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09.04.2024 – Volume 2, Issue 40

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IN THIS ISSUE

FROM THE GRIDIRON

LIGHTS, CAMERA, MARBLEHEAD

SINGING SENSATION

This Friday night lights

Harbormaster makes TV appearance

Recent MHS grad performs at Fenway

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MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25

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September 04, 2024

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VOLUME 2, ISSUE NO. 40

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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT

SPECIAL TOWN MEETING?

Zoning vote spawns heated debate BY WILL DOWD

Resident and attorney John DiPiano speaks at the Select Board meeting on Aug. 28 during a discussion on a planned special town meeting to reconsider a controversial housing law that voters rejected in May.

The Select Board meeting broke down Wednesday night as officials and residents clashed over whether to hold a special town meeting to reconsider compliance with the state’s MBTA Communities Act, a contentious housing law that voters narrowly rejected in May. Currently, a special town meeting is planned for November, but no date has been set. The Select Board meeting’s

COURTESY PHOTO / JAMES MARONEY

public comment period quickly became heated, with residents talking over one another and accusations flying. At one point, Select Board Chair Erin Noonan suggested adjourning the meeting due to the constant interruptions and lack of decorum. John DiPiano, a local attorney who started an online petition with approximately 450 signatures (some from out of town, he noted) opposing a special town meeting, confronted Noonan about a

personal email she sent out encouraging supporters to advocate for the housing law. “I find what you’re doing personally appalling,” DiPiano said, questioning whether the email violated open meeting laws. “You’re advocating people advance this cause as chair of this Select Board. I don’t think that’s your job. I don’t think you’re here to be a lobbyist.” Noonan defended her actions, stating that her support for ZONING, P. A7

A GRAND RETURN

History arrives by horse and carriage BY WILL DOWD

COURTESY PHOTOS

Marquis de Lafayette arrives in Marblehead by horse and carriage on Saturday.

Marquis de Lafayette greets people gathered to celebrate the 200th anniversary of his last visit to Marblehead.

Glover’s Regiment fires its muskets at the event celebrating the 200th anniversary of Lafayette’s last visit to Marblehead.

The Lee MansionGardens transformed into a living Revolution-era time capsule on Saturday. Over 100 people gathered there to commemorate the bicentennial of Marquis de Lafayette’s farewell tour visit to Marblehead on Aug. 31, 1824. The event, co-sponsored by Lafayette200, an initiative celebrating the French hero’s final American journey, brought the spirit of 1824 to life, complete with period costumes, speeches and musket fire. Marblehead Museum Executive Director Lauren McCormack opened the proceedings, offering historical context. Lafayette visited Marblehead three times — in 1780, 1784 and 1824. “When word first came to Marblehead in the spring of 1824 that Lafayette would return to the United States, the selectmen immediately sent out an invitation for him to visit,” McCormack said. “Lafayette disembarked from his coach at the house, what was known as the bank house at that time, at 9 a.m. He breakfasted [at the Lee Mansion] with the town’s preeminent citizens.” McCormack shared to widespread laughs: “According to the reminiscences of the Russell family, the bank cashiers family, living in part of the mansion in 1824, Lafayette asked to take a nap after breakfast.” Select Board Chair Erin Noonan delivered an abridged version of the speech that Marblehead LAFAYETTE, P. A15

LEARNING

Students return to schools as teachers’ contracts expire Bargaining, which has been contentious, set to resume next week BY LEIGH BLANDER Marblehead students are back in classrooms for a new school year as their teachers and custodians work without a contract. Teachers, dressed in red, gathered outside the Veterans School on Aug. 29 before walking in together to hear interim Superintendent John Robidoux’s convocation message. Marblehead High School teacher and coach Mike Giardi addressed his colleagues about their ongoing contract fight with the

BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW

School Committee’s bargaining subgroup. Both sides have filed grievances, and the School Committee has called in a state mediator to negotiate the custodian’s contract. The Marblehead Education Association walked out of teacher contract talks earlier this month. Bargaining is set to resume Sept. 10. “This will be difficult, but we have done it before and we can do it again,” Giardi said. “It’s going to be a working effort. We have to fight for safe schools,

parental leave and fair wages for everybody. So let’s get it rockin’.” Meanwhile, Salem teachers announced Aug. 30 that they had reached a tentative deal that gives them an average 20% raise over the next three years and paraprofessionals a nearly 50% increase in the same time period. The agreement also gives teachers six weeks of paid family leave. Village School teacher and MEA Co-President Jonathan SCHOOL, P. A2

CURRENT PHOTO / LEIGH BLANDER

“We’re just getting kicked around,” MHS English teacher Kristina Sholds said about contract talks.


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