FINAL-19 CP_MBHC_20250402_1_A01 Mon, Mar 31, 2025 4:13:57 PM
IN THIS ISSUE
ON THE RUN
LIVE MUSIC
TRANSPARENCY
Which ‘Headers are running the Marathon?
Arts Festival unveils Concerts @ Crocker Park lineup
What the heck is the Observer Corps?
Page 9
Page 12
NONPROFIT ORG PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
Page 7
NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
TM
April 2, 2025
|
VOLUME 3, ISSUE NO. 19
|
MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
|
ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
EDUCATION
Glover School teacher fired in restraint crisis cleared of wrongdoing BY LEIGH BLANDER
State arbitrator orders MPS to rehire her with back pay
A Glover School special education preschool teacher fired in the aftermath of a student restraint crisis has been cleared of any wrongdoing by a state
arbitrator. Arbitrator Mary Ellen Shea ruled on March 27 that Patty Frawley, who lives in town, be hired back at Glover. “The decision to fire Patricia
Frawley on April 17, 2024, was not supported by just cause,” Shea wrote. “The district is ordered to immediately reinstate Patricia Frawley to her
position and restore all wages and benefits she would have received but for the wrongful termination.” “I’m thrilled,” Frawley told the
EDUCATION
Young students show their STEAM smarts at fair
Current just hours after receiving the news. “I’ve always felt that I would be vindicated. Of course, you’re nervous, but I really felt strongly about our position CLEARED, P. A3
UNFUNDED MANDATE?
Noonan, Fox discuss MBTA zoning with state auditor Public hearing on multifamily housing moved to April 8 BY WILL DOWD
CURRENT PHOTOS / LEIGH BLANDER
ABOVE: First grader Sage Flaherty shows his Pokemon card lockbox, which he made with a 3D printer. BELOW FROM LEFT: Second grader Carlie Castro teaches people how her hydraulic elevator works. Adeline Frias, first grader, demonstrates how a chameleon uses its tongue to catch its prey. Second grader Andrew Zinin’s project showcases the 10 most dangerous animals in the world.
The Planning Board postponed the final public hearing on the MBTA Communities Act until April 8 at Abbot Hall. Last week, the Select Board reported that Chair Erin Noonan and member Dan Fox spoke with State Auditor Diana DiZoglio about her determination that the housing zoning law constitutes an unfunded mandate. Noonan and Fox shared details from their March 17 conference call with DiZoglio, highlighting key information that could impact the town’s approach to the controversial housing requirement. The discussion followed a contentious standing-room-only public forum on March 12 where nearly 40 residents voiced passionate arguments both for and against seeking an exemption from the state law, which requires MBTA, P. A6
COURT
Former Marblehead priest set to go on trial April 8 in child sex assault case BY LEIGH BLANDER
BY LEIGH BLANDER The future looks bright after visiting the Brown School’s third annual STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math) Fair where the next generation showed off their ingenuity and imagination on
March 27. More than 215 students in kindergarten through third grade presented creative projects to a packed gymnasium of proud parents and family members. Brown School teachers, dressed in white lab coats, roamed the aisles handing out
ribbons. First grader Adeline Frias, 6, walked people through her intricate project, called “How Does a Chameleon’s Tongue Work?” It ended with the chameleon eating a pretend fly.
A former Marblehead Episcopal priest, Boy Scout leader and assistant headmaster at Tower School is set to go on trial April 8 for allegedly raping a 12-year-old Marblehead boy whom he took across state lines to a Boy Scout camp in New Hampshire in 1976. On Aug. 18, 2023, a New Hampshire grand jury indicted Richard Losch, 92, on a charge
STEAM, P. A8 PRIEST, P. A6
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW