Neighborhood News Inc.

"Your Hometown News"
Announcements
Obituaries
Pick up a paper
Advertising Info
Photo Reprints
Subscribe!
Contact Us

Bedford Bulletin - Bow Times - Goffstown News - Hooksett Banner - The NH Mirror - Salem Observer
Updated: 4/21/05

The Goffstown News ­ January 29, 2004

 

This week's stories: (click on the headline to jump to story)
The primary descends on Goffstown
Schools to review freezing incident
Kindergarten top item on school district warrant
Charter commission to be deliberated at Feb. 4 session
Proposed school budget is $8.7 million in Weare
Budget would hike rate by 46 cents per $1,000


Goffstown

The primary descends on Goffstown

By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com

When Sully's newest bagboy stepped up and served his first customer, you could tell there was something different about him.
For starters ­ most bagboys aren't followed by a pack of two dozen photographers, cameramen, boom-mike operators and media advisors.

And most bagboys' short-term career plans usually involve a $1 an hour raise ­ and that coveted cashier's job.
This one, however, wanted more. He wanted your vote ­ and the title "Mr. President."

Gen. Wesley Clark, contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, swept into Sully's last Thursday, Jan. 22, bringing with him a media horde that watched his every move and listened to his every word.

 

 CENTER OF ATTENTION: Attracting more of a crowd than the usual guy, Democratic presidential candidate Gen. Wesley Clark chats with a customer during his stint as a bagboy at Sully's in Goffstown. In the Feb. 27 primary, Clark tied for third place with South Carolina Sen. John Edwards and Connecticut Sen. Joseph Leiberman. (R. Choma Photo)

"General Clark, was it hard to make the move from four-star general to bagger?" asked one television reporter. All the shuffling and elbowing stopped for a moment and the crowd of microphones inched closer to Wes Clark's face.

"Not at all ­ I'm here to serve!" he replied earnestly, before turning to his customer to ask, "Paper or plastic?"
As the cameras flashed, the knot of media surged closer to get the best shot.

Standing a few feet back, a handful of bemused shoppers looked on.

"Look!" says one, his voice dripping with sarcasm, "An 'authentic' New Hampshire moment!"

Like clockwork, every four years America's political movers and shakers show up at authentic hometown locales like Sully's in a mad rush in search of that authentic New Hampshire moment.

   Sully's manager Michael Ducharme said it was not the market's idea for Clark to take the bagging gig. Instead, he said, the store had been approached by the campaign staff.

And although Clark worked at an achingly slow pace, taking plenty of time to chat with each of the three or four customers he helped during his 20-minute stint, Ducharme had little to complain about. Or at least nothing about his new bagger.

"It went well," Ducharme said, pausing before listing his sole complaint, "Except for the reporters. They could've given more respect to the customers. I know they're looking for their photo shots, but they could've been better with how they took the pictures.
"They were crowding up the front end and standing on registers," Ducharme added.

 Putting Goffstown in the spotlight for a day, more than 600 credentialed journalists converged on Saint Anselm College for the final debate before the primary. (R. Choma Photo)


Despite the mob atmosphere the unruly herd of journalists brought into the store, Ducharme said he personally enjoyed the visit, especially how the candidate stopped and talked with Goffstown residents.

"I thought it was impressive," he said. "It was very nice that a candidate came into the store to see what we do. He talked to some of the employees and listened to the customers."

Debate at Saint Anselm

To a certain degree, this year's primary season was no different than any other.

Clark's visit to Sully's might have been a first in recent memory, but it is a scene that has been played out time and again over the years. If they don't go to a local market like Sully's, then they turn up at chicken dinners in church basements or on the sidelines of your kid's hockey game.

This year's election cycle, however, brought Goffstown more than its usual flood of attention.

When Saint Anselm College hosted a nationally televised debate on Jan. 22, almost 2,000 people flooded onto the small Benedictine college's campus.

Some, like Saint Anselm freshman Melissa Jenkins, welcomed the influx of candidates, campaign staffers and national media.
In fact, the 18-year-old Jenkins said many of her peers were ready and willing to be courted by the campaigns.

"We're the most impressionable group," she said. "If you hook us now, we'll stay with you. And we're looking for people to reach out to us."

During the debate, Jenkins was in the Carr Activities Center working as a student volunteer. The cavernous fieldhouse in Carr was turned into a media filing center ­ complete with dozens of televisions showing the candidates, telephone lines and wireless Internet connections ­ to serve the small army of journalists who had arrived for the event.

Jenkins and a number of other students had volunteered through the college's New Hampshire Institute of Politics to serve as runners for the event.

Jenkins and several other student volunteers said it was a bit overwhelming to return to campus only several days before the debate and see all of the campaigns and media at their school.

Walking up the icy path toward the filing center, it was easy to see why Saint Anselm students might feel overwhelmed.
Loosely contained by temporary fencing and the watchful eye of dozens of local police officers, hundreds of campaign staffers, volunteers and supporters rallied to show support for their preferred candidate.

Students going to and from dinner before the debate carefully weaved their way through the circus-like scene.

Some stopped to watch the rally, others stood laughing and took pictures, while some simply shook their heads and walked away. Faced with the constant racket of each group of supporters trying to out-shout each other, not to mention a large drum circle formed by the Kucinich contingent, the mixed response seemed understandable.

Back inside the media center, student volunteer Talia Hallet, 18, of North Straham, said there were some on campus who weren't all that enthusiastic about the political hoopla.

"There are probably some who don't care about it," she said. "There are probably some who are just like, 'Get these people off campus.' But there's a group who is really interested and wants to take part."

That included some students who said that if the campaigns had not come to campus, they may not have taken an interest in the primary at all.

Student volunteer Jason Landri, 18, of New Canaan Conn., who was helping out with security in the media center, said his group of friends were not interested in the primary.

However, when he had the opportunity to volunteer, Landri said he took the chance.

"My friends aren't really interested and they asked me why I was even interested," he said. "But I saw it as a helpful learning experience."

One aspect which the student volunteers said they did not like was that despite being on their campus, only a handful of students and faculty were allowed to attend the debate.

John Bozicas, a senior sociology major, said it was disappointing. But the fact that his college was being featured so prominently across the nation made up for it.

"It was somewhat frustrating, because (the debate and the primaries are) such a big thing," he said. "But these past couple weeks were so overwhelming knowing all eyes are on us."

Fellow student Hallet agreed.

"It's bringing a lot of attention to the school," she said. "Just seeing all the TV crews and everybody come on campus, people are starting to realize the potential for greatness here."

Barbara LeBlanc, director of news and information at the college, said whatever attention hosting the debate had brought to the college was worth it.

"I don't know what lasting effect something like this has," she said. "But it certainly brings Saint Anselm College to the attention of people who might not have ever heard of it."

LeBlanc also said the debate was a victory for the college's four-year-old Institute of Politics, proving that it was a "true venue for political debate and expression."

"I think we've proven to the world at large that we can pull this off," LeBlanc said.

 

Goffstown

Schools to review freezing incident

By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com

School administrators say they are working on a plan to prevent a recurrence of last week's incident at Mountain View Middle School in which a fire alarm forced the evacuation of students who stood outside in freezing temperatures without their coats on.

A fire alarm on Jan. 23 left more than 1,200 students and staff standing outside in temeratures in the teens.

The alarm, caused by a power surge, forced the entire building to evacuate, and many students left the building without warm clothing.

At the time the evacuation occurred, around 9:30 a.m., temperatures were around 15 degrees, with a windchill of 11 below zero.
It is estimated that some students had to stay outside for about 13 minutes until the fire department could arrive to secure the building. After returning inside, 60 students were evaluated for hypothermia and eight were treated at the hospital.

Rose Colby, principal, said that in terms of the school's actual response to the alarm, the evacuation went flawlessly. Unfortunately, she said, not all the students were prepared for the cold.

Colby and SAU 19 Superintendent Darrell Lock-wood, both said the situation raised a number of issues which are currently being dealt with.

Colby said school officials have discussed with the staff what occurred, and are currently in the process of developing an appropriate response to similar incidents in the future.

She said the school's safety committee will meet next week to work on some recommendations.

Lockwood stressed that any recommendations will not be final because the district and its schools are constantly updating their safety plans.

"We'll continue to brainstorm and hopefully come up with some ideas," he said. "But I don't know if a safety plan is ever final. You have to create contingencies for many what-ifs."

Colby said even though school officials are working on developing a more permanent solution to this type of situation, some strategies have already been developed.

One major focus, Colby said, is that if a similar situation were to arise the first priority will be to determine the type of emergency as quickly as possible. Once it is established whether certain areas of the building are secure, students could quickly be moved into that area.

"It's our goal that if the kids go out, we get them back in quickly," she said.

Colby said her staff had also been made aware of cold-specific issues.

"We continue to look at the availability of coats and coats that can go outside," she said. "And we've made (the teachers) more aware of the first-aid issues with cold."

Other strategies that have been discussed included putting smaller kids in the center of a barrier of people wearing coats.

Overall, both Colby and Lockwood said they were pleased with the way the actual evacuation was carried out. Now, they both said, the goal is to establish a reliable way to address an unexpected circumstance like extreme cold.

"I think we've learned from what we did," Colby said. "And we're going to formalize that feedback so we don't end up saying, 'Yeah, we're going to do (this plan),' and then find out it didn't really work."

 

Goffstown

Kindergarten top item on school district warrant

By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com

Approval of a new kindergarten for next year is among the four articles on this year's school warrant.

Voters will have the op-portunity to propose amendments to the articles at the deliberative session. At that session, any registered voter can propose an amendment to the warrants, and if a simple majority of voters approves it, the changes will be made.

The meeting will be held at Goffstown AREA High School at 7 p.m. on Feb. 2.

The four warrants which will be presented are:
Article 1: Election of new school board members. There are three members up for re-election.

Article 2: Approval of a new kindergarten. This is an idea which has been discussed for almost 20 years, and last year was defeated by only 15 votes.

This year's proposal, developed by a committee of town residents, parents and school administrators, would cost taxpayers significantly less than last year's kindegarten proposal.

The entire project will cost $3.3 million, but through the use of state aid, impact fees and money from the unreserved fund, the actual cost to taxpayers will be $256,202. This money will be raised in one year and not bonded.

"Because the project now nets out in the $200,000 range, it makes it more affordable to the town and also allows us to do it in one year," said Kindergarten Committee Chairman Peter Oseicki.

If approved by voters, the impact on the tax rate would be 21 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value. This means the owner of a $250,000 house would pay approximately $52 this year to fund the construction.

Article 3: Approval of the AREA Plan. This article asks voters to approve modifications made to the AREA agreement that were made during renegotiations this past year.

Article 4: District Operating Budget. On Article 4, voters are asked to approve the district's operating budget for the upcoming year, which totals $27.1 million.

This budget is significantly lower than what the school board originally proposed after the budget committee cut significant sums.
Funding for the high school's football program, which the budget committee originally cut, has been returned to this budget.

This budget is recommended by both the budget committee and the school board.

 

Goffstown

Charter commission to be deliberated at Feb. 4 session

By KATE BENWAY
Staff Writer
kbenway@yourneighborhoodnews.com

A cost-saving recycling program, upped elderly tax exemptions, a measure to create a charter commission and the third year of the road improvement plan are among the proposed warrant articles up for voter approval at the Wednes-day, Feb. 4., deliberative session of the Town Meeting.

The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. at the Goffstown AREA High School.

Voters will encounter 19 warrant articles, a handful of them zoning amendments, and will cast ballots on the measures on Tuesday, March 9, at Goffstown AREA High School.

Recycling proposal could affect proposed budget

Article 7 asks voters for $578,541 to initiate a curbside recycling program, and for authorization to issue a $533,800 bond from that funding for the capital expenses associated with starting the program.

The bond will cover a truck, a new building and barrels, while the $44,741 in operating costs will be generated through property taxes.

The idea, said town officials, is to encourage greater recycling, which could generate a sizable savings in trash disposal. The more residents recycling, the less trash they throw out ­ and the less the town pays for disposal, they said.

In fact, officials anticipate the savings generated from the program will cover the cost of the bond. And for the years after the repayment of the bond, officials said the town could save an extra $100,000 annually.

"Financially, it makes sense," said town administrator Sue Desruisseaux. "This year's proposal is different from last year's in that people don't need to sort their recyclables."

Residents will be given a 65-gallon blue barrel in which to pile unsorted recycling. A town truck will pick up the barrels.

"Hopefully, if recycling is easier, people will do it more and it will cost us less to dispose of trash," said Desruisseaux.
If the article passes, the town's operating budget will be reduced by $69,475, which is equivalent to about four months of the recycling contract.

Before that possible reduction, residents will see a proposed $14.8 million operating budget, with a default budget set at $14.3 million.

Road repair up again

Also up for consideration is the third year installment of the 20-year road improvement plan. Article 9 asks voters to devote $1.8 million to the plan, which is designed to get the town's roads up to par and set for consistent maintenance.

With that kind of attention, officials have said, the town will have to devote less money to major road repairs in the long-run.

The town's budget committee requested the appropriation be broken out into a separate warrant article, rather than remain as a budget line item.

Elderly and veterans exemptions upped

Meanwhile, town officials want to increase the elderly tax exemptions to even out the burden seniors felt after last year's revaluation.

"This will bring us up to the same levels as Bedford," said Desruisseaux.

The exemptions allow seniors a deduction on their assessed property values; as a result, they are taxed on less.

There are a number of qualifying factors, including a comprehensive analysis of a senior's assets.

If the article passes,the exemptions, broken out into age categories, would be as follows: those 65 to 75 may take $25,000 (up from $10,000) off their property value; those 75 to 80 may take $30,000 (up from $15,000) off; and those 80 or older may shave $40,000 (up from $20,000) off their assessments.

There are a handful of other petitioned warrant articles intended to bring the town in line with newly expanded state veterans tax credits.

Two of the credits, each granting $1,400 to veterans or their surviving spouse, would be raised to $2,000 if the articles pass.
Another, used by over 700 households in town, would bring the existing $100 tax credit on veterans' residential property up to $500.

Creating a charter commission

Asking voters to establish a charter commission, article 13 will be presented by selectmen, rather than by petition, as originally planned.

The move will save the town from paying for two special elections. If the article had continued as a petition, the town would have needed to hold a special election asking whether or not voters want to create the commission. And, upon passage, another election would be needed to elect commissioners.

With the current presentation, if the articles passes, the town will spend about $5,000 to hold a special charter commission election.

The commission would then consider proposing revision to the town's charter, which could result in a change in Goffstown's governing system.

Other requests

Among other articles: a request to devote $80,000 to the conservation capital reserve fund and a pitch to funnel $15,000 into the Goffstown Main Street Program.

 

Weare

Proposed school budget is $8.7 million in Weare

By KATE BENWAY
Staff Writer
kbenway@yourneighborhoodnews.com

An $8.7 million budget proposal and 13 additional warrant articles will be up for voter consideration at the Tuesday, Feb. 3, deliberative session of the annual School District Meeting, as school officials hope voters will break the default budget streak.

The meeting will be at the Center Woods Elementary School beginning at 7 p.m. After the chance to amend and consider the warrant articles, voters will determine whether the proposals pass or fail at the Tuesday, March 9, ballot voting session at the school.

The warrant articles reflect the trials of the town's schools ­ particularly the Weare Middle School, plagued by a failing facility and overcrowding. Many of the additional articles ask voters for more personnel, space and support.

Meanwhile, should voters shoot down the proposed $8.7 budget, the Weare School District would work with an $8.5 million default spending package.

Only one of the school board's proposed budgets has made it past voters in the last five years.

Weare School Board Chairman Matthew Thomas said the warrant articles are designed to give voters an easy, comprehensive view of what the schools need.

"The Weare voters are an educated group, and the whole idea behind the laundry list is to explain what we need as quickly and easily as possible at the polls," he said.

Middle school in need

On behalf of the middle school, officials want voters to devote $48,228 to the hiring of a guidance counselor, $40,000 toward a portable classroom, $8,300 for the hiring of a band director and $49,770 to bring a dean of students on board.

"We have one (guidance counselor) now and for middle school state standards, they say there should be one guidance counselor for every 300 students," said middle school Principal James Spadaro. "We have 615 students right now. This is the third year I'm asking for another counselor. The kids in the middle school have more issues to discuss."

And the dean of students position is a creative solution to a personnel need, said SAU 24 Superintendent Dr. Christine Tyrie.
With Spadaro and his assistant, Meeta Brown, focused on special education, curriculum and administrative duties, the dean of students could focus on the children, she said.

"It's a creative way to get some help without adding a third administrator so we can offer more help with the kids," she said. "It's like an assistant to an assistant ­ more focused on working with the kids and their particular issues."

Spadaro said he and Brown are swamped and, while most schools have a special education coordinator, the middle school does not.

"Meeta has taken over a great deal of the special ed issues and at the same time, we're trying to improve our instruction with staff and curiculum development. She's taken on that as well," said Spadaro. "We can't get it all done."

The dean of students would be the person students would go to ­ for both the good and the bad. Assemblies, suspensions, parent concerns and in-class observations are just a few of the items on a dean's to-do list.

"We're struggling getting to students as fast as we need to," he said. "But we think this is critical work."

The appropriations are additional expenses, tacked on to the proposed $8.7 million budget.

Up for consideration on behalf of the Center Woods Elementary School is a $48,228 proposal to hire an additional third grade teacher, an article devoting $15,000 toward the hiring of a custodian, $24,115 for a half-time reading specialist and $15,905 for a receptionist.

 

Weare

Budget would hike rate by 46 cents per $1,000

By LARA SKINNER
Staff Writer
lskinner@yourneighborhoodnews.com

Town Administrator Burton Reynolds was up late on Monday, Jan. 26, so he could post the final budget proposal and warrants for the town meeting.

Selectmen met for their regular meeting on the same night to approve the requests, and recommend a 1.7 percent increase in the budget for a total of $2.74 million. This would raise the property tax rate approximately 46 cents per $1,000 of assessed value, or $115 dollars on a house valued at $250,000.

The operating budget is up 17 cents, and Reynolds said that is mostly taken up with wage and health insurance increases for town employees.

Warrant articles would add another 29 cents to the total budget if voters approve all of the funding requests. There are 39 warrants scheduled for the town meeting, and 21 are funding requests.

Operations at the transfer station would get the most significant change with voter approval. Director Gerry Cornett has requested $40,000 for new scales for the station so he can begin to measure solid waste by the ton instead of by the cubic yard. Reynolds said the town is charged by the ton when solid waste is hauled from the station, and when they charge developers by the cubic yard for construction and demolition waste the fees aren't meeting the cost of disposal.

"(Construction and demolition waste isn't) just stuff we can put in the hopper and send on its way," Reynolds said.

The total solid waste budget request is $353,530, up $63,389 from last year. Funds earned through the new fee system should pay for the majority of the increase, Reynolds said. As the town starts to recycle more, it should decrease the total tons of solid waste that come in and hopefully reduce how much the town pays every year for disposal.

The transfer station budget didn't increase the total town budget partly because of last year's decision to create a revolving fund for the recreation department. By allowing the department to fund its programs through the fees charged for them it took a line item out of the budget total.

Program funds aren't used to pay for building improvements though, and the recreation department is requesting $50,000 to establish a capital reserve fund for a new recreation building.

School officials and the recreation department have agreed to replace the "white buildings" beside New Boston Central School with a new center which would double as program and extra school space.

Money in the capital reserve fund is used for a variety of purposes, such as the skate board park or new library building proposal. CRF helps to keep the total budget steady by planning ahead for capital improvement projects that will cost the town over $20,000, Reynolds said. Property taxes fund a little bit of on going town improvements every year.

The library trustees have scaled down the plans for a new library and are requesting $1.26 million total in the CRF for the building. Private donations and accumulated interest in the CRF for the library will cover $372,121 of the cost. A bond for $889,779 would cover the balance, and is less than the bond amount requested last year.

New to the CRF is the skate board park request for $40,000 from Leo Joy and his sons, Thomas and Alex. Reynolds said he would like Joy to request $50,000, and he plans to seek an amendment to the request during the Town Meeting.

Joy and his sons are hoping to raise money through fund raising to help pay for the park.

Other warrant questions on the ballot are:
· Purchase a new "Jaws of Life" for the fire department- $20,500.
· Purchase a replacement sedan for the police department ­ $31,200, with $10,000 in grant money.
· A traffic monitoring unit for $14,000.
· Funds for the State Bridge Aid program ­ $$20,000.
· Funds toward the master plan revision ­ $15,000.
· Repairs to the town hall roof ­ $35,000.
· To change the tax collector's position from an elected post to an appointed post.
· To appoint a building code board of appeals with five members to be appointed by the selectmen.


Archives | NewHampshire.com | Union Leader