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Updated: 4/21/05

The Goffstown News ­ March 18, 2004

 

This week's stories: (click on the headline to jump to story)
Spadaro's resignation sparks sadness
Church's mission of mercy brings hope and health to island nation
Soldier's story deferred until he finishes school
Abutter appeals fizzle out; Irving Oil gets go-ahead
Town explores charter school
As library debate continues, supporters regroup to figure out plan

 We have listed the warrants and candidates in advance of elections on March 9 so you can see them before the vote. Election results will be posted as soon as we get them on the night of March 9. See your town's warrants here:

Goffstown , Dunbarton, New Boston, Weare, John Stark School District



Goffstown

Spadaro's resignation sparks sadness

By KATE BENWAY
Staff Writer
kbenway@yourneighborhoodnews.com

WEARE ­ Weare Middle School secretary Sharon Fudala was choking back tears when she picked up the phone.
"Every time I look at him or I think about it, I cry," she said, of Principal Jim Spadaro, who, just a day earlier had informed his staff that he would be leaving his post after this year.

"The school is losing someone who cares about the school and the kids," she said.

The day after a townwide vote left Weare Middle School without the additional space and staff Spadaro had asked for, the Weare resident resigned from the position he has held for three years.

One ray of light for him ­ the Weare School District budget ­ had passed by just a few votes, but at press time was teetering on the brink of failure after a formal request for a recount was filed.

"The last time we had a recount, the budget failed," he said.

The Weare School District has been on a default budget for the last two years, and if the recount changes the outcome of this year's vote, the district could be on a default budget once again.

It's a situation Spadaro is tired of.

"I'm not mad and I'm not blaming anyone," he said. "But I don't know why the voters won't do it, won't help us. I really thought we would get more things, but without these things, I can't move the school where it needs to be."

Spadaro plans to finish out this year, but is done on June 30. He said he has no plans to move from Weare, as his son is a junior at John Stark Regional High School. He does not have a new job and he hasn't won the lottery, he said.

If fact, said Spadaro, he doesn't know what he'll do next.

Meanwhile, the Weare School Board will now begin the process of trying to fill Spadaro's shoes.

And, according to his staff, students and school board members, those shoes are big ones to fill.

"They're losing an educator and a coach," said Derek Geddes, an English teacher who teaches seventh and eighth grade. "They're losing a friend, they're losing an honest person, they're losing all the adjectives you can think of to describe a quality human being."

For their part, teachers and staff said they thought some of the requests on this year's warrant would pass.

Some said the dean of students position was a long shot, but Spadaro thought he'd made a good case for needing a third person to help him and Assistant Principal Meeta Brown.

Many officials also thought this would be the year the school would get a second guidance counselor.

Spadaro has asked voters for the added position for the last three years. He's quoted statistics and standards that say the guidance counselor-to-student ratio should be 1-to-300. At the middle school, there are roughly 615 students.

"My kids desperately need to have another guidance counselor," he said. "I believe in my heart that the middle school kids are not getting what they need."

Most who've met him say Spadaro is a champion of the middle school. According to school board officials, Spadaro has been the biggest advocate and cheerleader for the Weare children attending fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grade.

"We're devastated ­ absolutely devastated," said Matt Thomas, chairman of the Weare School Board. "He came to us last year and talked about a middle school philosophy, and it was one of the most impassioned speeches I've ever heard. It got us motivated."

Spadaro speaks freely of his passion and dedication to middle school students. He dubs them the "forgotten" students, as he watches a phenomenon by which, he believes, voters cater more to elementary and high school students.

He can't explain it, but it seems people think the middle-schoolers get by just fine without some of the much-needed staples.

"For a great school, you need awesome students and we win that hands down. You also need a staff that's willing to try new things and we have that, too," he said. "But you need the community willing to help get the school what it needs, and we don't have that. I don't have the skills to get us where we need to be with the resources the voters are giving me."

Meanwhile, school board members are gearing up to ask voters next year to build a new middle school.

The current facility is inadequate for use as a school; students are packed in classrooms as many as 30 at a time, and the back-up heating system has been dubbed a fire hazard by an engineering firm, say school board members.

And with five years' worth of disappointing voting history behind them, officials are worried residents won't respond well to the request.

"Knowing that I need a new middle school and knowing that I can't even get a budget passed, how am I supposed to get 60 percent (the majority that would be needed to vote through the building of a new school)?" said Spadaro.

Thomas said school officials are nervous as well. And more troubling than the thought of getting voters to pass key items is the thought of what the school is losing in Jim Spadaro.

"Weare police Detective (Mark) Bodanza told me the other day that incidents of criminal behavior by middle school kids has been reduced significantly in the last couple of years," said Thomas. "He draws the correlation to the after-school program Jim and Meeta have developed."

Thomas said he's given the students at the school free reign to try to convince Spadaro to stay. But that probably won't happen.
"It can be extremely disheartening to be faced with the same challenges every year," he said.

And the staff and students know that, too. Geddes said his students who run the school newspaper had a good understanding of the vote and have asked why residents keep turning requests down.

Linda Wood, a paraprofessional who has lived in Weare her entire life and has been with the school for 15 years, said the students are saddened by Spadaro's decision.

"They ask a lot of questions and they say, 'We don't want a new principal,'" she said. "He is the best principal that Weare has seen in a long time."

Fudala agrees.

"Everyone supports Jim and what his decision is," she said. "I talked to parents and I believed that they were going to go forward. We're all hurt and frustrated, too. It's just so sad. The school is losing a best friend."

 

Goffstown

Church's mission of mercy brings hope and health to island nation

By TIM RYAN
Staff Writer

A group of 26 adults and high school students from the Goffstown Christian Fellowship have a calling: to help provide medical and dental care to people in the Dominican Republic.

The group, composed of members of five New Hampshire churches, will leave for the Dominican city of Moca on April 24.
Although a week's worth of work in orphanages and makeshift clinics may not seem like a long time, part of the mission is continuing to build on what the Christian Medical Mission has started, said Laurie McMicken, wife of pastor Chris McMicken.

"We can accomplish a lot in a week," she said. "It's not a hit and run. We're working on an established relationship. Even though the team may change, we're building on long-term goals."

McMicken will be making her first trip to the country, and is excited about the possibility of helping those in need.

"People walk for miles when they know (help) is coming," she said. "These people have no other form of medical and dental care."
The project began in 1995, when Jack Meibaum, RN, and Mark McDonald, McMicken's dentist, helped a group from the Grace Bible Fellowship journey to the Dominican Republic.

 

 REACHING OUT TO THOSE IN NEED ­ Valerie Guerette; Sierra Gilmore, 5, of Goffstown; Ian Rauthier, 5, also of Goffstown; and Laurie McMicken will deliver crayons and markers to children in the Dominican Republic. (Tim Ryan Photo)

Upon their return to the states, Meibaum and McDonald decided more work needed to be done in the area of medicine in the country.

More trips were made, and the Christian Medical Mission, a nondenominational collaboration of New Hampshire churches, was founded.

The missionaries will assist medical workers providing medical and dental care to residents of Moca, Santiago, and surrounding areas in the northwest corner of the Dominican Republic. A group of seven University of New Hampshire students, including McMicken's 19-year-old daughter Lydia, traveled to the Dominican Republic during the week of March 14 with a similar objective.

Going on such a mission is important, because it is possible to bring change in a third world country that is reasonably close to the United States, McMicken said.

"This is something that's accessible and affordable," she said. "We can go for a week and have an impact on the country."

In addition to their luggage, the missionaries will be bringing medical, hygiene and educational supplies; crayons and markers will be distributed to children who are treated in the medical checkups, McMicken said.

Still, there are some concerns with the recent military coup in Haiti, which shares the island of Hispanola with the Dominican Republic.

Although the State Department has not issued a travel advisory for the Dominican Republic, the missionaries must be wary of the potential for danger spilling into the country, McMicken said.

"It's such a small island," she said. "We've got to be careful and we'll take precautions."

Group members have met once a month since November in preparation for the trip, and have been planning for what they'll do when they get to the island.

The missionaries have also had hepatitis A and B, malaria, tetanus and polio shots, McMicken said.

In addition , Valerie Guerette, the director of In His Steps learning center, will help lead Sunday school classes in Moca, with lessons tape recorded in Spanish by Goffstown High School Spanish teacher Reina Reidy.

"I think there's a lot of work that can be done there," Guerette said. "I think God is moving us in some good directions."

 

Weare

Soldier's story deferred until he finishes school

By KATE BENWAY
Staff Writer
kbenway@yourneighborhoodnews.com

Alex Peterson speaks with the measured self-confidence of a man twice his young age.

At 17, he sits in Army fatigues, his last name stitched in gray lettering above his pocket and his gear outfitted with a knife and canteen.

It's a little bit scary in these times, he says, but it's about camaraderie, bravery and integrity in Peterson's world, as a part of the Army National Guard's Charlie Company, 3/172nd Mountain Infantry.

His unit was called up at the end of December and they recently left for Kuwait to train for the 18 months they'll spend in Iraq.
Peterson is not permitted to join his unit, as the John Stark High School junior has not yet completed basic training.

"I'd like to be over there serving my country and putting my training to use," said Peterson from his Weare home.

It's difficult, he said, to know the men and women he's trained side by side with for months are on a mission without him.
Peterson joined the Army National Guard in October, on his 17th birthday. It was the fulfillment of a life-long dream to join the military.

"I've always wanted to do it," he said. "Actually, I've been wanting to join since I was 5 or 6."

He's trained one weekend a month and two weeks a year since that time as part of the mountain division. The infantry unit focuses primarily on training in mountainous terrain. They ski, snowshoe and run combat drills in difficult terrain.

"Our mission statement is to engage and neutralize enemies in mountainous or rough terrain," said Peterson.

And while some of his classmates might be doing homework or out at a weekend party, there are times when Peterson has spent his spare time hiking up mountains, sleeping on the ground and braving monster snowstorms.

He's been trained in mock combat situations with laser systems and climbed Mount Major during a blinding snowstorm.

"The wind was unbelievable and the snow was really deep," he said. "But it was fun. I've always liked being outdoors. Some of my friends think I'm crazy, but some think it's cool."

While Peterson stays behind to complete his training, at least part of him remains at all times with his unit.

"My unit is over in Kuwait right now so they can get used to the desert conditions before going to Iraq," he said. "And there are eight guys from the unit training the Afghani military, too."

Stateside, Peterson, along with the other "non-deployables," still trains in New Hampshire and will continue to do so through his senior year in high school. Once he's graduated, he'll head to AIT ­ Advanced Individual Training ­ for five weeks.

At that point, he'll be eligible to be deployed, but Peterson expects his unit will have returned by then.

Peterson said he plans to attend the University of New Hampshire and enroll in ROTC there.

Ultimately, he wants to become an Army Ranger.

The group, he said, is meticulously trained and often embarks on missions behind enemy lines.

"It's a really hard thing to do ­ it's very physical. There are three phases of Army Ranger school," said Peterson.

For his parents, Bill and Susan, their son's military path is a source of pride ­ and some worry.

"Obviously, you have second thoughts when the unit's deployed," said Bill Peterson. "As a parent, you have those thoughts in your mind that you could lose a child. But Alex has charted his path on his own."

And for Alex Peterson, the worries and fear are offset by the pride and camaraderie he's developed along with his unit.

"You have to trust in the guys you're with," he said.

It's that attitude that Bill Peterson is most proud of.

"Alex is well-grounded and he's rationalized it pretty well," he said. "His mom and I are very proud of him."

 

Goffstown

Abutter appeals fizzle out; Irving Oil gets go-ahead

By KATE BENWAY
Staff Writer
kbenway@yourneighborhoodnews.com

After months in limbo, Irving Oil has gotten the green light to build a gas station and mini-market at the corner of Mast and Henry Bridge roads.

The Hillsborough County Superior Court recently upheld the planning board's approval of the project after neighbors William and Patricia Wynne fought the decision.

Unhappy with the court ruling, Patricia Wynne said she and her husband will not appeal it, despite their assertion that the gas station is not an appropriate use of the property.

"I think the judge's decision was pretty lame," she said. "This judge allowed a decision by a (planning board) member who did not attend any of the meetings."

The project has been a source of contention from the May 2000 outset. The planning board tacked on a number of stipulations Irving Oil needed to abide by to stay in compliance, and neighbors lobbied hard against the project.

A particularly contentious point was the vote cast by board member Ryan Belanger, who voted during his first meeting as an official member of the planning board. Despite a warning from board chairman James Raymond that his vote could be grounds for an appeal, Belanger contended he'd seen enough of the board's previous meetings on videotape to become familiar with the issue.

It was that assertion the Wynnes vehemently disagreed with. But the court delivered a different verdict.

"(The court) upheld the decision of the planning board. There's a pretty high standard to overrule a planning board decisions," said Maria Dolder, one of the attorneys for the oil company.

Steve Griffin, Goffstown's town planner, said if the courts had found anything procedurally wrong with the way the planning board handled the issue, the town would have lost.

The town, however, did not lose, and construction machinery is on the site, ready to get the project underway.
Irving Oil officials have obtained the necessary permits and complied with orders to widen the left turn lane going into the gas station.

Meanwhile, the Wynnes, who have lived at their 292 Mast Road home for five years, will consider selling their property, but only after it's rezoned commercial.

"Why would we move and not rezone it first," she said. "We thought it was a pretty safe bet to move here, but apparently not."

Goffstown

Town explores charter school

By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com

After several years of growth and expansion in Goffstown schools, education officials are looking for more.

They're looking for more classes, more opportunities and potentially more students.
But if the plan goes through, Goffstown residents won't be feeling it in their pocketbooks. That's because the plan being explored calls for a separate charter high school.

Gail Kushner, SAU 19's assistant superintendent, said details are still sketchy, but the district has received $19,600 in preplanning grants from the state to explore the possibility.

"We're looking at how to expand the opportunities for Goffstown students, and it may not always be in the traditional way," Kushner said.

A charter school is set up independent of the local school district and accepts students whose tuitions have been paid by area school districts. Earlier this fall the state received a $7 million federal grant to explore charter school possibilities, and Goffstown is one of several communities receiving preplanning grants.

Although the proposal is not yet in the initial planning stages, Kushner said SAU officials and Goffstown School Board members have brainstormed some possibilities.

"Our hope is the students will probably be 16 or older, and that they really would have a specific career focus," she said. "And this would be a school of choice and would be focused on technology and business."

Goffstown School Board Chairman Scott Gross said the school would be independent of Goffstown AREA High School, but there is the possibility that it could make use of district facilities. Gross noted this is a potential source of revenue for the district, but it would require unconventional thinking.

"In preliminary discussions, the possibility (exists) of a situation where classes might be offered in the late afternoon or into the evening," he said. "It could take advantage of not only adult education, but students who want to supplement their daytime education."

Gross said the charter school's focus on technology could be an asset to regular GAHS students.

"Students could take part in interdistance learning where students could take a course that isn't even taught in the state of New Hampshire," he said.

Kushner agrees the possibilities could offer students opportunities, but nothing has been decided.

"That's why we're having the preplanning," she said. "To find out what is the need and do some sort of feasibility study."
Kushner said residents who are interested in finding out more about the charter school concept or the preplanning process can attend a meeting at the SAU on March 23 at 7 p.m.

Depending on the results of the preplanning study, Goffstown may be eligible for more grant money. Gross said he's enthused at the prospect of simply exploring the concept of a high school separate from the district.

Without school board involvement, he said, the school would be free to explore education structures that the larger district isn't flexible enough to look at.

"Something such as a charter school in Goffstown gives a fresh look at education," he said.


New Boston

As library debate continues, supporters regroup to figure out plan

 

 By LARA SKINNER
Staff Writer
lskinner@yourneighborhoodnews.com

NEW BOSTON ­ Three times wasn't the charm for the library trustees this year. A three-fifths vote was necessary to approve the building bond for $888,500, and trustee Timothy Cady said they only got 50 percent of the vote.

The trustees and Friends of the Library met on Tuesday to discuss what their next step will be.
"Our needs haven't changed," Cady said.

Neither have the needs of the residents, it seems. Property taxes increased by $3.22 in 2002, and that is a big concern for Tony Cardone. He moved to town 10 years ago with plans to stick around for a while. But with taxes at $27.95 per $1,000 of assessed value, he said he isn't sure he can retire in the small town.

 QUALITY TIME: Colleen Jorczak and her daughter, Hannah, 4, spend time at the Whipple Free Library. Jorczak is in favor of building a new library. (Lara Skinner Photo)

Cardone stood on the porch at Dodge's with Dana Briggs and Dave Hawkins on Friday afternoon. It was the regular afternoon lunch rush of sandwiches, coffee and a smoke before returning to work. The three men agreed that a library would have a greater effect on the taxes than numbers the trustees have presented.

"The bottom line is it's going to be an impact," Cardone said. "It's going to be a cost factor."

New building plans and a reduced bond amount weren't enough to convince Briggs that a new library is necessary.

Trustees have raised just over $200,000 in private donations to offset the cost, and $98,400 for the project would come from the town's capital reserve fund and money left from a 2000 warrant article. Still, the total project cost is $1.2 million.

Once the building is finished there is maintenance to think about, Briggs said. Safety for the children in school would push the cost up, too, he said. Walking to the library from the school is a short trip with the library in the center of town. He has heard suggestions of building a bridge over the Piscataquog River, or providing a bus to drive students to the new library building. Each of the projects, he said, would mean more money.

"We knew it was going to cost more than they say. (large projects) always do," Briggs said.

Across the street at the Whipple Free Library, there are residents who have heard these arguments, but still support the new building.

Colleen Jorczak was there on Friday with her two daughters. Funding for a new library is the one question that really gets people out to vote, she said.

It is a source of dispute in her family because her father doesn't support the proposal.

"He said, 'Well, pretty soon everything's going to be on CDs and computers anyway," Jorczak said.

She said she can understand the concern over property taxes, but would like to have a library that her daughters can grow up with.

How Cady, the rest of the trustees and the Friends of the Library will meet their goal is the next question for the groups. Town support might be split down the middle, but Cady said he will keep working to get the library built.

 

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