Consultant to lead town manager search; board pledges to involve public in process

By Carol Britton Meyer

The select board voted Wednesday to retain a consultant to assist in the search for a replacement for Town Manager Philip Lemnios, who is retiring on June 30.

Select Board Chair Jennifer Constable recused herself from that part of the meeting without explanation and left the room, returning after the discussion ended.

The alternative to hiring a consultant would be for the board to conduct an in-house search, which Lemnios did not recommend. He provided board members with a copy of the town charter, which defines the role of town manager, and also detailed a model of how many other towns conduct similar searches. The last time the town used a consultant was during the search for a police chief.

“You have the benefit of time in the sense that you’re not having to fill a position because someone left [with short notice] or there’s some problem to be solved right away,” Lemnios said.

Resident Anne Murray emphasized the importance of providing an opportunity for citizens to offer their thoughts “about what they see as town manager priorities. This will be a big change for the community, and there are a lot of issues [facing the town].”

Lemnios told the board they need to determine whether they want to offer a public outreach option early in the search process.

The new town manager will begin work at the beginning of Fiscal 2024.

“It will be an opportune time, and the board has the time to make [the right] choice,” Lemnios said. “You want to choose someone who will be successful in the position and have some longevity as well. It’s your process.”

After voting to retain the services of a consultant, the board asked Lemnios to start the process for hiring one immediately. Possibilities include UMass Boston’s McCormack Institute and Paradigm Consulting Group of Cambridge.

“The consultant will talk with the select board to gain an understanding of what the board feels a new town manager should bring to the table. It’s important to think about that,” Lemnios explained. “[My charge was] to put the town’s finances right when they were adrift, and that has been accomplished. The board may have a different focus this time.”

The consultant will develop a job description and advertising plan and recruit candidates.

“[Whoever is chosen] may be aware of individuals who might make good candidates for the [Hull] position” as a result of other consulting work, Lemnios said.

The next step is the formation of a screening committee, the composition to be decided, to work with the consultant. Lemnios suggested the committee consist of one member each of the select board, advisory board, and school committee, two members of the public, and possibly others.

The consultant will work with the screening committee to develop questions for the candidates, conduct reference checks and interviews, and narrow the field to semifinalists. That part of the process is private to ensure candidates not chosen as finalists won’t risk their jobs with their current employers.

Following the interviewing of the semifinalists, the finalists will be named for select board consideration through a public process.

“It’s important for the public to know that some aspects of the search process are private, while others are intended to be public and highly visible and that the board intends to keep it that way,” Lemnios explained. “For example, the public has the right to know how many applicants there are, the number interviewed, and other statistics.”

Once the final selection is made, a contract will be negotiated, a start date set, “and you’ll be ready to go,” he said.

An option is for the select board to host a public meeting for citizens to meet the candidates and ask questions. This would provide an opportunity to see how they answer impromptu inquiries and to gauge how they interact with the public, according to Lemnios.

Select board member Irwin Nesoff called the selection of a new town manager “probably the most consequential decision we will make this year. Outside expertise is important, and the process should be as open and transparent as possible.”

“Some people think residency (meaning the new town manager would live in Hull) is important,” Lemnios noted. “You’ll need to figure that out. There are lots of different cross-currents.”

The good news, Lemnios reported, is that “we have $2 million in the stabilization fund, $60 million in grant work completed or underway at zero cost to taxpayers, all town departments can keep on operating, and we’ll have the highest amount of free cash in many years. We’re in good shape. You don’t need to rush to make the right choice.”

Select board member Donna Pursel, who acted as chair in Constable’s temporary absence, said she trusts the process and thanked Lemnios for his service to the town.

Resident Steven Greenberg said “the earlier the better for the public process.”

The timeline for selection of a new town manager will be determined at a later date.

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Standoff ends without injury after Allerton Hill resident threatens self-harm with gun

An Allerton Hill resident who threatened self-harm with a gun prompted a multi-agency response and a warning to neighbors to “shelter in place” on Monday morning. Hull Police reported that the incident ended after about 45 minutes without injury.

Chief John Dunn said in a statement that police officers “successfully de-escalated a potentially dangerous situation” at 10:30 a.m. on Jan. 2 after getting a report that a person refused to come out of their house on Beacon Road and made threats about guns in the home.

A “reverse-911” call advised residents to shelter in place while police officers maintained a dialogue with the person and convinced them to come out of the house and seek treatment.

Dunn said the resident, who has not been identified and has not been charged with a crime, legally owns firearms, but did not remove any guns from a safe during the incident. Hull Police have taken possession of all guns in the house. The Hull Fire Department brought the person to the hospital.

"Our society calls upon police officers who need to be prepared to respond to any emergency situation, and thanks to the compassion, training and experience of our Hull Police officers, a potentially volatile situation was resolved, and our officers were able to facilitate the rendering of aid to a resident," Dunn said.

Norwell, Hingham, Cohasset and Scituate police departments who responded to the scene to assist on the call.

That was the year that was: Hull's top news stories from the second half of 2022

The top news stories of the second half of 2022, compiled by The Hull Times staff…

JULY

The Center for Social and Demographic Research on Aging, part of the Gerontology Institute at the University of Massachusetts-Boston, presented the results of a survey commission by Hull’s Council on Aging. Among the concerns of Hull’s older citizens were tax increases, the availability of public transportation, affordable senior housing, traffic and local infrastructure, remaining independent and healthy, and climate change and sea-level rise.

The Hull Public Schools announced that Jacobs School Principal Christine Cappadona would move out of her current role to become director of curriculum and assessment districtwide. Assistant Principal Kyle Shaw would replace her in the top job at the elementary school.

A draft five-year Housing Production Plan indicated that more than half of Hull’s existing households are cost-burdened or living at or below the poverty level. As the next step in addressing Hull’s affordable housing needs, the select board and planning board met to hear an update on the plan, with a focus on providing more senior- and family-friendly housing.

The “Hull-O Trolley” was up and running again after being unavailable during the height of the COVID19 pandemic, and plans were under way to greatly expand its service.

The state extended the ability of town boards, commissions, and committees to hold remote meetings through March 31, 2023. The select board would continue to meet in person. Other town boards had the ability to decide in which format to conduct their hearings and meetings.

Dozens gathered for the second annual Hull Council on Aging Block Party outside the Anne M. Scully Senior Center to enjoy live music, dancing, food and ice cream trucks, games, raffles, and prizes.

Hull Municipal Lighting Plant voted that, for the third year in a row, it would rent backup generators to help keep residents warm in the coming winter in the event of a prolonged National Grid power outage. The temporary generators would be available as needed from Dec. 1 through March 31, 2023. The average residential electric bill rose last year by $6.97 a month for one year starting Sept. 1 to pay for the use of the temporary generators. This time around, customers would be charged an additional 73 cents, or $7.70 a month, on their light bills.

The Hull Lifesaving Museum presented its annual Harbor Illumination, lighting flares to  honor, remember, or celebrate loved ones along the two-mile stretch of the bay from A Street to Hull Village. The celebration and personal remembrance event paid respect to the legacy of Capt. Joshua James and the lifesavers who patrolled the shores in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Then the community and visitors gathered along Hull Bay to witness the lighting of the flares.

The select board voted unanimously “to support a diverse, equitable, and inclusive community [and to] reaffirm the select board’s ongoing support of our LGBTQ community.” This was in response to comments Chairperson Jennifer Constable had heard from a number of LGBTQ community members regarding a recent letter to the editor published in The Hull Times. Constable stated that “The letter used language that was quite honestly offensive to [our LGBTQ] community and that has rippled through the [town].”

Six local organizations were awarded a total of $15,000 for programming in and around Nantasket Beach as part of Save the Harbor/Save the Bay’s Better Beaches Program. The grant recipients included Friends of Nantasket Beach for summer programs, Friends of the Paragon Carousel’s youth talent showcase and Friday morning story times, Hull-Nantasket Chamber of Commerce’s Hull-O Trolley and Endless Summer Waterfront Festival, Latifa Ziyad’s Afro-Arabian Nights, Soca Hikes’ Wellness Day, and the Hull Lifesaving Museum’s Harbor Illumination.

AUGUST

Multiple 911 calls reported that a woman in a black pickup truck had driven over the rocks and then into Hull Gut. Although boaters and fishermen on the beach attempted to help, the truck slipped under the water before anyone could reach the driver. The police and fire departments, the Massachusetts State Police Dive Team, Marine Unit and Airwing, Massachusetts Environmental Police, MassPort, the U.S. Coast Guard and Cohasset Police assisted in the search for the truck and its driver, both of which were found and removed from the water. The driver did not survive.

Residents of Gunrock, Green Hill, and Atlantic Hill dealt with roadwork, detours, and construction noise as the long-awaited reconstruction of the Atlantic Avenue continued throughout the summer and into the fall.

The Weir River Water System announced a total water ban that prohibited all non-essential outdoor usage in Hull. The mandatory Level 2 ban included irrigation using automatic sprinklers or soaker hoses; washing of vehicles, exterior building surfaces, parking lots, driveways, and sidewalks; and filling swimming pools.

Following the town’s decision to adjust the frequency of town-sponsored 9/11 events to an every-five-years schedule rather than annually as has been the case for nearly two decades, Hull citizens planned a ceremony on their own in order to carry on the annual tradition.

SEPTEMBER

The Veterans Voice Radio Network, co-hosted by Gregg Brasso and Craig Wolfe, was recognized by the Veterans Administration during its national community partnership challenge for steadfast commitment to veterans, families, caregivers, and survivors.

During a camp operated by Northeast Surfing, owner Ronnie Lees and others on the beach noticed a woman drifting out to sea. Lees’ 19-year-old son, Matthew (right), an aquatic first responder certified by the American Lifeguard Association, successfully reached the woman and brought her to shore.

The school committee voted unanimously to accept the Best Educational Use of School Facilities Ad Hoc Committee’s recommendation to consolidate all grades into two buildings, with a PreK-7 configuration at Jacobs Elementary School and grades 8-12 at Hull High School. The Memorial Middle School would be used for other municipal and educational uses. The final decision on consolidation would rest with the school committee.

Hull was awarded a $3 million state grant for the reconstruction of the seawall along Nantasket Avenue near Fitzpatrick Way. The town was one of 23 municipalities and nonprofit organizations to receive funding through the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs’ Dam and Seawall Program.

The Nantasket Beach Car Show and Veterans Fair featured 500 cars along Nantasket Avenue and thousands of visitors. Antique and classic autos of all vintages and styles were on display during the event, which raised funds for Cops for Kids with Cancer.

Hull Porchfest filled the air with music as bands rotated performances throughout the Kenberma neighborhood.

The select board approved the establishment of a Climate Adaptation Committee and a Climate Adaptation Working Group at the request of Department of Climate Adaptation and Conservation Director Chris Krahforst. The committee was charged with reviewing new climate change information and the town’s adaptation policies, projects, and future plans, to receive an annual progress report from the working group, and to provide feedback and input

A 30-foot humpback whale that became entangled in fishing gear off the coast of Hull was rescued by a crew from the Marine Animal Entanglement Response team at the Center for Coastal Studies.

OCTOBER

The Hull Lifesaving Museum’s 36th annual Head of the Weir River Race saw as many as 60 boats jockey for position racing out of the narrow estuary and onto open water, traveling from West Corner on the Hull/Hingham/Cohasset line, past Bumpkin Island, across Hull Bay, to the museum’s Windmill Point Boathouse at Hull Gut.

The school committee continued its discussion of the potential consolidation of school buildings, with Superintendent of Schools Judith Kuehn outlining the educational implications of moving most students out of Memorial Middle School and educating students in preK through grade 7 at the Jacobs Elementary School and grades 8-12 at Hull High School. Under this plan the middle school would become a mixed-use facility, to be determined by the school committee and town officials and guided by a memorandum of understanding. The South Shore Educational Collaborative programs would remain and the school committee would retain overall control of the Memorial building.

The Hull No Place for Hate Committee sponsored the third “Stand in the Sand,” in which participants lined up on Nantasket Beach to spell out ‘Hull for All,” a message of inclusion and community.

NOVEMBER

The Hull Light Board confirmed that both of the town’s wind turbines were out of commission and the unit at Pemberton Point needed to be removed or replaced due to damage from the elements. The turbine at the high school had been not been operational since April 2021 due to its deteriorating condition, and the one at the landfill  stopped working more recently due to recurring electrical issues.

The late Richard I. “Butch” Neal, a Hull native and retired four-star Marine Corps general, was honored on Veterans Day when the unnamed section street on the north side of the war memorial was named “General Neal Way” at the request of the War Memorial Commission.

The new owner of the former Atlantic Aquarium property filed plans to tear down the long-vacant building and construct a four-story, 21-unit residential complex at the base of Atlantic Hill. The new building will be constructed on the foundation of the existing structure. The complex would have parking underneath the building and an outdoor pool to the side.  

School administrators recently presented an overview of Hull students’ scores on this past spring’s Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) exams to the school committee, naming two critical areas of focus – student attendance and low participation in the exams as compared to statewide numbers.

Hundreds celebrated Thanksgiving Day as an enormous pile of wood went up in smoke in the annual Thanksgiving night bonfire on the Hull Redevelopment Authority property.

South Shore Community Action Council, Daddy’s Beach Club, and legions of local volunteers, led by Craig Wolfe, showed up at Daddy’s on Thanksgiving morning to prepare and deliver hot meals to hundreds of individuals and families.

On Thanksgiving morning, the Hull Pirates beat the Cohasset Skippers, capturing the South Shore League Tobin Division Championship. The football team headed to the Super Bowl.

DECEMBER

A Hull family found a Kemp’s Ridley sea turtle, the rarest – and the world’s most endangered – species of sea turtles stranded on the beach. Despite their best efforts, and those of the New England Aquarium, the turtle did not survive.

HRA Chair Bartley Kelley provided an update on the status of the HRA-owned 12.5-acre property that runs from Water Street to Phipps Street. Kelly explained that the HRA has been working on a draft Urban Renewal Plan (a plan for the improvement of the HRA property). Max Walder was appointed to a vacancy on the HRA that was created by the resignation of Robert DeCoste.

The select board and planning board met in joint session to fill a vacancy on the planning board by unanimously voting to appoint Jim Pitrolo. The vacancy resulted from Irwin Nesoff’s election to the select board.

The select board authorized Chair Jennifer Constable to sign a letter to be sent to the American Association of Retired Persons pledging Hull’s commitment to creating an age-friendly community and environment at the suggestion of the Council on Aging. The board also supported joining AARP’s Network of Age-Friendly Communities, an affiliate of the World Health Organization’s Global Network for Age-friendly Cities and Communities.

Town Manager Philip Lemnios announced that he would retire in June after serving Hull for a combined 26 years over two separate terms as town manager. He also stated his intention to leave funds for an assistant town manager in the proposed FY24 budget. Lemnios was town manager from 1992-2003 and again from 2007 to present.

The landmark property at Pemberton that houses Jo’s Nautical Bar was sold to a company based in Arlington. Michael McDevitt and Stephanie Apria have owned the bar for 19 years and will continue to run it.

The Weir River Water System informed the Board of Water Commissioners that it would not raise rates in fiscal year 2024. It further announced that a new one-million-gallon water storage tank could be built on Strawberry Hill within the next three years as part of the system’s capital improvement plan. Pending successful completion of a feasibility study and other factors, the water storage tank would be built in either 2024 or 2025, as well as a booster pumping station.

Hundreds turned out to formally congratulate the Division 8 Super Bowl Champion Hull Pirates football team, as the players, coaches, and cheerleaders climbed aboard a trolley and were escorted by police and fire vehicles from the high school to the southern end of town for a watch party.

Following a recent overview of the spring 2022 Hull Public Schools MCAS results, the superintendent director of curriculum and assessment presented target strategies for improvement to the school committee. The goals included analyzing current MCAS data to make instructional shifts to close achievement gaps and to improve student outcomes in all grades.

The holidays came, candles were lit day by day, houses were decorated, and the police department collected toys to distribute to local families during its annual Fill-A-Cruiser event. A few days later, the massive generators leased by the town to provide electricity in the event of a town-wide power outage kicked into action during an end-of-year wind and rain storm, and Hull Light crews braved the winds to repair a smaller outage in Hull Village.

A look back at the issues and newsmakers of the first half of 2022

The top news stories of the first half of 2022, compiled by The Hull Times staff…

JANUARY

Public access to town buildings was again restricted in response to the rise in cases of COVID19 driven by the Omicron variant. Public health guidelines such as masking and social distancing were encouraged. The two-week new case count rose to 149 cases, compared to 58 cases in early December. Hull Public Schools recorded 76 positive cases in the first week of the new year.

The select board appointed Hull Police Department Special Officer Michael Sampson to the position of animal control officer. Sampson previously worked as a seasonal officer and special officer for the Hull Police Department.

In response to rising cases of COVID19 and a shortage of testing, a temporary regional drive-up testing site was opened, sponsored by the health departments of Hull, Hingham, Cohasset, and Scituate. Later in the month, the Hull Board of Health secured nearly 4,000 at-home test kits for distribution to residents.

The Hull Redevelopment Authority announced that the town, through the Community Development and Planning Office, had secured funding in the amount of $272,000 from MassWorks Infrastructure Program to support a two-way road project in the Nantasket area. The grant will provide for the continued development of the initial design plan concept, funded by the HRA, into fully designed and shovel-ready construction plans.

The fiscal 2022 Firefighter Safety Equipment Grant Program announced that $5 million in grant funding was awarded to 306 Massachusetts fire departments, including Hull’s. The grant program enables fire departments to purchase a range of equipment intended to make firefighters’ jobs safer, such as protective clothing, communications equipment; thermal imaging cameras; and health and wellness equipment. Hull was awarded $11,779.70.

After two months missing, Hullonian cat King Philip was found and safely returned home. Philip, well-known around town, had been taken in by a well-meaning family, renamed Max, and moved to Stoneham, before being reunited with his owner.

The town-approved Alternative Compassion Services medical marijuana dispensary at 175 George Washington Blvd. cleared its final hurdle with the issuance of a license by the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission. Renovations at the former Java Jungle coffee shop, where the dispensary would be located, had been complete for some time.

Due to an impending snowstorm, the annual Drowned Hogs swim was postponed. The Drowned Hogs Ball was still on and the swim would take place in February.

The Hull Lifesaving Museum hosted its first monthly veterans’ rowing event at the museum’s boathouse. The program was an outgrowth of the ongoing First Friday veterans’ meetups held at the museum. Nearly 40 veterans braved the sub-freezing temperatures, fierce wind, and snow.

FEBRUARY

A blizzard brought heavy snow, pounding surf, and whipping winds. In its wake, Hull residents dug out from under more than two feet of snow and wind-blown drifts several feet high.

The select board reduced the numbers of cars parked in Hull Redevelopment Authority parking lots to 500. The total number of available spaces is 1,000.

As Hull’s COVID19 positivity rate continued to decline, town buildings reopened to the public, with masks optional for staff and members of the public. Hull boards and committees were able to resume using public buildings for in-person meetings. A flexible mask policy for the Hull Public Schools went into effect when students and staff returned from their winter break. Masks were still required on school buses, according to a federal mandate, and in school nurses’ offices.

The Hull Redevelopment Authority designated its Water Street parking lot as a municipal lot from May 1 to Oct. 1 for residential parking. It also approved the use for the large parking lot for Hull Boosters carnival in June and the Hull Youth Football carnival in July.

The Drowned Hogs’ annual swim was delayed by the January blizzard, but February saw a devoted crew taking the plunge to raise money for Wellspring. Participants included a wizard and Cookie Monster. A few weeks later, a polar plunge to benefit Special Olympics took place.

Town Manager Philip Lemnios presented a balanced FY23 $45.4-million town budget proposal, representing a $1.9 million – or 4.32% -- increase. The proposed $29.02 million operating budget included $12.1 million for general government and $16.3 million for the schools.

The town’s health department distributed free COVID19 rapid test kits in the DCR parking lot on George Washington Boulevard. Drivers were able to stay in their cars and pick up the tests from organizers.

Residents of a two-family home on Bay Street were displaced when a fire heavily damaged the building, bringing mutual aid companies from Hingham, Cohasset, and Norwell. Residents were evacuated and no injuries were reported.

The first Nantasket Vehicular Snow Show was a successful fundraiser for the Hull Lifesaving Museum’s veterans’ programs. The show on the HRA property attracted an array of nearly 100 winter vehicles ranging from heavy-duty plows to ATVs, Jeeps, Land Rovers, and trucks, along with snowmobiles, and a ski-lift gondola.

MARCH

The Plymouth County treasurer presented the town with four checks totaling $128,137 as the latest round of CARES Act reimbursement for COVID19-related expenses incurred during the pandemic. $1.58 million had already been reimbursed to Hull from the CARES Act and more requests for Hull were still making their way through the system.

After two missed years due to COVID19 restrictions, the Hull Lifesaving Museum’s 41st annual Snow Row drew a strong turnout. Nearly 120 rowers from across New England raced a 3.75-mile course from Windmill Point, around Sheep Island, past the Peddocks Island marker, and back to the shoreline. Forty-five boats competed, and more than 300 spectators watched the race and supported the rowers. Organizers used a Ukrainian flag to mark the shoreline as a tribute to those affected by the ongoing Russian invasion of that country.

U.S. Rep. Stephen F. Lynch announced that the federal government’s FY22 appropriations bill included funding to replace the sewer pumping station at Pemberton Point.

Students at the Jacobs Elementary School achieved a schoolwide goal of 200,000 minutes of reading and 1,000 acts of kindness during the school’s 19th annual Read-A-Thon event this month.

Spotted in Hull: Crocuses. Daffodils soon to come.

APRIL

Town Manager Lemnios reported that the original intent to pave 27 miles of Hull roads between 2018 to 2022 in accordance with a town meeting-approved pavement management plan would not be fully accomplished. Although progress would continue, the drainage systems in many of the roads would need to be repaired.

A group of 25 to 30 students gathered across the street from Hull High School before school in a show of solidarity for a classmate following a complaint regarding a bullying incident.

A hoax 911 call on April Fool’s Day resulted in a Hull home being surrounded by officers in tactical gear from five area towns. A reverse-911 call notified residents to “shelter in place” and avoid the area, and Nantasket Avenue was temporarily closed. The initial investigation revealed that the residents were inside, and police entered the home to confirm that no one was injured.

The Best Educational Use of School Facilities Committee held a public hearing to gather feedback from residents on how to manage the buildings currently used for educational instruction.

An expanded spring schedule for ferry service to Boston from Hull’s Pemberton Pier took effect. A little more than 18 months after the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority considered eliminating the boat service, the MBTA recognized the increased demand for the service, which also stops in Hingham.

Under the state’s draft guidelines for a new multi-family zoning requirement for MBTA communities served by bus, commuter rail, ferry, or other forms of public transportation, Hull would be expected to accommodate 1,171 units of this type of housing within at least one zoning district designated for that purpose. The legislation was enacted as part of an economic development bill designed to address the state’s growing housing crisis.

Hull High School Principal Nicole Nosek announced that she would be resigning from her position at the end of June after accepting a position as assistant principal of Hingham High School. Additionally, Daniel Mastrogiacomo, assistant principal, announced he would be leaving to become an assistant principal at Oliver Ames High School in Easton, also effective at the end of June.

MAY

During the first night of Hull’s 2022 annual town meeting, voters approved spending $2.2 million to renovate and make repairs to the Fort Revere water tower, the new fiscal budget of $45.4 million, and $1 million for phase one of work on the Nantasket Avenue seawall near Fitzpatrick Way. Voters also approved an adjustment to the zoning bylaw required by the state of communities served by the MBTA to encourage multi-family housing near transit stations, and $525,000 toward the costs associated with the completion of the Hull Sanitary Landfill assessment and closure.

The second night of town meeting voted to fund several Community Preservation Committee projects. Electronic voting at town meeting was also approved, as was funding for an assistant town planner and an assistant conservation administrator.

As the road work being done on Atlantic Avenue progressed, members of the Hull Garden Club – along with the Department of Public Works – moved the weeping cherry tree from the traffic island outside the police station to Joe Menice Ballfield.

Nine-term select board member John D. Reilly, Jr. was unseated in the annual town election, while Jennifer Constable was re-elected. Irwin Nesoff finished with 793 votes to Reilly’s 630. Reilly’s 27 years as a selectman were recognized and his service in that position was appreciated. Town Moderator George Boylen, Assessor Richard Morris, planning board member Nathan Peyton, Hull Redevelopment Authority member Bartley Kelly, and library trustee Kevin Loechner ran unopposed and would continue in their current positions. Henry J. Dunn ran unopposed to fill a vacancy on the HRA. Caitlin Gould was elected to the library board and Meghan Reilly was elected to the planning board, both in write-in campaigns.

Hull Times Publisher Patricia A. Abbate died on May 14 at the age of 68 after a battle with pancreatic cancer. Before Abbate and her husband, Thomas Foye, purchased The Hull Times in 2019, she served as manager of the Paragon Carousel, president of  the Hull-Nantasket Chamber of Commerce, and was the owner and publisher of South Shore Senior News. She will be missed.

Hundreds turned out for Hull’s annual Memorial Day observances, with a parade beginning at the high school and ending at Hull Village Cemetery. Volunteers placed flags at the war memorial at Monument Square and nine squares were dedicated in honor of veterans.

JUNE

Only a few weeks before hundreds of antique and classic cars were scheduled to travel from all over the region for the 17th annual Nantasket Beach Car Show, concerns about heavy traffic forced its postponement until September. The Massachusetts State Police asked the organizers to postpone the show because of its expected impact on beach traffic.

After three years in the shadow of COVID19, a restriction-free prom closed out senior year for Hull High students. Soon thereafter, 65 students of the Hull High School Class of 2022 graduated at Finlayson Field, supported by their families, friends, and teachers.

Wellspring announced that 14 students would graduate from the Oddleifson Learning Program, including four Hull residents. The Adult Learning Program graduation exercises were held at the end of June.

Family Pride at the Paragon Carousel was a rousing success, as was the Drag Brunch at Nantasket Flatts. Subsequent commentary about the appropriateness of the event in the letters section of The Hull Times, as well as in the community, raised concerns about anti-LGBTQ sentiments in Hull.

To honor Hull’s enduring relationship with the U.S. Coast Guard, the town was recertified as a Coast Guard City. Recognizing the honor at a ceremony at the Hull Lifesaving Museum were Executive Director Michael McGurl and Coast Guard Station Point Allerton Commanding Officer Justin Young.

Michael Knybel, the middle and high school principal in Lenox, was named the next principal of Hull High School. Knybel would replace Principal Nicole Nosek, who resigned to become the assistant principal of Hingham High School.

The committee studying the configuration of Hull’s schools recommended the consolidation of grades K-12 into two buildings and the repurposing of the Memorial Middle School. At a joint meeting with the school committee, the Best Educational Use of School Facilities Ad Hoc Committee unanimously recommended a PreK-7 configuration at the Jacobs Elementary School and grades 8-12 at Hull High School.

The Land Court trial to determine whether Graves Light is within the boundaries of Hull began, but was recessed for a month at request of the town’s attorney. The suit, filed in February 2020 by David Waller of Malden, disputes the Town of Hull’s claim that the lighthouse is within the town’s jurisdiction, and therefore subject to property taxes.

The Community mourned the loss of Gen. Richard “Butch” Neal, Hull native and role model. General Neal’s lifetime of dedication to his country epitomized the Hull lifesavers’ legacy of courage, service, leadership, and compassion exemplifying the ethic of the 19th century lifesavers. He was instrumental in Hull being certified as a Coast Guard City.

The town received $1 million in funding for seawall repair and design of a new senior center as part of a bond bill approved by the state Senate. The funding will be split between two projects – $500,000 to support the town’s efforts for the design and construction of a new senior center and the same amount toward a state condition assessment on the existing Point Allerton seawall and revetment.

Watch next week’s edition for a review of the top news stories of the second half of 2022.

Water company to study rebuilding its storage tank on Hull’s Strawberry Hill

By Carol Britton Meyer

REMEMBER THIS? For decades, the water company maintained a storage tank atop Strawberry Hill, but took it out of service in 2008. The Weir River Water System is studying building an even larger tank on the same site within the next two years. [File photo by John Galluzzo]

A new one-million-gallon water storage tank could be built on Strawberry Hill within the next three years as part of the Weir River Water System’s capital improvement plan.

The new tank would be about double the capacity of the former water tank, which was taken down after a 2008 study by the water company determined the 75-year-old structure was no longer needed.

Pending successful completion of a feasibility study and other factors, the water storage tank would be built in either 2024 or 2025, as well as a booster pumping station, Weir River Water System Managing Director/Superintendent Russell Tierney told the Board of Water Commissioners last week. The location of the pump station would be determined following discussions with Hull officials, Tierney said.

The new tank and pumping station would improve the reliability of service while ensuring adequate water pressure and flow for Hull customers.

During the meeting, the board, comprised of Hingham’s three select board members, approved an agreement with Environmental Partners Group, Inc. for preliminary design work for this project.

If the feasibility study, which involves a hydraulic analysis and geotechnical surveys of the proposed tank and potential booster station sites, shows the project to be a good fit and if it is demonstrated that the hill would provide a solid foundation that could support the tank, the next step would be the preliminary design work. The water company still owns the land on Prospect Avenue where the former tank stood.

The total cost of this phase is not to exceed $241,200, which would come from bond proceeds from the purchase of the water system. More information will be available at a later time.

Last week’s meeting focused on the fiscal year 2024 budget and proposed projects, including the one related to Strawberry Hill.

According to Tierney, there's a focus on the Strawberry Hill area, as this was identified as the number-one site for a new tank following an analysis of the system.

Hingham town meeting voters earlier this year authorized the borrowing of $5.4 million for water system capital investment in the water system, half in FY22 and the other half in FY23, that would be paid for by the system’s ratepayers in Hingham, Hull, and North Cohasset. These funds are earmarked to pay for the costs associated with designing, engineering, constructing, reconstructing, repairing, and improving the system.

Regarding another capital project in Hull, Tierney also reported that the design of the Manomet Avenue replacement water main “is being completed in fiscal 2023.”

Garden Club celebrating art, music, community, and more with ‘Books in Bloom’ event

By Betsy Russo, President, Hull Garden Club

The Hull Garden Club wanted to have an event to give back to the community for all the support we have gotten throughout the challenging last few years.

With the encouragement and help of Diane Costagliola, director of the Hull Public Library, the club is having a four-day “Books in Bloom” celebration at the library, Thursday, Jan. 19 through Monday, Jan. 23. 

The library will be filled with blooms as the Hull Garden Club and other community groups interpret books through floral design. There are many events scheduled, all free. 

The HGC wanted to reach out to other members of the community to participate in this event and to share in the excitement. The following groups will be joining us in making arrangements: the Hull Library Book Club, the Council on Aging staff, the Hull Lifesaving Museum staff, the Hull Village Association, the Friends of the Hull Public Library, and Barbara’s Book Club. The arrangements will be on display starting at noon Thursday, Jan. 19 through Monday, Jan. 23, during regular library hours, as well as during our special Friday night event. 

The HGC sponsored a class at the Council on Aging where seniors made more than 100 bookmarks to contribute to the Books in Bloom event. 

The Hull Artists will share their beautiful artwork. The collection centers around our garden theme, which promises to be a diverse and colorful display in the gallery. 

There will be a Friday morning garden-themed story time for preschool-aged children and a Saturday art class for the elementary age. Sign up at the library for the art class.

On Thursday evening, from 5-7 p.m., here is an opportunity to meet the arrangers and ask questions. On Friday evening, from 5:30 to 8 p.m., there is a special reception with music by Hull’s own talented Anne Walsh, Ned Morse, and Skip Tull. The Friends of the Hull Public Library will provide refreshments. There will be raffles and loads of fun. 

The Hull Garden Club wants to give back -- mark your calendars for this wonderful community event!

Bibbidi Bobbidi Bright announces winners of annual holiday decorating contest

SHINING BRIGHT. The Bibbidi Bobbidi Bright decorating contest attracted 27 Hull houses this year, bringing the holiday spirit to nearly every neighborhood in Hull. Best-in-show homes included first-place winner Maria Calabria, at 502 Nantasket Ave., who greeted visitors with a smile and won a summer photo session with Hull’s Brandie Nicole Photography. Second place went to the Gibbons Family at 17 O St.; they won the Vitamin Sea swag bag. Third-place winner was Jean Conway, 20 Clifton Ave., with a special winter wonderland village inside her porch. To help people find their way around town, elves Verona (9) and Dahlia (17) handed out 100+ maps at Scoops Ice Cream on Sunday afternoon. The full list of winners: First Place: 502 Nantasket Ave.; Second Place: 17 O St.; Third Place: 20 Clifton Ave.; Fourth Place: 19 O St.; Fifth Place: 115 Manomet Ave.; Sixth Place: 139 Kenberma St.; and Seventh Place: 733 Nantasket Ave. [Photos courtesy of Liliana Hedrick]

Residents reflected on a wonderful life in Hull as they celebrated the holidays a century ago

By John J. Galluzzo

HULL HOLIDAYS: IN 1903, THE HULL BEACON PUBLISHED ITS FRIDAY MORNING EDITION ON CHRISTMAS DAY.

Although there was no official declaration that the holiday season was under way in 1922, the passing of Halloween and the arrival of All Saints Day marked the transition for young and old alike.

“The spirit of Halloween was observed last evening in all the residential sections by the younger children who, dressed in grotesque costumes with masks and carrying lanterns of various designs, held parades through the main streets, which afforded much merriment and fun for the older residents,” read The Boston Globe’s “Hull” column of Nov. 1. The fire department responded to a “rubbish fire” started by “some boys” on the beach just outside of the Village at 10:30 p.m. on what proved to be an otherwise calm holiday night. At midnight, the summer police force went off duty for the year, with the winter force beginning their portion of the annual rotation. Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose Burnside Mitchell missed the entire Halloween affair, taking off on “an automobile tour of the New England States and other northern points” before night fell.

On Nov. 1, all three Catholic churches in town switched to their winter schedules, with All Saints Day observed by Masses in all locations. The Hull Women’s Club and the Ladies Aid Society held meetings, summer residents left for their winter homes in droves, and the town pivoted its offal collection routine from summer (five districts) to winter (the town as one large district) and mulled the naming of an official winter offal collector. Chatter turned to the upcoming state election on Nov. 8. The polls would open at 7 a.m. at the Central Fire Station, but when would they close? Hull residents hoped they would remain open until at least after the 5:15 p.m. train from Boston had returned to the Waveland Station around 6:10, but the decision would not be democratically resolved; the town had been run by a political machine, the “Old Ring,” since 1893, and it would decide when enough votes had been cast.

The chairman of the Republican Town Committee, which bore the aforesaid nickname, almost lost his streak of 28 consecutive years of voting in town. At 7 a.m. Dr. Walter H. Sturgis sat deep in the Maine woods, 300 miles away with friends Frank P. Richardson and A.I. McLean. Determined to cast his vote, Sturgis stepped on the gas of his car and began the journey home. As the vehicle rolled into town with “15 minutes to spare,” decorated with eight prize deer “strapped on the sides, rear and across the hood,” it made for a “picturesque sight,” according to The Boston Globe’s Nov. 8 article.

Sturgis went right to work. Late that evening, “a motorboat with several men aboard, grounded on the Nantasket shore, and one of the occupants of the fishing party was rushed to the Sturgis Hospital in a serious condition, caused by his falling against the engine, severely cutting his throat,” said the Globe. “Several stitches were necessary to close the long cut.”

As for the election, the prized state Representative’s seat representing Hull, Hingham, and Cohasset went to John L. Mitchell of Hull. The town voted for summer resident John F. Fitzgerald for governor in a losing effort, breaking the historic run of the political slogan “As Hull goes, so goes the state.” The Globe interviewed “one old weather-beaten fisherman” who declared “’It’s the fust time in my memory that we ain’t showed the way. Sum’en wrong someplace.’”

The community’s thoughts increasingly turned in the coming days to one topic – sewers. With the awarding of the contract to build the Ocean Avenue sewer to Bradford Weston, the residents of the Sagamore Hill and Hampton Head areas waited for news from the State House of the town’s sewer commissioners’ petition to build a sewer that would discharge into the sea by way of the Weir River. Concurrently, the new seawall at the southern end of the beach, another important piece of town infrastructure, was nearing completion, providing all-important protection for the railroad tracks that ran along the eastern shore. By the end of the second week of November, work would begin on a new sidewalk on the eastern, bayside section of Spring Street, formerly a wooden boardwalk.

Armistice Day, marking the anniversary of the end of World War I, was not celebrated publicly in Hull in 1922, as it was not a legal holiday, but the American Legion did host a surprise costume party at Fort Revere. The Hull Village Club began its regular winter meetings at the Nantasket House, next to the Hull Public Library, and young Moms gathered for Monday baby clinics at the Damon and Village Schools to receive free professional parenting advice. The Hull Gunning Club voted to outfit all of its members binoculars after one member had repeatedly shot at a decoy in the surf. As the holidays approached, whist parties, dances, collations, and other social events ramped up in frequency under the auspices of the town’s various clubs, fire department companies, and church groups. On Nov. 17, one of the final lingering summer residents, Mary Canary, flew the coop.

The phenomenon of celebrating Hull life was not confined to Hull. As early as Nov. 8, groups beyond the borders began planning gatherings in wistful remembrance of the summer just passed. The Nantasket Vacationists of Roxbury planned their annual gathering for Nov. 17, an event that drew 2,000 revelers. The Nantasket Beach Vacationists of Cambridge held their event on Dec. 4, with the special annual naming of “Mr. and Miss Nantasket.” On Dec. 12, a joint group of Center Harbor, N.H., and Nantasket Vacationists celebrated at Catholic Union Hall, where, according to the Globe, it was promised that “Frank O’Donnell, South Boston’s soft-shoe dancer, will give an exhibition of the steps, including his usual ‘Frisco.’” On Dec. 13, the Nantasket summer residents of Watertown would take over their town hall for a party of their own.

Indoors in Hull, as the temperatures dropped with the season, athletes turned to the newest fad, basketball. On Saturday night, Nov. 18, the Fort Revere basketball team defeated the Tank Platoon from New Bedford’s Fort Rodman in a barnburner of a game, final score 12-10. The West Corner Community Club promised to floor a solid squad that year as well. The Central Fire Station became home to nightly concerts played by radio, thanks to drivers William Jeffrey and Charles Fitzpatrick, with not only the firemen, but many local residents invited to take in the wonder. Of particular interest was the Harvard-Yale football game on Nov. 25, which would be heard at the station, but also at the home of G. Kendrick Smith of Allerton Hill, who would host the entire Allerton football team in his home to hear the “returns.”

On Sunday, Nov. 26, the first skating party of the year formed organically on a frozen lagoon in the low and swampy land of Kenberma. Kids from Allerton, Bayside and Waveland met in the streets – all members of the Junior Athletic Club – and walked throughout town to find ice. Locating it, they retreated home and grabbed their skates. Two days later, the first heavy snowfall of the season brought out the sleds on Telegraph Hill. The high winds that came with the nor’easter drove in “great quantities of driftwood, which was eagerly gathered by the many beachcombers who are without coal,” said the Globe, noting the ongoing hardships associated with the nationwide coal miners’ strike. The news of the arrival of a load of coal to the Waveland docks spread like wildfire throughout the town on Dec. 1.

The news of the death of Johnnie Robinson, a driver at the Central Fire Station, did the same on Dec. 4, with one problem: he wasn’t dead. Somehow the rumor started in town and residents began relentlessly calling the station. Robinson finally had to inform the central operator to hold all such calls and explain that he was very much alive. Sadly, within a few days Mrs. Elsie Fairbanks and Mrs. Belle James, wife of Captain Reinier James, did pass away. Within a few weeks, James F. Patterson and Mrs. William Waldron followed them; although, due to the frozen conditions at the time of her death, Mrs. Waldron’s remains were consigned temporarily to the receiving tomb at the Hull Village Cemetery.

On Dec. 7, Captain William C. Sparrow, commanding officer of the Coast Guard Station at Stony Beach, retired. Sparrow had embraced the impossible, taking over command of the station in the months after the death of Hull’s beloved Joshua James in 1902. Now, 20 years later, his career finished, he turned to board a train to begin his journey to see his daughter in Birmingham, Ala., with one last look back and wave to his crew, drilling in their lifeboat in front of the station.

Five days later, a major fire struck the storage building on the Floretta Vining estate, next door to the Coast Guard Station (where eventually the town would build its wastewater treatment facility). The blaze consumed huge quantities of hay and three automobiles, in what proved to be the first in a string of odd accidents and tragedies that would plague the last few weeks of the year. On Dec. 22, the Coast Guard Cutter Acushnet ran aground on Toddy Rocks off Allerton, the crew rescued by new Captain Hilton Acker and his crew from the Stony Beach station. Five days later the Boston fishing schooner Mary E. O’Hara struck hard in the same area, with luckily all 23 men being saved. The next day, Dec. 28, a fire started by a “fallen wire” partly destroyed Keany’s Café and poolroom on the state reservation at Nantasket during a heavy snowstorm that had disabled the town’s fire alarm system. Firefighters responded to individual phone calls to their homes and the sound of hand-rung bells in the middle of the night. Seventy-mile-per-hour winds threatened to push the flames to Paragon Park.

The storm proved to be a two-day affair that produced a new hero for the community. The storm raged strongly, tying up shipping and sending tidal surges onto the mainland. At Nantasket, the waves threatened to submerge and undermine the train tracks. In the aftermath, sea clams and lobsters washed ashore in great quantities, which “brought great joy to the beach combers,” according to the Globe. The driftwood was welcome, too, as the town went about 32 hours without electricity. During it all, Emma Sargent remained at her post at the telephone exchange. Billeted for seven hours of work, from 4-11 p.m., she remained at her post for 16.

“Call after call came in from anxious wives regarding their husbands, from mothers asking for their daughters and sons who were somewhere along the road either in automobiles or on the trains,” wrote the Globe. “To each and every one came the cheery word of encouragement from the operator at the Central Office who told each as well as she could about the train service and the condition of the highways.” When the police reported the fire to her late that evening, Sargent was the one who called every call fireman in town individually. “Had it not been for her wide-awake vigilance in immediately answering the call for the fire, Nantasket Beach with its pleasure park and nearby residences would have undoubtedly been fire swept.”

By the 17th of December, though, the Christmas spirit had taken hold, with the annual Christmas tree exercises for Sunday school students planned for both St. Ann’s at Waveland and St. Mary’s of Green Hill. Children attending the Village Grammar School looked forward to their annual trip down Spring Street to Gould Memorial Hall for their festivities. Along the way, they would pass the newly flooded and frozen over Village Park. The Young Men’s Hockey Club had already petitioned the town for an arc light so they could practice at night, and could avoid running over children during the day, as had happened the previous winter on far too many occasions, they said.

As the schools had cleared out, with families gathered for the wonderful holiday ahead, Hull residents believed they were in the most estimable place on earth, exactly where they should be. They understood perfectly when they sat down with the paper on the evening of Dec. 24 and saw the final Christmas wish of an anonymous individual, explained in two short lines, in The Boston Globe want ads: “Wanted: To buy a small seashore cottage, Hull or Nantasket.”

For Hull residents, that holiday dream had already come true.

Weir River Water System aims to keep rates steady, explore meter upgrades

By Carol Britton Meyer

The Weir River Water System will not raise rates in fiscal year 2024, which was part of the good news shared by Managing Director/Superintendent Russell Tierney during an update to the Board of Water Commissioners Tuesday night.

In related news, Tierney reported that for the first time since WRWS began operating the system, “the revenue collected has exceeded the billings, an indicator that we are collecting past due accounts,” an effort that will continue to stabilize finances.

The system was formerly operated by Aquarion Water Company before it transitioned to public ownership under the Town of Hingham in July 2020. The Hingham Select Board serves as the water commissioners.

WRWS is exploring the possibility of installing a new metering system that will also help track unaccounted-for water (UAW) and monitor violations of watering restrictions.

“The expectation is to reduce UAW to under 10%, resulting in reduced operation and maintenance costs,” Tierney said during an earlier update.

WRWS is asking a consultant “to perform an evaluation of the current metering system,” he explained. “This will provide us with important information on the cost and process of moving from a radio-read to a fixed-network system.”

While Tierney said that while he was happy overall with the way watering restrictions went this year during the severe drought, “we want to stay on top of how we can better implement water bans.”

Also in the works are enhancements to the security systems at the water treatment plant and remote locations, such as wells, and consideration of hybrid/electric vehicle options for the WRWS fleet.

Included in the WRWS proposed fiscal 2024 budget is a request for a new assistant water superintendent position at a salary of $95,000.

“We’re already paying $160,000 a year for outside inspection [services], and this individual [if the new position is approved] would perform those inspections as well as other tasks, freeing me up to focus on [the proposed] Strawberry Hill water storage tank and booster pumping station,” Tierney said.

He also outlined some of the work performed by the operations and maintenance staff annually.

This includes treating and distributing more than 1.2 billion gallons of water; maintaining more than 190 miles of water mains and 10 water sources, including Accord Pond; inspecting and maintaining 917 fire hydrants systemwide; and conducting a biannual systemwide flushing program, among other tasks.

Key initiatives, Tierney explained, include improving water quality by implementing preventive maintenance and water main replacement programs, making treatment plant and equipment upgrades, updating and improving GIS mapping, and developing a capital study report.

The overall WRWS mission is to provide “outstanding service to our customers in Hingham, Hull, and North Cohasset while continuously supplying the highest-quality water and improving the water system infrastructure,” Tierney said.