CP_MBHC_20230222_1_A01
OPINION
ON THE WATER
LIBRARY
Bringing back a bookstore
Marblehead Harbor plan nearly complete
APL kicks off PJ drive
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IN THIS ISSUE
NONPROFIT ORG PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE
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MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25
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NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.
TM
February 22, 2023
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VOLUME 1, ISSUE NO. 13
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MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG
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ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT
INFRASTRUCTURE
Town eyes state money for Village Street bridge Deck has had small repairs made to it over years BY WILLIAM J. DOWD At over 85 years old, Marblehead’s Village Street bridge needs to be replaced, and the town hopes to tap into Massachusetts Department of Transportation dollars to pay for it fully. “The town is in the process of applying for inclusion in the MassDOT Transportation Improvement Program to fully fund the construction of the
bridge replacement,” the town’s engineer, Charlie Quigley, told the Marblehead Current. “The town is anticipating covering the cost of the design services with Chapter 90 funds.” Marblehead officials are already very familiar with the TIP program. “This is the same program we used to fund the construction of the Village, Vine and Pleasant project, we are on the TIP with this project now,” said
Marblehead Town Planner Becky Cutting. “The way it works is we pay for the design, and the design engineer whom we hire will provide all of the design and interface with the TIP project for the town from options through final design.” Constructed in 1939, the Village Street bridge is 50 feet long by 43 feet wide, allowing vehicles to pass over the BRIDGE, P. A3
CURRENT PHOTOS / WILLIAM J. DOWD
Marblehead named the Village Street bridge after the town’s former engineer, Harold B. Breare, in 1939.
ADVENTURER
TV shows take intrepid ’Header around the world
PUBLIC SAFETY HEARING
Owner says ‘dangerous’ dog has been addressed Some neighbors are still wary BY WILLIAM J. DOWD Marblehead Town Administrator Thatcher Kezer will recommend that the Select Board deem a Pickwick Road dog dangerous, he said in a public hearing on Wednesday afternoon, Feb. 15. Marblehead Animal Control Officer Betsy Cruger petitioned the Select Board to schedule the dangerous dog hearing following two attacks involving Nala, a 2-year-old pit-bull mix owned by Gina Rushton of 45 Pickwick Road, on Dec. 3 and Jan.10. Cruger told Kezer that the first incident DOG, P. A5
COURTESY PHOTOS / BRYAN ADAMS
Cinematographer Bryan Adams stands on a glacier in McCarthy, Alaska, filming for Discovery Channel’s ‘Edge of Alaska.’
Native has worked on about 100 shows BY CHRISTINE MCCARRISTON At this time last year, cinematographer Bryan Adams emerged from the tent he was living in to a temperature of minus 58 while filming National Geographic’s “Life Below Zero” in Alaska. So, the 12 below zero we experienced recently was nothing for him. In fact, he went outside because he “hadn’t been out in that in a while.” He is definitely disappointed in our warm winter
weather after his Alaskan experience. The Marblehead High School and Ithaca College graduate has worked on about 100 television shows around the country and the world. Last year, he spent weeks working with Ricko DeWilde, the Athabaskan Indian on “Life Below Zero.” When he saw the thermometer hit minus 58 degrees he was “so happy. I thought, ‘This is going to be a great day,’” he said. That day he hit a milestone for himself, as his previous coldest experience was minus 40 while filming on “Ice Road Truckers” in the Northwest Territories. “There was a raging storm outside, but there were also amazing Northern Lights.” Being able to withstand severe
temperatures, storms and conditions isn’t just for those starring in reality and documentary television. The crew must endure it all as well. Adams finished working on “The Amazing Race” last fall and is preparing for the new season this spring. “You’re basically doing it with them [the contestants],” he said. “You have to run and keep up with them and actually make good footage.” He is grateful for the improvements in camera technology as he works to keep up with the characters in the shows he films. “Batteries used to be nine pounds themselves. Now it’s so much better,
you can run better.”
PUBLIC SCHOOLS BUDGET
Staffing cuts predicted BY WILLIAM J. DOWD AND LEIGH BLANDER Superintendent of Schools John Buckey cautioned that if the town holds the district to a 1.8% budget increase for FY 2024, 33 staff positions will need to be cut. The current school budget is nearly $44 million. “It’s devastating to morale,” Buckey said. “People are already asking building principals and directors if they’re going to be out of a job. People will begin looking. I
ADAMS, P. A8
BUDGET, P. A4
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