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IN THIS ISSUE
SPORTS
BEACH ACCESS
STAR GAZING
Marblehead track girls share NEC title
Devereux to get a $92K upgrade
Rick Cuzner takes you into space
Page 9
Page 3
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MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
TM
February 12, 2025
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VOLUME 3, ISSUE NO. 12
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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
STATE OF THE TOWN
No general override request this spring Voters may be asked to hike taxes for projects BY WILL DOWD AND LEIGH BLANDER Marblehead voters will not be asked to approve a general (permanent) property tax override this spring, Town Administrator Thatcher Kezer told a standing-room-only crowd at Abbot Hall during his annual State of the Town Address Wednesday evening. However, the town and School Committee will likely ask residents to
temporarily raise their taxes for two major capital projects. They are: » Mary Alley Municipal Building renovations, including a new HVAC system. The total cost is not yet known. » A new roof at the high school, estimated at about $14 million. Town Meeting approved $5.3 million for the replacement in 2022, but it was never started. The project
»From recalls to lobster traps, see what citizen petitions will be decided at Town Meeting, Page 6. now includes new HVAC units. The School Committee is expected to ask for another $8.6 million debt exclusion override that would raise taxes for 15 years. The first year, it would add about $86 to the tax bill for the medianpriced home. Assistant Superintendent of Finance & Operations Mike Pfiffering told the Current that the School Committee will not need to ask for an override
to fund teacher contracts or operations in fiscal 2026. That surprised many people in the community who remembered the School Committee warning about the need for layoffs if an override did not pass to fund the agreed upon wage increases. Pfifferling said the biggest increases in the fouryear contract come in the last two years. An override might be required then. Only one member of the School Committee replied to a request for comment. “I am not the best person to respond to your question since I am not on the budgeting
subcommittee,” Al Williams wrote in an email. “However, I can state two things relative to your question: 1. No decision has been made yet as to whether we are seeking an override relative to the new contract; 2. As a full committee, the budgeting process really begins at our budget workshop this Thursday at 5 p.m.” Debt exclusion overrides require both a two-thirds vote at Town Meeting and a majority in the June election.
Budget picture
Meanwhile, Kezer outlined TOWN, P. A7
SNOW GLOBE
Capturing the calm between storms
PHOTOS BY RICK CUZNER
Marblehead photographer and Current contributor Rick Cuzner snapped these shots around town after the weekend’s snow storm. Marblehead saw more than 5 inches of snow on Saturday night and early Sunday. More snow was expected this week.
PUBLIC HEALTH
Town leaders to decide how to spend $330K from opioid settlement BY LEIGH BLANDER Marblehead has been awarded $330,000 in opioid settlement money and is determining the best ways to spend the money. “These funds are from several opioid settlements made between representatives of states and municipalities and defendants, companies that played a role in dispensing opioids that were responsible for the addiction epidemic,” said Town
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW
Administrator Thatcher Kezer. Kezer, Public Health Director Andrew Petty, Fire Chief Jason Gilliland and Police Chief Dennis King have been meeting as a working group to decide how to allocate the funds. So far, they’ve spent about $7,000 to place naloxone boxes containing anti-overdose drugs in all municipal buildings. King said some of the money will go toward a substance use awareness day being planned
COURTESY PHOTO / PEXELS, TOUFIGU BARBHUIYA
Marblehead has been awarded $330,000 in opioid settlement money.
in town and to updating AED machines in police cruisers and municipal buildings.
“There’s a desire to spend the funds effectively and not just to spend them,” King said. There is one other important use for the settlement money. “We want to make sure that if there’s somebody in town that has a n ed (for rehab or treatment), we can help them get the best treatment possible. So, we want to make sure that they’re getting into a 90-day program,” Petty said at a recent Board of Health meeting. “These
are really high costs, so the idea was to keep a large sum of money so when the needs arrive, you take that money and you spend it on these individuals who have the need.” Kezer said more money may be coming. “There are new settlements being announced,” he said. “Each settlement has its own requirements and timeline to expend the funds over a number of years.”