Nantasket Flatts liquor license hearing continued until April

By Carol Britton Meyer

A select board hearing this week regarding the Nantasket Flatts liquor license that hasn’t been in use for a year was continued until April to allow time for owners Richard and Tracy Vaughan to sell the property.

The hope is that once a new restaurant is found to occupy the space, the select board and the state Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission will approve the transfer of the all-alcoholic license to the new owner.

The business is a turnkey operation in A-plus condition, Richard Vaughan said. “The napkins are still on the table!”

The former Nantasket Flatts Restaurant at 145 Nantasket Avenue has been for sale for more than a year.

The restaurant closed in January 2023, with the hopes that another would soon take its place. Although there’s not yet a buyer, the Vaughans’ attorney, Louis Cassis, said there are several people interested in the building and he feels fairly certain that a new restaurant could be up and running in time for the summer season.

In December, the select board declined to approve the request for renewal of the restaurant’s all alcoholic, common victualer, entertainment, and automatic amusement (pool table) licenses pending a hearing. Because the license hasn’t been in use for some time and the Vaughans were informed that they had six months to resolve the issue, the board had the option of revoking the liquor license or asking them to forfeit it.

Town Counsel James Lampke noted that selling the building – which has three bars and three kitchens – without the possibility of a liquor license transfer would be unlikely.

Chair Greg Grey praised the Vaughans for giving their business “a shot,” to which Richard Vaughan responded, “We put everything we had into it, everything.” 

Hearing continued, with updates in the meantime

Following the discussion, the board voted in favor of continuing the hearing until April 24, at which time the Vaughans and their attorney will provide a status update. In the meantime, they were asked to give the board monthly updates .

In a Dec. 29 letter to Richard Vaughan, Lampke issued a notice of this week’s hearing on non-use of the restaurant’s all alcohol license, failure to have the required alcohol liability and workers compensation insurance, and for misrepresentations on the 2024 license renewal form submitted to the town.

The purpose of the hearing was for the board to decide what action to take in response to the violations.

According to Lampke’s letter, the board gave Vaughan at least six months’ notice that the Nantasket Flatts license must be used or another place of business secured that was approved by the board and the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission from which to operate the license, to transfer the license to a licensee approved by the town and the ABCC, or to turn in the license.

The letter also states that the renewal form “misrepresented that the premises are now open for business… when in fact the premises were not open for business and you failed to satisfactorily explain why.”

That issue was resolved this week when Richard Vaughan said this was unintentional due to an oversight. A revised application was subsequently submitted.

A Jan. 11, 2024, letter to Lampke from Cassis states that “a combination of COVID and the difficulty in hiring and maintaining staff following the pandemic have made continued operation very difficult.”

Cassis also noted that Vaughan sent a letter to the board on January 23, 2023 notifying them of the closure and the Vaughans’ efforts to sell the business and the license.

“In light of the closing, Richard surmised that maintaining liquor liability and workmen’s compensation insurance would be a colossal waste of money as there were no customers or employees on the premises,” Cassis explained in the letter. “He has since obtained both liquor liability and workmen’s compensation insurance.”

At the end of the hearing, a number of board members wished the Vaughans “the best of luck.”

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Board members clarify details of citizens’ plans for reuse of HRA land

By Dolores Sauca Lorusso

At last week’s meeting of the Hull Redevelopment Authority, five citizen presenters answered follow-up questions on their proposals to help members better understand the ideas as they continue to update the draft Urban Renewal Plan.

Asked to return on January 8 were Erin Swenson Gorrall, who proposed a cultural hub; Patrick Finn responded to questions regarding parking and connectivity to DCR; Lenny Markowitz and team addressed logistical questions about a mobile stage and open space; Pam Wolfe spoke about her vision for open space and a seaside gateway park; and Lisa French pointed out the importance for the HRA land to be owned by the town and feature performance space.

Sarah Sullivan, whose submission is entitled Sandcastles on the Beach, left the Zoom meeting before she could present her concept for an extension of Sandcastles Childcare and Learning Center, at 313 East St. in Hingham, to offer summer programs for children ages 5 to 8, with a focus on marine science.

EcoVillage Housing

HRA Chair Dennis Zaia said he enjoys the “refreshing way” the agora-style seating in Gorrall’s concept allows people to sit in a space without having to worry about how many seats are available. However, Zaia focused on the EcoVillage Housing featured in Gorrall’s submission, especially the local examples she uncovered in her research.

“A lot of the proposals connect with this… a space that offers local community engagement, invites the South Shore as well as lifestyle/culture enthusiasts a chance to visit Hull, spend money, and experience the amazing land we love,” said the business strategist, yogi, runner, and metaphysical enthusiast. Gorrall referenced the show Down to Earth, starring Zac Efron, which features the film star spending some time at La Eco Villa in Costa Rica, with green houses, yoga areas, and meditation rooms.

“Eco Villa is very fancy, not saying it is exactly what Hull needs, but there are elements we can use,” she said, as she shared her research into two Massachusetts based EcoVillages –Renaissance Farms in Barre and Sawyer Hill in Marlborough.

Renaissance Farm’s mission statement says it is dedicated to the care of creation, care of the human person, and care of their community. Gorrall pointed out Renaissance incorporates a learning farm, small garden, beehives, goats, and tourism connected to the land. Sawyer Hill features two co-housing groups offering a community center for cooperative living activities, such as cooking meals, and incorporates affordable housing.

Gorrall said her proposal is a “bit of a mix” of the two. She wants to connect the Hull Ecovillage to the ocean, fishing, crabbing, and maritime history. She explained there will be a variety of elements to “bring it to life,” including a connection to the land that would be powered by solar panels and small wind turbines.

Traffic modifications

In evaluating the modified traffic flow in Finn’s plan, Zaia asked him to draw upon his “knowledge base” on transportation, as well as the DCR master plan. He wanted to assess the “viability” of a temporary driveway as egress from the parking lots, as well as what is needed from the HRA for the DCR to implement their master plan as it stands now.

“It is different than the permanent condition. It is just a curb cut on the Edgewater Road side, and it doesn’t open up on the other side and make it a pass-through road; it is just an egress,” Finn said. “It would require a beach detail and at the end of the day to put the barriers back.”

The driveway would be used to get all the people out of the parking lots on those beach days.

“This is a better solution than Phipps Street because that will allow all the folks coming from the Village and the rest of the town to be able to continue their progress and not be stopped entirely at Phipps Street and backed up to L Street,” Finn said.

“So, it is just an egress,” said Zaia adding, “it is not a permanent reality, it is temporarily addressing a situation, but it would be structured so the movement would be managed and monitored by a police detail.”

Zaia also asked Finn how many feet of HRA land the DCR would need to execute its vision for the boardwalk and bike lane in the master plan.

“A simple way to explain it is the two-way bike lane is taking up a travel lane, and the boardwalk is wider,” Finn said. “DCR proposed a 16-foot wide boardwalk along the wall, six-foot buffer area with shade structures, and a 12-foot raised directional bicycle lane.”

“If DCR continues the idea all the way to Phipps Street we would have to give up 14 feet of our property along that entire stretch to make it work,” Zaia said.

Finn agreed they could make the DCR plan fit along the HRA property if the widths are changed.

Mobile Stage

HRA member Adrienne Paquin asked Lenny Markowitz and his team about project management for their concept of the mobile stage.

Markowitz said initially the HRA would hire the project manager; however, they are also talking about a public-private partnership to mange the events on the space.

“I have heard options in other towns that Parks and Recreation Departments manage this sort of thing for the town; I strongly don’t think that is appropriate for the town of Hull,” he said. “But to me that is getting ahead of all this because we haven’t even gotten to the first step yet of deciding about open space principles.”

Paquin also asked about balancing climate resiliency, open space, and beautification. “It is a blank canvas right now; you can put the stage anywhere,” she said.

“The mobile stage, by virtue of being mobile and flexible, will fit into the environment,” Markowitz said. “If the design changes, the mobile stage concept itself can be modified to work with it. That is the whole point of being integrated in a landscape design.”

In response to concerns raised by Paquin about road noise playing into the performance environment, Markowitz went back to the flexibility of the mobile stage and that things can be easily corrected. He also mentioned the idea of “creating a green buffer around the HRA land between the road and the parcel, like in the words of Frederick Olmstead, an Emerald Necklace.”

Zaia wanted to know where the mobile stage would be “stashed” when it was not in use, and how the plug-and-play factor would be implemented.

Markowitz said from the group’s research, the best idea would be to rent the stage and have a preferred vendor that would handle the logistics of set-up, dismantling, and storage.

Open Space/Passive Recreation

In her submission, Pam Wolfe encouraged the HRA to “adopt a new mission and goal for the HRA: To maintain the HRA parcels as open space/passive recreation.”

“So many of the proposals were about open space and open space preservation and maintenance, which really hits right at the heart of what I am trying to support,” Wolfe said. “This space should belong to the whole community.”

Zaia asked Wolfe how she would suggest the HRA engage the select board into adopting, expanding, or modifying the focus mission of the HRA.

“Sometimes engaging others is hard, unless we have some sort of strategy or connectivity that allows us to make that, and I am leaning on you to give me some advice,” he said.

“I don’t know what the law requires,” said Wolfe. “Say you decide you do want to go with some of proposals that don’t call for the development of a hotel. They don’t call for a lot of housing. You want to keep to the open space principles. You want to maintain the site and improve it as it is, but not to develop it with permanent structures. Then you might need to change your mission to stay consistent with it.”

Wolfe suggested there would not be much that needs to change but the HRA would need to agree that it would change course. She also said the HRA would need to clarify what it means by development.

“Maybe you would say create a sense of place in our community through development that is consistent with, to use the Markowitz group’s term, open space principles,” Wolfe said. “That provides, delete tax revenue, (replace with) recreation, and education, job growth, improved business environment, and the rest stays the same.”

In her vision for a seaside park, Wolfe said she was thinking of something with “very minimal visual impact” because the site itself provides views of the ocean the bay. Along the paths lined with benches, she sees small posts with QR codes people can click with their cell phones to discover the history of the land, as well as signage for people to read.

Public Performance Space

Zaia asked Lisa French why she suggested in her proposal the town should own the property and therefore approve any income and expenses for the property.

“Normally a town with a good government would be the best choice, in my experience, to own and manage public resources and municipally owned facilities like public parks and parking lots and recreation al spaces,” French said.

However, French called into question the accountability of Hull town boards to the residents in favor of their own “financial interests or the interests of family or town staff.”

“We know those boards don’t always ensure the public interest and the general welfare of all residents,” she said. “Personally, I don’t see the advantage of relying on what should have been a temporary redevelopment authority rather than a municipality to safeguard the management of public land and facilities.”

Although Zaia said he did not want to diminish the hard work French had done, he addressed her comments about the HRA’s role.

“You sort of threw a whitewash over an organization that I am a member of, and it makes it sound like we have been poorly managed or poorly operating,” he said. “We may not have been smart about everything, but we have not done anything wrong.”

HRA Treasurer Joan Senatore said the “accusations made by Lisa are disheartening…the board works very hard for this town.”

Paquin said she did not have the same reaction as Zaia, and felt many opinions were shared about towns and boards in general

“But I do think even if we may be personally upset, we do invite people to come here and share their feelings,” she said.

Visit www.hra02045.com for details on all of the proposals submitted by citizens for reuse of the HRA property.

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Revised Boardwalk plan aims to address concerns about design, parking

By Dolores Sauca Lorusso

The developer proposing a 40-foot, 132-unit project at the Paragon Boardwalk property presented a revised design to the planning board Wednesday night that included changes in architecture, parking, and commercial spaces in response to concerns raised by residents.

The Procopio Companies Director of Development David Roache said it was “very productive” to hear from the residents, as the feedback prompted the company to refer to its mission to “build meaningful community connections in extraordinary spaces.”

DRAWING INTEREST. The developer proposing a 47-foot, 132-unit project at the Paragon Boardwalk property presented a revised design to the planning board last week that included changes in architecture, parking, and commercial spaces in response to concerns raised by residents about the previous concept. These updated renderings show the changes, which include pitched rooflines and some variances in siding, as well as how the buildings compare to existing structures, like the historic clocktower building down the block.


To achieve an architectural feel that is less wall-like, designers added sloped roofs, a varied façade, and details to the style of building. Architect Monte French said to fit the “fabric of Nantasket Ave.,” he also included clapboard siding, cornices, and window trim.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE DEVELOPER’S REVISED PLANS

Roache said changes include moving away from what had been referred to as “old, sterile, and not keeping in the spirit of the NBOD (Nantasket Beach Overlay District),” and that commercial space in the Paragon Dunes development would increase from the previously proposed 7,000 square feet to 22,000 square feet. He acknowledged residents said they would miss the current arcade and outdoor space, so Procopio is seeking a vendor to bring the arcade and beer garden into the new space, as well as outdoor turf, food trucks, a FlowRider surf simulation machine, and possibly a skating rink in the winter.

The Procopio team said an important part of the design change was the attempt to provide definition, scale and break what had been called the “boxy shapes” from last time.

The consensus of residents who spoke at the hearing was that Procopio is moving in the right direction.

“The design is remarkably better than before, but still not quite there yet,” said Rebecca Sacks, who also expressed her appreciation that the developer is changing things based on resident feedback. “I am relieved.”

“I appreciate you reflecting upon and responding to community concerns on this,” said Planning Board Chair Meghan Reilly.

Procopio also met with the Design Review Board to ensure the newest designs would better reflect the architectural aesthetic of the town, consider the scale of the buildings, and adequately incorporate additional public open space.

“Architectural elements provide scale and definition to the project,” said French, adding the Art Walk connector under the building provides a “cross connection with the colonnade, the beach, and the liveliness of the streetscapes.”

Procopio added more solid colors to the exterior of the buildings to try to “dial into that part of the design.”

On the George Washington Boulevard side, designers added more detail and a variety of different shapes, gables, double gables, and flat roof, to change the “barrier feeling” residents said the former design gave them. 

When asked by planning board member Steve White what they were using as architectural references for this property, French said it is not necessarily a single building, but design features of many buildings in Hull that demonstrate the town’s visual appeal.

“[You] need to bring continuity to not only old structures but new structures in the town of Hull,” White said.

At the planning board meeting on December 11, some questioned whether the Paragon Dunes project achieves the purpose of preserving and expanding commercial uses in the NBOD, if the amount of commercial space dropped from 60,000 square feet in the original plan to 7,000 feet. The newest design has 22,000 feet of indoor and outdoor commercial space.

Roache said that you “can’t just focus on the numbers; it is quality versus quantity.”

Some residents said they were concerned that the development would overshadow the nearby Paragon Park Carousel and historic clocktower building. The carousel and clocktower were described by SOS member Liz Kay as the “pride and joy” of Hull, and she did not like that they seemed to be “diminished” by the Paragon Dunes proposal. She added the building closest to the comfort station seems to substantially block it.

“I would like to see a scale model of this (development) showing the carousel and the clocktower,” said planning board member Jeanne Paquin, adding that the developer “need[s] to be mindful the front and back of the development is key to the community ... feels like a wall effect; nicer wall than last time, but still a wall.”

Parking and traffic were top concerns, although the new plans have added 11 parking spaces to the 177 initially proposed.

Planning board member Nancy Boyce said the traffic study was done in the fall, and requested they do another study closer to the summer.

“We want to grab realistic numbers, not AI computer-generated ideas,” she said. “Residents have a hard time getting out of town because the streets get so crowded in the summer.”

“Traffic engineers will be at a future meeting to dig deeper into those issues,” said Community Development and Planning Director Chris DiIorio.

After Wednesday morning’s deluge from a 10-foot tide with three-foot surge, flooding was at the forefront of many residents’ minds.

“Less continuous street walls allow flood waters to pass through and around spaces,” said Engineer Karlis Skulte of Civil and Environmental Consultants. “The garage is elevated a foot above flood elevation and allows flood waters to pass through.”

Roache explained that in a storm, it is their plan the cars will remain in the garage. Water flows through but not at a considerable depth.

“We are not looking for cars to leave in a storm and scatter into the neighborhood,” he said.

The open public space has a few steps to get down to it, which is a concern for Susan Mann, as she predicted that during a flood it will fill up like a bowl.

Roache said there is a substantial drainage system underground to deal with rainwater, but the developer will do a full storm management report looking at small and large storm events.

Given the size and scope of the project, White could not understand why the town has not requested an environmental impact report.

Adam Brodsky, Procopio’s attorney, said the developer needs to file an environmental report with the state, but this project does not trigger a mandatory environmental impact report.

The next meetings on the project will be with the Design Review Board on January 25, while the planning board review was continued until February 5.

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Generations of Hullonians recall positive influence of beloved teacher and coach Joe Menice

By Christopher Haraden

In the days since the death of longtime teacher and coach Joseph F. Menice, hundreds of former students, colleagues, friends, and family members have shared memories of his positive impact on the town and on generations of Hullonians.

Mr. Menice, who was 96 when he died on Saturday, January 6, 2024, taught in the Hull Public Schools for 40 years and worked in the town’s recreation department for decades. He is fondly remembered as a mentor and role model for local kids.

NOT YOUR AVERAGE JOE. Joseph Menice, who taught in Hull’s schools for 40 years and influenced generations of local kids, died this week at age 96. This photo is from the yearbook dedication by the Hull High Class of 1974. [File photo]

“He was just ultimate in humility, and in leaving a place better than you found it,” said Jim Quatromoni, a Hull High graduate who, like Mr. Menice, was a Pirates basketball coach and the school’s athletic director. “His influence on the number of kids at Hull High School is amazing to think about.”

“It is hard to imagine anyone who had a greater positive and meaningful impact on the lives of Hull youth and, in fact, the entire Hull community,” said Stu Turgel, a student of Mr. Menice’s in the 1960s. “Joe was a bigger-than-life man who taught and led, not just within the school’s walls and on its sports fields, but on behalf of and for the benefit of every household and family in the town.”

School committee Chair David Twombly acknowledged Mr. Menice at the opening of Monday night’s meeting and led a moment of silence in tribute.

“He was an all-around great representative of the town of Hull that all students should strive to emulate. He had a very caring demeanor, and he’ll be missed by many residents and Hull High alumni,” said Twombly, a 1979 graduate. “He made a positive impact on the lives of many students.”

Mr. Menice’s children said this week that they were not fully aware of his far-reaching influence while they were young.

“I did not know that we were ‘sharing’ Dad with other kids until later in life,” said his daughter, Vickie Desharnais. “Growing up, he was just our Dad. I had no idea the impact he had on others until he would tell his stories of his years coaching and teaching.”

“The way that he conducted himself made you want to know more,” said Quatromoni, who now is Hingham’s athletic director. “I think about him taking a very measured, thoughtful approach to the job. During my time in Hull, I felt a sense of pride to hold the basketball coach and AD positions that he held, and to live up to the standards that he set.”

Mr. Menice played basketball and baseball at Hingham High School and was treasurer of his class when he graduated in 1945. Only a few months later, he enlisted in the U.S. Army and was sent overseas to serve as a guard during the trials of Nazi war criminals in the aftermath of World War II. As much as Mr. Menice would later impact the lives of young people, he noted that being present during one of the most somber and significant chapters of world history made an impression on him as an 18-year-old.

“Being at the Nuremberg Trials had a profound effect on my life,” he said in a 1994 interview upon his retirement from teaching. “I had to escort the prisoners, and I was on hand during the testimony. The evidence was overwhelming. When they showed the movies of the atrocities, many of the accused looked away from the movie screen. The proceedings left an impression on everyone who was there.”

Mr. Menice’s role at the trials was captured on an educational filmstrip that was used for many years in Hull’s history classes. His son Peter said that for years, teachers would pause the lesson to point out Mr. Menice on the screen.

“It happened so much that by the time my year and turn came to see it, he was like a ghost!” he said. “It paused on this spot so many times, the bulb had burned his image.”

After his discharge from the Army, Mr. Menice attended Boston University and earned a teaching degree. In 1954, shortly after their marriage, Mr. Menice and his wife, Doris, settled in Hull, where Mrs. Menice’s family, the Kinnears, already were well established. Their home on Sunset Point became the focal point for their family, which eventually grew to include 10 children and 22 grandchildren. Mrs. Menice worked as a telephone operator at the local exchange building (now the Knights of Columbus Hall), and Mr. Menice was appointed sixth grade and physical education teacher at the Memorial School. For many years, he was the director of the school’s evening recreation program, an activity Hull kids simply called “Night Gym.”

Many describe Mr. Menice as a giant of a man or as larger than life, but not in the boisterous or chatty way that those terms typically imply. Instead, he carried himself with a calmness and moderation that instantly made others feel at ease.

“He created a culture and environment of inclusion, fairness, decency, class, and dignity long before it was fashionable,” said Turgel, who graduated in 1966 and now lives in Arizona. “I’m 75 years old, and yet I remember him as my teacher and coach as vividly as though it was yesterday. Joe was humble and modest, and I dare say he would be embarrassed by all of the well-deserved accolades that have and will be written and spoken about him.”

Retired science teacher Joseph Doniger, who was a student of Mr. Menice’s at Hull High and later became a teaching colleague, credited him with treating all students alike.

“He was a coach and did a lot with athletes, but he was a wonderful role model as a teacher,” said Doniger, who graduated from Hull High in 1967 and directed the school’s theater program while a faculty member. “When you were in Joe’s gym class, it didn’t matter what kind of athlete you were. You were treated well and you felt safe. All students mattered to him.”

Teaching in the town where he raised his family meant that his children often found themselves with a familiar name on their academic schedules.

“Having him for gym class, when he was doing attendance, he never said my name,” his daughter, Theresa Ryan, recalled this week. “When I finally asked him why, he just said, ‘I know you are here.’ Like we would ever skip his class.”

In his classes – and as a parent – Mr. Menice was supportive and encouraging.

“He was always there for people,” said Peter, the Times’ editorial cartoonist for more than three decades. “[Fellow teacher] John Anderson used to say, if there was a kid who wanted to climb the ropes and was too scared or weak, Joe would stay with him and encourage him until he did it. That’s a big takeaway for me. It’s difficult until it’s easy. You just don’t know when that moment is. Keep going.”

“What I remember most about my Dad is that it’s not one special moment, but many moments,” said his daughter, Mary Wilson. “Those moments when you were alone with him, those one-on-one moments where, out of the blue, he would give you an encouraging word for only you to hear – ‘I am proud of you’ or ‘You’re doing a great job.’ In these  moments, I felt special and loved. He was a beautiful soul and a gift.”

HOLDING COURT. Joe Menice spent 40 years in the Hull Public Schools and was Hull High’s first basketball coach. He enjoyed competition, but also instilled in his players the value of sportsmanship and respect for the rules of the game. [File photo]

Mr. Menice was hired as the first basketball coach after Hull High School opened in 1957. Although he valued competition and led his teams to tournaments, he wasn’t in the game only to win.

“I told them if they were interested in a coach that would win games alone, I wouldn’t be the person for them,” he said in 1994 when he recalled his initial interview with the school committee. “I told them if they were interested in a coach that would teach their players the game of basketball and good sportsmanship, I was their person. I wasn’t overly concerned with wins and losses.”

Frank Infusino, a 1960 graduate who played football and basketball at Hull High, echoed the sentiments of many athletes who credited Mr. Menice as a quiet inspiration who knew how to get the best out of his players. Infusino, a retired teacher and school superintendent who now lives in California, recalled his classmates inviting Mr. and Mrs. Menice to a reunion as their guests of honor. In a poem he wrote for the occasion, “No Ordinary Joe,” Infusino noted that Mr. Menice “spoke softly, carried no big stick; his compassion and commitment not a trick; from Little League, to Night Gym, to high school coach; always there, no problem too difficult to broach; his legend over the years would only grow; to us, No Ordinary Joe.”

Mr. Menice’s many years in the school district meant that he crossed paths with names long memorialized with plaques on the walls. He taught for a time in the same building as Lillian M. Jacobs, who later would have an elementary school named in her honor, and John W. Finlayson, Jr., the shop teacher to whom the high school field was dedicated in 1962. In 1969, Mr. Menice was appointed athletic director, replacing the retiring Joseph Berman, for whom Hull High’s gymnasium is named. Doniger, who taught in Hull for more than 30 years, is the namesake of the school’s auditorium.

In 1990, the town named the baseball field on the grounds of the Hall Estate, just up Nantasket Avenue from the Hingham line, “Joe Menice Ball Field” to recognize Mr. Menice’s contributions to Hull’s recreation programs. Peter Menice said that while his father was grateful for the honor, privately he worried that it unfairly put the spotlight on him instead of the kids using the field.

Desharnais, his daughter, said that although humble, Mr. Menice had a long memory and appreciated the support he received from the community.

“Please know that Dad remembered everyone who touched his life. His memory was phenomenal,” she said. “He could recall stories from all times, and would remember the names of everyone and how he was associated with them. Know that you were remembered by him.”

In 2009, Mr. Menice was inducted into the Athletic Hall of Fame of both Hingham and Hull high schools, a unique and fitting achievement. In 2019, he served as the grand marshal of Hull’s 375th anniversary parade, riding down Nantasket Avenue in a convertible with General Richard “Butch” Neal, a former student who often visited with his former teacher when he returned to Hull.

In his own quiet way, Mr. Menice commanded respect long after his students had left his supervision. One former student recalled how, many years after graduating from Hull High, he was standing on the Kenberma sidewalk, enjoying an afternoon smoking break. When he saw his former teacher approaching, he quickly flicked the cigarette onto the pavement and covered it with his foot.

“I was a grown adult, but I still couldn’t let Mr. Menice see me smoking,” he recalled. Others remembered being admonished for showing poor sportsmanship or for using foul language in frustration during games; neither were tolerated when Mr. Menice was in charge.

Retired elementary school teacher Susan Perry worked with Mr. Menice as a summer instructor at the L Street playground. She recalled that one of her tasks was to submit a weekly account of her group’s activities – “writing about who made potholders, gimp, and won at checkers.” Mr. Menice would then submit these to the Times for publication, so that parents would know what their children were doing and so that the kids could see their names in print.

“He was truly a kind, quiet gentleman who would hate all the accolades,” Perry said.

Although he worked year-round, his children remembered that Mr. Menice made sure he was present for them.

“We spent a lot of time down the beach in the summers, and Dad had to work at Park and Rec, but he would always find the time to stop by the beach and wave to us as we were playing,” said his son Jeff. “I also remember always hearing the Red Sox games on the radio when he would do things around the house or wash the car.”

MR. MENICE RETIRED FROM TEACHING IN 1994 BUT CONTINUED working with the recreation department until the pandemic prompted him to step back.

In addition to his involvement with the recreation program, Mr. Menice served on the town’s youth commission and emergency preparedness committee, and took on numerous other volunteer positions and advisory roles. One of the most unusual was in 1988, when he agreed to participate in the “Meadow Muffin Megabucks” fundraiser to help save the school’s athletic program from budget cuts. Along with two other “judges,” Mr. Menice donned a cowboy hat and spent an afternoon following a cow around the football field, which had been divided into squares that were numbered and sold. A participant “won” if the cow’s droppings landed in their square; proceeds were split between the ticket holder and the Boosters Club. The event raised $20,000 in its first year and was copied by other towns across the South Shore.

Not all requests were as unique as that one, but Mr. Menice never hesitated to offer his assistance when asked.

“Every time I approached Joe with an idea to expand opportunities for students, he graciously listened and offered his support,” current Superintendent of Schools Judith Kuehn said this week. “Witnessing Joe’s generous and kind qualities demonstrated by his grandchildren has been a true privilege.”

After teaching for 40 years, Mr. Menice finally decided to retire from the school department in 1994.

“I forget who it was, but somebody once told me that if you work with three generations of the same family, it is time to call it quits,” he told The Boston Globe in 1994. “I have youngsters in the recreation program and I can remember coaching their grandfathers and fathers, so I guess it is my time to leave.”

Although retired, Mr. Menice remained tireless. He stayed active with the recreation department for many years, organizing and officiating games of all kinds for all age groups, until the pandemic prompted him to step back. He was a model train enthusiast and enjoyed spending time with his large family, teaching his own kids winning strategies in backyard games like run the bases, croquet, and Frisbee golf.

Visiting hours for Mr. Menice will be held on Monday at St. Ann’s Church, followed by a funeral there on Tuesday morning. Full details can be found in the print edition or by clicking here. Donations in his memory may be made to the Joe Menice Scholarship at Hull High School.

“I really feel that it is a sad end to an era,” said Quatromoni, summing up the feelings of many who appreciated Mr. Menice’s influence. “I can’t be thankful enough to have crossed paths with him in my particular journey. You’re a better person for having had Mr. Menice in your life.”

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School Committee hires N.H. educator Michael Jette as next superintendent

By Carol Britton Meyer 

Following three hours of interviews with finalists, the school committee on Wednesday night hired Michael Jette, current leader of the Litchfield, N.H., school district, as Hull’s next superintendent. 

Forty-eight citizens were on the Zoom call at one point, with 39 remaining until the school committee made the final decision on who will replace current Superintendent Judith Kuehn, who will retire at the end of this school year. 

Each of the finalists – Jette, Michael Tempesta, and Sarah Shannon – were asked six questions, based in large part on community feedback throughout the search process. 

Click here for the resumes of all three superintendent finalists

“We have three fantastic candidates,” said school committee member Kyle Conley, who chaired the screening committee. 

MICHAEL JETTE…

Jette has 32 years of educational experience, including as former superintendent of the Bedford, N.H., school district. During his interview, Jette said he’s looking toward the next step in his career and is hoping it would be his “last stop,” with the intention of dedicating another 10 years to this work. 

“Before I applied for this position, I didn’t know where Hull was,” he said. “I didn’t realize it’s like a unicorn community with its close proximity to Boston and the ocean.” 

Jette also said he thinks “smaller is better” with regard to the size of Hull’s school system, allowing for more opportunity to have conversations with people face to face, rather than over the telephone. 

In addition, he finds the implementation of a school consolidation plan, which is underway for the Hull Public Schools, of particular interest. 

“This will cause a lot of stress, and I think the easiest way [to address these issues] is to recognize the people behind those emotions, engage with them as to where they are, and to do everything possible to set folks up for success in the new environment,” Jette said. “It’s all about relationships and making sure everyone is part of the team.” 

When asked what he would aim to accomplish in his first 90 days on the job, Jette said he would in part focus on where the district has been and build upon that. 

“I don’t think anyone is looking to make any drastic changes,” he said. 

He also said he would work with the school committee to establish goals and objectives, setting priorities for “measurable outcomes.” 

Shannon a close second 

Cohasset resident Sarah Shannon, who came in a close second in a straw poll that was taken before the final vote and deliberations by the school committee following the interviews, currently serves as assistant superintendent of teaching and learning for the Canton Public Schools. She is the former assistant principal of the Duxbury Middle School and former principal of the Gates Intermediate School in Scituate. 

The third candidate, Michael Tempesta, is the current superintendent of the Claremont and Unity school districts in New Hampshire and former superintendent of the Saugus Public Schools. 

The committee made some favorable comments about Tempesta related to his broad experience in collaborative and public school positions, his experience in the role of superintendent, his effective work in restructuring schools, his willingness to start developing an entry plan on a per-diem basis before his contract began, his focus on school safety, and his sensitivity to meeting the needs of all students, with varying needs. However, the committee decided to focus on the top two candidates based on the informal poll. 

Jette was praised for his more than 30 years of education experience, his role in a net-zero middle school project, and for his “look, learn, and listen” approach in his role of superintendent. 

“He has a warm, friendly, personable manner and a nice tone,” school committee member Ernest Minelli said. 

Positive feedback from students 

Other strong points noted by the committee were that he seemed invested in getting to know the Hull community; that during Wednesday’s forums before the interviews, students made positive comments about him; his support for helping to create individual plans for success among students; his “people skills and calm, reassuring style;” his intention to build upon existing Hull Public Schools strengths while making improvements; and that he doesn’t consider the school system “to be in a state of crisis.” 

Those providing feedback about the candidates “were impressed and unanimously positive about his potential to be the next leader of our district and offered across the board support for his candidacy,” Conley said. 

Jette also has built “well-rounded relationships” throughout his career and has “worked through the ranks,” school committee member Liliana Hedrick said. 

What stood out about Shannon to the committee are her leadership skills and ability to build relationships, her knowledge of the Massachusetts School Building Authority program, experience with contract negotiations, her “passion for Hull,” willingness to take risks, and focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion. 

Overall, the committee agreed that they could envision either Jette or Shannon being successful as the next superintendent, and that it was a hard choice. 

When a motion to enter contract negotiations with Jette was made by Conley following the straw vote, the outcome was 4 to 1 in favor, with Chair David Twombly against the motion. 

“It’s nothing personal,” he said. 

When Conley called for a vote of reconsideration, with the goal of reaching a unanimous vote, Twombly changed his vote in favor of Jette.

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No Place for Hate Committee sponsoring ‘A Day of Service’ for Wellspring on MLK Day

By Carol Britton Meyer

The Hull No Place for Hate Committee is sponsoring a food drive to benefit Wellspring Multi-Service Center’s food pantry as part of A Day of Service and Remembrance on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The event will take place on Jan. 15 at Wellspring, 814 Nantasket Ave., from noon to 2 p.m. This is an opportunity for the community to gather together to donate food items for Aunt Dot’s Kitchen and to participate in a program featuring poetry, a slideshow, resources about the history of this national holiday, and light refreshments.

“Food is a basic right. No one should go hungry,” Wellspring President and CEO Vinny Harte told The Hull Times. “When HNPFH approached Wellspring about what the focus of this event should be, the response is always food or sustenance. People cannot function at school or work when they are hungry or food insecure. With organizations like Wellspring and HNPFH working together with the community, there is no reason anyone should go hungry.”

Giving back to the community

This day of service, commemorated by many, “is not just about talking about Martin Luther King, but also about living who he was and giving back to the community,” HNPFH Committee member Paula Nesoff told The Hull Times. “Wellspring is such a treasured and well-used social service agency, serving a wide variety of people.”

Nesoff – along with Deb Bayer, Sandie Baler-Segal, Deb Greenstein, Meryl Johnson, and Jim Ianiri – is part of the HNPFH working group organizing the event.

HNPFH is pleased about the number of local groups and entities that are endorsing and participating in this “day of joyful giving” as well as spreading the word.

They include the Hull Select Board, Hull Lifesaving Museum, Hull Pride, Hull Artists, The Anchor of Hull, Friends of Nantasket Beach, Hull Nantasket Chamber of Commerce, the Hull American Legion, Rotary, Lions, and Knights of Columbus, the Anne M. Scully Senior Center, Friends of the Paragon Carousel, the United Church of Christ in Norwell, the Weir River Watershed Association, and the Hull Land Conservation Trust.

‘A natural merging of different groups’

Some HNPFH members belong to a number of these organizations, which resulted in “a natural merging of different groups in the community,” Nesoff said. “We’re very fortunate to have these connections.”

An ongoing slideshow will feature excerpts from King’s moving 1963 “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” where he was imprisoned as a participant in nonviolent demonstrations against segregation.

“This is a piece rich in some of his most outstanding quotes,” Bayer said. King wrote the letter in longhand in response to a public statement of concern and caution issued by eight white religious leaders of the South.

One of the most popular quotes from that letter is that “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,” which Nesoff said brings out a sense of “interconnectedness.”

Guest speakers will include Margaret Dawson, who has served on the Norwell United Church of Christ’s racial justice ministry team, and Jean Holley, who has served on the UCC’s mission and outreach team, beginning at 12:30 p.m. following introductions by Harte and HNPFH Chair Val Carlson.

Short videos of King’s famous civil rights speech will be shown, and educational resources will be available for those interested in learning more about the history of King and the civil rights movement.

Poetry readings by Hull students

In addition, the working group reached out to Hull students, who will read poetry appropriate for the occasion, along with NPFH members.

“During the hour-long program, those attending will hear Martin Luther King’s words, and we will ask people to share a thought or memory of the impact he has had on their own lives,” according to Nesoff, and also what MLK Jr. Day means to those participating in the event.

The overall commemoration, including the community service, “is a way for Hull to pay tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. in a very tangible way and to live in accordance with his example,” she said.

“After the holiday Toys for Tots collections and the incredible Thanksgiving meal served in Hull, the HNPFH Committee wanted to continue with that understanding – that we are inextricably bound to and need each other,” according to Nesoff.

The focus is that building bridges increases communication.

“Dr. King spoke so loudly for civil rights, and it is vital that all communities keep his dream alive. There is too much hate and ignorance in our communities, and we must work together to overcome the intolerance,” Harte said.

Bayer and all those involved are looking forward to the event.

“It should be an uplifting day,” she said.

Food items requested by Aunt Dot’s Kitchen, which serves Hull residents, include canned and boxed meals, stews, soups, chili, tuna, canned chicken, ham, and Spam, vegetables, macaroni and cheese, tomato sauces, pasta, rice, cereal, peanut butter, jelly, granola bars, juice, cooking oil, maple syrup, condiments, and coffee.

Toiletry needs include shampoo and conditioner, toothpaste and toothbrushes, soap, toilet paper, laundry detergent, dish detergent, disposable razors, and shaving cream.

Items may be dropped off at Wellspring during the Jan. 15 event and also on Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., when food deliveries are accepted. For larger donations, a call ahead is appreciated.

“The need is always growing for many families and individuals, and Wellspring has never turned anyone away due to a lack of food,” Harte said. “If you are hungry, come to Wellspring. We promise [to assist you with] dignity and compassion.”

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Knights of Columbus helps Hull family buy ramp van for boy with mobility issues

Submitted by Armando Aguilar, Grand Knight and Peter Marciano, Faith Director

Back in July of this year, we were alerted by a pediatric nurse, Karen Dean, that the family of one of her young patients from Hull was in need of some funding and to see if we could help with the purchase of a ramp van for their three-year-old boy. So, working with Karen and the parents of Finian Medeiros (Jamis and Cheryl), the process of applying for the Knights of Columbus Charitable Fund for Finian began.

RAMPING UP. The Hull Knights of Columbus Council 4865 presented the family of three-year-old Finian Medeiros with a check for $8,000 from the Knights of Columbus Charitable Fund to help pay for a ramp and van to help Finian, who has mobility challenges due to several health conditions. With Finian and his parents, Jamis and Cheryl, are Armando Aguilar, Grand Knight and Peter Marciano, Faith Director. [Skip Tull photo]

Finian was born with a congenital heart defect, hypoplastic left heart syndrome. He required multiple surgeries for survival. Due to a complication in one surgery, he is on a ventilator around the clock. He also suffers from hypotonia (low tone muscles) and is unable to stand or walk. A recent additional issue, Finian now has hyperuricemia (high uric acid, which causes pain to joints, especially legs and ankles). He is expected to require mobility devices for the foreseeable future. It is difficult for his support team to move him around, since he is growing and is always connected to various medical equipment needed for all his conditions.

These funds thankfully become available due to the yearly Tootsie Roll drives that our local and state K of C groups run each year. We are happy to say that the residents of Hull and neighboring towns always and generously support the charity. We thank all our contributors!

We often kick this off in Hull at our Endless Summer event. Every council in Massachusetts delivers the funds from the collection to our state office to put into a state fund. From there, our state K of C funding committee reviews the many applications and decides on most-needed support.

We [the authors – Hull’s grand knight and faith director] met with the family to finalize the application and process to submit to our state fund committee early December.

The request of $8,000 for Finian’s van with ramp was quickly nominated for one of the awards just before Christmas. Finian and his parents are living with his grandmother in Hull and his father is working two jobs to help pay the expenses of the professional help needed to support Finian’s precious life.

The Hull Knights of Columbus Council 4865 is so proud that we have had the opportunity to support Finian and the Medieros family to pay a portion of the cost for their beautiful van and ramp. We hope it makes Finian’s daily events a little easier for him and his loving supportive family. Having the chance to meet them, we learned their days are busy ones with doctor appointments, hospital visits, therapy, and even participating in preschool. He’s a strong little boy!

May God Bless Finian, his family, doctors, nurses, teachers, and all support teams!

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Revised Paragon Boardwalk design to include new beer garden, arcade

By Carol Britton Meyer

A revised development plan for the Paragon Boardwalk property that will be presented to the planning board on Wednesday will include design modifications and some version of the current beer garden and arcade.

Paragon Boardwalk owners Diana and Chris Reale are selling the property to the Procopio Companies, which is seeking a special permit for a 40-foot-tall mixed-use building, with 7,000-square-foot retail space on the first floor topped by 132 residential units. The plan features 177 parking spaces under the building and along the former railroad bed that runs behind the property, along with public open space.

PARAGON BOARDWALK OWNER CHRIS REALE

On Wednesday, Jan. 10, Procopio will unveil a new plan that includes a new version of the current entertainment venue – including the beer garden and arcade – adjacent to the proposed development, Chris Reale told The Hull Times.

“While the current venue will be closed during construction [if the project is approved], we’re excited that a brand-new, indoor-outdoor entertainment center is now part of the proposal,” he said.

Full details will be presented at the hearing.

“We agreed to sell the property to the Procopio Companies because the business is not financially viable in the current space, given the size and age of the facilities,” Reale said. “We offered to sell the property to another operator to keep it as-is, but we could not get our investment back, and the investment needed for a new facility can only happen as part of a larger development.”

Paragon Boardwalk closed for the season and paid its staff through the end of the year.

“We are looking for a viable and profitable path forward in 2024 and hope to reopen for one final season,” he said.

At next week’s meeting, other changes to the Paragon Dunes development plan by Procopio also will be presented to address community feedback about the size and design of the project, and adequacy of the parking plan.

Contingent on project approval, the Reales would be involved with the new family entertainment center, he said.

“We’re pleased that after seven years, this popular business would be rebuilt as a first-class venue within the new development,” he said.

The Procopio Companies earlier withdrew a request for a variance to build a 75-foot building at 183-197 Nantasket Ave. in the Nantasket Beach Overlay District, which limits building heights to 40 feet.

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Remembering Hull’s biggest issues and memorable newsmakers of 2023 – Part 2

Compiled by The Hull Times staff

JULY

The select board adopted a temporary policy to allow public comment on individual agenda items, allowing members of the public wishing to speak on a particular item to do so after being recognized by the chair. The temporary policy is based on guidelines provided by Town Counsel James Lampke and developed with input from retiring Town Manager Philip Lemnios. The discussion was prompted by a complaint from a resident about the board’s disallowance of resident participation at meetings other than public hearings.

The Hull Nantasket Chamber of Commerce announced that its popular Hull-O Trolley would not be making its rounds this summer due to a lack of funding and higher operating expenses.

At its first meeting since the annual town election results were finalized, the Hull Redevelopment Authority elected new officers and agreed to wait until September to schedule additional public forums on its draft Urban Renewal Plan. Later in the month they invited Hull residents to submit their unique visions for the land. The HRA’s goal with their call for ideas was to gather more information to offer additional choices for community consideration.

During the Fourth of July weekend, police received numerous calls reporting fireworks that were too loud or too close to the piping plover nests on the beach. State Police troopers confiscated two wagonloads of fireworks near the Hull Redevelopment Authority.

For the second time since 2021, plans to revitalize the Paragon Boardwalk property were withdrawn by the developer when its attorney requested via letter to withdraw the application for a height variance without prejudice, meaning that the developer would be able to reapply in the future.

Graduation exercises for the Wellspring Multi-Service Centers’ Adult Learning Program were held at the Bernie King Pavilion.

The select board acted on a citizens’ petition bearing the requisite 200 signatures to call a special town meeting related to the potential granting of an additional package store license for the Quick Pick Food Store on Nantasket Avenue. The date was set for Aug. 31.

The select board approved an employment contract with new Town Manager Jennifer Constable following a lengthy executive session. The three-year contract included an annual salary of $190,600 and four weeks of vacation, along with other benefits.

AUGUST

A citizens’ petition for the Aug. 31 special town meeting asked voters to amend the town’s zoning bylaw and overturn the ban on recreational marijuana sales resulting from a related 2018 town meeting vote. Following certification of the required number of signatures, a warrant article asking voters to allow an existing registered marijuana dispensary in Hull to add adult use retail sales would appear on the warrant. In addition, voters at the special town meeting would be asked to approve additional funding of up to $800,000 to cover increases in the cost of restoring the Fort Revere water tower. An additional article would also adjust Hull’s wetlands protection rules in response to a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision.

Hull Police Sgt. Scott Saunders was placed on paid administrative leave after being arrested in Pembroke for assaulting a 72-year-old neighbor on July 24. Saunders was charged with assault and battery on a person over 60 with injury. After his arraignment, he was released on personal recognizance and ordered to stay away from the victim. Saunders was hired by the Hull Police Department in December 2004 and has been a sergeant since 2019.

A long-awaited decision by a Massachusetts Land Court judge determined that Graves Light is not within Hull’s boundaries and its owners do not owe property taxes to the town. The 50-page decision included a detailed analysis of historic records stretching as far back as the Colonial Land Grants from 1634 and multiple maps, deeds, and other documents.

A group of Hull residents, led by members of the Hull No Place for Hate Committee and town officials, braved rainy weather take a stand against acts of hate on Nantasket Beach. The gathering was in response to a swastika found on the beach near A Street.

Unexpected repairs to the entrance to the Memorial Middle School would change how students and staff accessed the building when school started in August. Voters at the special town meeting would be asked to spend $300,000 to stabilize the top of the front portico.

Hull Public Library Director Diane Costagliola announced that she would be leaving to take a position as the new director of the library in Sandwich. Costagliola, who was hired in large part due to her extensive library services experience, earned respect and affection for her energy and creativity at the Hull Public Library during the past two and-a-half years.

SEPTEMBER

A majority of the more than 400 voters attending the Aug. 31 special town meeting soundly defeated a request for roughly $600,000 to cover the increased cost of restoring the town-owned Fort Revere water tower. The request for funds was in addition to the 2022 town meeting appropriation of $2.2 million for tower repairs. The town would now evaluate how to proceed with the project with the original budget amount. Town meeting voters approved an initial $300,000 for emergency repairs to Memorial Middle School and $120,000 to replace two pieces of equipment that regulate water flow in the drainage lagoon at Draper Avenue and Newport Road. Voters also supported allowing the sale of recreational marijuana in Hull. The meeting wrapped up in three-and-a-half hours, expedited by electronic voting.

The unexpected discovery of ammunition left over from a police training exercise caused a lockdown on the first day of classes at the Memorial Middle School. The training round had been used in an active-shooter drill earlier in the summer. Training rounds do not have the capability to leave the barrel.

It was a big month for water rescues. Hull Fire Department personnel were called to rescue several people in distress in the water near the former Beach Fire restaurant after they misjudged the timing of the tides. Fire Department staff used their training on water rescues to bring this incident to a successful resolution, as all three people were brought ashore without injury. On two separate occasions in August, beachgoers became rescuers at Nantasket Beach when they jumped in to save people who found themselves in trouble in the water.

The school committee established a draft timeline for hiring the next Hull Public Schools superintendent, with a selection expected to be made by the end of January and a start date of July 1. Current Superintendent Judith Kuehn is retiring at the end of the school year. The New England School Development Council, based in Marlborough, has been hired to facilitate the search.

The beachfront was packed as the crowds came out for the Endless Summer Waterfront Festival, which featured great food, music, games, and all kinds of family fun. The excitement continued with the Nantasket Beach Car Show, which raised funds for local charities and Cops for Kids with Cancer.

The Friends of the Paragon Carousel held its annual Derby Day fundraiser to support the organization as it entered the winter season.

Peddocks, a purebred Labrador Retriever, joined the Hull Police Department as a comfort dog to support students and others in the community by helping to reduce stress and promote wellness in the schools and at town events. The department acquired Peddocks, who is named after the Boston Harbor island, with assistance from a $5,000 grant from the Plymouth County District Attorney’s Office. The first comfort dog to serve the Hull Police, 11-month-old Peddocks underwent his comfort dog training at Professional Canine Services in Middleboro and has already gotten down to business. His handler is Hull Police Officer Leanne Marshalsea.

The planning board approved a definitive subdivision plan for the new development at the site of the former Atlantic Aquarium. Filing a subdivision plan locks in current zoning for eight years.

OCTOBER

Demolition of the former Atlantic Aquarium at the foot of Atlantic Hill began and construction of the 21-unit residential building that will replace it moved forward with the anticipated arrival of a building permit. Contractors began demolishing the concrete-block building, constructed in 1972, from the inside out.

The Hull Redevelopment Authority began hearing presentations from citizens on ideas for the development of its property. Several pitches would be heard at HRA meetings over the course of the month. Of the 20 citizen submissions, 10 pitches were given.

Boats awaited the start of the Head of the Weir race in the estuary and come ashore near the boathouse at Pemberton Point. Hull Harbormaster Kurt Bornheim and other public safety officials were out on the water to keep racers safe, while back at the Boathouse Bistro, members of the Rotary Club and other volunteers kept racers and spectators fed with a selection of hearty soups.

The Hull Fire Department purchased and installed the town’s fourth public automated external defibrillator [AED], which can be used to help people experiencing sudden cardiac arrest, at the Dust Bowl field in the Village. The other AEDS are at the Kenberma courts, L Street Snack Shack, and Hull High School/Emma Ryan Walking Track.

A standing-room only crowd packed the first Design Review Board meeting introducing a revised proposal for the Paragon Dunes development. Residents in attendance expressed concern about design and density of the buildings.

A new director of the Hull Public Library was hired. Brian DeFelice, former assistant director of the Scituate Town Library, would begin in November. The selection committee included Town Manager Jennifer Constable, a library trustee, and select board member Jason McCann.

Residents who live near the Hampton Circle Playground remained concerned about longstanding problems with flooding, rain pooling, and poor drainage, problems that they said have been made worse by the town’s addition of fill during the reconstruction of the site.

NOVEMBER

The town received nearly a million dollars in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds for the restoration of the outfall pipe at the sewer plant.

The select board voted to maintain a single tax rate for residential and commercial properties during the annual tax classification hearing for FY24, following the recommendation of the board of assessors. The average residential property owner could expect a 3.4%, or $237.52, increase in fiscal 2024 taxes, while the tax on commercial properties was expected to increase by 4.5%, or $366.51.

The Hull Redevelopment Authority decided not to move forward with a definitive subdivision application to freeze zoning on its land for eight years. Instead, the HRA would submit another preliminary subdivision, holding the current zoning in place for seven months while the board continued to review the citizens’ submissions regarding uses of the land.

Veterans Day events included the traditional ceremony at the war memorial at Monument Square on November 11, and a special dinner for veterans and guests sponsored by the Nantasket-Hull Rotary Club and The Parrot.

Several hundred generous volunteers cooked, served, boxed, and bagged almost a thousand Thanksgiving dinners and delivered them, along with bags of donated groceries, to grateful South Shore residents. Also, several hundred more free meals were enjoyed by a large gathering at Daddy’s Beach Club in the spirit of the season.

The results of the 2023 Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System exam administered to students in grades 3 to 8 and 10 indicated that there was room for improvement, administrators told the school committee. Overall, students’ post-pandemic performance was showing signs of recovery, with further work needed to accelerate their progress, according to Director of Curriculum and Assessment Christine Cappadona. The year 2023 represents a return to the full state accountability system aimed at improving student performance at all levels since 2019, due to learning losses from the COVID19 pandemic restrictions and school closures.

The crowd attending the annual Thanksgiving bonfire on the Hull Redevelopment Authority property had to stand far back from the intense heat from the flames as one of the largest fires in recent memory lit up the night. Hullonians enjoyed celebrating both the holiday season and the Hull Pirates’ 10-3 victory over the Cohasset Skippers in the Turkey Day football game.

DECEMBER

A standing-room-only crowd packed the meeting room at Hull High School and criticized the latest proposal to build a 40-foot-tall, 132-unit building at the Paragon Boardwalk property across from Nantasket Beach. Residents told the planning board that they wanted to make sure that the development reflected the character of a seaside community while creating a welcoming entrance into town. The key findings of the Design Review Board were that the proposed site lacked adequate public open space and functional parking, and that the building scale overshadowed the Department of Conservation and Recreation’s comfort station and Paragon Carousel complex.

Town Manager Jennifer Constable suggested to the select board that Hull delay action on applications to sell recreational marijuana until new state regulations could be reviewed. Town Counsel James Lampke originally was scheduled to present an update on the process for approving Host Community Agreements with retail marijuana sellers, but Constable recommended that the state Cannabis Control Commission’s new rules and regulations be reviewed to ensure the town’s zoning and general bylaws were in compliance.

The town prepared for the holiday season as Hanukkah and Christmas came. Candles were lit, lobster trap and buoy Christmas trees went up, and decorations shone throughout town. Flying Santa made his annual stop at the Hull Lifesaving Museum, circling Boston Light in a helicopter before landing on the beach near the Spinnaker Island bridge. He was escorted by Hull Police officers to the museum, where he greeted the public.

The townwide winter generators were installed along George Washington Boulevard and tested briefly. The generators provide backup electricity when the transmission lines serving Hull are affected by an outage. They are not able to supply power to spot outages within the town. A subsequent storm would put Hull Emergency Management and Hull Light line workers to the test as they worked into the night to repair localized outages throughout town despite high winds and heavy rain.

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Public invited to meet finalists for superintendent on Jan. 10

The screening committee reviewing applications for Hull’s next superintendent of schools has narrowed the field to three finalists. The names of the finalists will be announced at the school committee’s meeting on Monday, Jan. 8.

All three candidates will participate in a site visit to the district, as well as a series of interviews, on Wednesday, Jan. 10. Candidates will first rotate through three community and staff forums in the afternoon and then will interview with the school committee in the evening. 

Members of the community, students, and staff members are invited to meet the finalists and ask questions at forums to be held at the high school between 3 p.m. and 4:30 p.m.

The interviews in the evening will be an open forum and community members may email feedback to Maggie Ollerhead, mollerhead@town.hull.ma.us, who will compile the comments for the school committee. All input will be considered, but school committee members will not respond to emails directly. 

The schedule will be broken up into three 25-minute sessions: 

3:00-3:25 p.m. Candidate 1 (Students), Candidate 2 (Staff), Candidate 3 (Community)
3:30-3:55 p.m. Candidate 2 (Students), Candidate 3 (Staff), Candidate 1 (Community)
4:00-4:25 p.m. Candidate 3 (Students), Candidate 1 (Staff), Candidate 2 (Community)

4:30-5:00 p.m. Break

Over Zoom:
5:00-6:00 p.m. School Committee Interview Candidate 1
6:15-7:15 p.m. School Committee Interview Candidate 2
7:30-8:30 p.m. School Committee Interview Candidate 3

Hull Community Television will record the candidate interviews with the school committee.

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