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IN THIS ISSUE
ON THE FIELD
MHS THEATER
DOC IN A BOX
How 100s of parents make youth sports happen
Behind the scenes at ‘The Prom
Online shopping tips from Digital Docs
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Page 12
NONPROFIT ORG PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
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NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
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April 10, 2024
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VOLUME 2, ISSUE NO. 20
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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
EDUCATION
Teachers to act for paid parental leave BY LEIGH BLANDER This week, Marblehead teachers are joining 5,000 educators across the North Shore taking action for paid parental leave. Educators from 11 districts are planning a coordinated series of morning demonstrations. Marblehead teachers were set to meet Thursday, April 11 outside their schools and
walk in together “for fair and just parental leave,” according to the Marblehead Educators Association, the local union. The teachers staged a similar “walk in” in January to support four Glover School educators placed on paid leave after a student restraint incident. “The MEA stands in solidarity with the North Shore Educators United and its 5,000 members during our week of action, as we
rally for paid parental leave,” according to an MEA statement sent to the Current. “One of the MEA’s core priorities for collective bargaining with the School Committee is reaching an agreement on humane and equitable parental leave policies.” The Marblehead teachers’ contract expires this summer.
COURTESY PHOTO
In January, teachers showed their support for four Glover educators placed on paid leave after a student restraint incident by meeting outside their schools and walking in together.
TEACHERS, P. A6
SOLAR SHOW
Around town, people stop to witness eclipse
SCHOOLS
New budget restores positions, programs Also, mold at MHS discussed BY LEIGH BLANDER
Village School fourth grader Jack Lawler stared at the sky through his eclipse glasses.
BY LEIGH BLANDER AND WILL DOWD Monday afternoon, students and adults across Marblehead dropped what they were doing and looked to the sky during an historic eclipse that blocked 93% of the sun locally. Students streamed out of schools wearing their eclipse glasses, and families and friends gathered at spots around town. Fourth grader Jack Lawler stepped out the front door of the Village School with his protective glasses
in place. “We learned that an eclipse is when the moon and sun line up and it gets dark during the day,” Lawler explained. Fourth grader Jaelyn Wilcock was also wearing her glasses and explained that an eclipse is when “the sun and moon mix together.” A group of artists gathered at Devereux Beach to experience the eclipse together. They brought themed snacks, including Oreos, Orbit gum, ECLIPSE, P. A13
CURRENT PHOTO / LEIGH BLANDER
COURTESY PHOTO
People caught a glimpse of the eclipse outside the Council on Aging. They are, left to right, Kathryn Naffziger, Pat Bibbo and Marilee Wolfson.
SPRING SURPRISES
Nor’easter, earthquake hit town
Interim Superintendent Theresa McGuinness updated the School Committee last week about mold discovered at the high school, linked to several roof leaks throughout the building. Town Meeting approved funds for the roof replacement in 2022. After various delays, it is now out to bid. McGuinness said the first part of the project would not be completed until the summer of 2025. “Earlier this winter, in one classroom a concealed source of mold was identified behind a sink and removed,” McGuinness said. “As in all situations, our response to mold is to identify, remove the impacted area, treat the area and replace the damaged material such as the wall and insulation. Principal (Michele) Carlson made arrangements to move the teacher and class to an alternative location within the school. The area where it was found is not currently being used as a classroom.” The district has contracted with two companies to perform tests in different areas of the high school, McGuinness said. Air quality tests have also been performed, determining that the mold “was not airborne” and not at dangerous levels. At a budget hearing last month, Village teacher Jonathan Heller, who co-leads the teachers union, spoke about the mold. “We learned that this kind of mold feeds and spreads quickly and is highly dangerous,” Heller said. “It can trigger infections, SCHOOLS, P. A3
BY LEIGH BLANDER Before Monday’s eclipse, Mother Nature had a few surprises in store for Marblehead last week. On Thursday, an April nor’easter hit with snow, rain, high winds and crashing waves. Streets were closed while crews cleared debris. Then on Friday, a 4.7 magnitude earthquake, centered in New Jersey, rattled Marblehead. There were no reports of damage in town, according to police. “It felt like maybe my washing machine was off balance in the basement beneath me, a steady shaking for 10 seconds or so,” Cindy Schieffer of Marblehead told the Current. “It even woke my sleeping dog, who started barking.” Artist Kristen Nyberg was in her studio when “everything just started to rattle.”
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW
CURRENT PHOTO/TANYA BRAGANTI
A spring nor’easter kicked up some serious surf last week, before an earthquake rattled the town.
“I have metal rulers hanging on a wall, and they all started to rattle,” she said. “And I have various glass bottles on a shelf, and they started to rattle
and tinkle. It was like something out of a movie.” Other residents took to social media to describe “pictures rattling on walls.”
COURTESY PHOTO
Marblehead High’s leaky roof is creating mold problems.