CP_MBHC_20250115_1_A01
IN THIS ISSUE
GARDEN PARTY
ROVER
LIVE THEATER
MHS girls basketball scores big in Boston
Changes may be coming to leash laws
MLT stages drama with timely topic
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MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
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NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
TM
January 15, 2025
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VOLUME 3, ISSUE NO. 8
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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
MULTIFAMILY HOUSING
What’s ahead after state’s highest court rules on controversial zoning law? BY LEIGH BLANDER, WILL DOWD AND KRIS OLSON The next stop for Marblehead’s zoning plan to comply with the MBTA Communities Act will be a hearing before the Planning Board, tentatively scheduled for March 11. After being defeated at Town
Meeting last year, the plan is being reconsidered against a newly clarified legal backdrop. The state’s highest court ruled on Jan. 8 that the act, G.L.c. 40A, §3A, is constitutional and the Attorney General has the authority to sue to enforce it, rejecting arguments by the town of Milton, which had been sued
by the AG after Milton missed its Dec. 31, 2023, deadline to comply. The Supreme Judicial Court also invalidated the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities’ guidelines related to the MBTA Communities Act because EOHLC had not complied with the
Administrative Procedure Act when issuing them. Gov. Maura Healey vowed to have that deficiency remedied in short order by having EOHLC issue emergency regulations by the end of last week. Those emergency regulations would be effective for 90 days, allowing time for permanent regulations
to go through the normal process under the APA. Because the MBTA Communities Act compliance plan is being reconsidered within two years of being rejected by Marblehead Town Meeting, state law (G.L.c. 40A, §5) requires the ZONING, P. A6
WINTER WONDERLAND
COURTESY PHOTOS / BRODIE INGLIS
Rosie Inglis, 7, in red, and her brother Lachlan, 5, face off on a frozen Redd’s Pond. The kids play Marblehead Youth Hockey and skated for two hours that day with their dad, Brodie, until the sun went down.
COURTESY PHOTO / MATT MARTIN
EDUCATION
ABBOT HALL
Marblehead’s story, written in signs New basement museum showcases more than 80 pieces of town history BY WILL DOWD On a frigid January morning, Marblehead resident Richard Thibedeau’s walking group made a detour into Abbot Hall’s basement. For Thibedeau, one sign in the town’s newest attraction struck a particularly personal chord. “Freddie Finkel made a wedding ring for me,” he said, pointing to a jewelry store sign and twisting the gold band he still wears. “He was down on Darling Street, just off Washington Street. He was a skilled craftsman.”
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW
The newly opened Sign Museum showcases more than 80 pieces of Marblehead history, including signs from a weathered ship chandlery (a store that supplied sailors and maritime businesses with essential goods) to mid-century storefront markers. Years of planning and hundreds of volunteer hours transformed the basement storage area into a museum offering visitors a unique window into the town’s evolution. “A lot of the history that MUSEUM, P. A7
School Committee makes two ‘placeholder’ override requests
Board votes to give away Coffin; start eval process for interim super BY LEIGH BLANDER The School Committee voted to add two “placeholder” override articles on the Town Meeting warrant (voting agenda) for this May, with no dollar amounts attached. The first is a general Proposition 2 1/2 override “for the purposes of revenue to go directly to the school budget,” said School Committee Chair Jenn Schaeffner. “I just want to make sure everyone knows this is just a placeholder,” emphasized member Alison Taylor. “No decisions have been made on what is or is not needed from a
The School Committee voted to put two placeholder override requests on the Town Meeting agenda and to formally turn the old Coffin School back to the town.
budgetary perspective.” During teacher contract talks, Schaeffner and member Sarah Fox said that the agreed-upon wage hikes would add more than $3 million to the school budget, and without an override there
would be layoffs. The second placeholder article is for a debt exclusion override for capital expenses for the school department. SCHOOLS, P. A2