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IN THIS ISSUE
GIFT
SPORTS
THEATER
Siting for Rotary Club clock revealed
Ready for a repeat
A bittersweet wink at love
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MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
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NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
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March 29, 2023
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VOLUME 1, ISSUE NO. 18
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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
TOWN MEETING
Override would add $2.5M to tax base BY WILLIAM J. DOWD Marblehead Select Board members will now place one general override, not two, before Town Meeting in May, and Town Administrator Thatcher Kezer put an estimated $2.5 million price tag on it. “I don’t want anybody to get misguided by the raw numbers,”
said Kezer during the Select Board meeting on Wednesday night. “There will be tweaking.” As they assembled the fiscal year 2024 budget, Marblehead Finance Director Aleesha Nunley-Benjamin and Kezer arrived at the $2.5 million number by subtracting projected revenues of $94.5 million under a no-override budget from
projected expenditures of $97 million under a level-services budget. Departments made sacrifices to help address the structural deficit. “You’ll see departments that have taken a good amount of cuts,” Kezer told the Finance Committee on Monday, March 21, adding that the target was a 4% reduction per department.
“There are departments that were significantly reduced to meet the target number. Other departments — there are no cuts.” The override request targets the projected structural deficit stemming from the town’s reliance on free cash to balance its annual budget. In FY 2024, the town estimates free cash
GOOD DEEDS
SPUR’s growing season begins
to come in at $8 million, a $2.6 million decrease over the $10.6 million used to balance the FY 2023 budget. As a general override of Proposition 2 1/2, the new taxes would become a permanent part of the town’s revenue base, helping the town avoid similar OVERRIDE, P. A11
WILDLIFE
Learn about local coyotes
Animal control officer will cover ‘hazing’ techniques BY WILLIAM J. DOWD
CURRENT PHOTO / NICOLE GOODHUE BOYD
Debra Rubin, Maya Abramov, 5, and Boris Abramov plant lettuce seeds on March 26 at SPUR’s Community Roots Garden at St. Andrew Episcopal church.
Garden supplies fresh, organic produce to food pantries BY WILLIAM J. DOWD Spring is in the air, and with it, SPUR begins another growing season. On a recent Sunday afternoon, a legion of volunteers from the Marblehead-based nonprofit tended to the Community Roots Garden
situated on the steep hill outside St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church on Lafayette Street. “We’re planting the first round of crops for the 2023 season,” Marblehead resident Cara Whelan said. “We’ve just weeded the beds and turned the soil.”
As she spoke, Whelan’s children, Adelaide, 4, and Foster, 8, flanked her to the left and right, curiously looking on as she carefully covered two rows of tiny seeds. “I’m planting carrots. Others are
Residents have an upcoming opportunity to learn more about local coyotes with Daniel Proulx, one of Marblehead’s animal control officers. “Our mission is to educate the public and monitor and track coyote activities in Marblehead,” he said. “And the number one thing is to get coyotes to fear people again.” Proulx’s presentation will take place in the Gerry 5, Veteran Firemen’s Association, 210 Beacon St., on April 13 at 6:30 p.m. All are invited, and Proulx said the program is meant to be fun and informative. Between his time as an animal control officer in Swampscott and Marblehead, Proulx has several years of experience with wildlife. “One of the problems is there are people
GARDEN, P. A5 COYOTES, P. A5
NEVER FORGET
‘Don’t be a bystander’ Holocaust survivor delivers powerful message at Charter School BY WILLIAM J. DOWD Gasps echoed throughout the Marblehead Community Charter Public School cafeteria as Henia Lewin projected a faded photograph taken following her parents’ wedding in the late
BLACK CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW
1930s. In the image, her parents smile as they sit at the head of a long, wooden table surrounded by a joyful group of roughly 40 friends and family members. As an aside, Lewin said, “My mother had the most gorgeous wedding dress.”
“My parents are sitting at the table with my dad’s mother and father sitting next to them,” Lewin told an audience of seventh- and eighth-graders. “Out of this entire group, only nine people survived; everyone else was killed by the Nazis.”
Lewin offered the photograph as a powerful reminder of the Holocaust and the macabre atrocities carried out by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, resulting in the systematic murder of six million Jews, as well as millions of others
considered “undesirable,” including the Romani people, people with disabilities and homosexuals. Nick Santoro, an eighth-grade humanities teacher, said nothing LEWIN, P. A3