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You are here: Home / Archives for News

Weaving a tale of a muddled war

August 25, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

1812 is the backdrop to a novel of early America

By Tracy F. Seelye, Express editor
editor@whitmanhansonexpress.com

HANSON — Perhaps it could be called the Rodney Dangerfield of wars.

Even on the bicentennial observance of its final year — and of the writing of the “Star-Spangled Banner,”  during the 1814 British bombardment of Baltimore’s Fort McHenry — there has been little notice of the  War of 1812, as the Napoleonic Wars were called hereabouts, outside of history classrooms.

That may be due, in part, to how close we came to losing our fledgling nation back to the British only about 20 years after winning it.

Author Deborah Hill of Brockton suggests that today’s attitudes toward the conflict are also not much different from those of 1812-14.

“Most people never strayed far from home, communication was very difficult, America was really just a collection of citizens here and there whose concerns usually stopped at their front door,” Hill said.

Eonomically, states were fairly autonomous.

“The new nation was was becoming firmly locked into regional power struggles,” she said. “The sea provided for anybody, like the fisherman and the mariner who got rich as the Boston merchants got rich.”

At least that was the case before President Thomas Jefferson decided an embargo on trade with Britain in an attempt to halt the impressment of American sailors.

“The embargo meant that both merchants from Boston and mariners of the seas would face ruin,” Hill related.

Her latest historical novel, “This is the House,” intersperses chapters of a fictionalized biography of such a mariner — an ancestor of her husband’s family, Cape Cod sea captain Elijah Cobb of Brewster — with those of an invented character representing his wife and the struggles they faced as a result of the embargo and war.

“I am not a professional historian, I am an author and authors are known to take liberties with fact,” she said to a Hanson Historical Society audience Thursday, Aug. 7. “I hope not to take liberties with history.”

As part of the cadre of mariners working to establish trade and credit for the new nation, she recounted how Cobb ran afoul of British press gangs looking to bolster their navy during the Napoleonic Wars. By that time, America had become entwined in the conflict, though few were aware of it.

Cobb and his crew were held at St. John, Nova Scotia and later exchanged for the crew of another merchant ship,  the Alert, captured earlier.

“The people I’m writing about are based on my husband’s family, based on the town of Brewster,” she said. “I keep telling my husband’s family this is not a biography.”

Hill grew up on Lake Erie in Ohio — which is where some of the heaviest fighting in the western frontier was experienced, usually with the United States on the losing end, as Canada was dragged into the conflict.

“These skirmishes might as well have happened on the moon,” she said. “They were just not relevant to us at all and news of them would come weeks after they occurred.”

Hill outlined how, as the state militias dispatched to Ohio, the British were able to take territory in Maine, burn Washington D.C., and be prevented only by fortifications in Baltimore from taking back the United States after Napoleon abdicated and the French were out of the war. Militias from Massachusetts and Connecticut, who refused to go fight in Ohio, as well as Southern militias helped protect Baltimore.

“But the British people did not feel like having anymore war and they didn’t want to raise taxes — and they saved us,” she said.

A certain respect for America had been earned by the victories at Baltimore and New Orleans, demonstrating the renewed military organization of the militias and regular Army, she concluded.

Filed Under: News

Building better babysitters

August 25, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

4-H course teaches the ins and outs of child care

By Tracy F. Seelye, Express editor
editor@whitmanhansonexpress.com

HANSON — Where do good babysitters come from?

Parents seeking dependable child care while they go out for the afternoon or evening are sometimes confronted by the challenge of how to find a good sitter.

Plymouth County 4-H helps to increase the supply in an effort to meet this demand by offering babysitter certification courses, which provide an overview of the ways to keep young charges safe and happy. The certificate of participation students received for the course attests to the six hours of instruction in safety and appropriate diversions for different age groups as well as hands-on practice in diaper changing and the crafting of “boo-boo bunnies” with which to ice bumps or scrapes.

CPR certfication comes with a different course not offered by 4-H, but this class offered guidance on when and how to deal with first aid needs and when to call in help. Basic nutrition and bottle feeding were also covered.

“It helps parents realize they take babysitting seriously and that they have thought out some form of training,” said instructor Evelyn Golden, a program assistant with Plymouth County 4-H. “I encourage them toward getting certified in first aid and CPR.”

Golden was assisted in conducting the class by 4-H Ambassador Emily Capasso, an experienced club member and role model who mentors 4-H youth.

“I am glad Emily agreed to share her stories of being a  babysitter and how babysitting has allowed her to choose a major that will allow her to work with children when she graduates and leaves for college,” Golden said.

The next course Golden teaches will be at the Pembroke Library, but a date haas not yet been determined. Golden has already conducted the class at libraries in Whitman, Abington, East Bridgewater and Scituate. They are often held once a year in each town.

On Saturday, Aug. 9, a group of about 15 tweens and young teens attended such a course at the Hanson Public Library — four of them boys.

“That is the most boys I’ve had in a class to date,” Golden said. “Of the six classes I’ve taught, I’ve only ever had one other boy sign up, so to get four in a class was pretty exciting.”

She said two of the boys were very interested and the parents of another thought their son should do it.

The students entered the library’s Community Room yawning at the compartively early hour for a class on a sunny summer Saturday — 9 a.m. — but soon Golden was peppering them with thought-provoking questions and exercises.

She started off with an overview of her own expertise.

Growing up in a small Kansas town, Golden said she babysat a lot for her siblings as well as the children of teachers and friends.

“The fact that I had been babysitting for these people led to my first non-babysitting job when I was in high school,” she recalled. It also afforded her a change of scenery when she took a job as a nanny while in college, which brought her to the South Shore in Massachusetts. It also inspired her to study early childhood development in college and led to her starting her own daycare business and eventually to her post at 4-H.

“You’re thinking of babysitting as a couple of extra bucks here and there, but it could be something that could carry you and affect you into the next step of your life,” she said.

Babysitting skills also transfer effectively to the responsible care of the frail elderly, which can help them assist with family situations, according to Golden.

“Today is your chance to shine and show me you are ready to become a responsible babysitter — that you are ready for parents to leave their children alone in your care,” she said.

The students began by discussing age-appropriate contents of a “babysitter’s magic bag” that good babysitters bring along to help them entertain young charges and good storybook choices to read to children of various ages.

Some basic rules of deportment were also reviewed:

• Never answer a knock at the door while babysitting.

• Ask the parents how and if they want the phone answered.

• Never spend time texting or talking on the phone with friends.

• Be prepared. Know the children’s names and ages ahead of time, their bedtimes and any allergies and other information parents may need you to know.

• Know the street address in case of emergency and get parents’ cell phone number.

For more information on future babysitting courses or other 4-H programs, visit the site plymouthcounty4h.org or call 781-293-3541.

Filed Under: News

Hanson Schools’ repairs advance

August 25, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

By Tracy F. Seelye, Express editor
editor@whitmanhansonexpress.com

HANSON — Selectmen voted Tuesday night to support five immediate repair needs at Indian Head and Maquan schools in an effort to finish the work before school starts Wednesday, Aug. 27.

The board also discussed an Open Meeting Law complaint filed by a resident after selectmen Bill Scott and James McGahan attended a July 30 meeting of the School Repair Priority Committee, which is chaired by Selectman Bruce Young. The complaint was deemed unfounded, as no dilerations were conducted between the three selectmen at that meeting.

In the meantime, Tuesday’s 4-0 vote — Selectman Don Howard abstained — clears the way for the $82,169 in repairs to be made and a financing article prepared for Town Meeting approval.

The list of repairs — sidewalks, library carpet and dishwasher replacement at Indian Head as well as cafeteria floor and boiler repair at Maquan — were deemed emergencies as they present insurance liability risks, the need for state certfication compliance for the boiler and a diswasher deemed beyond repair.

The meeting was attended by School Committee Chairman Bob Hayes of Hanson, School Committee member and Facilities Subcommittee Chairman Fred Small of Whitman, Superintendent of Schools Dr. Ruth Gilbert-Whitner and both assistant superintendents Craig Finley who heads district operations and Ellen Stockdale who supervises teaching and learning.

Vice Chairman of the Priority Committee Michael Jones also attended.

“We’re looking at some of the larger items, but we also want to address the smaller items that we’ve come across,” Young said. “We definitely need to address some of these before school takes place, and that’s agreed on buy the members of the school department.”

Town Administrator Ron San Angelo reminded selectmen that the School District is expending the money now and need to “feel comfortable that they’re standing side-by-side with selectmen” so residents know the warrant article at  Town Meeting is a joint recommendation.

Howard asked why the inside projects were being handled before the leaking roof.

“The roof is under consideration for some other type of repairs,” Hayes said. “These repairs we’re talking about we’re trying to get done before the opening of school because of some of the insurance problems.”

Past repair efforts on a low-bid carpet installed several years ago have been ineffective and the rug presents a trip hazard, as does the unneven tile in the cafeteria.

The repair considerations have also raised the issue of how an emergency is determined.

“We do agree that going forward we are going to establish a new policy or agreement on what an emergency might be [determined],” San Angelo said. “Now that we are recognizing that the schools are getting older and we’re talking about a lot more emergency repairs than we have in the past, all of a sudden these numbers are starting to inflate.”

He suggested a town-side budget line, similar to that approved at Whitman’s Annual Town Meeting, so emergency repairs can more quickly be funded.

Gilbert-Whitner said a subcommittee is reviewing the regional agreement including whether the $5,000 school obligation before towns are required to foot the balance of repair bills should be raised.

“Whatever it is, it essentially comes out of taxpayers’s pockets, so you’re going to have to pay it one way or the other,” she said.

The locking system at Maquan School, which “doesn’t even exisist,” is an item which should also be included as an emergency repair, Scott maintains. It was not included on the list brought forth to selectmen Tuesday.

Finley said the district has been meeting with both the police and fire chiefs to vet the systems for door locks, which should be able to be installed with children in the schools.

The Open Meeting Complaint, filed by resident James Armstrong, was determined to be unfounded by both Town Counsel Jay Talerman and San Angelo, who reported that finding in a letter prepared for him by Talerman to the Attorney General’s Office Division of Open Government. The corrective action sought was completion of training in the law’s requirements, which is already being done by the board’s newer members.

Selectmen Chairman David Soper said the proper procedure for such a complaint should have been to contact the board first.

“Going forward, you’re going to see two or three selectmen at some of these meetings,” Soper said. “I would just caution everybody who wants to make a call that the board should be notified first, that’s protocol.”

The board would then discuss the issues involved with a complainant and determine the next steps.

“The Open Meeting Law is taken quite seriously and shouldn’t be used as a political widget for whoever thinks it’s to their advantage,” he said.

Scott and McGahan sat in the audience at the July 30 meeting in question. Scott said at the time he was offering his comments as a private citizen, which the Open Meeting Law allows, and McGahan explained he was attending in his role as a member of the School Committee’s Facilities Subcommittee.

“We were acting on the best interests of the town,” said McGahan who also called Armstrong to discuss the matter. That discussion revealed the Board of Selectmen’s vote to rescind the pay-as-you-throw grant was the real issue involved, he said.

“I truly was disappointed,” McGahan said. “We should try to be respectful of one another.”

Filed Under: News

AT&T proposal raises questions in Whitman

August 25, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

By Tracy  F. Seelye, Express editor
editor@whitmanhansonexpress.com

WHITMAN — The Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) Monday, Aug. 11 continued a hearing on an AT&T application to install a self-supporting, 150-foot tall monopole with cell anntena at 672 Bedford Street near Churchill Street and Diane Terrace.

The project includes spaces lower on the pole for three future antenna colocations and would be located in a 40-by-40-foot compound behind the school bus depot.

Continuance will allow the company to literally float a trial balloon in the area between 8 a.m. and noon on Saturday, Sept. 6 — with a rain date of Saturday, Sept. 13 — before the project comes back before the ZBA at 7 p.m., Monday, Sept. 15 for more discussion and a decision.

The required balloon test, in which a large balloon is floated 150 feet in the air is desined to give an idea of what the height of the monopole looks like, ZBA Chairman John Goldrosen explained. Residents of the Diane Terrace area in attendance indicated they will be keeping an eye to the sky on test day.

The application seeks a laundry list of special permits and variances to local zoning bylaws for the project on land leased from TMZ Realty Corp. II of Hanson, and leans on state and federal telecommunications laws.

“AT&T is currently developing its wireless communications network, bringing 3G and 4G service which will provide voice and data services on the same platform,” said Brian Grossman, a lawyer with the firm of Anderson and Kreiger of Cambridge, representing AT&T. “Customers are demanding to use those [data-centric] services, whether it’s Facebook, streaming media, Netflix, HBO GO, to use their dish network options … this has put a strain on the network and also means the useage patterns have changed. It’s no longer enough to provide coverage on or near roadways — people expect and want to use their devices when and where they want to use them.”

Grossman was accompanied by Site Asquisition Specialist Elisabeth Rutkowski of the firm TRM in Foxboro, but the project engineer was unable to attend due to a personal emergency.

The Board of Health has expressed no objections to the project, but the Planning Board has recommended denial as the “applicant does not show compliance” with a bylaw limiting space between towers to one mile. The proposal has yet to go before the Conservation Commission.

The ZBA’s concerns expressed Monday included security measures, effect on drainage, noise, impact of weather on tower integrity, safety of the tower’s height, status of property tax payments by the site owners, environmental impact, cost to remove it in the future and any remaining gaps in coverage.

“It looks like a nice, wooded area but I guarantee you will have two-legged critters visiting you and challenging to try to get into that site,” said ZBA member Wayne Andrews said of site security.

Several people at the meeting — both abutting residents and board members — agreed with Building Inspector Robert Curran’s suggestion that AT&T consider colocating its antennae on the tower behind the Police Station in an effort to reduce the height of the proposed monopole.

“There’s no colocations right now [at the station’s tower],” Curran said. “The question is if you could consider colocating on that and then maybe building a 100-foot-tower here.” He added the 150-foot tower there was approved so other firms could colocate.

Rutkowski indicated the company is not in a position to do so and build a tower at this time.

“It may be that if there were one on the Police Station, does that affect the ideal location for a second one?” Goldrosen said.

The representatives of AT&T pledged to have answers to the board’s questions and suggestions when they return on Sept. 15, and indicated they would amend fence and security measures as the board might request.

Michael Hayes, 18 Diane Terrace also asked if a noise test had been conducted of a generator at the site, which will run for about 45 minutes on a one-day-per-week basis and continually during a power emergency. Company representatives said the sound level would be about 42 decibeles and 375 feet from the nearest residence.

“The typical ambient nighttime noise level in quiet suburban areas is approximately 40 dba,” Grossman said.

Stephen Frech of 30 Diane Terrace expressed concern over how plans for construction of a support building would affect a drainage basin on the property as well as the effect of snowpack on the monopole tower.

Grossman explained the tower is desined to bend, or kink, but not fall over at the base as a result of severe weather. He added it does not burden public safety services — it will be visited by maintenance crew once a month — and produces no sewage or trash.

Four other locations were considered by AT&T and rejected for service coverage limitations inherent in the location and available height of structures available:

• A colocation in the steeple of the First Congregational Church on 519 Washington St.;

• The bell tower of Holy Ghost Church on School Street;

• The National Grid stanchion at 1005 Temple St.;

• The smokestack of the Bostonian Shoe Lofts at 7 Marble St.

A monopole siting at the Whitman Middle School was rejected due to the complexities of using public property, Grossman said.

Filed Under: News

Hanson DARE Officer graduates to the next chapter in life

August 6, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

By Stephanie Spyropoulos
Express staff

HANSON — He has been a presence in the hallways and in the lives of nearly every student in the Whitman-Hanson school for the last 18 years as Hanson Police and School Resource Officer Rick Nawazelski has implemented the DARE program in Hanson schools.

He feels he has given hundreds of students the opportunity to have a person in their lives they know they can trust and talk to.

Success stories of students, who have gone on to teach and help others in their community, are only a few of the triumphs being in the school system has afforded him, Nawazelski said. Often, a student will have spoken to him about deciding not to attend a party or hearing that story in DARE camp that allowed them to trust their gut about a situation, these have brought so many affirmations to his career, he recalled.

“Officer Rick,” as his students and colleagues fondly know him, is a true Hansonite, born and raised here as well as raising his own two children here.

Nawazelski started out as a dispatcher in 1984 and went on to become a part-time officer after attending the police academy. He became full time shortly thereafter completing his 30 years in Hanson. He took over the DARE program in 1997, which he said proudly kept him as an officer instead of looking towards gaining rank in his career.

“I had to stay an officer to remain in DARE. That is what I loved,” he said.

The DARE program will continue in Hanson as Nawazelski passes the torch to fellow officer William Frazier of Hanson. Officer Frazier is currently in training to become the full-time DARE Officer and ended the school year becoming acquainted with students as the new resource officer. Officer Kevin Harrington, as a full-time DARE and resource officer, serves Whitman schools.

Nawazelski encompassed patience and wisdom, which he uses to be a positive influence to educate the youth of tomorrow, and he believes in second chances.

Seeing his work as a DARE officer come full circle is what has kept him grounded, committed and pulled him through some of the more difficult portions of his career.

 “I was a hockey coach for a long time and I kept that as a positive, which always helped if I had a hard shift the night before… it helped me keep from being tainted in the bad I saw. It let me see and find the good in people,” he said.

Nawazelski admits the highs and lows of a career in law enforcement can do a toll on someone’s mind.  His haunting memories are those of two suicides he responded to. Car accidents and injuries to people have been the hardest calls he admits for him to respond.

“There was a suicide where a man intended to kill his family and then himself but because they were late and he was extremely depressed,” Nawazelski said. “He killed himself. The family came home and found him. This was found out after the investigation… it was 18 years ago and it still comes to mind. It has stayed with me.”

In those days the department didn’t have the counseling and support programs available today.

Still, Nawazelski would encourage anyone who asks him about pursuing a career in law enforcement to find an internship, learn about the career, and find what fits such as forensics there are many different parts of working within the police services not just as an officer. He is a first-generation officer in his family. Both of his children have careers in law enforcement his son is a guard at the Plymouth County Corrections facility and his daughter is a state corrections officer.

Nawazelski lauded Hanson Chief Michael Miksch who has been a strong supporter of DARE.

“We are lucky to have a chief who is committed to DARE and resource officers in the school.  I believe it makes a difference, “said Nawazelski.

Plymouth County District Attorney Timothy J. Cruz has sponsored DARE camp as a week of summer fun for 970 campers over the last 20 years. Before him, the late William O’Malley and Michael Sullivan also supported and helped fund the DARE camp — a time of bonding for local officers and kids on the South Shore through fun and education, themed days, special guest performers, a visit from the state police helicopter, a day of water fun, lunches, snacks and team bonding are all part of the nonstop week. Nawazelski has hosted the camp 14 out of 15 years at WHRHS and the middle school. Several other towns in Plymouth County hosted and from 2005-2008 Duxbury co-hosted when camp ran for two weeks.

Planning camp is a yearlong labor of love and begins almost as soon as the camp ends each year. Securing donations when times are tough has been a struggle but with local businesses offering discounts, and sponsorship of lunch, snacks, drinks, and activities there are many behind-the-scene hands to pull the camp together in success.

Cruisin’s New England Magazine, a strong local supporter of DARE education, honored Nawazelski as DARE Officer of the year in 2007.  He also received numerous citations for his career from Plymouth County organizations at the last DARE graduation he oversaw for the school year 2014. He said the emotional impact of guest speaker Amanda Earner’s life after her brother Greg died of a tragic overdose is something all in attendance won’t soon forget. He admitted that he, too, had tears following her emotional speech at DARE graduation. In all his years as an officer he has seen a lot happen but he has never allowed his heart to harden.

On the last day of school, he received messages of thanks from dozens of students, piles of handmade cards and countless teary goodbyes.

As he gets ready to retire in late August he is looking forward to the next chapter in life spending time and vacations with his wife of over 40 years — they hope to go on a cruise. He is looking forward to his daughter’s upcoming nuptials and spending time with his grandchildren.

Filed Under: News

Italian summer

August 6, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

Exchange program forges cultural connections
By Dave Palana
Express Contributor

WHITMAN — Donna Gardner of Whitman has been hosting exchange students long enough to know the Wrentham Outlets are a must-stop destination for Massachusetts visitors. She’s also been hosting long enough to get a pleasant surprise on her recent trip to the shopping Mecca.

Gardner, and her Whitman host families, took the five Italian homestay students staying in town this summer to Wrentham last Thursday only to run into an old friend all grown up.

“I said ‘I know this walk, it can only be this person,’” Gardner said. “It was my first exchange student and his wife, who he met at Whitman-Hanson. Now they live in Belgium.”

Gardner is the Bay State’s administration for Cultural Homestay International, a volunteer organization that matches students hoping to spend time abroad with local families willing to provide room and board. Whitman-Hanson has been a gracious host for exchange students for years, but when five students from Italy decided to take in New England for three weeks on their summer vacation, Whitman families were more than happy to oblige.

“We wanted to learn English better and know another culture — their habits and what [Americans] usually do,” said Chiara Cassiano, a high school student from Milan. “And to leave your life and try something new.”

Cassiano, Giulia Fontana and Marco Tardivo all came to Whitman from Milan, though they did not know each other before the plane ride over. Giorgio Meloro and Riccardo Fomina both hail from Manza, near Milan, knew each other previously and decided to take the trip together.

The group took in Provincetown and Plymouth in addition to Wrentham, but the trip to Boston was the highlight for most.

“It is very different from Italian cities,” Meloro said.

Tardivo, Meloro and Fomina also saw a stock car race in Seekonk while Cassiano ventured to Pittsburg with her host family and Fontana took in a New England tradition — the whale watch.

“It was amazing,” she said. “There were, like, 15 whales all around the ship.”

Tardivo got a sampling of American soccer with a trip to Gillette Stadium to take in a New England Revolution game ­, which didn’t quite have the same atmosphere as watching AC Milan in his eyes.

“It is different,” he said jokingly. “In Italy, it is better.”

Tardivo was the first student taken in by the Winnett family. Michelle Winnett said the positive experiences her children had meeting the Cultural Homestay students during their time at Whitman-Hanson motivated her to volunteer a bed in her house and added the experience was so positive that she will now be hosting a Swiss boy for the school year.

 “It’s been great,” Winnett said. “We enjoyed being able to show [Marco] the things that were around here, and he’s been just a wonderful guest.”

“Most people think the reward is just for the student, but that’s not true,” Gardner added, “the families have such an amazing time with the kids… I think because we’re volunteers I think there is a lot more love and effort put into the kids. The kids are not a paycheck.”

The five students headed home Sunday after cooking a goodbye meal from their families and taking one last trip to the Cape. Cassiano is hoping to return for the school year, and hoping to stay with the same family, while the others all said they either hope to return for a visit or return the favor by showing their host families a slice of Italy.

“I wish I could come back,” Fontana said. “I had such a great time.”

If Cassiano returns, she will join students from Australia, Brazil and Slovakia at Whitman-Hanson in addition to the Winnett’s Swiss guest.
“Whitman-Hanson is wonderful with taking students,” Gardner said. “Families host over and over and over because it’s an amazing experience.”

Filed Under: News

A new look at nicotine

August 6, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

Whitman review of tobacco regs continues
By Tracy F. Seelye, Express editor
editor@whitmanhansonexpress.com

WHITMAN — For communities grappling with revisions to tobacco control regulations, questions over how pharmacies will be affected remain a concern.

Whitman’s Board of Health finds issue with the point and will ask Cheryl Sbarra, senior staff attorney for the Mass. Association of Health Boards to attend a meeting — either Aug. 19 or Sept. 2 — to help clear up those questions.  Sbarra is also the MAHB’s director of tobacco prevention and cessation and the chronic disease prevention programs.

“Everybody is on the bandwagon here, I think,” said Chairman Eric Joubert, RN. “We’re looking to regulate nicotine in all its forms. … I think everybody is concerned as to what each town’s going to do.”

He said the major concern of the Whitman Board as recently  as May was the definition of “health care institution” in which the sale of tobacco products would be banned. They also want to know if  pharmacy sales of smoking-cessation products —that incorporate a nicotine delivery system to help wean smokers of the habit — are also prohibited.

“Nicotine delivery products are included in the sales ban, which means you can’t go to a drugstore and get the patch to quit smoking, which is crazy,” Joubert said. “The big concern is legitimate nicotine replacement — not the e-cigarettes.”

Board Administrative Assistant Elaine White noted the panel has been advised that consultation with clients concerning over-the-counter remedies such as smoking cessation materials is a key component to the training of pharmacists.

“Pharmacists play a key role in smoking cessation because [customers] don’t have to go to the doctor’s — they can discuss it with a pharmacist,” Williams said the board has been advised previously. “You really only want to visit this once.”

Board member Barbara White and her colleagues agreed, and she stressed the importance of inviting Sbarra to help clarify the issue.

“It was March when she came here and they’ve done so much more since then,” White said.

While the board was most concerned with the smoking-cessation materials, they also worry about the attraction flavored e-cigarette juices have for underage youths.

“It’s just that all these new things coming out look so good to the young people,” said board member Diane MacNeil, RN.

“It’s important that all of the surrounding towns are on the same page so people aren’t hopping from town to town,” said White.

In other business, the board expressed concern about the number of dogs planned to be cared for at a proposed dog day care at 51 Bedford St., and will meet with the applicants. Key questions the board has regarding the proposal to handle from 15 to 20 dogs in a 22-by-24-foot holding room and fenced-in yard center on adequate space and waste disposal.

Representatives of Dunkin’ Donuts will, at an Aug. 5 meeting outline via conference call, a pilot program proposed for Whitman stores in which food waste is converted to gray water for disposal in the municipal wastewater system. DPW representatives will be invited to the meeting.

Starting in October, food waste will be banned from the state’s solid waste stream.

Filed Under: News

Bostonian complex makes National Register of Historic Places

August 6, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

By Tracy F. Seelye,
Express editor

editor@whitmanhansonexpress.com WHITMAN — The Bostonian Shoe Lofts have done for commercial properties in town what Whitman Park has done for recreational space — earning a place on the National Register of Historic Places. The former factory building was designated an historic site under the Commonwealth Shoe Company name on May 13, it was announced earlier this month. Now the owners just have to find a place for the plaque.

“It’s been a long, involved process but they got through it all,” said June O’Leary of the Whitman Historical Commission. “I think it’s marvelous that someone like Fred and his company can come in and look at a building like that and see how it can be bought back.” “It was a good part of my life,” said Fred Kiley, now retired from The Heritage Companies, which purchased the building in 2009. “I wish I could find another Whitman job today, I’d go right back to Whitman. … It was a helluva lot of fun doing it.”

He said the width of the east building was the perfect size for conversion of the upper floors to roomy apartments on both sides along a center corridor. The west building required a corridor along the window line with one row of apartments per floor. “It was love at first sight,” he said of his decision to buy it. The goal from Day One in the Bostonian renovation project was earning a place on the National Register, according to Fred Kiley’s son Michael, who now runs the business. “It was all well worth it,” Michael Kiley said. “It’s well received. The occupancy’s been fantastic.”

The National Register is the nation’s official listing of significant historic resources. In Massachusetts, there are more than 70,000 properties listed in the National Register. The Massachusetts Historical Commission has been administering the National Register of Historic Places program in Massachusetts since 1966. Secretary of State William Galvin serves as chairman of the 17-member Commission, which meets regularly and considers historic resources eligible for the National Register four times a year. “The Massachusetts Historical Commission is dedicated to preserving the Commonwealth’s rich historic, architectural, archaeological, and cultural resources,” Galvin said in his announcement of the national nomination. “Inclusion of the Commonwealth Shoe Company in the National Register helps to preserve an excellent group of late 19th and early 20th-century industrial buildings with strong ties to Whitman’s shoemaking heritage.”

Mill rehabs once word came down that the final meeting on approval was scheduled, the Kiley family of Quincy — owners of The Heritage Companies of real estate and investment firm who bought the former Commonwealth Shoe Company building on Marble Street in 2001, knew approval was imminent. The firm has also renovated the Star Mill Lofts in Middleboro and the Granite Lofts in Quincy among its other projects. “It was a fast turn around,” said Barbara Kiley, sister of founder Fred Kiley and project manager on the Bostonian Lofts project. “We’re very proud and very happy about how it turned out. It’s a tribute to Fred’s foresight.” The phases of the application process followed along with progress on the Bostonian’s renovation, governing details of the work such as how windows can be replicated and use of original bricks. “There are a lot of different specifications that you have to adhere to,” Barbara Kiley said.

The Commonwealth Shoe Company is a large, brick and wood-frame mill complex associated with much of Whitman’s long tradition in the shoemaking industry. The complex increased by increments, starting with the original part of Building 1, which was constructed circa 1864 by an earlier shoe company and became the nucleus of Commonwealth Shoe’s property. Founded in 1884, the Commonwealth Shoe Company’s success was largely based on its popular “Bostonian” shoe, which became nationally renowned as a high-quality dress shoe for men and is still manufactured today by another company. The Bostonian name was bought after the former site, where Regal Marketplace is now located, burned down.

Located on the west side of Marble Street and constructed mainly between 1864 and 1923, Building 1 [west] features two elegant stair towers – one in the Chateau style, and the other in the Colonial Revival style. Both towers are prominent features of the Whitman landscape. Building 2 [east] is a more typical example of a Victorian-era, wood-frame shoe factory. “There’s two things these [balloon-construction] buildings could do very well, they could tip over or they could burn,” Fred Kiley said of the original structure which required stabilizing during renovation. Local support The Kileys lauded the work of the Planning Board, Building Inspector Robert Curran and Whitman Fire chiefs Timothy Travers and Timothy Grenno, who were involved in the renovation planning and work, for their contributions to the project.

The shoe company had made substantial additions to the buildings in 1891, 1893, 1919, and 1923. Boston-based architect J. Williams Beal designed the 1891 and 1893 additions, and most likely designed the 1919 addition as well. The successor firm, J. Williams Beal Sons, designed the 1923 addition. Also included within the complex is the former First Unitarian Church (1888), which was absorbed by Commonwealth Shoe in 1968 when the church closed. The fourth building on the property, a pool house constructed in 2011, does not contribute to the property’s significance due to its age. The town of Whitman took it over in 1981 for $1, and 19 years later, John Campbell of Harding Print & Digital Copy Center, who is also a local historian, bought it from the town for $1 per square-foot.

“What happened was the downsizing of the shoe industry,” Campbell said. “In the ’50s there was 600 people working in this factory. In the ’60s, the factory itself stopped manufacturing and they used it as a warehouse.” When Fred Kiley made an offer, it didn’t take long for Campbell to decide he should sell. “Fred had the knowledge of what to do with that building — and the pocketbook — which I didn’t have,” Campbell said. “I learned so much had so much fun … because I’d follow him around and he’d take a corner that was completely a mess that nobody would even touch it and he did it.”

The Commonwealth Shoe Company had remained under the ownership of founding president Charles H. Jones’s family until 1959, when the family transferred ownership and operation to the company’s management and certain employees. A substantial 2011 rehabilitation of the complex, which utilized state and federal historic preservation tax credits, created 127 residential apartments and 15 commercial/retail spaces at the property.

Filed Under: News

Hanson officials differ on recycle grant

August 6, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

By Tracy F. Seelye, Express editor
editor@whitmanhansonexpress.com

HANSON — The Board of Health and Selectmen differed in separate meetings Tuesday night on whether to return a state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) grant which helps fund the town’s new pay-as-you-throw program.

The health board voted 2-1 against a motion by member Richard Edgehille to return the $18,000 — partly because doing so would block the board from applying for any DEP grants for three years. The same motion made at a July 3 meeting failed to obtain a second and was not voted.

Selectmen, however, voted 3-2 later on Tuesday, July 22 to return the money — an action, which superscedes the Board of Health vote [See story].

The key issue for opponents of the grant lie in accompanying language that requires private trash haulers to bundle rates for curbside trash and recycling pickup even for customers who plan to recycle at the transfer station.

“It’s got noting to do with pay-as-you-throw or $2 a bag …we’re going to be doing that,” Edgehille said. “It’s that people who have been trash haulers for 15 years are being penalized now for $12-$13 extra and they already pay taxes.”

Health Board Chairman Gil Amado and member Terence McSweeney both stressed that the DEP regulation is already in place as part of the new waste ban policies, which prohibit the inclusion of a long list of recyclable materials from the solid waste stream. The ban covers about 40 percent of what is now thrown away. Hanson recycles at a rate of about 9 to 19 percent of its waste stream, which limited the life of the landfill.

“Historically, Hanson residents have not recycled at a rate we need to by law,” McSweeney said. “A secondary concern of mine is not only losing the grant we received, but being ineligible to apply for subsequent grants for three years.”

One of those subsequent grants could have meant $200,000 to the town. Since 1993, Hanson has received more than $40,000 in DEP grants.

“Trash haulers already know they’re supposed to comply with this,” Amado said. “If you’re a hauler, and you’ve educated yourself about your business, you’ll understand what you have to do.”

Even after a rescinding of the grant, the regulation will have to be enforced, according to Amado.

Edgehille said he was putting forth the motion to rescind the grant because he expected the Board of Selectmen to do so before reading a letter to the Board of Health he wrote on the matter into the record.

“We were given no paperwork regarding this regulation,” Edgehille said of the bundling rule. “We were told the regulation was required to be voted.”

The regulation requires private trash haulers to charge an extra $13 for the bundled service.

“The private hauler customer already pays tax dollars to [support] the transfer station,” he said. “We shouldn’t have to pay this extra amount. We should be able to take their recyclables at the transfer station. This is nothing more than paying double … it isn’t anything that affects the health and safety of our town.”

A Hanson waste hauler in attendance said he understands the enforcement of waste ban regulations, but is concerned with the need to report customer information, which is also required.

“You’ve got to find some common ground here,” he said.

He also asked if the grant regulations could be adjusted to permit one free bag per household each week without losing the funding, but McSweeney replied that would not be possible because the cost of disposing of recyclable materials is also at issue.

In other business, the Board of Health decided to leave the length of the contract governing the town’s membership in the South Shore Recycling Cooperative (SSRC) to Town Meeting after Chairman Claire Galkowski said a one-year renewal was not permitted, according to the SSRC counsel.

“Our municipal agreement has to be identical for every member town,” she said of the SSRC board’s recent decision on the issue.

Kingston’s town counsel has also opined that the contracts can be renewed without going to town meeting, but Hanson officials want to review that opinion.

“I don’t think there’s a debate as to whether or not we want to continue our relationship,” McSweeney said. “I think the question was did it have to be a five-year commitment or was there some mechanism to allow us to sign for a shorter term.”

Hanson has been a member of the SSRC for 10 of the organization’s 16 years. The contract lapsed last year without anyone noticing and Hanson has continued membership on a waiver meaning the current decision to renew would be for four years.

Filed Under: News

House in Hanson is deemed a safety hazard

August 6, 2014 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

By Mike Melanson
Express Correspondent

HANSON — Selectmen on Tuesday, July 22 deemed an unfinished house at 62 Ocean Ave. an attractive nuisance and ordered it to be demolished by Nov. 1.

In other action Tuesday, the board also voted to withdraw from a state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) grant process to implement a pay-as-you-throw trash and recycling program in Hanson.

Selectmen voted 5-0 to find that the house at 62 Ocean Ave. is not safe, nor secure, and to order it demolished.

Property owner Dean Anderson could comply with the order or appeal it in court.

Building Commissioner Robert Curran produced a file folder for 62 Ocean Ave. that was a foot thick.

Curran said he has spent hundreds of hours in court on the case seeking to enforce permit injunctions, and the town has prevailed in court.

Anderson has been put in jail for noncompliance, been found in contempt of court a number of times, and has ignored court orders to not occupy the building, not store stuff there, not operate an automobile repair business there, and not store unregistered motor vehicles there, Curran said.

“Yet the property continues to be a hazard,” he said. “It’s essentially a three-and-a-half story bonfire.”

Curran said the building is open, despite a court order that it be secured.

He said the building permit for it has been revoked and is expired.

There has never been a occupancy permit, and the building is not in a business zone, he said.

Anderson also has a retaining wall that is seven feet into the roadway, which could hinder fire and rescue vehicles responding to an emergency. A fire at 62 Ocean Ave. could spread to other properties, Curran said.

Curran said he started the enforcement process more than four years ago, and there was even a jury trial.

“The owner is doing whatever he pleases with this property,” he said. “It definitely poses a threat to other properties.”

Curran recommended that the building be taken down.

Fire Lt. Gary Smith said anyone entering the building can be injured and firefighters responding to a fire there would be placed at risk.

“To our knowledge, this building does not have any drywall installed, essentially making the building an unprotected lumber yard,” Smith said. “The building has no power, but the owner has used an electrical extension cord that has been run across the street to another house for power or, it has been reported, that a generator has been used for power.”

Anderson said the hearing Tuesday was not fair.

“There isn’t much I can say right now because all of this information I’m getting right now,” he said.

Anderson asked who gave the building commissioner, police, fire or other town employees permission to enter his property.

“No one has the right to enter my property,” he said.

Selectman Bruce Young said the evidence is overwhelming and the case has gone on for too long.

“A man’s home is his castle,” Young said. “My heart goes out to you, but it’s time to move on. It’s time for everyone to move on.”

Selectman William Scott said Hanson officials tried to work with Anderson, but got little or no cooperation.

“It’s a shame that it got to that point. Maybe we could’ve headed it off. It’s too late now,” Scott said.

Selectman Chairman David Soper said it was Anderson’s inability to cooperate with the town and tendency to see things his own way despite the evidence that has resulted in a need to order the building demolished.

“You leave this board no choice,” Soper said.

Pay-as-you-throw

Selectmen voted, 3-2, to withdraw from the state DEP grant process for pay-as-you-throw.

Scott, Young and Selectman James McGahan voted to withdraw from the grant; Soper and Selectman Donald Howard voted against the measure.

McGahan said a grant requirement that private trash haulers offer bundled rates for curbside pickup for trash and recyclables, even for customers who wish to dispose of recyclables at the transfer station, is not fair to the haulers or residents.

The Board of Health enacted the policy as part of the grant application, and the motion approved by selectmen Tuesday stated a recommendation that the health board rescind it.

“What bothers me is it didn’t come before the people to vote on as an option,” McGahan said. “What choice do we have? We have no choice.”

Town Administrator Ronald San Angelo said that recycling has doubled with pay-as-you-throw, from one container to two, and the amount of trash has decreased, from one container a day to one or two containers a week, at the transfer station.

“In its first month, we’ve seen great progress,” San Angelo said.

Of the $18,000 state grant, the town has spent almost $7,000 to paint lines and place signs at the transfer station and to mail information to residents, said Town Accountant Kimberly Brown.

The liability will now be treated as an unpaid bill because Hanson will no longer be reimbursed for implementation costs by the state, and will need to go before Special Town Meeting in October for funding, Brown said.

Filed Under: News

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