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08.14.2024 – Volume 2, Issue 38

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IN THIS ISSUE

SALUTE TO SERVICE

JUNIOR OLYMPIANS

NATURE

Town named Purple Heart Community

Showing their ‘medal’

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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

August 14, 2024

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VOLUME 2, ISSUE NO. 38

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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG

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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT

SCHOOLS

DCF voids educator’s neglect finding TO OUR READERS The Current is taking a summer print break on Aug. 21. Our newsroom is still hard at work, however, so check MarbleheadCurrent.org for news coverage. The print edition returns on Aug. 28.

BY LEIGH BLANDER The state’s Department of Children and Family Services has reversed its previous finding of neglect against a Marblehead educator who was fired after a student restraint crisis at the Glover School last year. Initially, DCF found that the evidence supported an allegation of neglect against Ann Haskell, the former student services chair at Glover, related to a Nov. 20, 2023, restraint involving a third grader. However, on Aug. 8, the agency reversed its decision on appeal. “There was a lack of substantial evidence to determine that [the

CURRENT PHOTO / LEIGH BLANDER

The Department of Children and Family Services now says that the evidence does not support a finding of neglect against a Glover School teacher fired in connection with a student restraint incident.

educator] failed to provide the child with minimally adequate care,” reads DCF’s determination. Haskell, a career educator who lives in Nahant, is suing the

district, School Committee and former interim superintendent Theresa McGuinness over her firing. The district denied her unemployment benefits as well.

Reached for comment, current interim Superintendent John Robidoux said, “I am not at liberty to comment on this situation at this juncture.” According to Haskell’s complaint filed in Essex Superior Court, she was also “exonerated” by the expert witness hired by the independent investigation firm Comprehensive Investigations and Consulting hired to look into the restraint incident. The complaint quotes the report (which is heavily redacted) saying, “The finding in this incident is that Ms. Haskell did not violate the rules and regulations of the RESTRAINT, P. A6

MENTAL HEALTH

Delaney speaks on love, laughter and loss Actor returns home for Counseling Center benefit BY KRIS OLSON By design, it wasn’t entirely a happy homecoming for comedian and actor Rob Delaney Saturday night at the Performing Arts Center at the Veterans Middle School. “I hear sniffling out here… good!” Delaney said, using his trademark humor to break the tension. The story about the final days of he and his wife Leah’s third child, Henry, was supposed to be sad, he explained. Henry was diagnosed with a brain tumor around his first birthday and died before turning 3. In unsparing detail, Delaney wrote about his family’s heartbreaking experience in the memoir, “A Heart That Works.” To be sure, there were plenty of

MARBLEHEAD CURRENT PHOTO / KRIS OLSON

Comedian, actor and author Rob Delaney, a Marblehead native, chats onstage with WBZ-TV news anchor Lisa Hughes during a benefit for the Marblehead Counseling Center at the Veterans Middle School Aug. 10.

laughs during the “Hearts & Humor” benefit for the Marblehead Counseling Center, which featured an hour-long conversation between Delaney and WBZ-TV news anchor Lisa Hughes. Both Delaney and Hughes donated their time so that 100% of the proceeds could support the Counseling Center’s work. Those laughs started early, as Delaney bemoaned his decision not to do a soundcheck before the doors

opened and thus got his first look in a long time from a stage on which he once performed as a Marblehead High School thespian. He was taken aback by the murals at the back of the auditorium, new since his last visit. The seats — and the smells while waiting in the wings just off stage — were far more familiar, Delaney quipped. Delaney has gone on to appear on the big screen in a number of major

feature films, including “Deadpool 2” and its recently released sequel, “Deadpool & Wolverine.” When Hughes explained that their discussion would recount Delaney’s mental health journey, Delaney was quick to offer a disclaimer. “I don’t know anything about mental health,” he said, adding, “I have it. I DELANEY, P. A6

REVIVING LOCAL ECOSYSTEMS

From gardens to public spaces Marblehead embraces native plants to save pollinators BY WILL DOWD

CURRENT PHOTO / WILL DOWD

A vibrant display of Veronica (Speedwell) flowers attracts bees at Marblehead Garden Center.

BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW

On a sunny morning at the Lead Mills property, a former industrial site turned conservation area, volunteers Mary Krull and Patricia Hines carefully tend to a patch of wildflowers. Their work is part of a growing movement across Marblehead to create pollinatorfriendly landscapes using native plants. “We’re slowly trying to reclaim this field,” Krull said, gesturing to the five-acre expanse around

her. “We’re taking it now piece by piece to try to get rid of all the invasives, meaning things that are not from around here and are taking over, and replace them with native pollinators, native to Massachusetts.” This effort at Lead Mills is just one example to support local ecosystems and the crucial pollinators they sustain, they said. Pollinators are organisms that help transfer pollen from one flower to another, facilitating the fertilization process essential for plant

reproduction and the production of fruits and seeds, according to MassAudobon. From public spaces to private gardens, Marblehead is experiencing a native plant revolution, according to Susan Fitzgerald, a horticulture specialist at Marblehead Garden Center. The movement towards pollinator-friendly landscaping has been gaining momentum in Marblehead over the past few POLLINATORS, P. A3


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