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Updated: 4/21/05

The Goffstown News ­ September 16, 2004

This week's stories: (click on the headline to jump to story)
Deadlocked on selectman
A year later, Barney's better
Weare administrator off to a good start
Hillsborough County Fair begins the giant pumpkin season
Neighborhood News wins seven awards at Better Newspaper Contest



 

 

Goffstown

Deadlocked on selectman

 

By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com

After narrowing their choices down to two candidates, Goffstown selectmen deadlocked over the issue of which one should fill the vacant seat on their board.

The seat was left open following the death of John Sarette in August. The board has the right to choose a replacement to fill the seat until the next March election. Using a process proposed by Chairman Robert Wheeler, each member of the board proposed one candidate.

After a lengthy, often contentious discussion and two secret ballots at the Sept. 13 board meeting, the list of candidates was narrowed to Gossett McRae and Henry Boyle. Further discussion failed to yield a final selection, as the board split 2-2, behind each candidate. The discussion will be brought up again at the next meeting, on Monday, Sept. 27.

From the very beginning of the conversation, tension between Wheeler and fellow board member Barbara Griffin was apparent. The major bone of contention between the two board members appeared to be Griffin's general opposition to the selection process format.

Griffin told her fellow board members several times that she was frustrated with the process being used to select a new member.

"I've tried to talk about what the criteria (for choosing a new member) are, a couple of times, but we haven't really gotten anywhere," she said.

At the previous meeting, Wheeler proposed the board adopt the nomination and ballot system to narrow the list down to two candidates who would be interviewed before a final selection is made. Despite this plan, board members agreed that of the final two candidates, both are so well known, it would be pointless to interview either one.

Griffin complained that it was "ludicrousness" to interview Henry Boyle, who had served with all four board members, and until six months ago, was the board's chairman.

Wheeler agreed.

"I can see absolutely no reason to interview Henry Boyle," Wheeler said. "We all know Hank well, and I have no idea what we could ask him in an interview that we wouldn't already know the answer."

Board members agreed the other candidate, Gossett McRae, was also very well known to all four board members.

Stalemate

Although, all four selectmen agreed interviews were not necessary, the group was evenly divided on who the board should choose to fill the vacant seat.

Board member Phil D'Avanza introduced Boyle as a potential candidate, and said he couldn't accept any other candidate.

"In my mind that's the only person I could support for this," D'Avanza said, adding that he would rather see the seat stay vacant than be filled by anyone other than Boyle.

"You may call me stubborn-minded, but that's the way I feel," he said. "I'm not trying to slight anyone else. I like everyone else. But to me, that's the only person I could see going through this process."

Griffin originally nominated Vivian Blondeau, a budget committee member and former selectman, but changed to support Boyle.

Wheeler, who originally proposed resident Fred Plett to fill the seat, changed his vote as well, choosing to support Gossett McRae.
McRae was originally proposed by board member Bruce Hunter, who said McRae's background with the fire department makes him an ideal person to help the board handle the issue of 24-hour, 7-day-a-week fire coverage, which is expected to be decided on this fall.

Neither of the two factions wavered in their support for either candidate, and at the conclusion of the discussion, the board appeared firmly deadlocked.


 

Hooksett/Weare

A year later, Barney's better

 

By JENNIFER CLAISE
Staff Writer
jclaise@yourneighborhoodnews.com

 

A 12-pound toy poodle named Barney could possibly be the most spoiled dog in town. But his owners Ruth and Lou Mariano ­ or, as they would say, his "mom and dad" ­ wouldn't have it any other way.

"Lou told God that if he got through his ordeal, he wouldn't complain if (Barney) took his side of the bed ­ which is good, since now he usually does," Ruth Mariano said. "He's right up on the top now, on the pillows, and I'll usually wake up to find him nuzzled underneath my arm."

Barney's "ordeal," which happened just over a year ago, occured when he was kidnapped from Ruth Mariano's mother's house in Weare on Aug. 23. About 27 hours later, he was discovered in a neighbor's driveway. His legs were duct-taped together, part of his skin and fur had been sheared off, and his right eye had come out of its socket. Animal control officers suspect that Barney was dragged on a road by some type of vehicle.

In fact, his torture was so brutal the small dog nearly died.

"He wasn't expected to live," Ruth Mariano said. "Of course, they didn't tell us that until after it looked like he was going to be OK."

FEELING BETTER ­ Though Barney is blind in one eye and missing fur on his left side, for the most part he is doing well a year after being bound and dragged in Weare. His owners, the Marianos of Hooksett, still hope for a break in the case. (Jennifer Claise Photo)

And, for the most part, he is OK today, just about a year after he returned home from a four-week stay at the Capital Area Veterinary Emergency Service in Concord, where he battled infection, severe pain and endured the loss of sight in his right eye. Today, Barney is 5 years old, but the trauma he endured makes him look much older. His blind eye is clouded over and has a blueish tint, and a large patch of fur on his left side is gone, probably forever.

"It looked like some of it might be growing back, but it doesn't look like it now," said Ruth and Lou's 11-year-old son, Louie.
Sometimes, Ruth Mariano said, Barney has trouble with his jaw when he eats. "The vets checked it out, but we're just not sure what it is."

And sadly, it seems as though Barney may have memories of his abuse. He has had two episodes where he curled up into a little ball with his tail between his legs and started whimpering. One of the times happened when he was in the car.

"He never did anything like that before, ever," Ruth Mariano said.

But on the whole, Barney acts like any other dog, running and jumping around, and yapping at strangers. On the day he was released from the hospital, he eagerly barked at a crowd of reporters who had gathered to see him.

"We could tell that he was back to his old self," Ruth Mariano said.

But it's clear that the Mariano family has not returned to normal, largely because no one has ever been charged with Barney's kidnapping and torture, they said Sept. 5, when they gathered near their Hooksett home wearing matching "Justice for Barney" T-shirts.

The main suspect in the case, Stephen Hess, 19, of Weare, has not been charged with the abuse, but recently pleaded guilty to one count of felony falsifying physical evidence, for concealing two pieces of the duct tape from police. Hess received a 12-month suspended sentence and was placed on probation and ordered to complete substance abuse counseling.

Weare police have told the Marianos that the case is still under investigation, but they have not recently returned calls to the family, Ruth Mariano said.

And now that so much time has passed, the Marianos are hopeful that someone might now be willing to come forward with information.

"We believe that someone out there must know something more about this," Ruth Mariano said. "Now that a year has gone by, we're hoping that someone might be more willing to talk."

In the mean time, Barney is enjoying all the attention he's getting almost as much as the Marianos enjoy giving it to him.

"Basically, he needs 24/7 cuddling now, and that's good because that's what we give him," Ruth Mariano said.

 

Weare

Weare administrator off to a good start

By JENNIFER CLAISE
Staff Writer
jclaise@yourneighborhoodnews.com

Bob Christensen was recently promoted to the position of town administrator, but you'd never know it by looking at his business card.

"Because of the spending freeze, I can't get new ones made," he said with a laugh, drawing a sharp line through his former title of administrative coordinator. "These will just have to do for a while."

Earlier this summer, the selectmen reinstituted the town administrator position, thereby eliminating their supervisory role with most of the town's department heads and employees.

Other than Police Chief Myles Rigney, who reports to the selectmen, and Fire Chief Bob Richards, who reports to the board of firewards, all department heads are now supervised by Christensen.

Prior to his promotion, Christensen had served as administrative coordinator since May of 2003, a position that required him to act as a liason between the departments and the selectmen.

But the board decided that the administrator position should be revived, based on the need for daily, centralized leadership.

"At the end of the day, they felt there had to be someone here who could make decisions and supervise the day-to-day activities," Christensen said.

Still, he said, he is the type of manager who puts great stock in the department heads, allowing them to do their jobs and to use him as a resource.

"I consider the department heads to be subject experts," Christensen said. "I try to have a working knowledge of what they do, but they are the experts with the skill sets."

And Christensen isn't shying away from one of the town's biggest concerns: the development of an operating budget that will win voter support. The town has been operating under a default budget for six of the past seven years, Christensen said. And in speaking with other town administrators whose towns have passed successful operating budgets, he's realized that they spend a lot of time working with the press and the public to let them know exactly what the town needs, and why.

"As a resident correctly told me, if we were to need $3.5 million to run the town, then give me a $3.5 million budget," Christensen said. "Don't hide what the town's needs are and hit me with them at the last minute. Let me make my decision by way of my vote."

And, he added, it's not always the amount of money needed that people object to.

"It's the way things are done, and the tenor in which they are presented," he said.

Furthermore, the town is still struggling to find its identity; while some people welcome new businesses and want to see the town grow, others want to preserve a more rural character, he said.

"There's a running contention over what people want the town to be," he said. "Many say that they don't want Weare to become like a city, and they say that 'This is why we moved to the country.' But you have to ask ­ it's 2004 ­ is this really the country anymore?"

To get feedback from the community, Christensen has been moderating a series of public input sessions on the budget process.

The next two scheduled sessions will be held Thursday, Sept. 16, at the town office conference room from 7 to 8:30 p.m., and Monday, Sept. 27, at the Christ Community Church Auditorium from 6:30 to 8 p.m.

"We're not holding these so that the community can hear what we want to do," he said. "Instead, we want to hear from people about things that they support, or things they object to or have complaints about."

But Christensen's promotion is not the only thing occupying his time these days.

His sons Ethan, 10, and Elijah, 8, whose pictures cover his office, keep him busy 'round the clock, he said.

He coaches basketball, baseball and soccer for the Weare Athletic Club, and is also an avid outdoorsman.

"But I've gone deer hunting for eight seasons in a row, and I've never gotten a deer, so I guess I'm a pretty pathetic hunter," he joked.

From 1993 until 2002, Christensen was the pastor of the Christ Community Church, where he said he spent his time constantly focused on others, always trying to climb the next hill.

"It came to a point where I needed to put the focus on my family," he said. "And my life has never had more meaning than it does now, not just because of the promotion, but because it's an affirmation of where I've come from and of the leadership I've tried to bring to the town."

And despite the political environment in town, which Christensen admitted can get rather heated, he said he is confident he can handle any problems in stride.

"My world view is bigger than this chair," he said, "and at the end of the day I'm not going to be crushed by whatever happens here."
Christensen can be reached through the selectmen's office at 529-7535, or at his new e-mail address: rchristensen@ weare.nh.gov.

Hillsborough County Fair begins the giant pumpkin season

 

FINAL ADJUSTMENT ­ These horses were all strapped up and ready to pull a plow. No, they aren't pulling the truck behind them ­ they give that job to the plastic cows. The fair ran from Sept. 10 to 12 in New Boston. (Devon Cormier Photos)

 

 

 BIG ONE ­ Three-year-old Samantha Boulay reaches out to touch a giant pumpkin as she enjoys her first fair. The pumpkin was much bigger than little Samantha, but her
curiosity got the best of her.

GOAT PILLOW ­ Eleven-year-old Justin Prince sits with his goats as the fair got underway Friday, Sept. 10. Prince said the goats are very friendly and as excited as he was to be at the Hillsborough County Fair.

 

Neighborhood News wins seven awards at Better Newspaper Contest

The staff of Neighborhood News Inc. earned seven awards in the New Hampshire Press Association's annual Better Newspaper Contest. The awards were presented to the winners at the association's annual banquet on Friday, Sept. 10, at the Manchester Country Club in Bedford.

Sportswriter Marc Thaler got two awards, first place in Sports News for a story on the struggle to fund the Goffstown High School football team, and second place for his contribution to a feature on identity theft. Sharing in the prize for Feature Story for the identity theft story were former Goffstown News editor Henry Metz and former staff writer Kate Benway; that feature story was published in all four Neighborhood newspapers.

Benway also won second prize for Spot News Story for her coverage in The Bedford Bulletin of the shooting of a police officer in Bedford. Editor Susan Clark also had a role in this story.

Staff writer Russ Choma took first place for Education Story or Series for his three-part series on education funding, which ran in all four Neighborhood newspapers.

Kristin Crawford won first place for Sponsorship Pages, Black and White, for her Downtown Manchester advertising section, and Ginger Kozlowski won second place for Front Page for The Hooksett Banner, a design category.

Jamie Gorton of Hooksett, now a junior at West High School, was awarded High School Writer of the Year. The entries included his coverage of two town meetings and an Eagle Scout feature in the Banner.

Amy J. Vellucci, publisher and president of Neighborhood News Inc. and vice president of the New Hampshire Press Association, said she's proud of her staff's accomplishments.

"We publish four quality, free community newspapers every week, full of local news and advertising, and it's nice to be recognized by your peers for the hard work that goes into these publications," said Vellucci.

Neighborhood News Inc. publishes The Bedford Bulletin, The Bow Times, The Goffstown News and The Hooksett Banner, with a total circulation of 38,800.

The Bedford Bulletin is mailed free to every home in Bedford and The Bow Times is mailed free to every household in Bow, Hopkinton, Contoocook and Dunbarton. The Goffstown News and Hooksett Banner are distributed free in many southern New Hampshire locations.

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