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IN THIS ISSUE
SPORTS
FRIENDLY SKIES
LIVE MUSIC
Hockey Headers skate to Elite 8
Local retired pilot reacts to recent crashes
Me&Thee throws a ‘Porch Party’
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PAID
MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
TM
March 5, 2025
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VOLUME 3, ISSUE NO. 15
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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
UNFUNDED MANDATE?
Auditor’s ruling stirs new challenge to MBTA housing law in Marblehead BY WILL DOWD MBTA Communities Act opponent John DiPiano is urging Marblehead’s Select Board to pursue a compliance exemption following the state auditor’s recent determination that the housing law constitutes an “unfunded mandate.” In an email sent Feb. 24 to town officials, DiPiano requested the issue be placed on the Select
Board’s March 12 agenda, citing the state auditor’s recent ruling regarding Middleborough. “Given the majority vote last May, I believe it incumbent on the Select Board to seek a compliance exemption given that the state auditor has now determined that Marblehead will have to bear the costs of implementation of this state mandate,” DiPiano wrote. DiPiano, an attorney who has
spearheaded opposition to the law in Marblehead, cited the official mandate determination process on the state website as grounds for exemption. “More information may be found at and ‘Next Steps after the [Office of the State Auditor] determines an unfunded mandate exists,’” DiPiano noted in his email to officials. The MBTA Communities Act, signed into law in 2021,
requires 177 cities and towns served by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority to zone for multifamily housing by right. Marblehead voters rejected a zoning proposal to comply with the law at Town Meeting last May by a 33-vote margin, with nearly 800 votes cast. The town’s proposed compliance model includes zoning for approximately 58.4
acres across three districts: Tioga Way with 29.8 acres allowing up to 483 units, Pleasant Street with 20.6 acres allowing up to 295 units and Broughton Road with 8 acres allowing up to 119 units. The plan includes about 300 existing housing units that would count toward the town’s zoning obligations. ZONING, P. A2
TOWN MEETING
EDUCATION
New draft flag policy may be proposed this week, after 100+ people pack forum
Let the debate begin Marblehead unveils 52-article warrant BY WILL DOWD
CURRENT PHOTO / LEIGH BLANDER
Eighth-grader Jack Manganis spoke in favor of letting students have a say on which flags will be displayed in their schools.
BY LEIGH BLANDER School Committee members Jenn Schaeffner and Alison Taylor planned to meet Friday, March 7, at 11:30 a.m., to discuss a new draft flag policy for Marblehead schools. Schaeffner told the Current that she shared information from two recent flag forums, as well as a counterproposal by students, with the district’s lawyer and that he is writing a new draft plan for discussion on Friday. That meeting is virtual and open to the public. Two earlier drafts permitted only U.S., Massachusetts, Marblehaed and POW/MIA flags, which would lead to the removal of Black Lives Matter, Juneteenth and Pride flags. On Feb. 26, about 100 people joined an emotional community forum on flags in schools. The crowd (in person and online) overwhelmingly supported giving students a voice in deciding
Former School Committee member Jonathan Lederman supports a more limited flag policy that allows only the U.S., state, Marblehead and POW/MIA flags.
which flags can be displayed inside their schools. Thirty-one people spoke against a plan that would remove Pride and BLM banners, while seven spoke in favor of the School Committee’s policy subcommittee’s early draft plans to restrict flags. Veterans School eighth-grader Jack Manganis, 13, said most of his peers in the middle school didn’t know about the proposals to restrict flags, but once they found out they had strong feelings about them. “I believe, like many of my peers at MVMS, that this flag ban policy is an unnecessary breach of freedom that takes away choice and stifles expression,” Manganis said. He had started an online poll two days earlier and had 60 students sign saying they wanted a say in developing any policy. Schaeffner and Alison, who make up the School Committee’s policy subcommittee, have met a few times
with high school students regarding a flag policy, but not with Vets students. “This flag ban policy is rooted in censoring expression and taking a choice away from the majority of people it will affect,” Manganis continued. “It is completely unwarranted and unwanted. Don’t just take my word for it. Give the students the forum we deserve, and you can see for yourself.” On Feb. 20, about 20 MHS students sat down with Taylor and Schaeffne and submitted a compromise counterproposal that would restrict flags on school flagpoles to U.S., state and Marblehead flags, but would give students a voice in deciding what flags and banners are displayed inside their schools. Resident and speech therapist Jessica
Marblehead’s 2025 Town Meeting warrant is set to spark debate on issues ranging from multimillion-dollar infrastructure projects to controversial citizen petitions addressing governance transparency, sustainability and policy. Marblehead’s 2025 annual Town Meeting will convene at 7 p.m. on Monday, May 5, in the Veterans Middle »Budget review School Auditorium, 1 Duncan Sleigh Square, timeline, Page 11. and will continue on successive nights until all business is concluded. At the Feb. 26 Select Board meeting, Town Administrator Thatcher Kezer provided an overview of the 52-article warrant, emphasizing practicality over ideology as he pushed back against proposals to eliminate the town’s sustainability coordinator, impose a residency requirement on department heads and mandate an independent town audit. The warrant, released on Feb. 27, charts the agenda for the May 5 meeting and reveals a community grappling with both basic municipal needs and deeper questions about how Marblehead should govern itself following 2024’s contentious teacher strike and heated MBTA Communities zoning debate.
FLAG, P. A2 WARRANT, P. A12
FROM THE KING OF THE STATE TO THE KING OF NEW ENGLAND
Assa bests regional peers in two-mile Szalewicz, Tredwell, Burchfield also excel with top finishes BY JOE MCCONNELL What can Marblehead High boys indoor track star Nate Assa do for an encore after winning the state championship in the two-mile during the annual AllState Meet of Champions at the Reggie Lewis Athletic Center in Roxbury on Feb. 22? Nobody had to wait too long for the answer, because one week later back at Reggie Lewis the MHS senior boys captain
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW
is now the New England twomile champ. And he did it in style by setting a new personal best time of 9:04.60, which also bumped him up to 10th place among all scholastic two-milers nationwide. “Entering this event, Nate was a significant favorite, according to the seeds, but there were still some impressive distance runners competing against him, who had not yet ‘peaked’ yet this season,” said coach
Nolan Raimo. “For example, the second-place finisher — Matthew Giardina of New Hampshire’s Bishop Guertin High School — was seeded 13th with a qualifying time of 9:31.81, despite not yet running a competitive race this season. This past fall, he was seventh at the Foot Locker National CrossCountry Championships, which earned him All-American honors. “Sean Gray of Portsmouth, Rhode Island, was another elite runner running in this event, who has a personal best time of 9:11, but last Saturday he ended up eighth in 9:18.92,” added Raimo. “So, while Nate had
confidence in winning this event with the 11th best time in the nation, he still had to face some serious competition in order to do so.” It all started off with Assa taking the lead immediately. He was able to open the race by running a casual 400-meters in 70-seconds, while the rest of the field stuck together, even with the strong pace. After the initial 400-meters, however, Giardina took the lead, before both he and Nate crossed paths again around the 800-meter mark, running at a 2:18 clip. They crossed the first ASSA, P. A11
COURTESY PHOTO / MARRI O’CONNELL
Marblehead High boys indoor track running star Nate Assa proudly holds his New England regional championship plaque in his hands after coming in first in the two-mile at the Reggie Lewis Athletic Center in Roxbury on March 1.