Community pays fond tribute to Larry Kellem, a tireless champion of Hull

By Christopher Haraden 

During the past several decades, Larry Kellem dedicated himself to large-scale projects to make Hull a better place – from helping to establish the Hull Medical Center to leading the beautification of the Kenberma business district – but his family says the well-known attorney, who died Jan. 12 at age 90, relished giving his community service and legal work a personal touch. 

“He was just so in love with Hull,” his son David recalled last week. “He helped a lot of people privately because it was the right thing to do. And he always looked out for the good of the town, no matter what he was doing.” 

LEGAL EAGLE. Attorney Larry Kellem was visible all over town, but nowhere was his wise counsel more memorable than on the town meeting floor, where he often alternated between the role of advocate and mediator. Mr. Kellem died last week at age 90. [File photo]

David Kellem recalled an instance many years ago when a local couple planned their wedding at Temple Beth Sholom, where Mr. Kellem served at various times as president, treasurer, and a board member. On the day of the ceremony, the groom arrived to find Mr. Kellem, paint brush in hand, sprucing up the front of the building. Nobody had asked him to do it. 

“He wanted everything to look beautiful for them, and for the Jewish community,” his son said Friday. “He just cared that much.” 

Mr. Kellem grew up in Roxbury, spent summers in Hull as a child, and moved his family here permanently in the 1950s. He met his future wife, Cynthia Swartz, when they worked at the same summer camp for Jewish youth. The couple had been married for 62 years when Mrs. Kellem, a retired English teacher at Hull High School, died in 2016. 

“He and my Mom were surrogate parents and mentors to many kids in Hull,” said David, who with his brother, Steven, eventually joined their father in the family’s law firm, Kellem & Kellem. Mr. Kellem’s daughter, Amy Slotnick, “escaped the practice of law,” the family wrote in Mr. Kellem’s obituary, and works in the mortgage industry. He was the grandfather of six and great-grandfather of two. 

In a legal career that spanned more than 50 years, Mr. Kellem represented local residents in court, businesses applying to licensing boards, and developers seeking permits for new projects. Over the years he provided legal services to the town’s light board, redevelopment authority, and was associate town counsel, and wrote several zoning bylaws and reports interpreting municipal regulations. 

In his eulogy at a service at the temple on Monday, David Kellem recalled that his father enjoyed spending time in Kenberma, where he would go “ostensibly to do his personal business, but really to dispense legal advice and sage counsel to all of the townspeople who grabbed him and said, ‘Hey Larry, can I ask you a quick question?’”  

His son said he was a willing adviser on legal matters of all kinds – his children lovingly referred to him as “Loophole Larry” – and he enjoyed helping community groups raise funds and build membership. David Kellem said his father’s favorite accomplishment was managing the 1971 Hull Little League championship team sponsored by Paragon Park. 

“One might argue that many of us love Hull as much as Larry Kellem did, but nobody loved it more,” said John Galluzzo, vice president of the Hull Historical Society. “Larry always had Hull’s best interests in mind. He was always thinking, planning and dreaming about growth, the future, ways for the Hull community to improve. Many of the positive changes that have benefitted Hull in the past half century have his stamp on them – the expansion of the library, the redevelopment of the Kenberma business district, all the way down to the green benches liberally spread around town.” 

In addition to leading the chamber of commerce and lending his legal expertise to business enterprises like the Atlantic Aquarium, Mr. Kellem contributed to Hull in myriad ways, ranging from chairing the local draft board during the Vietnam War to becoming a key figure in the disaster relief efforts following the devastating Blizzard of 1978. 

“My decades at the Times gave me the opportunity to report on many of Larry’s initiatives on behalf of his legal clients, town government, and Hull residents in general,” said former Hull Times Publisher Susan Ovans. “Larry was at the forefront of Hull ‘boosters’ in the word’s most generic sense. He was keenly interested in every aspect of life on the peninsula, and that manifested in working hard, and for a long time, to establish the Hull Medical Center, for example, or poring over proposed bylaws to be sure the wording for an article to be presented at town meeting didn’t have unintended consequences.” 

In the 1980s, Mr. Kellem realized that development was coming to Hull, regardless of whether the town was ready to accept it, so he used his influence to persuade builders of large projects to give back to the community. 

CARRYING ON. When attorney Larry Kellem, right, represented condominium developers in the 1980s, he often negotiated community amenities as a condition of their proposals. Here, he and Nantascot Place builder Mario Bertone deliver plans to Hull Town Hall.  [File photo]

“However anyone feels about development and developers, my Dad always believed that what he was doing was for the good of the town,” David Kellem said. “He wanted developers to improve Hull [and] got them to offer amenities along with their projects, even when it wasn’t required by law.” 

His first large-scale client was Nantascot Place on George Washington Boulevard, a condominium project that was in the works for many years before being completed in 1987. One of his proudest achievements, according to his son, was helping to create the zoning that allowed the current Nantasket Beach Resort hotel and conference center to be built in 2000. 

Mr. Kellem represented developers large and small, including General Investment and Development, which built the Hall Estate condominiums. He wrote the townhouse residence district zoning bylaw that facilitated the development, then put his money where his mouth was and purchased a unit on Gatehouse Lane, where he lived for many years. 

Earlier, he represented MGM Grand when the casino operator sought to legalize gambling at the Hall Estate property in the 1970s, a high-profile assignment for the self-professed small-town lawyer. 

His son laughed when he recalled the casino executives visiting Mr. Kellem at his office in his Nantasket Avenue home to discuss the multi-million-dollar project, “sitting in our living room with the shag rug and the gold curtains [and] some furniture my parents probably bought at Building #19” – about as far from the Las Vegas glitz as they could get. 

“When he had his law office in the house, his clients would literally bang on the door and he would have them come in and eat with us at our kitchen table, and then they would go downstairs and work for a few hours,” David Kellem said. “That would happen all the time.” 

Galluzzo, who also served on the board of directors of Manet Community Health Center, which now operates the Hull Medical Center, cited Mr. Kellem’s early involvement in its creation in the late 1960s. A sign in front of the building recognizes that it was named in his honor. 

“After the tragic and unnecessary death of a high school student shook the community and demonstrated the need for a medical center in Hull, Larry joined others in spearheading the movement that resulted in today’s center,” Galluzzo noted, adding that Mr. Kellem’s enthusiasm for the town continued over the years. “When Fox 25’s morning news team arrived in Hull for the long-awaited ‘Zip Trip’ segment on our community, Larry, as head of the chamber of commerce, took the prime seat and smilingly did what he loved most – promoting Hull to the world.” 

Town Counsel James Lampke, who grew up in Hull, said Mr. Kellem “was truly a town leader and a dear friend to many. 

“Larry was the type of person every town wished they had as a resident,” Lampke said this week. “Hull was very fortunate to count Larry as a true Hull champion. He loved his family, of course, who in their own right were and are wonderful residents. But Larry had a true and unique love for the town. For many years as the only attorney with an active office in Hull, he helped countless people and was very generous in providing legal guidance. He set an example by his actions worthy of everyone’s emulation.”  

While many who remembered Mr. Kellem this week cited his long list of community activities, others recalled that his calm demeanor and gift for conversation made him good company, no matter the venue. 

“We shared office space in the Conway building on Nantasket Avenue, and Larry often climbed the stairs to pop in and share a story idea or the contextual history of a lingering policy issue that was making news,” Ovans said. “He loved gossip and was a reliable source as to the veracity of many a rumor. And he had an opinion about everything. One of the most lovely things about him was that he wanted to hear your opinions, too, even when he didn’t agree with them.” 

Galluzzo added that Mr. Kellem’s legacy will long be felt in the town where he dedicated so much of his life to civic involvement. 

“He showed us what could be done if one committed to volunteerism, his actions inspiring us to be better citizens ourselves,” Galluzzo said. “Hull has always had its pantheon of civic champions. Larry, with more than 60 years of his service to the town, stands among them.” 

Mr. Kellem’s full obituary can be found by clicking here. 

The Hull Medical Center’s building on George Washington Boulevard is named in honor of Lawrence A. Kellem in recognition of his role in its founding.

Have a memory about Larry Kellem to share? Click here to write a letter to the editor.

New conservation administrator, ‘a Hull kid through and through,’ to focus on wetlands

By Carol Britton Meyer

Hull resident Ian MacDonald started a new chapter in his career in late December after accepting the position of conservation administrator in the town’s Climate Adaptation and Conservation Department, with a focus on the all-important Wetlands Protection Act.

CONSERVE AND PROTECT.  The staff of Hull’s Climate Adaptation and Conservation department, from left, Director Chris Krahforst, Conservation Administrator Ian MacDonald, and Conservation Clerk Renee Kiley. [Courtesy photo]

“I’m excited and grateful to be granted this opportunity to work in the town I grew up in,” he told The Hull Times. “I graduated from Hull High School in 2015 and am a Hull kid through and through.”

MacDonald stepped into the role formerly occupied by Chris Krahforst, who is now serving as the town’s first director of climate adaptation and conservation, and will work under his supervision.

The department coordinates the town’s efforts in climate adaptation and conservation planning, and serves as administrator to the conservation commission, guiding floodplain and storm management as well as bringing about the research, design, and implementation of climate adaptive and resiliency projects. In addition, the department also provides assistance in Wetlands Protection Act applications.

MacDonald believes that being a longtime Hull resident is a “plus” in his job because he understands the importance of preserving and protecting the town’s valuable resources from his own experience “and knowing what it means to reap the benefits of maintaining a healthy environment.”

MacDonald stood out to Krahforst during the initial round of interviews for the conservation administrator position because he was prompt and well-prepared.

“Ian had also taken a course on WPA regulations and administration through the Massachusetts Association of Conservation Commissions months before we considered advertising for this position,” Krahforst said. “That certainly was a bonus. Also, his genuine enthusiasm and ready-to-go attitude were immediately apparent.”

MacDonald said that his “favorite thing about living in Hull is the natural beauty that we get to live in every day. From the beautiful sunsets, to sunrises, and everything in between.

“Going to the beach in the summertime is how I like to spend my days off,” he said. “Also, I love being out on the ocean on a boat or kayak. Hull is a great place to grow up and make lifelong friends along the way.”

Among MacDonald’s duties are assisting applicants in the permitting process, reviewing applications and plans, determining resource areas and Federal Emergency Management Agency flood zones, conducting conservation commission meetings, organizing site visits, drafting decisions, and addressing compliance issues.

“Administering the WPA is a full-time job since most of the town is within protected resource areas such as barrier beaches, coastal dunes and banks, and land subject to coastal flooding resulting from storms, or within a buffer to these resources,” Krahforst explained.

Enforcing the WPA is one of the biggest issues facing Hull, according to MacDonald. “About 80 percent of the property in town falls under the Act.”

MacDonald’s annual salary is $65,000 and is a non-union position, according to Town Manager Philip Lemnios. As part of the fiscal 2023 budget, town meeting approved the creation of the director position that Krahforst now holds, which is responsible for coordinating the town’s response to climate change.

Potential flooding is a concerning issue the town faces on a regular basis, especially in view of rising sea levels.

“This has become more apparent over the years,” Krahforst said. “Anyone driving around Hull can see that there are plenty of homes that need to be, or have been raised, on piles to get them out of the flood zone. The [threat of flooding] is very real and has been happening in town at an increasing rate.”

Scientific data confirms the frequency and magnitude of the impacts of climate change on the environment, according to Krahforst. “Ian has been focusing a lot on different aspects and starting to unpeel the layers” he said. “He has a lot of catching up to do, and he’s up to the job.”

In recent years, the conservation administrator also served as Hull’s floodplain manager and through that role has worked with the town to identify and implement storm damage protection and flood control measures through grants. The department also manages Straits Pond and works with the DPW to maintain flood control and improve the quality of the pond’s ecology.

“Ian’s focus will help our department to be able to continue to improve the town’s response to current coastal flooding issues, and to prepare for future climate impacts by incorporating the best science and technology-based information,” Krahforst said. “This added capacity to our department will also benefit our outreach and communication.”

Prior to accepting the administrator position, MacDonald served as an environmental scientist and earlier, as an energy efficiency intern with Newton Power Choice. He holds a bachelor’s degree with a focus in environmental studies from Lasell University.

While he enjoyed working for an environmental consulting firm in Bridgewater and working in this field, MacDonald didn’t feel as if he could “check off all the boxes” because he was looking toward a career change that would give him more of a sense of fulfillment.

“Living in this peninsula town as I do, I wanted to make a difference in physically conserving and preserving Hull’s resources,” he said.

Many of the planned projects related to climate adaptation and resiliency are under way, including in the Hampton Circle area, which Krahforst and MacDonald hope will serve as a model for other coastal communities.

Looking ahead, the department will play a major role in:

- Creating a new floodplain bylaw (required after Hull’s FEMA flood maps are updated);

- Securing FEMA funding for Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities and Flood Mitigation Assistance;

- Integrating American Rescue Plan Act funding initiatives into hazard mitigation;

- Participating in initiatives for climate change vulnerability and mitigation and floodplain management;

- Continuing to address the town’s aging infrastructure, including seawalls, municipal buildings, and others, and the need for climate adaptation;

- The overall management of Nantasket Beach.

 The department also ensures the town’s participation in FEMA’s Community Rating System and is preparing, with FEMA funding, to update Hull’s local Hazard Mitigation Plan.

The added capacity from creating the new position for Krahforst will be beneficial to the town when pursuing funding, Krahforst said.

Among MacDonald’s goals in his new role are “growing as a person, getting settled in the position, brushing up on previous, current, and future projects, and maintaining positive relationships with staff in the other town offices.”

For more information on the Department of Climate Adaptation and Conservation, click here. At the bottom of the page is a link to a story board on Preparing for Climate Change.

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‘Saltwater in my veins’ – memoir recounts adventures while growing up in 1950s Hull

By Carol Britton Meyer

In his new book, “Stickball to Clamshells,” longtime Hull resident and former firefighter Tommy Claffey recollects in a conversational and humorous way his childhood years spent in Hull during the 1940s and 1950s – from playing pranks on his friends to numerous adventures in school and around town.

STORYTELLER. Hull’s Tommy Claffey describes the transition from city life to growing up in Hull in his new memoir, ‘Stickball to Clamshells.’ [Courtesy photo]

Each engaging chapter is centered on a different recollection or experience, and imparts a lesson of its own, which could well start the reader reminiscing about his or her own childhood.

“The book is a period piece featuring several elements, including romance, humor, human interest, and coming of age. There’s even a haunted house in the mix,” Claffey told The Hull Times. “It is not cemented in historical fact; rather, it’s a narrative of what it was like growing up in my earlier years in a city element and then transitioning to Hull in increments due to [circumstances at the time].”

A good portion of the book relates to Claffey staying occasionally with his Uncle Tony and Aunt Rose on Hampton Circle before moving here permanently with his mother when he was still a young boy. He also recounts the adventures he had with his late cousin, Dave.

After moving from Mattapan to Hampton Circle, Claffey found himself starting fifth grade at the original Damon School. His book details what it was like living in Hull during a time when he recalls the town being referred to as “‘Brockton-by-the-Sea” by outsiders, “Dodge City” in the summer, and “Siberia” during the winter months.

The title of the book refers to going from playing stickball in the street in Mattapan, where he spent the first few years of his life, to playing football in summer residents’ back yards in Hull when their properties were vacant, swimming in the ocean, and playing on the beach and noticing clamshells.

The focus of the book is on the overall experience being “very fun and positive,” he explained. “My cousin and I shared many adventures in that part of Hull and also at World’s End [in Hingham],” he said.

The boys also enjoyed fishing, taking Uncle Tony’s dory out on the bay, wiener roasts beside the bay wall, and fun at Paragon Park, where Claffey also worked for several years – from selling newspapers there to being a miniature golf course attendant to running the Wild Mouse ride when he was in Hull High School.

When writing “Stickball to Clamshells,” Claffey said he had one thing in mind: “To provide an escape from all the trials and tribulations of today’s world; a retreat into yesteryear and a different era that would spread a little joy and fun.”

While he’s not thinking this to be a great novel, he explained, “I do honestly feel it is a fun read.”

Living in Hull most of his life, Claffey considers Hull to be his playground.

“I have saltwater in my veins,” he said. “I feel fortunate to live in this beautiful town.”

When asked what he likes best about his hometown, he replied, “Every inch of it.”

Claffey has another book coming out next month entitled, “Tears in the Parlor,” related to his early childhood experiences living in Mattapan.

“My grandmother was related to James Michael Curley, and we had a very large family,” he said. “It was an interesting and remarkable time.”

Moving to Hull as a young boy “opened up so much for me. It was wonderful,” he recalled.

In the early 1990s, Claffey had a story each published in Yankee Magazine and Reminisce Magazine that shared some of his childhood adventures with readers.

“The day we put soap suds in the Tunnel of Love” –  featured in Yankee Magazine – told the zany tale of how he and several other boys poured soap suds into the ride’s water reservoir at Paragon Park. “When the soap got to the paddle wheel, it was like a big washing machine, with soap suds everywhere!” he remembers.

Another time, in the 1950s, Claffey and a friend appeared live on the Community Auditions show, accompanying on guitar at her father’s request a young girl they were acquainted with who was in the lineup to sing “Stupid Cupid,” the only song she knew. The story he wrote about the experience appeared in Reminisce Magazine.

“She forgot the words and froze, so we started the song all over again. At the same time, our guitar amplifier blew up on stage, and a member of the crew ran out to throw sand on it to put the fire out,” Claffey recalled. “The whole thing was a disaster!”

Claffey served as a Hull firefighter for 26 years and was a member of the dive team before retiring. He enjoys working in his yard and visiting with his grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

“Stickball to Clamshells” is available at the Barnes & Noble bookstore and on Amazon.com.

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Member’s absence delays school committee’s vote on consolidation to Jan. 23

By Carol Britton Meyer

The school committee delayed until Jan. 23 a vote on consolidating Hull’s schools into two buildings because a member was absent from Monday’s meeting due to a family illness.

The agenda for the meeting noted that the committee would vote on phase one of the reconfiguration plan by moving the sixth grade to the Jacobs Elementary School next year – or, in effect, keeping the fifth graders in the same building for another year. The Memorial Middle School would house grades 7 and 8.

However, the discussion and vote was delayed for two weeks because member Liliana Hedrick could not attend this week’s meeting.

“I know people are expecting us to vote on the reconfiguration tonight, but that wouldn’t be fair without all the school committee members here,” Chair Stephanie Peters said.

The overall reconfiguration as outlined in the MARS Best Educational Use of School Facilities report and supported by an ad hoc committee calls for the Jacobs School housing grades PreK to 7 and the high school containing grades 8 to 12 in the 2024-25 school year. A future vote would be needed by the school committee to implement the full plan.

The reconfiguration would leave the middle school open to other educational uses, such as the South Shore Collaborative, or municipal uses, such as town offices or a senior center. The school committee would maintain control of the building.

The MARS report evaluated the educational adequacy of the three current school buildings with the goal of what is in the best interests of Hull Public Schools students.

These votes by the school committee relate to a December school committee meeting during which Superintendent of Schools Judith Kuehn presented the two-phase plan. The first phase, if approved by the school committee, is to allow time for planning and communication prior to implementing the overall reconfiguration plan.

Before the agenda item came up, Kuehn noticed people in the audience who attended the meeting for the planned consolidation discussion and vote and let them know that it was being postponed.

Peters noted that she would like the committee to consider offering hybrid meetings, including the usual in-person meeting and an interactive remote option, so that those who can’t make it to a meeting are able to participate.

For the full consultant’s report and other data on the Best Educational Use of School Facilities, visit this link.

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As families struggle with economic anxiety, town considers how to help residents

By Carol Britton Meyer 

Some Hull residents are experiencing the crunch of inflation and related challenges in different ways, Select Board Chair Jennifer Constable told fellow board members recently.

A WOLFE AT THE BORDER. Craig Wolfe, a familiar face around Hull, has been working to help migrants at the southern U.S. border in El Paso in his role as a Red Cross Disaster Team supervisor. He reports that the Red Cross and partners are providing different levels of services, such as shelter, food, blankets, cots, and safety in this large-scale operation. The Red Cross’s mission is to prevent and alleviate human suffering in all parts of the world. [Courtesy photo]

“We’ve had a number of inquiries about what kinds of assistance are available; this is not unusual [in times like these],” she said, following up her comment with a query to Town Manager Philip Lemnios about what services “are out there” to help individuals and families who are facing food insecurity, financial hardship, and other issues.

He noted as an example that while the price of eggs has tripled, “incomes haven’t.”

“We have a large senior population on fixed incomes who are not keeping up with the rate of inflation,” she observed.

An outreach worker is part of the Anne M. Scully Senior Center staff, Lemnios explained, “and we have a veterans’ agent and a board of health [on hand to provide certain types of assistance]. There’s always a need for services.”

Board member Irwin Nesoff noted that Wellspring Multi-Service Center on Nantasket Avenue is another source of help in many forms.

Lemnios noted that the holidays are “acute” times for the police and fire departments due to the number of calls for assistance. “This period is fraught with a lot of emotion,” according to Lemnios. “The long and the short of it is that we offer the same set of services available in other communities our size.”

He suggested that checking with Council on Aging Director Lisa Thornton could help define whether there has been an uptick in requests or demands for services at this time.

“I’m not sure there has been,” Lemnios said. “Seasonally, we know that there is an increase in requests for help, such as fuel assistance.”

Lemnios also mentioned that the Hull Municipal Light Plant doesn’t shut off service to customers who are late with bill payments during the winter months.

“Perhaps we could have some kind of contingency that provides [additional assistance], but towns [of our size] are not designed to provide safety net services,” Lemnios explained. Such services are offered to some degree at the state level. “Trying to provide them locally is [overall] an inefficient way [to go about it].”

At the same time, providing generator backup to Hull residents during the winter months to ensure they don’t go without electricity during a potential National Grid power outage is one way to meet citizens’ needs locally, Lemnios pointed out.

“Generators allow people to shelter in place during [a severe weather event] so that they don’t have to find a way to get to a warming shelter,” he said.

There is no short answer.

“There are indices that there is a need [for services] as shown in the [recently completed] needs assessment,” Lemnios said. The study focuses on the preferences, evolving needs, opinions, and interests of Hull’s 55-plus population.

This information is particularly meaningful in light of the town’s growing senior population.

In addition to needing services, some seniors and other residents also have other concerns.

For instance, the needs assessment report indicates that most Hull residents who responded to the survey wish to remain in town as they age but have concerns related in part to being able to afford increasing taxes and the availability of public transportation and affordable senior housing.

The study also shows that Hull has the highest proportion of older residents and the smallest physical space in terms of senior center square footage than its peer communities, and the lowest median household income for residents ages 60 and older.

A large number of older residents indicated that the nearest person they could call for assistance “is at least 30 minutes away,” Lemnios reported. “Nothing good can come from that.”

He noted that the state is currently making it easier for people to qualify for certain benefits, but that some people “put up pride or other barrier” to seeking this assistance.

Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP (formerly called food stamps), assistance is available if certain income and other guidelines are met to help address food insecurity, and “people who qualify should take advantage of this benefit,” Lemnios said. “Many people need and deserve it, and many individuals, especially seniors, have been paying for them through their taxes for many years. It’s innocuous. The SNAP card looks like a debit card. This program is designed so people [in need] don’t have anxiety about one of the most basic requirements for survival – food. It’s really a shame [when people don’t access benefits for which they are eligible].”

That said, Constable noted that many households are “on the cusp and don’t [quite] qualify.”

Lemnios intends to ask Thornton to include information about available social services in the newsletter for seniors.

Constable emphasized the importance of being “kind to each other,” especially during these challenging times.

“It’s as simple as that for starters,” she said.

Legislators outline fiscal benefits for Hull’s schools in current state budget

By Carol Britton Meyer

State Sen. Patrick O’Connor and State Rep. Joan Meschino visited the school committee this week to provide an update on the Fiscal 2023 state budget and possible impacts on the Hull Public Schools, including additional education funds and an extension of free school lunches for all students.

RAPPING WITH OUR REPS. State Rep. Joan Meschino and state Sen. Patrick O’Connor met with the school committee on Monday night to deliver an update on the current state budget and educational spending priorities on Beacon Hill. [Courtesy photo]

“Massachusetts is going through a time of tremendous prosperity, with resources to deploy in our communities to tackle different challenges,” O’Connor said. “Hopefully, more of these will be deployed in the area of education to help Hull students achieve everything they want to in their educational careers.”

Overall, education “is still recovering from the pandemic,” he said. “I know that [experience] wasn’t easy, and I want to express my appreciation to the school committee [for their efforts].”

The FY23 state education budget includes $1.8 billion for the early education and care sector, while there’s a Student Opportunity Act balance of $500 million.

The SOA ushered in a new phase in the state’s commitment to ensuring that every student has the benefit of high-quality learning opportunities that lead to success in school, including at the postsecondary level.

“The SOA is a gamechanger [for economically-challenged school districts],” O’Connor said. “We’d like to continue to build on that success, especially in the gray areas where communities don’t meet the economic metrics but are struggling.”

For FY23, $6 billion was allocated to public schools through Chapter 70 funding (an increase of $495 million over FY22). Hull’s share of this education funding is $3.95 million, or a 1.26% increase over FY22.

In addition, $110 million is included in the current fiscal year’s state budget for a year-long extension of universal school meals (allowing every student who wants or needs a school breakfast or lunch to receive it at no cost to their family).

Local aid to Hull includes $2.5 million for Unrestricted General Government Aid, representing a 5.26% increase over FY22.

Local Hull causes also benefitted in the FY23 budget – $20,000 for the Campbell Christmas Angels program; $20,000 to the Hull Lifesaving Museum; and $20,000 for the Noreen Deady Memorial Fund, which aids children who are experiencing serious medical issues or have lost a parent, sibling, or caretaker or faced some other hardship in life.

Local funding that benefitted the Town of Hull also included $3 million for repair of the Nantasket Avenue seawall.

Hull causes that benefitted from Economic Development Bill funding included Wellspring Multi-Service Center, $25,000; Friends of Hull Scouting, $25,000; and the Anne M. Scully Senior Center, $25,000.

The Hull Public Schools received $122,779 in federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER I) funding and $274,746 in ESSER II funding. In addition, $962,051 in ESSER III funding was allocated, with $112,405 claimed to date.

The ESSER grants are a federal program administered by the Department of Education in response to the COVID19 pandemic. The program provides emergency financial assistance to public school districts across the country.

In another update, Meschino noted that genocide education legislation has been signed into law, relating to educating students on genocide and human rights in response to growing concerns regarding antisemitic incidents in the Commonwealth.

This legislation requires all middle and high schools in the state to include instruction on the history of genocide. The Genocide Education Trust Fund will be used for the instruction of students on the history of genocide and to ensure the development of related curricular materials, as well as to provide professional development training to assist educators in the teaching of genocide.

While overall supportive of the concept of genocide education, School Committee Chair Stephanie Peters expressed concern that “our teachers are hanging by a thread. I love the idea, but I hope there’s also a balance with what’s already included in the curriculum,” she said.

Peters also referred to the number of costly unfunded mandates imposed on school districts.

“Everyone’s plates are overflowing, especially our teachers’,” she said. “There are only so many hours in a day to do things.”

Meschino responded that Peters’ point was “well taken.”

The Mental Health Act, which O’Connor called “a hallmark piece of legislation” was also signed into law. This act addresses barriers to care, implements a 988 hotline for emergency assistance, initiates a public awareness campaign, mandates coverage, and eliminates prior authorization for mental health acute treatment and stabilization services for adults and children.

It also stablishes an Office of Behavioral Health Promotion, increases access to care for those in school and individuals in geographically-located areas, and creates a roadmap for access to culturally competent care.

The goal of culturally competent health care services is to provide the highest quality of care to every patient, regardless of race, ethnicity, cultural background, English proficiency, or literacy.

Meschino also explained other legislation of interest, including an Act Relative to Educator Diversity, which did not pass this session. However, it was reported out favorably and is now with the House Ways and Means Committee.

“If passed, the act would establish alternative certifications for aspiring teachers, create an educator data dashboard, require districts to appoint officers or teams to set plans and ensure compliance, and create an educator diversity grant fund,” Meschino said.

Although this law hasn’t passed yet, a new $15 million line item was included in the FY23 budget focused on supporting teachers of color.

At the end of the presentation, Meschino noted that both her office and O’Connor’s provide constituent services, including helping people access resources and “navigate state government,” and encouraged members of the community to reach out to either office for help.

“We’re here for the community,” she said.

Peters expressed appreciation for the assistance both legislators provide to the Hull Public Schools and the town.

Meschino begins fourth term on Beacon Hill, appointed vice chair of beaches panel

State Rep. Joan Meschino has had a busy start to the New Year, as she was sworn in for her fourth term as Hull’s Representative on Beacon Hill, was appointed the vice chair of the Metropolitan Beaches Commission, and was interviewed by a Boston television news crew about a bill she sponsored.

ANOTHER TERM WELL IN HAND. On Jan. 4, Hull’s Joan Meschino was sworn in for her fourth term in the Massachusetts House of Representatives. Her district includes Hull, Hingham, and Cohasset. [Courtesy photo]

“I am honored to have the opportunity to continue representing the Third Plymouth District on Beacon Hill,” said Meschino, who lives in Hull and also represents Hingham and Cohasset. “As state Representative, I will continue to work collaboratively to ensure that our region is getting the resources it deserves and that issues impacting our communities are addressed. From supporting our local and regional economies to mitigating the effects of climate change, I look forward to getting to work and continuing to address these issues.”

Meschino’s district previously included North Scituate, but the boundaries were adjusted in the past election cycle.

In the 193rd legislative session, Meschino is the House vice chair for the Metropolitan Beaches Commission (MBC) while continuing her work on the board of directors for the Massachusetts Caucus for Women Legislators. The MBC was created in 2006 by the Legislature and is managed by Save the Harbor/Save the Bay to take an in-depth look at the Boston region’s public beaches. It is composed of elected officials and community leaders from beachfront communities.

“I am pleased to serve as a vice chair in the House of Representatives for the Metropolitan Beaches Commission,” Meschino said. “As a legislator for an open-ocean district, I understand that the Commonwealth’s waterfront neighborhoods and beachfront communities depend on the maintenance of our coastline. I look forward to continued collaboration with leaders in this space to identify shared issues and to advocate for both increased resources and public access.”

Meschino also recently offered remarks in an interview with NBC10 Boston’s investigative team regarding her bill that would require a judge to review a child’s removal from a home during hours when courthouses are closed. She said that this oversight would ensure that sound decisions are made by the Massachusetts Department of Children & Families at critical moments, and that the well-being of each child is central in the decision-making process.

Meschino sat with NBC10’s Ryan Kath to discuss the proposed “timely court oversight” legislation, which is one of multiple children-and-family bills she plans to re-file in the new session.

“Any time government takes that step to intervene [with an emergency removal], we owe it to ourselves and to those families to be thoughtful,” Meschino said. “It seems like an obvious and reasonable thing. It is an important opportunity for key oversight to make sure we are making good decisions at critical moments.”

Veterans’ advocates, family of military hero question plan for wounded warriors’ home

By Carol Britton Meyer and Christopher Haraden

A Hull resident’s announcement on social media that he plans to open a home for wounded veterans on Atlantic Hill – and name the facility after General Richard “Butch” Neal – has raised questions among local veterans’ advocates and prompted the Neal family to request that the project stop using the late Marine Corps general’s name.

Both the town’s veterans agent and the commander of the American Legion post said the proponent, Kenneth D. Rowland, had not consulted with them or with the Neal family before posting his plans on Facebook on Dec. 28.

This facebook post on december 28 sparked concern among hull’s veterans’ advocates…

Neal was a Hull native and Vietnam veteran who died last year. This week, his son-in-law said that the family has “received no official information from any source associated with the project” and requested “that General Richard Neal’s name be removed” from the proposal.

In an interview with The Hull Times, Rowland declined to name the investors he said are behind the project, and acknowledged that he has not made an offer on the property pictured in his announcement, the home and land at 16 State Park Rd. currently on the market for $1.45 million. The two corporate entities Rowland named in his Facebook post – Nantasket Beach Club LLC and General Richard Neal House LLC – also are not registered with the Massachusetts Secretary of State’s Corporations Division.

Rowland, who lives at the Bermaken Hotel on Revere Street, is the CEO of Nantascot Peninsula Partners, Inc., a company he formed in 2019 that describes its business as “interconnecting the media industry with leisure, travel and tourism, outdoor recreation, arts, science, and education.” The Nantasket Beach Club is referenced in the Facebook post as a subsidiary of Nantascot Peninsula Partners. During a lengthy interview, Rowland described the Nantasket Beach Club as “soon to be an LLC” and a “virtual entity unrelated to the project right now.”

Rowland said some of his funding comes from the construction of the MarketStreet lifestyle mall in Lynnfield, with which he said he was involved. The Times was unable to independently verify that claim of involvement; Rowland provided newspaper clippings that referenced his role in the Reedy Meadow Foundation, a non-profit conservation organization in Lynnfield, but nothing that outlined his affiliation with the MarketStreet development, which was built in 2011 by WS Development and National Development.

Regarding the veterans project, Rowland said, “I’m the sole owner, with investors in the Lynnfield area involved with the MarketStreet and a couple of investors in Hull,” whom he declined to name but said were neighbors to the proposed project site.

Both Hull Director of Veterans Services Paul Sordillo and Jim Richman of American Legion Post #140 said they had not been contacted by Rowland about the project and were concerned about the name of the well-respected general being used without permission.

Jason Korzen, Neal’s son-in-law and executor of his estate, echoed these concerns in a statement to the Times on Wednesday.

“The family of General Butch Neal learned only within the last several days of a stated intention to develop a facility in Hull to provide housing for veterans. That information was communicated to the family informally by persons not associated with the project. We have received no official information from any source associated with the project, public or private. We have no details as to any person or persons involved; the scope of the project; how it is to be funded for development, construction, and/or operation; any cost control and oversight plans in place; the proposed management structure of the facility; nor, any other pertinent details,” Korzen wrote.

“Additionally, the family has been told that a proposal has been put forth by some involved to name the planned facility ‘The General Neal House’ or something similar. Due to the recency and sparsity of information regarding this project, the family of General Neal states that we can offer no endorsement of the project at this time,” Korzen continued. “Further, it is respectfully requested that General Richard Neal’s name be removed from any plans, promotional and/or fundraising materials at this time.”

After hearing about the Facebook post, Sordillo reached out to Rowland to talk about the proposal.

“We had a very cordial, pleasant conversation, during which he explained the project and I told him that the majority of veterans I have spoken with, while supportive of the overall concept, are concerned about the use of General Neal’s name without the family’s permission,” Sordillo said. “I also explained how much he [Neal] means to Hull veterans and others whom he grew up with – that he is held in high regard and that it’s not right to use his name without the Neal family’s support.”

Richman, who is reactivating Hull’s American Legion post, said that while he is in favor of the concept, he is “livid” that Rowland would use Neal’s name without first speaking with family members.

“General Neal’s name stands for honor, respect, and dignity,” he told the Times. “There are too many gray areas [to this proposal].”

What concerns him, Richman said, is that “this is a for-profit company using General Neal’s name when he’s [Rowland] advertising for investors. I and others involved with veterans are in the dark and just looking out for veterans’ best interests.”

There has been quite a bit of confusion surrounding the Facebook post, Richman said, and that Hull residents are wondering if Rowland’s plan is affiliated with existing veterans organizations in town. “Some people are wondering if I’m involved with this proposed project, but I’m not involved in any way,” he said.

Richman added that he and other veterans’ advocates “want to ensure that the veterans of Hull aren’t involved financially until the details are clear and they can decide whether or not they want to support the project.”

The veterans home plan is contingent on Rowland signing either a lease or purchase-and-sale agreement for the property, as well as obtaining approvals from the Veterans Administration and Hull’s planning department.

Rowland told the Times that he plans to initiate a letter of intent to the property owner through listing agent Judy Hemingway of RE/Max Realty Pros this Thursday or Friday that explains his proposal.

“The question is, Do we rent the property for [a period of time] and then initiate a purchase and sale?” he said.

Hemingway confirmed that the property is listed as for lease or for sale, but that “nothing is yet on the table – no offer or lease as of Tuesday. Ultimately, it’s the owner’s decision,” she said. At presstime, the property remained actively for sale for $1.425 million in the Multiple Listing Service.

Rowland said he envisions the four-bedroom house on the property serving as a place to hold events and as an administration building, with caregiver quarters upstairs, and offering transitional housing for veterans suffering from traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the form of about 10 modular apartment units behind the house.

“This veterans’ home would provide an opportunity for veterans being treated for TBI to spend time with other veterans and to help them transition into real-life settings,” Rowland said.

He explained that this would be a privately-funded project and that investors have already pledged $45,000.

“The rest will come from additional investors, with plans to sell off 49 percent of my corporation,” he said. “The investors are ready and eager [to move forward with the proposal].”

Under Rowland’s plan, about 10 investors would be considered executive board members, pledging $25,000 each, he said.

“We have about six already, including a couple of people from Hull, and are [expecting] about 36 additional investors pledging $15,000 each over the next year. We probably have 10 of those investors now,” he said. “We’re looking to fundraise the rest.”

Rowland told the Times that he’s expecting the Red Sox Foundation Home Base program to help pay for the services veterans living in the home would require if the project is approved. According to its website, “Home Base, a Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital program, is dedicated to healing the invisible wounds for veterans, service members and their families through world-class clinical care, wellness, education and research.”

The Home Base Foundation issued this statement on Friday: “Home Base, a Red Sox Foundation and Massachusetts General Hospital program, is not aware of this proposal, has not been contacted about this plan, and is not affiliated in any way.”

Rowland said he intends to reach out to neighbors and the community with further information about the project in the coming weeks.

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Incumbents weigh options for May election as major decisions loom for boards

By Carol Britton Meyer

Sixteen elected town officials have terms expiring in 2023, including members of the school committee, select board, and the Hull Redevelopment Authority.

Depending upon the decisions of the incumbents, and whether other citizens step forward to run for office, the town could see an active election season this May. The HRA, school committee and select board have several important issues and decisions to make in the coming year.

The select board will be conducting a search for a new town manager to replace Philip Lemnios, who is retiring in at the end of June, the school committee appears to be on the cusp of deciding whether to consolidate the three schools following completion of the Best Educational Use of School Facilities study by the MARS Group, and the HRA is in the midst of finalizing a draft Urban Renewal Plan.

Nomination papers for the Monday, May 15, election will be available in the town clerk’s office in February, according to Town Clerk Lori West.

An informal poll of school committee and select board members with terms expiring this year produced mixed results, as the incumbents shared their thoughts about whether they intend to run for re-election with The Hull Times.

School Committee member Ernest Minelli plans to pull nomination papers for a second term.

“A near-term goal would be to ensure a smooth transition as we resolve the pertinent details related to the best educational use of our school facilities,” he said.

Colleague member Stephanie Peters, who has served on the school committee for 17 years, said she is “undecided” about another term.

Select board member Donna Pursel said she plans to run for re-election and would be “honored to serve another term on the board if given the opportunity.”

She said she has “really enjoyed my first term serving on the select board and have learned a lot. As a board, we’ve started projects and communication around affordable housing, coastal resiliency, the draft HRA Urban Renewal Plan, and of late, the search for a new town manager.”

Select board member Domenico Sestito is doing what he said he always does when he is facing this kind of decision.

“I evaluate whether to seek re-election and make a final decision around the January-February timeframe,” he said. “So at this point, I am still evaluating.”

Other incumbents with expiring terms include:

Housing Authority (five-year term): Jim Richman

Assessors (three-year term): Pamela Sinton-Coffman and Mario Peter Grieco

Light Board (three-year term): Patrick Cannon; Jake Vaillancourt

Planning Board (five-year term): Joseph Duffy, Harry Hibbard, and Jim Pitrolo (who was recently appointed to fill a vacancy until the upcoming election).

Hull Redevelopment Authority (five-year term): Henry Dunn and Max Walder, who also was appointed recently to fill a vacancy.

Library Trustee (three-year term): Ceila Nolan and Gail Saitow.

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