CP_MBHC_20241127_1_A01
IN THIS ISSUE
SPORTS
HOLIDAY
MUSIC
Are you ready for some football at Fenway?
Flipping the switch at Marblehead’s tree lighting
Old North’s Festival Chorus a Christmas staple
Page 9
Page 3
Page 14
NONPROFIT ORG PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
TM
November 27, 2024
| VOLUME 3, ISSUE NO. 1
| MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
| ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
SCHOOLS
Teachers strike enters third week BY LEIGH BLANDER
The Marblehead teachers strike entered its third week Monday, with hundreds of educators marching from the Veterans School to Abbot Hall demanding higher wages and better benefits. Select Board member Dan Fox addressed teachers telling them that they deserved fair, equitable pay that puts them at the “median of their peers” at the end of their four-year contract, in order to attract and retain quality educators. Fox did not respond when asked if he thought the School Committee’s offer met that bar. Fox wrote in a statement, “The town of Marblehead will need an
» Visit MarbleheadCurrent.org for the very latest on the teachers contract dispute. override in order to pay all of our employees (educators, municipal employees, first responders) a fair and competitive wage.” Monday afternoon, School Committee members Jenn Schaeffner and Sarah Fox held a press conference at a small fitness facility at Little Harbor, announcing that they are participating in court-ordered fact-finding with a neutral third party. The fact-finder, an MIT professor, will hold a hearing beginning Dec. 2 and issue a ruling Dec. 4. The MEA attended the first STRIKE, P. A7
CURRENT PHOTO / GREY COLLINS
Marblehead High School teacher and soccer coach Elmer Magaña marches with hundreds of educators from Veterans School to Abbot Hall Monday.
SPORTS
Marblehead makes it two in a row in annual Powderpuff football classic BY BENJI BOYD The Marblehead High senior girls have been training for weeks to get ready for their annual Powderpuff football game against rival Swampscott. Last Saturday morning, Nov. 23, at Swampscott’s Blocksidge Field, their hard work paid off with a 28-12 win to make it two in a row over their Swampscott peers. They defeated the Big Blue last year, 21-14. It was Jacqui Bouchard’s last game as the team’s advisor after an 18-year run. It also broke a two-game losing streak. Swampscott won in 2022, 21-13 after shutting out the Magicians in 2021, 10-0. As the rain poured down on Blocksidge Field, the Marblehead junior girls were decked out in Marblehead gear and face paint, while waving flags and blowing whistles from the stands. Parents, friends and teachers also filled the stands to cheer on the team. After the 10 a.m. kickoff, it didn’t take long for Marblehead to score the first points of the game. By halftime, Marblehead was leading 14-0. Marblehead began the second half with a 60-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by soccer and track star Ava Machado, but Swampscott wasn’t about to give up. They were able to trim the deficit to nine, 21-12. But the Marblehead girls remained in control, while scoring one more touchdown to account for the final score. For the record, star softball catcher Luka Bornhorst led her teammates in scoring with two touchdowns. Sierra Leinberry and Machado again
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW
COURTESY PHOTOS / EYAL OREN, WEDNESDAYS IN MARBLEHEAD
MHS Powderuff player Abigail Peach tries to evade a Big Blue defender during Saturday morning’s game.
each chipped in with one touchdown. “This game was awesome,” said James Bickell, one of the team’s offensive coaches. “I’m so proud of these girls for turning in such an amazing performance. It was an honor to coach them.” Juliet Burchfield, Sydney Shull, Paige Tredwell, Sophia Johns, Ramona Gillett and Hannah O’Brien were the 2024 team captains. According to first-year team advisor Caitlin Fields, Burchfield, Shull and Tredwell were primarily the MHS senior Lani Gilmore kicks for a point.
POWDERPUFF, P. A9