Representative William Straus kept a 6:15 pm appointment with the Marion Select Board on Tuesday night at the Music Hall, offering encouraging overtures of more financial support from the state, but at the same time cautioning against being overly optimistic.
The Mattapoisett resident’s advocacy of Marion’s infrastructural upgrades, particularly the recently completed lagoon cleanup, has been impactful for a small town facing enormous expense in the present and future.
On Tuesday, Straus reported that the House has approved a $25,000 grant to go toward utility connections at the Cushing Community Center. The bill would next go over to the Senate. “Typically, it’s unlikely the Senate follows exactly what we do,” he said. Straus anticipates that Senate action would be presented in late June to Governor Baker, who in turn would sign off in the weeks and months following.
In summarizing the state government’s activities where it concerns Marion’s lagoon project, Straus said $2,000,000 in funding was based on a 2018 bond bill. Marion received a $250,000 payment.
The state Department of Environmental Protection, he said, was in touch last week about advancing another $250,000. If the trend continues, he said, in a couple years, the project will have received half of the earmarked $2,000,000.
Straus also was able to procure $50,000 to go toward the Creek Road pumping station project.
The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARPA) is responsible for that sum, and Straus told the Select Board that the governor over the last couple of weeks filed Step 2 ARPA proposals.
A number of local projects could be impacted by another potential $2,000,000, but Straus cautioned that expectations don’t always carry out. “I don’t want people’s expectations to be too high on that,” he said, noting a plan to clarify the direction of the funding with the governor.
The obvious hope is that over the next three months, the Creek Road pumping station could receive impactful funding. Straus said that the earlier numbers proved to be “pretty solid. The town is getting the kind of cooperation from the DEP that they deserve.”
Town Administrator Jay McGrail said, “not everyone gets that kind of attention, I really appreciate it.”
“The money really matters,” said John Waterman in his final meeting as a member of the Select Board.
Straus said the Marion Select Board is “always a good board to work with.”
The board wasted little time before voting to approve the Request for Determination of Eligibility for 0 and 78 Wareham Road, paving the way for a simple majority vote on developer Matt Zuker’s proposal to change his Route 6 property to Residence Zone E (multi-family.)
Zuker’s “The Cottages” townhouse-style, market-rate housing complex is strongly favored by the Planning Board and Select Board as a smart-growth opportunity for Marion.
The same zoning proposal, then requiring a super majority (two-thirds) ended in a split at Town Meeting last fall and was defeated.
Based on a state amendment, the town will ask voters at the May 9 Town Meeting for a simple majority vote to approve the zoning change, after which Zuker’s project will go through a full vetting process.
Waterman said that the usage of the law is project-specific, and while the Select Board members “have the back of the Planning Board … this will be case by case,” he said.
Suspecting that Lockheed Martin will put its property up for sale in the coming days, McGrail has worked several months with the Affordable Housing Trust and consultant Judy Barrett on a Development Plan that the Planning Board reviewed on Monday night and the Select Board on Tuesday.
Both boards authorized McGrail to send the conceptual plan to Lockheed Martin on Wednesday in hopes that it will facilitate a sale to a party that could partner with the town on a key development for Marion’s long-term future.
Paul Naiman updated the Select Board on the Cushing Community Center food pantry that was approved to open in December. Naiman reported that the pantry has assisted 501 people, not only seniors but on a wide-ranging demographic. “The residents have been incredibly supportive of our effort,” he said.
Among the 501 people, 282 households were represented with Tuesdays the most popular day of the week, especially between 4:00 and 6:00 pm, accounting for 50 percent of the visits. Thursdays and Saturdays (10:00 am to 2:00 pm) are equally divided.
The demographics were broken down to 55 percent seniors, approximately one-third ages 18-64 and 12 percent under age 17.
Citing a bevy of volunteers, Naiman also noted that the pantry has received $6,000 in cash donations that he would like to see used to expand the pantry’s offerings beyond the steady stream of items that come from Boston Food Bank through the local YMCA. The pantry, he said, has been offered a refrigeration unit.
Naiman thanked Tabor Academy for its donation of 100 hams at Easter.
He would also like to talk to Rochester and Mattapoisett representatives about partnering with them and opening up Marion’s food pantry to those towns. That is a matter that Naiman said will eventually come back before the Select Board.
As outreach and publicity increases, Naiman said, the pantry will be able to do more.
Parker pointed out in part for Straus’ benefit that the pantry is based at the Community Center, the subject of the $25,000 grant announced early in the meeting.
Karen Gregory of the Council on Aging has been the point person for the project.
McGrail said that, during the May 13 Town Election, a food drive will be held in the Community Center parking lot with an emphasis on items not supplied by the Boston Food Bank including condiments and cat and dog food..
In a 6:30 pm appointment, the board voted to approve the appointment of Marion Police Officer Sean McAssey as a part-time officer. In announcing McAssey’s retirement effective May 8, Chief of Police Richard Nighelli said it has been a “pleasure to work with Mr. Waterman.”
McAssey spent 20 years on police forces, working in several departments, including the U.S. Army National Guard from 1984 to 1990.
Nighelli said he appreciates McAssey seeking the convenience of the department in timing out his retirement from full-time duty. McAssey was the recipient of a commendation for the apprehension of a dangerous suspect in a breaking-and-entering case including pursuit on foot. Nighelli also read the testimony of a resident whose daughter was traumatized lauding McAssey of his kindness and professionalism.
“We very much appreciate your down-home touch here in Marion,” said Select Board member Randy Parker.
“I’ll miss it,” said McAssey.
In his Town Administrator’s Report, McGrail noted key dates including: Annual Town Meeting Monday on Monday, May 9, at 6:45 pm at Sippican Elementary School; Candidates Night hosted by The Wanderer on Friday, May 6, at 5:00 pm at the Music Hall; and the Town Election on Friday, May 13, from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm at the Cushing Community Center.
In bidding an official farewell to Waterman, McGrail thanked him for “tireless enthusiasm for this truly thankless job. … John has challenged me over the last few years, and that challenge has made me a better town administrator,” said McGrail. “John never takes the easy way out. We wish him and Mallory the best in the future.”
The board presented Waterman a plaque to commemorate his four years of service and a cake.
Waterman called it a “great four years” and said he could not have worked with “two greater people,” calling them a team that worked really well.
In other business, the board approved with stipulations George Morton’s sewer-connection application at 17 Hermitage Road. They also approved a Water/Sewer commitment of $777.14 (final readings April 27.)
The next meeting of the Marion Select Board will take place at the Annual Town Meeting, Monday, May 9, at 6:45 pm at Sippican Elementary School.
Marion Select Board
By Mick Colageo