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You are here: Home / Archives for Tracy Seelye Express Editor

Clinton, Trump carry Mass.

March 7, 2016 By Tracy Seelye Express Editor

With nearly half the registered voters in both towns turning out to vote Tuesday, Whitman and Hanson backed the outsiders in both the Democratic and Republican primaries in Massachusetts. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders garnered 1,414 votes to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s 970 in Whitman, while he received 997 to Clinton’s 692 in Hanson.Statewide, Clinton carried the day by a slim margin of some 20,000 votes. Businessman Donald Trump received 1,242 votes in Whitman as Florida Sen. Marco Rubio got 292, Ohio Gov. John Kasich had 266, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz had 186 and Dr. Ben Carson had 52. Other candidates who have withdrawn from the race split 60 votes in Whitman. Trump sailed to the front of the pack in Hanson with 1,000 votes, compared with 237 for Rubio, 205 for Kasich, 194 for Cruz, 50 for Carson and 46 for withdrawn candidates or no preference. Of Whitman’s 9,909 registered voters, 4,582 — or 46 percent cast ballots. In Hanson 48 percent of the town’s 7,215 registered voters — 3,475 — cast ballots. “There was a line when polls opened this morning,” said Whitman Town Clerk Dawn Varley. “People were waiting.” She was hopeful, based on interest, phone calls and the number of people registering, that they might see a 50-percent turnout. In the first hour alone, 300 votes had been cast in Whitman.

While voters lined up to vote, sign-holders supporting candidates were an unusually rare sight during the day on Tuesday. Two, supporting Sanders in Whitman and Cruz in Hanson, spoke of their support for their respective candidates. Anastasia Mykoniatos of Whitman, holding signs for Sanders in front of the post office next door to the Town Hall polling place, was counting on a high turnout to help her candidate, who she said needed five states to stay competitive. “I like the fact that he’s paying attention to the lesser-thought of issues such as student debt and the climate change that a lot of the other people aren’t paying attention to or supporting,” she said. “I like the fact that you can trace back his stance on issues for at least two decades.” Mykoniatos noted Sanders has supported LGBT rights since 1992, while Clinton voted for the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). Sanders took four states — Vermont, Oklahoma, Minnesota, and Colorado — on Super Tuesday to Clinton’s  seven. Trump took seven — Georgia, Alabama, Massachusetts, Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee and Vermont —with Cruz winning Texas and Oklahoma and Rubio notching  his first primary win in Minnesota. “Trump scares me,” Mykoniatos said. Leslie J. Molyneaux, also a candidate for GOP state committeeman said he was backing Cruz for similar reasons.

“I’m working for Ted Cruz because he’s a constitutionalist,” Molyneaux said outside of Hanson’s Maquan School polling place. “He knows the Constitution front and back and he’s been fighting for it his whole life.”Molyneaux noted that Cruz, a former law clerk to Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist, is also the most experienced candidate in terms of governance.“He successfully argued several cases regarding personal liberty before the Supreme Court,” he said. “Donald Trump, I don’t feel, is a conservative. Donald Trump is a populist and he has reached a nerve with the American people who truly are sick of government.” But, Molyneaux said, what happens down the road has yet to be determined. “Certainly the establishment Republicans are really unhappy because they don’t have a dog in the hunt,” he said. “I think the establishment is putting all their money behind Rubio, and he’s really not one of them, but he’s closer to being one of them than Trump or Cruz is.” One local official that has gone to work for Trump as the state co-chairman of that campaign is state Rep. Geoff Diehl, R-Whitman.

“He’s clearly going to win, it’s just a question of how big,” Diehl said of Trump’s chances Tuesday morning. “Just like my run in 2010, I think Donald Trump brings that same business background to D.C. with the momentum of supporters who feel like D.C. is no longer listening to them.” Diehl compares Trump’s past business setbacks with the experimental failures Thomas Edison experienced while inventing the light bulb. He also noted that the economic climate of the past few years has made Trump realize that government has done a poor job of allowing businesses to grow. “I’m a  Cruz man, but Geoff is a good man,” Molyneaux said.

Filed Under: Featured Story, News

Brady wins state senate seat

November 6, 2015 By Tracy Seelye Express Editor

Brady wins state senate seat, Geoff Diehl strong in suburbs as a tale of two districts emerges

By Tracy F. Seelye
and Deborah Anderson
Express staff

As many political watchers had predicted, Brockton’s landslide win for state Rep. Mike Brady, D-Brockton, Tuesday was too big for state Rep. Geoff Diehl, R-Whitman, to overcome despite big wins in all but one other town in the 2nd Plymouth and Bristol District.

Brady wins state senate seat“I’m very humbled by all the support,” Brady told supporters Tuesday night. “It was from all of your efforts all across [the district].”

Diehl, for his part, told supporters, “you have to try, you can’t just cede this race,” in his remarks at Whitman’s VFW.

“We’ve had the best supporters I’ve ever seen,” said Diehl, whose campaign out-spent Brady’s two-to-one. “A lot of people thought this race was unwinnable from the get-go. … We looked at the numbers and felt it [was] a potentially winnable race.”

But Brady held on to win the state senate seat — vacant since the death last June of state Sen. Tom Kennedy, D-Brockton — by a margin of 14,381 to 10,242 for Diehl and 643 for Halifax Independent Anna Grace Raduc.

Kennedy was much on Brady’s mind as he gave his victory speech.

“He was a great friend and mentor to myself and a lot of others and he was also a man of great faith and truth,” Brady said. “He would let me know if my tie wasn’t straight or whether I needed a haircut.”

He also thanked his two opponents in the race.

“You’ve got to give them a lot of credit, everybody ran a great race,” Brady said, noting it was now time to “keep this community and this district moving forward” citing, in particular, veterans’ legislation he is supporting.

Diehl said he views his wins in the suburbs as a “win overall,” and  made a promise to supporters.

“I will not stop working hard for you everyday as your state representative,” Diehl said. “You elected me — not power-brokers up on Beacon Hill — and I’m still going to stand up to special interests.”

Rather than look on the result simply as a loss, Diehl called it “an opportunity to gauge the work to be done” to ensure greater balance on Beacon Hill.

Brady garnered 11,193 votes in Brockton to Diehl’s 3,594. Brady also edged Diehl in the portion of Easton that falls in the district — 397 to 388 with 9 going for Raduc.

Elsewhere, it was all Diehl, but not by enough to overcome Brockton’s 7,599-vote differential.

Whitman went big for its “native son” giving Diehl 1,930 votes to Brady’s 727. Hanson cast 1,142 votes for Diehl and 494 for Brady. Halifax voted 592 for Diehl and 288 for Brady and Plympton gave 229 votes to Diehl and 90 to Brady. In East Bridgewater voters gave their state Rep. Diehl 1,037 to Brady’s 423 and in Hanover, Diehl garnered 1,350 to Brady’s 775.

Raduc received 506 votes in Brockton, 12 votes in East Bridgewater, 21 in Hanson, 13 in Plympton, 32 in Whitman and 41 in Halifax.

In Whitman, 28 percent of the town’s 9,659 voters cast ballots. Hanson saw a 23 percent turnout.

“Geoff Diehl has the hometown advantage,” Whitman Selectman Dan Salvucci said Tuesday afternoon. “In the district, I think that Geoff has worked so hard that it’s almost like he has a right  to get it, but the fact is if he doesn’t win it’s not from a lack of trying.  He’s done it all — he’s knocked on doors in all the towns in the district, especially Brockton, and win or lose, he’s done his best.”

It was a concern  Diehl supporters voiced all day.

“He’s been doing great everywhere, but Brockton’s iffy,” said Whitman resident Joe Goldsberry, holding signs for Diehl Tuesday morning, of his candidate’s chances. “Hopefully there’ll be a low turnout in Brockton.”

Whitman Town Clerk Dawn Varley  had ventured to guess shortly after the polls opened Tuesday that Diehl’s candidacy could translate into a 13 percent turnout in town.

In Hanson, where several poll workers brought knitting projects to pass the time during lulls, Town Clerk Beth Sloan said the special primary turnout in September was already been exceeded before 9 a.m. Tuesday. One poll worker competed an entire blanket during the 3-percent primary turnout in September.

On Tuesday, the projects included a baby blanket, sweaters and at least one pair of socks. Sloan was hopeful voters would be interrupting the handicrafts often, with the 23 percent turnout, she got her wish.

Filed Under: More News Left

‘Chicken Boy’ Joe Freitas remembered

August 13, 2015 By Tracy Seelye Express Editor

Coming home to roost

NEWS-WHP-ChixBarn-36

SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT: Parent volunteers and members of the Hanson-based United Bantams 4-H Club stand behind their renovation work at the Marshfield Fairgrounds. Photo by Tracy Seelye.

MARSHFIELD — The United Bantams 4-H Club, based in Hanson, is a group of chicken enthusiasts on a mission for the 148th annual Marshfield Fair Aug. 21-30.

They’ve spent the past month working two to three times a week — almost 40 hours — renovating the old 4-H poultry barn at the Marshfield Fairgrounds. Members and parent volunteers have been updating displays and cages as well as adding new features to a wing of an L-shaped building they will share with a photography competition and model train display.

The chickens have, indeed, come home to roost — and they’ll be joined by ducks and some other feathered friends.

“We’ve been doing a ton of work,” said United Bantams leader Mary Drake, whose club includes members from Hanson, Whitman, Abington, Pembroke, Plympton and other Plymouth County communities. “The chicken barn has not been represented by 4-H for a long time — it’s not a 4-H barn.”

Neighboring dairy and sheep barns, by contrast, had retained their 4-H management all along. As she spoke parent volunteers Peter Trask and Shawn Barry were climbing up on the roof to restore the “Poultry Show” sign Trask’s wife Lisa repainted, along with a sign bearing the 4-H four-leaf clover logo.

“There was a falling out many years ago and what we’re trying to do is mend some bridges, and get this back to being a 4-H barn,” Drake said.

The late Plympton Selectman Joseph Freitas “taught us everything about raising chickens,” according to Drake. He instructed the United Bantam members how to hold, feed and care for their birds.

“Mr. Freitas loved his chickens,” she said. “He was a great guy — and he was here every year and always helping and always right there with everybody.”

Freitas, known as “chicken boy” among friends, was active in the Plymouth County 4-H program for 25 years as the leader of the Fowl Play Poultry Club of East Middleboro and served on the Board of Trustees.

His widow Jacqueline, who attended a recent “Chicken Run” obstacle course fund raiser to help pay for the barn renovation, is scheduled to be the guest of honor at a ribbon-cutting for the rehabbed poultry barn Thursday, Aug. 20 — the night before the fair opens­ — according to Drake.

After a lengthy absence in the county, the United Bantams 4-H Club was the first poultry club to return. Drake noted there are now almost a half-dozen poultry clubs in Plymouth County.

Among the nearly 20 members of United Bantams, some joined to forge friendships as well as to learn more about backyard poultry. Among those is Isabel Barry, 14, of Hanson.

“When I first moved to Hanson I didn’t have any friends,” she said, noting it takes time to get to know people in a new town. “I was basically bored all day.”

Her grandmother had also suggested she join 4-H.

“The chicken barn was always my favorite out of all the barns,” she said.  “When I found Mary’s group, I just loved the atmosphere.”

James Furness, 16, of Abington has been active in backyard chicken raising since he was in the first grade. His two brothers found it less enthralling, mom Lisa noted.

“I always loved the baby chicks and they always asked, ‘What are you going to do when they grow up and become chickens?’” James said.

By the time he began 4-H three years ago, he had begun his own project with three full-grown laying hens. He built his own coop with the help of his dad Bill, who has been a carpenter for 30 years.

James’ assorted flock of seven hens all have names, flouting rule one of farming, “Don’t make them pets,” he joked.

Khloe Drake, 9, followed her mom into raising chickens, saying she likes their soft feathers best.

“We have big chickens, small chickens, all kinds of stuff,” Mary Drake said of United Bantams. “There are more backyard chicken farms than there are for cows and horses combined.”

That growth has occurred within the past five to 10 years — and can be found in some urban settings as well.

“We’re trying to show that it is so predominant that it should have a face,” Drake said as parent volunteers and club members unloaded wood, paint and tools; took cages apart to clean and paint and sand plywood appliqué pieces for a mural backing a nesting box and brooder display where patrons can watch chickens lay eggs and watch eggs hatch.

“Kids could get nose-to-nose with a cow, nose-to-nose with a sheep, a llama or a pig, but they couldn’t get nose-to-nose with a chicken, so we’re making that possible by revamping the barn,” she said. “Every bird in the coop is tested for influenza and pullorum-typhoid. They all have leg bands and have to have a certificate.”

State health regulations also require all poultry exhibited must be free of visual evidence of infectious bronchitis, coryza, fowl-pox, external parasites and laryngotraceitis.

“Nose-to-nose,” or nose-to-beak in this case, means birds will be displayed on lower levels where children can see them, and Plexiglass will be used for safety in some areas — especially in the nesting and brooder display. Steps will be placed near the nesting boxes (which are open in the back) so children can see better. Brooders, where eggs hatch and new chicks are kept warm, will also be lower.

An indoor duckling slide will be included as well as “Mustang,” a resident duck who will be waddling about the nesting area among the chickens because he would be lonely if left home by himself, Drake said. Mustang will also have a small pool, to be placed under a tree on which chickens may perch. Outdoors, about 30 ducks will be splashing and swimming about in a fenced-in duck pond.

“Someone will be available at all times to answer questions, holding chickens so children can touch and pet them,” Drake said. Parents are very involved in the club, which Drake noted is not a “drop-off club” and all parents of club members are CORI checked.

Shawn Barry of Hanson has done much of the construction work along with Bill Furness of Abington.

“There’s no shortage of energy around here,” Barry said Sunday morning as United Bantam members rushed about to figure out which projects they wanted to work on. “We just need to harness it.”

Filed Under: News

Region mourns Senator Tom Kennedy

July 2, 2015 By Tracy Seelye Express Editor

TPK-headshot

Thomas P. Kennedy

State and local officials who have worked with state Sen. Thomas P. Kennedy, D-Brockton, expressed shock and sadness at his death.

According to Legistlative Aide Michael King, Kennedy died at Signature Health Care-Brockton Hospital surrounded by family and friends on Sunday, June 28.

“Senator Kennedy proudly represented the 2nd Plymouth and Bristol District in the Massachusetts State Senate since 2009,” Kennedy’s family noted in a brief statement Monday morning. “Prior to joining the Senate, Tom served as a State Representative for his beloved city of Brockton since 1983.

Senator Kennedy also served the city of Brockton as a City Councilor and as the city’s first Ombudsman.

“He will be deeply missed by all who knew him,” the Kennedy family stated.

Statehouse colleagues were also deeply affected by news of his death.

“From the time I met Senator Kennedy, when he was visiting the Whitman Finance Committee meeting when I was still a member, to just a few weeks ago when we saw each other at the East Bridgewater Memorial Day ceremony, he was always active in the community and available to talk about legislation pending at the State House or to celebrate the retirement of people who had served their towns or the state after years of service,” said state Rep. Geoff Diehl, R-Whitman.

While Diehl said it was an honor to serve and work with Kennedy to pass not only local home-rule bills, block grants to fund senior housing, and critical financial reform bills, he also appreciated Kennedy’s personal touch as a constituent.

“Just a year ago, Tom was good enough to take the time to come and speak at the ribbon-cutting of the new studio facility for my wife’s business in Hanson and it seems hard to believe that a year later, he is gone,” Diehl said. “His life was dedicated to spending time with the people of the towns he represented and his passing is a great loss to us all. I ask that we all remember him as the great public servant he was and that we pray for his close friends and family at this difficult time.”

State Rep. Thomas J. Calter, D-Kngston, had this to say:

“I feel blessed to have known Sen. Kennedy as a legislator and as a friend. I was fortunate to have shared several personal moments with him over the last ten days. His sage words of advice will never be forgotten. Tom set the standard for those of us who choose to work in service to others. God broke the mold when He made Tom Kennedy.”

Kennedy had been a quadriplegic since 1970, when he broke his neck in a fall while washing windows. He was a 19-year-old seminary student at the time.

“He was a great guy. He helped a lot of people, he was very humble,” said his cousin, Fran Cruise, who works with Old Colony Elder Services. “You’d try to thank him for something and he’d say, ‘Oh, no, no, no, I don’t want any praise.’ This is how he was. It’s sad.”

Cruise indicated that Kennedy had been ill for a while, having undergone “major surgery” in the fall and battled pneumonia a few weeks ago.

“He was always out — functions, everywhere — and that stopped him,” she said of the surgery. “I know that affected him because he was [usually] never home.”

While he looked good when she saw him at Easter, Cruise noted that his health had prevented him from attending Mass for a time and kept him from attending St. Patrick’s Day events — his favorites.

“He’ll be missed,” Cruise said.

Filed Under: News

Celebrating the life of Bruce Wood

April 27, 2015 By Tracy Seelye Express Editor

‘We will see him again,’ family, friends of Bruce Wood assured.

Bruce Wood

Bruce Wood

HALIFAX — Family, friends and fellow firefighters said goodbye to the man many knew as “Wood Duck” on a raw and rainy spring morning Friday, April 17.

The hearse carrying 43-year Halifax Fire Department veteran Bruce Wood, escorted by Halifax police and fire vehicles, passed the Town Cemetery — where he would be laid to rest — and under a giant American flag suspended from a HFD aerial ladder, on its way to a funeral service in Halifax Congregational Church. The department formed an honor guard to escort Wood’s casket into the church where an hour-long visitation preceded his funeral.

“Every Sunday and every Wednesday without fail, Bruce would stand and sing the songs that we’re going to sing today,” said the Rev. Joseph Wadsworth in his greeting to the mourners crowding the sanctuary. “He would sing with joy in his heart, conviction in his soul and a smile on his face.”

Two hymns, “Saved By The Blood” and “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus,” opened the service, which was closed with “Amazing Grace” and “On Eagle’s Wings.”

A celebration of his life, Wood’s funeral service honored his evangelical commitment to Christ as much as his humor and love for duck hunting and motorcycles.

“Growing up we called him anything,” his sister Beth Wood recalled with a smile as she recalled his first “cycle” — an old Vespa scooter he obtained when he “felt the need for speed.”

“At that time, we called him Easy Rider, Hell’s Angel, he loved it because he thought he was going fast” around area bogs, she said fondly. “The name Wood Duck came along, thanks to his hunting friends.”

“As there is a species of waterfowl called wood ducks, and Wood was a good shot who loved duck hunting, so a nickname was born. But this was a man known more for his dedication to faith than his recreational pursuits,” she added.

“After Chris passed away, my brother changed, and changed for the good,” she said. “He refound his faith in God. He was happier. He even smiled even more, if you can imagine.”

Several members of the clergy and friends spoke of how Wood’s rededication to his faith helped him cope with the death of his only son Christopher, who was killed in a motorcycle crash in 2009 at age 21.

“I believe God saw his good works and need him to come home,” Beth Woods concluded. “My brother was right with God.”

The Rev. Henry “Hank” Belcher, retired from Silver Lake Chapel in Plympton, described Wood’s return to faith following his son’s death.

“I guess I was one of the lucky ones, I knew Bruce when he was a kid,” Belcher said, describing him as a typical boy before talking about the call he received from Wood about his son’s death.

“He loved his son very much — he loved all of you very much,” Belcher said. “At the end of the [son’s funeral] service he said, ‘Hank, I’m going to come to church.’ That was a shocker.

“He came to church, and he came every Sunday,” he said joyfully. Belcher even gave Wood a Bible when he said he didn’t have one.

“He read it and he became a different person,” Belcher recalled. “He was a loving soul — he loved everybody.”

When Belcher retired, Wood decided he needed to find another church and on Belcher’s advice to pray about it, found Bible Baptist Church in Hanson. Belcher also encouraged Wood in his decision to become the Halifax Fire Department chaplain.

“Bruce is gone, but his memory will never be gone,” Belcher said. “God has given us a wonderful gift — we are walking computers. We have memories, and I pray the memories we have of Bruce will carry us through the days ahead of us. We will see him again.”

Pastor Mike Fernandez of Bible Baptist Church, where Wood was a member at the time of his death, said in his sermon, “Bruce was a straight-shooter,” with an assignment.

“He was praying he’d get everybody in the church one day,” Fernandez said. “Well, Bruce, here you are. … Right now, Bruce’s death is doing the work of an evangelist.”

It was also the work he did in life, handing out Gospel tracts, inviting people to church, praying for them and witnessing about Jesus.

“Bruce had the spirit of God inside him.” Fernandez said.

Fellow Bible Baptist Church member Peter Flores honored his friend as a “man of integrity — an honest man.”

Wood’s friend Harry Anderson remembered Wood’s smile under a giant black mustache when they first met each other in the 1970s.

He told of how Wood helped him impress his future wife with an airplane ride to view foliage, as well as their spring break adventure in Key West, Fla., and a winter hunting misadventure in the Berkshires.

Anderson, too, spoke of Wood’s spiritual rebirth after his son’s death.

“He was a better man for it,” he said.

After the service, mourners escorted Wood’s casket back under the flag, as it billowed in the breeze, to graveside services at Halifax Town Cemetery.

Filed Under: News

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