CP_MBHC_20240320_1_A01
IN THIS ISSUE
POLICE
IN MEMORIAM
FOOD
Uptick in ‘destructive behavior’
Mountaineer, filmmaker Breashears dies
Tea — from ‘A’ to ‘Z’
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MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
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NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
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March 20, 2024
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VOLUME 2, ISSUE NO. 17
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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
EDUCATION
Restraint report due, budget meeting set BY LEIGH BLANDER Interim Superintendent Theresa McGuinness sent an email Friday, March 15, saying the district will share its “Restraint Response Plan… Our Way Forward” this week, along with a legally redacted report on the district’s student restraint policies by the firm Comprehensive Investigations
and Consulting. McGuinness hired CIC after a student restraint crisis late last year that resulted in four Glover educators being placed on paid leave. Her email did not mention anything about the educators’ fate. McGuinness said the district has applied for a $75,000 grant with the Department of Elementary and Secondary
Education to work with Dr. Stuart Ablon, founder and director of the Think Kids Partnership at Massachusetts General Hospital. Ablon has developed a program called Collaborative Problem Solutions. “When school-based special education administrators and district administrators consulted with Ablon this spring, he
described a research study that demonstrated on average an 80% reduction in restraints when CPS is fully implemented,” McGuinness said. “I will share more information on this later in the spring.” McGuinness also shared that there have been faculty meeting presentations on “de-escalation, social-emotional support and best practices for supporting
students’ social-emotional needs, including a review of the District Curriculum Accommodation Plan.” Budget hearing The School Committee planned to hold a public budget hearing Thursday, March 21 at the Veterans School Performing Arts Center to hear residents’ SCHOOLS, P. A11
STATE CHAMPIONS
Simply one-derful Lone goal is all Headers need to claim second state title in 13 years BY JOE MCCONNELL
CURRENT PHOTOS/NICOLE GOODHUE BOYD
Marblehead High boys hockey captain Hogan Sedky poses with the Division 3 state championship trophy with his teammates surrounding him after they defeated Nauset, 1-0, at the TD Garden March 17.
MILESTONE MET
Local troop honors first female Eagle Scouts BY WILL DOWD In a historic ceremony on Saturday, Marblehead Troop 79G conducted a Court of Honor for Marblehead’s first female Eagle Scouts, Zoe Gast and Katie Jenkins, at Abbot Hall. Eagle Scout is the highest achievement attainable in the Scouts BSA program. Troop 79G, founded just over four years ago, opened scouting to adventurous young women willing to break stereotypes. Integrated into Marblehead Troop 79, which was founded in 1937, the girls troop has seen over 20 young women participate under the leadership of Scoutmaster Jennifer Stoddard. “Today marks a historic milestone for BSA Troop 79G
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW
as we celebrate our first Eagle Scouts, Katie Jenkins and Zoe Gast,” said Stoddard. “Their achievement is a testament to the resilience, dedication and leadership that define the spirit of scouting.” In the Boston Spirit of Adventure Council, there are 47 female troops made up of just over 900 scouts. To date, just over 50 have achieved the rank of Eagle Scout. Across all of the BSA, only 6% of all Scouts achieve BSA’s highest rank. Through perseverance and hard work, Gast and Jenkins paved the way for future female Scouts by camping across New England, leading backpacking trips to Philmont Scout Reservation in New SCOUTS, P. A6
It was a season of perseverance, a shining example of sticking to one’s beliefs in the face of all sorts of obstacles. The Marblehead High boys hockey team (17-9-1, sixth seed) lost its first six games but never gave up. As a result of that attitude, the Headers were the last team standing in Division 3 after defeating Nauset (22-2-1), the tournament’s top seed, 1-0, in the state title game at the TD Garden on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17. The Headers’ theme of perseverance this season was on full display at the Garden on Sunday. Nauset had a decided edge in shots, but somehow the Marblehead boys were able to turn away its opportunities, with some help from the goal post on a couple of occasions. It also helps to have a reliable goalie between the pipes, and junior Leo Burdge has been just
Exhausted but happy: Junior forward Crew Monaco casts his eyes to the heavens as he hugs teammate Avin Rodovsky while assistant captain Charlie Grenier tries to catch his breath after the final buzzer.
»Players reflect on magical ride to state title. Page 9. that this season. Burdge came up with 32 saves to shutout Nauset, while his teammates managed just 14 shots. But they withstood the onslaught HOCKEY, P. A10
FIVE, SIX, SEVEN, EIGHT
DancEnergy celebrates 40 years of movement, music, community BY LEIGH BLANDER Nearly 70 women crowded into a brightly lit studio at the JCC on March 12 to celebrate the 40th anniversary — to the day — of DancEnergy in Marblehead. Founder Joyce Colahan, who still teaches five times a week, led the milestone class. She made it through to the last song before she started crying. “The love I get from everybody… I feel so honored and privileged. I look back at it in awe,” she said of her career. “I had no idea when I started teaching that it would grow into this.” Colahan, who lives in Marblehead, was a professional dancer and traveled the world with the Joyce Trisler
CURRENT PHOTO / LEIGH BLANDER
Joyce Colahan leads her 40th-anniversary DancEnergy class on March 12.
Danscompany. She started teaching at Energy Works on Barnard Street in 1984 and has worked with more than 800 students since. DancEnergy, which moved to the JCC 10 years ago, has seven instructors
leading a dozen classes every week. Colahan’s students are devoted to her and her choreography. “I’m 76 years old; this has kept DANCENERGY, P. A6