CURRENTLY ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2025 FUNDING
PLYMPTON – The Plympton Community Preservation Committee (CPC) is currently accepting applications for fiscal year 2025 funding. The deadline for completed applications is October 15.
Projects funded in prior years include a safe in the Town Clerk’s office to archive important historical records; installation of a chairlift and new insulation for the “Old Town House” building at 189 Main St.; a comprehensive drainage system to solve a chronic wet basement in the Plympton Library; funds to acquire and improve the 11 acre parcel on Main Street now known as Churchill Park which offers access to the abutting 87 acre parcel known as Cato’s Ridge thereby forming a large natural preserve with walking trails; improvements at Harry Jason Park to make it more accessible for family and recreational use; the installation of a chairlift in the Plympton Historical Society Building; renovation of the old Winnetuxet swimming hole into a recreational area; and facilitating the donation of O’Neil Marsh on Ring Road which offers additional access to Cato’s Ridge.
More recent projects include clapboard painting and window restoration and replacement at the “Old Town House”; repair and restoration of Town Green gazebo; creation of the 150 acre “Two Brooks Preserve” off Prospect Road; funding for improvements to the playground at the Dennett Elementary School; and the purchase and preservation of almost 300 acres known as Turkey Swamp.
The CPC takes very seriously its responsibility to administer Community Preservation Act funds and is thrilled to have the opportunity to serve and improve the town through acquisition and protection of open space, historical preservation, community housing and increased recreational opportunities. New projects selected by the CPC for further consideration will be voted on at the 2025 Annual Town Meeting.
Project guidelines and applications can be found on the Plympton town website at http://www.town.plympton.ma.us/community-preservation-committee. Click on “Documents” at the left-hand side of the web page to bring up the Plympton Community Preservation Plan which includes the application and criteria. The CPC Plan and application are also available at the Town House and at the Plympton Public Library. Questions can be addressed by contacting CPC Chair Mark Russo at [email protected].
EEE, West Nile Virus in Halifax, Plympton, and Kingston
The Massachusetts Dept. of Public Health reminds people in moderate to high risk areas, such as Whitman, Hanson, Halifax, Plympton, and Kingston, that the threat continues for both Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE) and West Nile Virus (WNV). To date, two males, one in Hampden County, in the 40-49 year old age group and one in Middlesex County, in the 70-79 year old age group, have contracted WNV. One animal has been found with EEE..
These mosquito-borne illnesses continue to be a threat to health and residents should take precautions when outside from dusk to dawn, prime time for mosquito bites. The threat will continue until a hard frost, usually in October..
Ken Vinton celebrates 90th birthday
Tuesday, Aug. 6, Ken Vinton, president of TRIAD, was surprised with a room full of birthday well-wishers at the regularly scheduled August meeting.
Vinton noted, before realizing that the celebration was for him, that there were a record number of attendees on Tuesday, 34 in fact, there at the August meeting.Asked how long he plans to remain president of TRIAD, Vinton responded that he was having a lot of fun with the group and that it’s always easy to get speakers.’
State Rep. Kathy LaNatra presented Ken with a Citation from the Massachusetts House of Representatives praising his leadership and activities promoting senior citizens’ rights with Halifax TRIAD and congratulating him on the celebration of his 90th birthday. Plymouth County Sheriff Joe MacDonald presented Ken with a ball cap from the sheriff’s department.
A beautiful birthday cake was enjoyed by all.
Vinton introduced Fred Corrigan, this month’s speaker, an active 89-year-old Halifax citizen who spoke about growing up in the White Mountains in Randolph, NH, in a three-room house with his parents, his brother, and baby sister.
Years later, the little house was moved, as was the custom, to become a garage to another home. The owner would brag that she had the only garage with wallpaper on the walls, Corrigan told the group.
He showed a photo of the one-room schoolhouse in Randolph, NH, where he had the same teacher as his father. She taught there for 33 years, grades 1 through 8 in the one-room schoolhouse, where she had to keep an authoritarian rule on the group – the youngest in the front rows, and older kids in the back. There was a blackboard in the front, and another in the back, so she could teach separate lessons to separate age groups.
There was no electricity, no running water, and an outhouse in the back. Life was simple. High school was in Lancaster, NH with about 30 kids in the senior class, Corrigan told his audience.
Fred told about Saturday nights in Lancaster, where the entertainment was movies at the Rialto Cinema. “Drive from the three-room house in Randolph to Jefferson, then to Lancaster. It was shopping night, ‘because you don’t run that trip every day to pick up a loaf of bread,’” Corrigan said. “Shopping night was Saturday night; we stocked up for the week. While Mom and Dad went shopping, we three kids got to go to the theater to see whatever was playing. Fred’s brother was an usher at that theater. The cost to go to the Rialto theater was five cents. That theater is still operating today.”
Fred told some of the history of the area that was his home so long ago, and showed a photo of a sculpture of a wolf erected “to honor the brave men and women who redeemed Lancaster from the wilderness. This memorial is erected by their local sons and daughters upon the 150th anniversary of the founding of the town of Lancaster. July 6, 1913.”
“Lake Coos and the Presidential Range. Lancaster, founded in 1763, lies on the bed of glacial Lake Coos, formed as the glaciers receded 14,000 years ago.
“Today, the Connecticut, an American Heritage River, flows along the bottom of the ancient lake. You stand at a gateway to the Great North Woods Region.
“To the east, aligned from north to south, are Mounts Madison, Adams, Jefferson and Washington, the highest peaks of the White Mountains Presidential Range. Mt. Washington, at 6,288 feet, is the highest in the Northeast.
“The strongest winds ever recorded, 231 miles per hour, were measured on its summit on April 12, 1934.”
Plympton’s Code of Conduct policy
Plympton’s Board of Selectmen met on Monday, Aug. 12, and voted unanimously to adopt a three-page, single-spaced “Code of Conduct” enumerating behavior and protocols for a varety of situations.
In introducing the policy outline, Town Administrator Liz Dennehy distributed the handbook with the following message:
The Board of Selectmen has unanimously approved the concept of establishing a Code of Conduct for Boards and Committees. We believe that this Code, which is comprised of language from the Massachusetts Municipal Association and other communities, will serve as a guide for maintaining civility in communications amongst Boards and Committees, Town staff and the general public and will ultimately further enhance our ability to provide efficient, effective and responsive public service as a Town government team. While we’re aware that in terms of implementation, elected Boards or Committees can certainly opt out, we’re hopeful that everyone will see this as a useful tool in terms of encouraging respectful communications and furthering Town initiatives in the provision of public service.”
The guide deals with acceptable conduct generally and in relation to the community, other elected and appointed officials, conduct in relation to town administration and town staff.
The Town Clerk shall provide a copy of this policy to all elected and appointed officials upon its issuance and upon the subsequent appointment or re-appointment of officials.
Each official shall sign a statement that they have read and understood the policy and that they will comply with all requirements set forth herein. In the event that any member declines to sign the statement form, that fact shall be noted by the Town Clerk on said form.
Should any official receive or become aware of a violation of this policy, they should report the violation to the Town Administrator and his/her department head.
Violation of its policy may constitute good cause for removal of appointed board/committee members.
Elected officials, while ultimately accountable to the voters of Plympton, may be subject to a request for their resignation, public censure or reprimand, or a recall petition, accordingly.
A complete copy of the Plympton Code of Conduct policy can be found at the office of the Plympton Town Clerk.
Hank and Bert deemed dangerous
Alan Ingram
Express correspondent
Kingston Selectmen voted July 30 to classify two Great Danes as “dangerous dogs” following three separate delivery driver biting incidents, imposing containment and liability insurance requirements on the owners.
The board voted 3-2 to deem the dogs, named Hank and Bert, as dangerous after hearing testimony about attacks that occurred on April 4, May 4 and July 14 at the home of Jenna Goldstein on Raboth Road.
Along with the “dangerous dog” classification, Goldstein must construct a secure enclosure with a roof for the dogs, obtain liability insurance of at least $100,000 per dog, and have the animals neutered.
Animal Control Officer Sonya Buckner recommended the dangerous designation, citing the repeated incidents.
“It’s three bites, whether they’re gentle giants or not,” Buckner said. “Who’s to say if she walks them off the property? I don’t know how they’re going to be. So our role as public safety officers is to make sure that nothing like this happens again and that we’re not here in another three, four months because something else has happened.”
Goldstein argued she had taken steps to prevent further incidents, including installing delivery instructions, a drop box, and signage warning of dogs on the property. She said the dogs have never had issues with visitors or family members.
“From the start here, I was already putting measures in to kind of protect the dogs, protect people from coming to the house,” Goldstein said. “I am taking this very seriously and I’m very sorry that this did happen”
Board member Kim Emberg expressed reservations about the dangerous classification, suggesting a nuisance designation instead.
“This isn’t like they’re running down the street attacking random people. They were acting as I would expect a dog in a safe, believed to be safe, place of their own, protecting their home,” Emberg said.
However, board member Tyler Bouchard argued the repeated incidents warranted the stricter designation.
“We’re not dealing with one, we’re not dealing with two, we’re dealing with three,” Bouchard said. “And respectfully, this could have been stopped at one. It’s our job now.”
The board set a Sept. 30 deadline for Goldstein to comply with the new requirements, with the option for an extension if needed.
Kingston BOS green-lights ambitious road safety plan
Alan Ingram
Express correspondent
Kingston selectmen have approved a comprehensive road improvement plan aimed at enhancing safety and connectivity throughout the town.
The plan, presented by Environmental Partners at the July 30th Board of Selectmen meeting, prioritizes projects on both town and state-owned roads. It includes upgrades to Main Street, intersection redesigns, and new pedestrian facilities.
Jim Fitzgerald, Principal at Environmental Partners, explained the project’s goals: “We want to put the town in a good position to solicit those other alternative funding sources to supplement the Chapter 90 [state funding].”
The top-rated project for town-owned roads is along Main Street, focusing on improving pedestrian safety. The plan proposes installing improved crosswalks at regular intervals, ensuring ADA accessibility, and potentially adding rectangular rapid flashing beacons at key intersections.
Other high-priority projects include redesigning the intersection of Pembroke Street at Lake Street and Station Street near the high school, and adding a shared-use path on Lake Street.
For state-owned roads, the plan prioritizes improvements to the intersection of Main Street, Summer Street, and Linden Street. This location saw 44 crashes over a five-year period, including eight with injuries and one fatality.
Margot Schoenfelder, Senior Project Manager at Environmental Partners, emphasized the importance of the prioritization methodology: “We find creating a set of criteria that is made public and having it be quantitative is really important for justifying how the town’s prioritizing projects.”
Paul Basler, Kingston’s Streets, Trees, and Parks Superintendent, stressed the need for road maintenance funding. “We need money in this town to maintain the current roads we have,” Basler said. “We got $415,000 from Chapter 90 this year. That Chapter 90 money is earmarked for Ring Road, Prospect Street, and Thomas Street. Those three jobs alone are worth almost $2 million.”
Town Planner Valerie Massard noted that the next steps involve seeking funding opportunities. “We’re not gonna be able to predict where we’re gonna start. We’re gonna go with opportunity meets money,” she said.
The Selectmen unanimously accepted the state and local road improvement priorities report. The full report is available on the town’s website.
Halifax woman honored at Fenway
On Friday, July 12, the Boston Red Sox and Red Sox Foundation commemorated the foundation’s 22-year commitment as a co-presenting sponsor of the Pan-Mass Challenge (PMC) with PMC Night at Fenway Park.
The organization has raised $28 million toward its $75 million goal for this year, officially surpassing $1 billion in lifetime fundraising for Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Dana-Farber) since 1980. During the ceremony, 40 members of the PMC Living Proof community, PMC riders and volunteers who are currently undergoing or have undergone treatment for cancer, rode around the warning track while being cheered on by Red Sox Nation, followed by the official unveiling of the PMC logo on the iconic Green Monster. Halifax local and cancer survivor, Jainey Holland, was among those honored on Friday night.
On August 3 and August 4, more than 6,500 riders will come together with a goal of raising a record $75 million to support lifesaving cancer research and treatment. The PMC donates 100 percent of every rider-raised dollar to Dana-Farber as its largest single contributor, accounting for 62 percent of its Jimmy Fund’s annual revenue. The PMC is co-presented by the Red Sox Foundation and M&T Bank.
Summer nights and simple times remembered
By Linda Ibbitson Hurd
Special to The Express
Across the street from our house on Elm street in Hanson when we were growing up was a cozy little house that my Grandfather Ibbitson had owned and lived in until he and my grandmother moved their expanding family directly across the street into a big blue shingled house. The little house had a nice living room, a kitchen, bath and two bedrooms with a small upstairs room that overlooked the big front lawn. The living room led to an enclosed porch which was across the front of the house and had many windows. Inside the porch was what looked like a long built-in bench that was actually storage for toys and an assortment of other things such as blankets, towels and clothing. The house and yard were taken care of by a man who owned it back then and my grandparents had a key as some of their things were kept in the storage bench until the owner could find a tenant.
On summer evenings my grandmother could be seen sitting in her Adirondack lawn chair in the front yard of the little house with her teenagers, my aunts, Sally and Sam and two of my uncles, Richard and George. My sister Penny and I were allowed to go over and some of the neighborhood kids would end up there as well and also friends of our aunts and uncles. The gathering usually evolved into a fun fest for the kids.
We’d lay on the ground looking up at the clouds, watching them change shape while we called out what they looked like. When we got restless or bored we’d pluck the stems off the narrow leaved plantain weeds with the little black heads on them that looked like raisins and curl the stems upwards to snap off the little black tops at each other while running around the yard. Inevitably one of the kids would end up falling or crying if they got snapped and Gramma would put a stop to it.
Richard and George would start swinging us around and we’d laugh and scream until they set us down and we’d stumble around from being so dizzy; we always went back for more. Sally and Sam would go into the porch and come out with a couple of blankets. We all took turns laying down in the blankets while our uncles, aunts and their friends, Rita and Loraine who were sisters, helped by picking up either end of the blankets that now looked like hammocks with a kid in them and they swung us back and forth into the air while we giggled and shrieked with delight. Gram approved, commenting it was safer than swinging kids around any other way.
Aunt Sally was very good at doing and teaching us hand stands. She and Sam and their friends also showed us how to do cartwheels. When we played games like Red Light or Simon Says, some of the dogs and barn cats liked to join in. When we tried LeapFrog one time, Gram put her foot down making it clear it wasn’t allowed on her watch.
To the far right of the front lawn was a lilac grove where my siblings and I played as did our aunts and uncles before us. It magically transformed into anything we wanted it to be. In the spring it was fragrant and beautifully dressed in its white blossoms. Further out in the yard beyond the lilacs was a small pond. Around its edge were pussy willows in early spring and also the home of cattails that both Gram and my mom loved putting in vases. We made a few rafts out of barrels and boards and had fun floating around on them pretending we were pirates until they sank. It wasn’t too deep of a pond; we always landed on our feet and were careful of the turtles and frogs.
We watched many a sunset from the lawn of this house and when it got dark, the lilac grove and the woods beyond became enchanted with fireflies. We knew once it got dark it wouldn’t be long before our parents would call us in. Sometimes my dad would come over and Penny and I would get to stay until the moon came out. When dad was there he and Gram would sing an old song I came to love called, “The Old Lamplighter” That would prompt more singing and we’d all join in. Two favorites were “K-k-k-Katy” and “Oh Susanna”.
The little house is still there and I’m happy to say a family member lives in it. I may not frequent it like I did growing up but the memories of those simpler times and what we did for fun stay with me. I still love watching the clouds, a sunrise, sunset, fireflies and the magic of a full moon. It brings back those simpler times and the faces and voices of my grandparents and all my aunts and uncles.
Rep. LaNatra applauds MassDEP decision to deny Holtec’s permit to dump 1.1 million gallons of Pilgrim wastewater into Cape Cod Bay
BOSTON – State Representative Kathy LaNatra announced that the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) today denied the permit modification sought by Holtec Decommissioning International, LLC, to discharge up to 1.1 million gallons of industrial wastewater from the former Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station into Cape Cod Bay. Cape Cod Bay is a protected ocean sanctuary as defined under the Massachusetts Ocean Sanctuaries Act, which prohibits the dumping or discharge of industrial wastes into protected state waters.
“I am thrilled with the MassDEP’s decision to deny Holtec’s request to dump over 1 million gallons of wastewater into Cape Cod Bay,” said State Rep. Kathy LaNatra (D – Kingston). “Cape Cod Bay is the lifeblood of the economy of both the South Shore and Cape Cod. People live, work and play on the water and on its shores. The plan to dump nuclear wastewater into the bay is yet another attempt by Holtec to ignore the pleas of residents in the area in an attempt to maximize their profits over the health of Cape Cod Bay. Today’s decision is the culmination of a lot of hard work by myself and my colleagues in the State Legislature, and shows what can happen when Federal, State and local officials work together towards a common goal of protecting the health and safety both of the residents that we serve as well as the environment that they, and generations to come, rely upon. I want to thank the MassDEP, the Healey-Driscoll Administration and all officials involved in this decision.”
Pilgrim stopped generating electricity in May 2019. As part of its decommissioning of the plant, Holtec requested that MassDEP modify Pilgrim’s state Surface Water Discharge Permit to authorize Holtec to discharge up to 1.1 million gallons of treated wastewater from the facility into Cape Cod Bay.
MassDEP reviewed the Holtec application, and after consultation with the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management, determined that Cape Cod Bay is a protected ocean sanctuary. The Ocean Sanctuaries Act prohibits the “dumping or discharge of commercial, municipal, domestic or industrial wastes” into ocean sanctuaries. The water that Holtec proposes to discharge qualifies as industrial wastewater, and therefore, the proposed discharge is prohibited.
MassDEP issued its final determination after holding a public hearing and public comment period and conducting an extensive review of the more than 1,000 comments received. The final determination and the public comments are available online.
MassDEP’s mission is to protect and enhance the Commonwealth’s natural resources – air, water and land – to provide for the health, safety and welfare of all people, and to ensure a clean and safe environment for future generations. In carrying out this mission, MassDEP commits to address and advance environmental justice and equity for all people of the Commonwealth; to provide meaningful, inclusive opportunities for people to participate in agency decisions that affect their lives; and to ensure a diverse workforce that reflects the communities we serve.
Environmental Groups endorse Fernandes for State Senate
Cite Fernandes’ long time leadership on climate action and renewable energy
Representative Dylan Fernandes has received the endorsement of both the Sierra Club and the Environmental League of Massachusetts (ELM) in his bid for State Senate. These endorsements from two of the most respected environmental organizations in the state underscore Fernandes’ strong record on environmental issues and his leadership in the fight against climate change.
“We need to protect the water resources of the Plymouth and Barnstable district and ensure that our communities are resilient in the face of climate change,” said Fernandes. “In 8 years as state representative, I’ve been a champion of clean air and water and we have more work ahead to protect our environment.”
“Fernandes has been a critical leader on environmental policy in his time in the legislature,” said Casey Bowers, Executive Director of the ELM Action Fund. “He has successfully championed clean water, the blue economy, and innovative ideas to ensure that Massachusetts remains a national leader in combating climate change. We are certain that he will continue to prioritize our beautiful beaches and outdoor spaces in the Senate.”
“Dylan Fernandes has been a strong advocate for clean air, clean water, and offshore wind,” said Celia Doremus, Political Chair of the Sierra Club Massachusetts Chapter. “As a member of the State House, he has sponsored and helped pass bills to support a transition to clean energy and clean water infrastructure investments. We encourage voters to support him in his race for State Senate.”
Since his initial election in 2016, Representative Fernandes has sponsored dozens of bills advancing clean air and clean water. The first bill he passed through the House was legislation signing Massachusetts onto the Paris Climate Accords in the wake of Donald Trump pulling America out of this historic agreement. He serves as Vice Chair of the Committee on the Environment and Natural Resources, and has seats on the Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy, as well as the Committee on Global Warming and Climate Change.
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