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07.31.2024 – Volume 2, Issue 36

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IN THIS ISSUE

DECISION 2024

POOCH PROBLEM

Do you suffer from Election stress disorder?

Why getting Rover to the Dog Park is ruff

CURRENT EVENTS

Actor/author Rob Delaney is coming home

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NONPROFIT ORG PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE

PAID

MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25

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NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.

TM

July 31, 2024

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VOLUME 2, ISSUE NO. 36

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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG

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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT

EXPLICIT ATTACKS

Zoom bombs hit at least three town meetings BY WILL DOWD AND LEIGH BLANDER Police are investigating three pornographic Zomb bombs in as many days during town meetings last week. The Select Board will be moving to a platform with more protections before its next meeting. “We have to pay for the more expensive subscription. and we

have to personally let people into the meeting,” Select Board Chair Erin Noonan told the Current. “There’s something about the way they enter the meeting that’s more secure.” Town Administrator Thatcher Kezer said other boards and committees that use the Select Board’s Zoom account will also utilize the upgraded system. “We want all boards to

conduct their meetings using webinar mode, but they will need to have someone trained to support that mode,” Kezer said. The Select Board meeting was hit on Wednesday, July 24. The disruption happened about halfway through Finance Committee Chair Alec Goolsby’s presentation on financial projections for 2025. “I don’t believe this has ever

happened at one of our meetings before,” Noonan said. The Zoom bomb lasted more than a minute before administrators removed the offender. People attending the Select Board meeting in person could not see the explicit video, but viewers tuning in virtually could. “Unfortunately, we did not know the screen was visible

to those online because in our meeting room … it was not,” Noonan said. “Otherwise, I would have immediately shut it down and continued the meeting in person.” Then on Friday, July 26, during the virtual meeting of the School Committee’s policy subgroup, several screens popped up with ZOOM, P. A7

SUMMER SAILING

Harbor hosts 700 sailors for light-air Race Week BY LAURIE FULLERTON

Pleon team and I felt we could do really well in this regatta so it was frustrating not getting some good races in.” The winner of the Opti Green race was Brendan Boulter from the Pleon Yacht Club team. “Marblehead is known to have little wind

The 135th sailing of Marblehead Race Week wrapped up after light air gave competitors only six races over the entire four-day regatta. By Sunday, as the remaining eight fleets waited outside the harbor under a postponement flag, the race committee, in their hunt for wind, deemed to be strong enough for one short race for the Lasers and Town Class off Crocker Park. The results after six races did bode well for Charlie Pendleton and Jim Rasidies of »More Marblehead in the photos, J/70 fleet on their Pages 9 boat Bad Hombre, and 16 which took home second place overall and first place in the Corinthian, or amateur, division with 21 points overall. The J/70s were hosting their national championships as well. “With conditions like these our strategy has been to sail our best race possible. We felt like we were sailing well, and made very few mistakes,” said Charlie Pendleton, skipper of the Bad Hombres. “Our philosophy has been to race every race like it is our last one. This bodes well, too, as next year we have the J/70 amateur worlds coming to Marblehead. It looks like we will have about 80 boats.” In the International One Design fleet, veteran sailor Bill Widnall on board Javelin benefited from

JUNIORS, P. A11

RACE WEEK, P. A11

Lack of wind canceled all but one race during Junior Race Week, but that didn’t ruin all the fun for young sailors.

CURRENT PHOTO / GREY COLLINS

Windless days foil junior regatta BY GREY COLLINS On Monday morning, July 22, young sailors from around the Northeast eagerly unfurled their sails for the annual Marblehead Junior Race Week. But unfortunately, Mother Nature had other plans. Due to a lack of wind, only one race out of 21 took place.

After months of preparation, both the first and the third days of racing were canceled due to lack of wind, and on the second day, only one of the races took place. Out of 210 sailors, only 29 were able to race in the regatta. “I was pretty disappointed not being able to sail at all,” said Jack Morgan, a 16-yearold sailor for the Pleon Yacht Club. “The

FINS IN THE HARBOR

We may need a bigger boat BY GREY COLLINS Ever since Marbleheader and avid swimmer Jane Bianchi saw a recent video of a shark at Halfway Rock about 4 miles east of Marblehead, she wears a shark deterrent band on her ankle. She’s also more cautious about where and when she swims. “I live on my Sharktivity App to see where they’re located,” said Bianchi. “I’m also hoping that my magnetic bracelet helps, and obviously I won’t go at dusk or dawn.” In the last few weeks, several videos have surfaced on social media of sharks in Marblehead waters, including one inside

BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW

»See more of Rick Cuzner’s shark photos on Page 4. the harbor, that have worried residents. “We have had approximately four sightings,” Harbormaster Mark Souza told the Current. “Based on video and descriptions, all have been confirmed to be basking sharks.” But that doesn’t mean the great whites aren’t there. Last week, local lobsterman Matt Finn recorded a close-up of a large shark just past Halfway Rock. “Everyone said that it’s a

basking shark, but this thing moved completely differently, and it was massive. It had to be 17 foot long,” said Finn. “If you saw the nose of the shark, it didn’t look like a basking shark. It didn’t have its mouth open. It didn’t have the exposed gills that a basking shark has.” Finn said friends had seen two great whites 6 or 7 miles from that spot a few days before. “We’re all seeing them. We know they’re out there,” he added. The Atlantic White Shark Conservancy estimated that from 2015-2018 there were 800 great white sharks in Massachusetts waters. The

COURTESY PHOTO / RICK CUZNER

Local nature and wildlife photographer Rick Cuzner captured photos of a basking shark near Halfway Rock.

population is still increasing as seal populations continue to recover since the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972. Just this week, there were 16 great white sightings confirmed off the coast of New England, including two in Maine, one on the South Shore and one on the

North Shore. Marblehead resident Arthur Beauchesne, who has been surfing in Marblehead since 1984, has seen many over the years, sometimes too close for comfort. SHARK, P. A3


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