Suit threatening 12-unit Rockaway Annex project to be heard in Land Court

An aerial view of the proposal for 25 Ipswich Street. The road shown in the center (heading in the direction of the water) travels along the disputed easement over the abutting property.

The state’s Land Court is scheduled to hold a pre-trial conference next week in a long-running dispute that jeopardizes the development of 12 townhouses in the Rockaway Annex neighborhood.

The proposed Residences at Rockaway plan includes six modular, four-story townhouse-style buildings with two units each set on .63-acres. It was approved by the Zoning Board of Appeals in May 2025, but uncertainty around an easement over an abutting property – needed for access and utilities – could derail the plans.

Click here for the ZBA’s final decision approving the project

Click here for renderings of the proposed project

The property was formerly part of a larger tract of land owned by Hulltop LLC, comprising what is currently 7 Salisbury Street, 20 Ipswich Street, and 25 Ipswich Street. The entire property is the former Veterans of Foreign Wars post.

Alan Mckenzie, the developer of 25 Ipswich Street is suing Derek M. Paris, the owner of 20 Ipswich, over the easement, which lawyers claim was not properly created when the property was subdivided.

The Land Court’s hearing will be held at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, June 23.

-- Christopher Haraden

Shorelines: Good news about your friends and neighbors

FANS FROM AFAR: With the World Cup taking place in Foxboro, members of the Tartan Army – the kilt-clad of the Scotland national team – have been seen in Hull. Jennifer Whelan caught up with them while having dinner at Local 02045

• Congratulations to Jack Burke, a rising senior and marine transportation major at Massachusetts Maritime Academy, who has been named to the President’s List for second year in a row. This honor is bestowed on students who earn a grade-point average of 3.6 or higher. The Hull High graduate is looking forward to his senior year as captain of the MassMaritime soccer team. Go Bucs!

• Merrimack College recently recognized academic excellence by naming students with high academic achievement to the Dean’s List. Congratulations to Fallon Ryan, a nursing major who made the Dean’s List for the spring semester.

• The Hull Garden Club  recently held its annual luncheon at the lovely Lincoln Room at South Shore Country Club. This year, members celebrated two scholarship recipients as well as the induction of new officers.

The new officers for the next two years are President: Faye Baglione; First Vice President: Sue Bradley; Second Vice President: Tricia Fleck; Recording Secretary: Diane Norton; Corresponding Secretary: Nancy Bokun; Treasurer: Debby Tamborella (not pictured).

The Hull High graduates who were awarded scholarships were Kaylee Ann Blake, who plans on attending the University of Tampa to major in nursing, and Camila Arias, who will be attending the University of Massachusetts at Boston to study to become a physician’s assistant.

• A packed house gathered at the Hull Yacht Club this past Saturday night for a screening of Joe Berkeley’s documentary, “The Last Islander,” which tells the story of Mike McDevitt and his quest to save his sister’s home from demolition on Peddocks Island. Each showing of the film has been sold out – including at the Hull Lifesaving Museum’s newly renovated Windmill Point Boathouse. “The Last Islander” recently won best short documentary at the Big Apple Film Fest.

• Two Hull students – Erica McGowan and Abigail Gibson – were among the 525 recipients of bachelor’s degrees at Salve Regina’s commencement exercises in Newport, Rhode Island on May 17. Salve Regina University is a Catholic, coeducational institution of higher education founded by the Sisters of Mercy in 1947. More than 2,700 students from around the world are enrolled in the school.

Hailey Gould has been named to the University of New England’s Dean's List for the spring semester. Dean's List students have attained a grade point average of 3.3 or better out of a possible 4.0 at the end of the semester.

• If you have always wanted to learn more about the piping plovers and their impact on Hull’s coastline, mark your calendars for an upcoming presentation on Thursday, June 25 at 1 p.m. at the Anne M. Scully Senior Center. Plover Ambassadors Liz Vargas and Susan Mann will discuss these birds, their nesting habits, and the need to protect them from harm when they are on the beach. You also can learn about how to become an ambassador, educating the public and watching out for the birds when they are most vulnerable. To register, call 781-925-1239.

Grace Holden, a student at Lasell University, has been named to the Dean's List for academic performance in the spring semester. Students must complete at least 12 credits and achieve a semester GPA of 3.5 or higher.

Tyler Sordillo has been named to the Dean’s List for academic excellence for the spring semester at Springfield College. He has a primary major of exercise science/applied ES.

• Events celebrating the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence are in full swing! Check the community calendar in the Summer Guide that is included with this issue of the Times, or log onto hulltimes.com for more information. Hull’s USA 250 Committee is planning excursions to view the Tall Ships parade in Boston Harbor that will depart from Pemberton Pier on July 15 – ticket information will be announced soon. Also on the agenda is a parade and field day on Saturday, August 15. The parade steps off in the Kenberma area and travels down Nantasket Avenue to L Street. These and many other activities will help make this summer one of the most patriotic in recent memory.

Christine Burnett has been named to Southern New Hampshire University’s spring President’s List. Full-time undergraduate students who have earned a minimum grade-point average of 3.7 and above for the reporting term are named to the list.

Patrick Lynch received his bachelor of science in business administration degree at Stonehill College’s 75th commencement on May 17. Lynch also was recognized at the college’s Student Life Awards program, which celebrates campus community members for their outstanding contributions to the betterment of Stonehill.

• Also at Stonehill, Lilly Copenheaver-Smith, a member of the Class of 2029, was named to the spring Dean’s List. To qualify for this honor, undergraduate students must have achieved a grade-point average of 3.50 or higher with a minimum of 12 credits.

• This Sunday, June 21 is Father’s Day! Be sure to celebrate all the Dads and father figures in your life this weekend. Stop by Nantasket Pharmacy to pick up a card and maybe a great gift (or gift certificate) at one of our faithful advertisers in the Times or in our Summer Guide, which is included in this edition. Or, reward Dad with his own subscription to The Hull Times – if he already has one, you can contact our office and extend it for another year. He’ll appreciate it!

Would you like to see your accomplishments celebrated here in the Shorelines column? If you have news about Hull residents to share – birthdays, anniversaries, career and education achievements, weddings, births, and other milestones – send your information to us at news@hulltimes.com. There is no charge for inclusion in this column. If you include a photo, please be sure that everyone in the image is identified. Thank you!


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© 2026 The Hull Times. All rights reserved.

More than 100 citizens contribute to survey about how to improve town meeting process

By Carol Britton Meyer

The results of a citizen-driven survey intended to gather constructive feedback from Hull residents following the recent four-session, often divisive, town meeting are in. A total of 103 citizens participated.

The goal was “to better understand what residents felt worked well, where communication or process could improve, and how we can encourage greater transparency, engagement, and public participation moving forward,” Hillary Taverna wrote in the introduction to the survey, which she organized.

Taverna is the daughter of select board member Jerry Taverna, and while he attended the “debrief” meeting following the close of the survey on May 20, “this was my own initiative,” she said.

Since then, several citizen volunteers have joined together with Taverna to begin the conversation about ways to improve the 2027 town meeting.

Taverna’s initial takeaways from the survey results, which she shared with The Hull Times, are that residents:

• “Care about the town and want to make changes … and to see it improve over time” and

• Desire better information about town meeting throughout the year as well as changes to the process and length.

Click here for the full compilation of results from the survey.

That document has both quantitative and qualitative results from the 103 responses. According to the compilation, “some respondents felt citizens were not informed enough about articles or the budget going into ATM” and “by far, the most common complaint this year was disrespect and a lack of decorum across the board.”

“Residents were clearly frustrated with what they perceived to be unfair moderation and disrespect from all sides,” Taverna said. “However, we drew the conclusion that if we made strategic improvements in key areas – like more communication and education about warrant articles and the budget and perhaps reverted to addressing the articles in order – the moderator’s job may become much easier.

“As a result, the issues of unfair moderation and disrespect might be greatly reduced or may disappear entirely,” she added. “This was a useful revelation that may help us better focus our energies on what we feel we can truly change by next year.”

Other takeaways include that the survey process was not difficult and that overall, the in-person debrief meeting of 30-plus residents was “a great example of collaboration prevailing over divisiveness, as we quickly learned that we all have more in common than not.”

“Residents certainly wanted to vent, but the more we discussed it, the more we focused on more systemic issues as opposed to issues with specific town officials” – for example, the point that improving resident education and the length of town meeting could make the moderator’s job easier, Taverna said.

The survey included questions about town meeting engagement, participation in past town meetings and how citizens felt prior to and during town meeting with regard to feeling informed, among others.

The survey was posted on the Today in Hull and Hull Happenings 2.0 Facebook groups to encourage as many citizens to participate as possible, and the details were also published in the Times.

Taverna then created an email list from the names of those who took the time to fill out the survey to provide follow-up information and an opportunity to join working groups, including one focused on resident education/information.

To reach Taverna for more information or to join the effort, use the QR code included here.


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© 2026 The Hull Times. All rights reserved.

Tennis, anyone? Volunteers rally to repair and repaint neglected L Street courts

CRACK TEAM: Recognizing that the tennis courts at L Street had seen better days, a group of volunteers teamed up to fill the cracks and create a smooth playing surface. At top right, Brady Cowling and Tom O’Callaghan fill the large gap in the pavement, while Jake Millen, Jason Romanow, Brendan English, and Pete Coumounduros helped spruce up the courts for all to enjoy. [Courtesy photos]


A group of volunteers from Hull’s tennis community spent several days this week repairing cracks and repainting lines at the Paul Dunphy Tennis courts at the L Street park, bringing the long-neglected facility to a more playable condition.

Pete Coumounduros, one of the effort’s organizers, said the work was overdue.

“The tennis courts have fallen into a horrible and embarrassing condition,” he said. “A group of us from Hull’s large and growing tennis community came together over the past few days to make them better to play on. While the courts are still not perfect, we were able to fill most of the cracks and paint new lines.”

The volunteers included Coumounduros, Brady Cowling, Mike Daganhart, Joe Dunn, Brendan English, Sean Flanagan, Frank Leonard, Jake Millen, Tom O’Callaghan, Kevin Rodrigues, Jason Romanow, Kevin Summers, and Matt Willard

“We’d like to thank select board member Greg Grey for his support of this volunteer-led effort,” Coumounduros added. “It makes a real difference to know the town is behind us.”

The Paul Dunphy courts serve a growing number of recreational players across Hull. The volunteers hope the repairs will extend the courts’ life while longer-term improvements are considered.


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© 2026 The Hull Times. All rights reserved.

Board updated on plan for new light plant/DPW facility, extends Tipsy Tuna entertainment hours

the select board and light board held a joint meeting wednesday night. [Screen capture from Hull community Television]

By Carol Britton Meyer

During a nearly three-hour meeting, the select board met in joint session with the light board for a lengthy discussion about various issues – including an update on the proposed combined light plant/DPW facility at West Corner– granted the owner of Tipsy Tuna a half hour extension for its live entertainment hours, and raised the possibility of changing the day and time of its meetings.

As part of the joint discussion, Town Counsel Brian Winner provided an update on Article 40, which passed at this spring’s town meeting in the form of a citizens’ petition calling for the removal of the town manager from the light plant manager role and requires Legislative approval.

Certification of the warrant article vote by the town clerk is required before a home-rule petition can be filed with the Legislature. At its next meeting, the select board will review a transmittal letter – a formal, introductory document – drafted by Winner and vote on whether to submit the home-rule petition. 

A similar article from the 2025 town meeting (Article 37) was approved by voters but lacked the precise language to enact the change to Chapter 8 of the Acts of 1989, which established Hull’s town manager form of government. The light plant manager’s position was combined with that of the town manager through a 1993 home-rule petition.

During the sometimes-contentious meeting, there also was discussion following a presentation by the Weston & Sampson engineering firm on the proposed combined light plant/DPW building on the current DPW site and also about the permanent garage the light board approved at its November meeting for the current light plant site, rather than the temporary structure proposed by Town Manager Jennifer Constable, pending further project details.

Click here for more information on the combined DPW/light plant at West Corner

Weston & Sampson architect John Comeau called the condition of both the current light plant and DPW facilities “deplorable.” He explained that the new 37,000-square-foot, not counting additional shared space, proposed combined facility – with a current estimated cost of $60-$65 million – would be designed to meet FEMA flood-resilient standards. Both sites currently experience flooding.

Climate Adaptation & Conservation Department Director Chris Krahforst said that “funding opportunities are being explored knowing this would be a huge cost.”

Select board Chair Brian McCarthy – who did his best to move the discussion along – said “it’s quite obvious to all of us that this will be a significant decision we will all have to make” as to whether this proposal will become a reality.

The presentation will be posted on the town website, and additional information is available on the Climate Adaptation & Conservation Department webpage.

Light board Chair Tom Burns requested another joint meeting of the two boards, to which McCarthy responded, “Absolutely.”

Four members of the select board participated in the joint meeting this week. Board member Irwin Nesoff was not present.

In other business

• The select board did not approve Tipsy Tuna owner Anthony Ghosn’s entire request for extended live music hours, but did grant him a half-hour increase to the weekday and weekend hours. The new hours are Sunday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m., and Friday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. This was an attempt by the select board to reach a compromise, balancing concerns voiced by some neighbors about noise issues with Ghosn’s request as a seasonal restaurant owner.

“When we shut off the live music, customers start flowing out,” he said.

Board member Jerry Taverna once again emphasized the need for the town to draft and adopt a noise ordinance that all businesses would be required to abide by for consistency.

McCarthy said this is an issue that could be discussed at the board’s upcoming retreat.

• Susan Short Green asked fellow select board members to consider changing their meeting night to Tuesday from Wednesday, noting that the Hull Redevelopment Authority meets on Mondays, planning board on Wednesdays, and the light board on Thursdays.

“It would helpful if each [board] had its own night,” she said.

Green also proposed changing the meeting start time to 6 p.m. from 7 p.m., with public hearings scheduled for no earlier than 6:45 or 7 p.m. to accommodate citizens’ schedules.

In addition, she suggested that the board meet weekly, rather than every other week, but that if this isn’t feasible to at least consider adding quarterly meetings devoted to discussions about the board’s goals and objectives, with citizen input.

The meeting schedule will be a topic of discussion at the board’s next meeting.

A replay of the meeting will be available on demand on Hull Community Television’s website, www.hulltv.net.


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© 2026 The Hull Times. All rights reserved.

Light board majority opposes plan to move to West Corner; prefers staying at current site

By Carol Britton Meyer

A lengthy discussion at the June 4 light board meeting revolved around the proposed joint municipal light plant/Department of Public Works facility at West Corner – which the board opposes – and who has authority to make capital and policy spending decisions for the light plant.

At its April meeting, the light board adopted a resolution requesting a written accounting of related grant activity, among other information, from Town Manager Jennifer Constable, who also serves as light plant manager and has been advancing planning and grant work connected with the combined-facility concept.

At last Thursday’s meeting – which was standing room only – Constable said that information was not available that night and would be addressed at a joint meeting of the light board and select board on June 10, with the town’s consultant, Weston and Sampson, attending.

The Times reached out to Constable for this story but did not receive a response by this week’s deadline.

During the April meeting, the majority of the board members supported the resolution – proposed by light board member Jake Vaillancourt – to withdraw the Hull Municipal Light Plant from the Coastal Zone Management grant to combine the light plant’s headquarters and the Department of Public Works into one building.

At that time, Vaillancourt outlined the intent of the resolution: to require either the withdrawal of HMLP from the existing grant scope or modification of the scope so that any grant-funded work supports HMLP facility needs at 15 Edgewater Road, including the board’s previously approved new four-bay garage, rather than relocation to West Corner.

Click here for more details about the combined light plant/DPW at West Corner

According to Vaillancourt at that time, the resolution gives the board leverage to negotiate either a change in scope, a withdrawal of HMLP from the project, or a smaller award, and that without such a formal communication, the board has effectively no leverage.

The resolution asks for a written accounting covering grants since 2022 tied to light plant property, operations, or the combined-facility concept; light plant resources committed to those grants; the scope of work and design-completion targets for the Phase 3 grant and any pending or submitted Phase 4 application; town communications with the Office of Coastal Zone Management, the state energy office, or other agencies that represented or implied light board support; and confirmation of any Phase 4 application submitted on or before March 27, 2026, including its amount, scope, and any representation of board support.

The light board’s underlying question is whether the light plant has been named as a participant or beneficiary in grant applications for the combined facility without the elected board’s authorization, given that the board opposes the project.

The board’s opposition is based in part on concerns that a new building would cost ratepayers more than refurbishing and expanding the current building.

Under a change in the town manager act approved in 1993, the town manager also serves as light plant manager. The board’s position is that capital and policy spending decisions belong to the elected board, while day-to-day operations and the town’s buildings are the manager’s and the town’s domain.

The point was made at the June 4 meeting that funding of the roughly $60 to $65 million combined-facility project would require a two-thirds debt authorization at a future town meeting.

In a unanimous vote last November, the light board approved funding a capital project for a permanent four-bay garage at 15 Edgewater Road, where the current light plant is located.

The board’s current position is an estimated cost of roughly $2 to 4 million and that this work could be financed through a low-cost municipal loan program without new debt charged to the town’s taxpayers.

Such a capital project would be designed to allow for solar orientation and complement the historic nature of the existing building.

At the June 4 meeting, the board voted unanimously to oppose erecting a temporary garage – as proposed by town management – on the grounds that it does not match the permanent four-bay garage approved in November.

In response to a second motion, the board directed the light plant manager to advance the design and cost estimate for a permanent garage and to look into renting off-site garage space, within Hull, as a short-term stopgap to house an incoming vehicle while the permanent garage is built.

Also at the June 4 meeting, light board counsel Nicholas Scobbo, of Ferriter Scobbo & Rodophele, urged the light board and select board to resolve their differences cooperatively for the benefit of the ratepayers, and that opening a dialogue makes more sense than spending public money while in disagreement.

Scobbo also advised that the light board’s Section 5 wording in the resolution went too far in directing Constable to produce records, but that the board may request the same information, including through a public records request. He noted that the 1993 framework governs until the law is changed.

It’s unclear whether the light board controls the decision to relocate the light plant. At the same time, the board’s position is that the capital spending decision is the board’s purview.

With regard to the passage of Article 40 at the recent town meeting, similar to last year’s Article 37 – which removes the town manager from the light plant manager role – the board voted last week 4 to 1 to reaffirm its support of Article 40. The home-rule petition would now go to the Legislature. The board also voted 4 to 1 to direct the light board chair and clerk to draft written testimony to the Legislature for the full board’s review at its next meeting. Commissioner Stephanie Landry was the only “no” vote.

The next regular light board meeting is scheduled for July 16.


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In the Sport-light: Roundup of news from Hull's wide world of sports

SEASON-ENDERS: Last week marked the end of the youth soccer season. The top photo is the girls 5/6 squad, which closed out the season Saturday with a hard-fought 3-3 tie against Hingham. The boys 7/8 team, shown in the middle photo, finished up the regular season this past week and is on to the Coastal Cup, while the boys 5/6 team 1 tied its final game at home against Pembroke with a score of 1-1. [Courtesy photos]


Compiled by Matthew Haraden

• Boys 5/6 Soccer Team 1 tied its final game at home against Pembroke Team 2 with a score of 1-1. Will McCarthy scored Hull’s only goal, and the whole team put up a good fight to end the spring season. Andy Michaelides, Jordan Dunn, Killian Kelly, Liam Palermo, Luke Panetta, North Saforrian, Owen Bilodeau, Ryder Lankas, Silas Van Slyke, Will McCarthy, and Zachary Shea all played their hearts out, improved their skills throughout the season, and look forward to seeing how much better they are in the fall.

• Girls 5/6 Soccer closed out the season Saturday with a hard-fought 3-3 tie against Hingham. The result was a fitting end to a year marked by steady growth and increasingly competitive play. Goals came from Charlie Ward and Willa Britton, who netted two, both finding the net off set pieces. Sharp passing and timely assists kept Hull in the match throughout, reflecting the team’s development over the course of the season.

• Girls 5/6 Lacrosse battled hard but came up short in a 12-5 loss against Weymouth on Sunday, June 7. Congratulations to Leah Dibley for scoring her first goal of the year. Frankie Rockett and Cordelia Hennessey each had two goals. Laila Dolan took the draws with ferocity and midfielders Sydney O’Brian, Maryonna McKinney, and Jacqueline Collins covered the field and made great passes against an aggressive Weymouth defense. Sienna Truglia, Ryleigh Mooney, and Emma Medina attacked Weymouth’s crease to open up shooting lanes. As always, Hailey MacLeod strapped on the pads in net to keep the game within reach while defenders Willa Britton, Julianna Moore-DaSilva, and Hadley Dolan swarmed Weymouth’s offensive efforts. The players held their heads high in defeat and showed great camaraderie and spirit to close out the regular season. Hull’s Jamboree by the Sea takes place at the turf on Sunday, June 14.

• The Hull Youth Soccer Travel registration for the fall 2026/spring 2027 season continues until June 20; this is a strict deadline and you may not be able to register your player after the deadline passes. If your child plans to play travel soccer this upcoming season, register ASAP to guarantee their spot. Travel players are required to upload an updated player photo for league rostering. Photos should be recent, similar to a passport or school photo, with a clear view of the face and no hats or sunglasses. Travel teams are boys and girls grades 3-8, and in-town teams are boys and girls, preK through second grade. Register online at www.hullyouthsoccer.com.

• The Hull Youth Football Association is excited for another great year and organizers have been working hard planning for the upcoming season. Families are asked to register as soon as possible so that HYFA can plan accordingly. As many of you know, Hull has faced challenges with numbers in the last few years. With athletes playing multiple town sports, the rise of club sports, and other activities competing for schedules, it can be very difficult and time-consuming to keep the program running. The sooner families register, the better chance there is to make all seven teams work for the 2026 season.

For details and to register, visit https://clubs.bluesombrero.com/Default.aspx?tabid=465294

• Have you ever watched the sailboats out on the bay and wished you were there? Now is your chance! The Hull Yacht Club is offering adult sailing lessons to members and non-members. Upon completion of the learn-to-sail course, you will be able to handle a small boat, including rigging the boat, principles of sailing, safety equipment, and procedures and terminology.
Adult Learn-to-Sail classes will begin the week of June 29. There are multiple time slots available, with classes running for six weeks (one lesson per week).There is a minimum of two adults with no more than three adults per class. Tuition is $300. Class options are Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday mornings or afternoons from 10 a.m. to noon or 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Students are required to provide their own life jackets. The 2026 instructors are HYC members Claire Guerin, Joe O’Neil, and Charlie O’Connor. Register at https://hullyc.org.

 Coaches, league organizers, and superfans – We need your help to report the scores and results of the latest events in Hull’s sports world! Please send local sports news and photos to sports@hulltimes.com. Deadline is Wednesday at noon. When providing details of the games or races, please be sure to include the sport/team, the players’ full names, and the final scores. When sending photos, names (first and last) of those pictured are greatly appreciated, as well as who should get credit for taking the photo.

Thank you for your help!


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© 2026 The Hull Times. All rights reserved.

Friends of Paragon Carousel to host annual ‘Field of Flags’ ceremony in honor of Flag Day

The Friends of Paragon Carousel will host its annual Field of Flags ceremony on Sunday, June 14, from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. on the lawn of the historic Paragon Carousel.

The community event, held in observance of Flag Day, invites residents and visitors to come together to reflect on the history, symbolism, and importance of the American flag while honoring loved ones, veterans, active members of the armed forces, educators, mentors, and community leaders.

As part of the ceremony, patriotic musical selections will be performed by the Paragon Carousel Chorale. Throughout the event, American flags sponsored by community members will be displayed across the carousel lawn, creating a meaningful visual tribute to those being honored.

Community members may sponsor a flag for a $20 donation. Sponsored names will be included in the event program and read aloud during the ceremony, and sponsors may take their flags home following the event. Sponsorship opportunities at the silver, gold, and platinum levels are also available for individuals and organizations wishing to further support the program.

Proceeds from the event directly support the ongoing restoration and preservation efforts of the nearly 100-year-old Paragon Carousel, the last remaining attraction from the historic Paragon Park.

Flags may be purchased online at www.paragoncarousel.com.


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Opinion: The questions Hull ratepayers were not asked

Op/Ed by Jake Vaillancourt, Clerk

Hull Municipal light board 

On June 10, the light board and the select board sat together for a presentation on a proposed building that would move the Hull Municipal Light Plant out of 15 Edgewater Road and into a shared facility with the Department of Public Works at West Corner.

The boards were told, near the outset, that no one was proposing to move the light plant into a joint facility. The cover of the slide deck handed to us that evening reads, in large type: Design of Resilient Joint HMLP and DPW Facility. Residents can hold both of those statements in mind as they read what follows.

Start with what the study never examined. After roughly four years of planning, exactly one option was presented: a combined building of approximately 37,000 square feet, rising to 44,000 with mezzanines, on the DPW site at 9 Nantasket Avenue. The deck’s site screening slide tells residents two things its presenters did not dwell on. First, the top-ranked site, the one that is actually out of the flood zone, is privately owned and the owner will not sell; the DPW site is the fallback. Second, 15 Edgewater Road was screened only for whether a brand-new, full-sized replacement light plant facility would fit there. Whether the existing facility could be renovated and a garage added, the path the light board has actually voted for, was never screened, never costed, and appears on no slide.

When the question was asked at the meeting, the project’s lead acknowledged it plainly: that wasn’t the scope. Select board member Jerry Taverna pressed the point, asking exactly where these buildings are failing and why, noting that the DPW building has extremely good bones, and asking whether the buildings the town already owns can be salvaged. No one had an answer, because in four years, no one was ever paid to find one. A feasibility study that examines one outcome is not a comparison. It is a recommendation in search of a ratification.

Next, the cost. The schematic design is with an estimator now; the town has no estimate. The only dollar figure shown to two elected boards on June 10, after four years of study, appears on a closing slide that reads, in full: $60 million plus $5 million, followed by a question mark. The presenter, to his credit, cautioned that no one should hold him to it. Fine. But notice what even that framing conceals. The light plant’s dedicated program is roughly 12,000 of the 37,000 square feet, about one-third of the building. So who pays what? If ratepayers are assessed a proportional share, that approaches or exceeds $20 million. If ratepayers pay only the $5-million increment, then Hull’s taxpayers are subsidizing the light plant’s housing. Nobody answered the allocation question, and until someone does, no one can honestly say what this proposal costs the people who pay electric bills in this town.

Then there is the money already spent and the money being sought. The boards were told on June 10 that the work to date has cost the town less than $100,000. The Commonwealth’s own announcements tell a fuller story: three consecutive Coastal Resilience grants for this project totaling $524,805, and the town’s own June 10 slides describe a pending Phase 4 application for roughly $500,000 more in state funds with an approximately $50,000 town match, with federal FEMA funding anticipated after that. These figures may well reconcile; awarded funds and expended funds are different things. But that is precisely what an accounting would show, and that is why the light board’s April resolution requested a complete written accounting of every grant touching light plant property and operations. At the board’s June 4 meeting, the town manager stated that the accounting would be provided. As of the June 10 joint meeting, it had not been. The ratepayers of Hull are entitled to see those numbers, and so is the elected board that answers to them.

Compare the path the light board has already chosen. In November 2025, the board voted unanimously to fund a permanent garage at 15 Edgewater Road to protect the plant’s fleet, including a bucket truck that cost ratepayers roughly $375,000. The board was later informed that design work on that garage had been engaged. What came before the board this month, more than six months after its vote, was not that design. It was a proposal for a temporary fabric structure in a coastal high-wind area that the board never requested and, at its June 4 meeting, unanimously voted to oppose. The board has asked what became of the permanent garage design, who redirected it, and under what authority; those questions are unanswered. The board’s preliminary review puts a garage and facility upgrades in the range of $2 million to $3 million. I will say plainly that the figure is preliminary, and the board intends to commission the engineering and cost work to firm it up, including full floodplain compliance, and to publish the comparison. But the financing structure is not preliminary: the light plant can fund this work itself, through reserves or the MMWEC pooled loan program, repaid from electric revenues rather than property taxes, without adding a dollar to the town’s borrowing and without the two-thirds town meeting vote the joint building will require. And the timeline is not preliminary, either. By the project’s own schedule, the joint facility would not be complete until 2030 or 2031. The light plant’s need to shelter its equipment is now.

What about flood risk, the stated reason for all of this? Look closely at the slide the boards were shown. The graphic titled HMLP Projected Flood Elevations measures from a base elevation of 3.2 feet, at the old storage buildings at the water’s edge on the lowest corner of the property. Those buildings are in use today, and that is exactly the problem the light board’s garage vote exists to solve: move the plant’s vehicles out of the low buildings and onto the upper ground along Edgewater Road, which sits at roughly 15 feet above the current FEMA base flood elevation of 10 feet, on land the town already owns. The joint facility solves the same problem by moving the vehicles to a site that starts at nine and a half feet, below the base flood elevation. Under the project’s own 2070 projections, the water line eventually rises past 15 feet at both sites, which is why the proposed building must be raised on deep foundations, in soil the geotechnical study calls challenging, with garage bays expected to take on water by design, and why Mr. Krahforst’s own closing slide describes the outcome in writing: a combined facility, still in the flood zone.

The board’s garage would be built to the same modern flood standard, on the highest ground either site offers. In other words, the slide is a fair picture of the problem and a poor argument for the prescription. Both plans get the trucks out of that building. One moves them uphill for $2-3 million; the other moves them five and a half feet downhill for a share of a $65 million question mark. If resilience is the goal, the smaller, higher, cheaper project is not the one that needs explaining.

Underneath all of this sits a structural problem the town can no longer avoid naming. Under Hull’s 1993 special act, one appointed official serves simultaneously as town manager and as manager of the light plant. Consider what that means here. The town manager’s office pursued and administers the grants that are premised on relocating the light plant. The same office supervises the DPW, which would anchor the new building. And the same office is responsible for carrying out the elected light board’s capital direction at 15 Edgewater Road, the project that competes with the grant-funded one. No individual could serve all three of those interests at once, and this is not a claim about anyone’s good faith. It is an observation about the structure, and it would hold for any person occupying both seats. But when one office sits on every side of a $65-million question, residents should not be surprised by what this record shows: a four-year study that examined one option, a grant application that left the elected board’s support field blank, a unanimous vote for a permanent garage answered with a fabric tent, and an accounting promised on June 4 and not delivered by June 10.

Any one of those might be an oversight. Together, they are what a structural conflict looks like in practice, and the ratepayer pays for it. Town meeting has now diagnosed this problem twice: in 2025, when it voted to remove the town manager’s role as light plant manager, and again this spring, when it adopted Article 40 to restore the governance under which nearly every other municipal light plant in the Commonwealth operates: an elected board that hires an independent, professional light plant manager. The capital authority of the elected board is not a technicality. It is the same authority under which this board, not any appointed official, voted to purchase the truck soon to be sitting in the weather. And it is the only structure in which the people who pay the electric bills choose the people who decide how their money is spent.

Both boards agreed on June 10 to take up a full cost comparison at a coming joint meeting, and I welcome it. The light board does not oppose a proper home for the DPW; that case may be strong on its own merits. Our charge is narrower and older: best value for Hull’s ratepayers. On today’s record, a $2-3-million project that the plant can fund itself, on the highest ground available, finished years sooner, is a better answer than a share of a building whose only published price is a question mark. If the forthcoming numbers prove otherwise, we will say so.

We ask only that the town do two things. First, do what four years and a half a million dollars of study have not: put both options on the table, with real numbers and a real accounting, and let the ratepayers see the comparison. Second, when the select board transmits Article 40 to Beacon Hill in the coming weeks, as it has indicated it will, our legislative delegation should carry it across the finish line. Last year’s petition was referred to study and died without a vote. Hull’s voters have now asked twice, and they will be watching to see that the answer this time comes from the Legislature and not from the filing cabinet. One office should not sit on both sides of the question.


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Public invited to honor deceased firefighters at Memorial Sunday ceremony on June 14

On Sunday, June 14, the Hull Fire Department will celebrate Firefighters Memorial Sunday at the Firefighter Memorial at the Hull Village Cemetery. Arrival time is 9 a.m. and the ceremony begins at 9:30 a.m.

Firefighters Memorial Sunday is held each year on the second Sunday in June to honor all the active and retired Hull firefighters who have passed away during the last year, and has been a tradition for more than 100 years throughout the country. Memorial Sunday is sponsored by the Hull Firefighters Relief Association, organized in 1925; it provided a small benefit to the families of deceased members at a time of need.

Firefighters Memorial Sunday is also the department’s annual awards ceremony, in which members are recognized for actions above and beyond the call of duty during the year.

In the event of heavy rain, the service will be held indoors, at the Central Fire Station at the corner of A Street and Nantasket Avenue.

The public is invited.


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© 2026 The Hull Times. All rights reserved.