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Updated: 4/21/05

The Goffstown News ­ August 26, 2004

This week's stories: (click on the headline to jump to story)
Fluoride vote in question
Overcrowded school at 'end of useful life'
Compromise in the works over trucks on Back Road
The new Miss Goffstown


 

Weare

Safety first

 

At the Weare Police Department, Kids Camp officer Paul Moller shows one of the campers the inside of a 9mm pistol barrel. (Courtesy Photo)


Goffstown

Fluoride vote in question

 

By DEVON CORMIER
Staff Writer
dcormier@yourneighborhoodnews.com

The Sept. 14 vote on continuing to fluoridate Goffstown water may be held up, now that two towns which receive Manchester water have filed a lawsuit asking they be included in the vote.

Auburn and Derry have fewer than 100 hookups to the city water system and, by law, are currently excluded from the vote.

Attorney Jed Z. Callen is representing Auburn residents Thomas Upham and David Lariviere; Derry residents Fred W. DeJong, and Kim and Charles Statler; and Manchester state Rep. Barbara J. Hagan.

The lawsuit has been filed in both Rockingham and Hillsborough counties. Auburn and Derry are in Rockingham County, while Manchester, the owner of the water system, is in Hillsborough County. It is expected that the lawsuits will be consolidated to the Hillsborough County court.

Hagan said there are two parts to the lawsuit.

"Voters of Auburn and Derry are again being denied a vote on this issue," Hagan said. Hagan suggests that this is unconstitutional and a denial of due process.

Also, Hagan said the lawsuit will address the wording of the ballot question. Hydrofluorosilic acid is the actual material being added to the water, whereas the ballot question apparently reads simply "fluoride."

"The stuff they are adding to the water is making a health claim," Hagan said. "But they are using the generic word, fluoride, which is not the actual term. It is hydrofluorosilic acid. That does not give people a clear idea of what they are voting for."

Hagan hopes the suit will be put on a fast track to curb the Sept. 14 referendum. Under law, the vote does not need to be tallied until June 2005.

"The court has scheduled a hearing on my request for a preliminary injunction for the first week of September," Callen said. "The court could order Auburn and Derry to vote or that the vote be delayed or any number of things."

Upham declined comment and Lariviere could not be contacted for comment.

Debates take place

Although Hagan said she hopes the vote will be put on hold, hearings and forums are marching forward at full force. On Monday, Aug. 23, two forums took place, one in Goffstown and one in Manchester.

While Hagan spoke with others in Manchester against fluoridated water, Manchester Public Health Director Fred Rusczek and others were scheduled to speak in favor of fluoridating the water in Goffstown.

Goffstown selectmen hosted the public hearing, where they scheduled Rusczek along with Assistant Director of Manchester Water Works Bob Beaurivage.

Beaurivage spoke about the technicalities of administering fluoride to the water. He said Goffstown has 1,300 service connections and that one part per million of the hydrofluorosilic acid is being added to the water currently.

Rusczek spoke about the health benefits of fluoride.

"I am in support of community water fluoridation," Rusczek said. "Fluoride had been found by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention to be one of the top 10 public health achievements of the century. Today, over two thirds of the public water supply is fluoridated. Over 170 million people who live on the public water supply benefit."

After the two spoke, selectmen permitted audience member and researcher Michael Connett to speak against fluoridated water, and then allowed questions.

"Fluoride chemicals are cheap," Connett said. "Why? Because they are industrial waste products. There is an elegant solution to this. If people want fluoride, go to the store and buy fluoridated toothpaste."

About 20 audience members had gathered for the occasion, and although the questions were few, statements ran rampant throughout the meeting for those against fluoridated water, who were in the majority.

Hagan said about 30 people came to listen to the forum in Manchester on the same night. There were no pro-fluoridation speakers, since most of them were in Goffstown at Saint Anselm College to speak.

Changing laws

Manchester voted to fluoridate its water in 1999. Manchester followed the process of similar communities that voted to fluoridate their water by leaving out other towns that receive city water. Following other towns' examples, only the city that owned the water system voted.

In 2001, a lawsuit was filed in Superior Court asking that Manchester be barred from fluoridating the water because customers in Goffstown, Hooksett, Bedford, Londonderry, Derry and Auburn did not get to vote.

The court ruled that all affected communities should vote, but because the law was unclear, it gave the city of Manchester until June 2005 to remedy the situation with new legislation.

Manchester filed Senate Bill 449 in response, which would have established that only the community that owns the public water supply gets to vote. The Senate amended the bill, adding that everyone in any outlying community which receives water from Manchester gets to vote.

The House further amended the bill to say that communities with fewer than 100 direct connections to the water supply do not get to vote. Auburn is one of those communities. The recently filed lawsuit by Auburn and Derry residents is taking this decision into question.

 

Weare

Overcrowded school at 'end of useful life'

New middle school to cost about $21M

 

By JENNIFER CLAISE
Staff Writer
jclaise@yourneighborhoodnews.com

School officials are reviewing a proposal for a new middle school that would be built on Route 114 across from the town's safety complex at a preliminary cost of about $20 million.

SAU 24 Superintendent Christine Tyrie said the current middle school is badly overcrowded. As of Oct. 1, 2003, there were 606 students in grades 5, 6, 7 and 8 enrolled in the school ­ over 100 more students than the school's official capacity, she said.

Additionally, the school lacks science labs, locker rooms, and the heating system does not function properly, Tyrie said.

According to a facility deficiency study conducted by Team Design Inc., the architectural firm in charge of the proposed new school, the current school has a number of other flaws ­ some areas are in violation of building and life safety codes; the electric wiring is fragile and not expected to last much longer; 21 out of 24 classrooms do not meet state guidelines for minimum square feet; there is no stage for student performances; and the library is below state standards.

Renovation of the current school is not seen as a viable alternative, Tyrie said, because the facility is deteriorating, and not enough can be salvaged to make renovation a cost-effective option.

"The current middle school has basically come to the end of its useful life as a school," Tyrie said. "It's just generally in very bad shape."

And the time to build a new school is now, according to school board Chairman Matt Thomas.

"The costs of a project like this are only bound to go up the longer we wait," he said.

According to preliminary plans from Team Design, the new school would occupy between 145,000 and 151,000 square feet across from the town's safety complex on a 43-acre parcel of land that is owned by the town.

Enrollment capacity would range from 800 to 1,000, depending on the final size of the school, Tyrie said.

While the preliminary cost of the new school is pegged at between $20 and $21 million, Tyrie said that she will meet with lead architect Dan Bisson on Tuesday, Aug. 24, to discuss whether the current plans meet the town's needs, and whether an adequate facility can be built for less money.

"We are trying to do this in a way that is fiscally responsible," Tyrie said.

A final cost for the new school will need to be presented to voters by Nov. 1, Tyrie said, and then the issue will be voted on during Town Meeting in March.

But if approved, the new middle school would not be ready for at least another two years, Tyrie said.

As for the current middle school, Tyrie said the town has expressed interest in buying the property from the school, but plans have not yet been finalized.

And while Tyrie said no other proposals for a new middle school have been presented to voters in recent years, people in town are aware of the conditions at the current middle school.

"People seem to understand the situation there, but they haven't gotten a lot of information about the new proposal yet," Tyrie said.

"I've been getting fewer questions about why can't we just stay in our current space ­ now it's more a matter of people making sure that we're spending money wisely," Thomas added.

To remedy that problem, Tyrie said, there will be a series of meetings held to discuss the proposal before the bond vote in March.

The next Team Design meeting will take place Tuesday, Sept. 14, at the middle school, at 6 p.m. The meeting is open to the public, and all residents are welcome to attend, Tyrie said.


Goffstown

Compromise in the works over trucks on Back Road

By JENNIFER CLAISE
Staff Writer
jclaise@yourneighborhoodnews.com

A potential standoff between the town and the city of Manchester over traffic conditions near a proposed industrial park on the border of the two communities may have been diffused, at least for now, according to officials from both parties.

Selectmen Chairman Bob Wheeler said he just recently reached an agreement with Manchester Alderman Armand Forest about how to deal with trucking on Goffstown Back Road, where town planners approved plans for two buildings and a small industrial park in May.

Forest originally threatened to propose the prohibition of commercial truck traffic on a section of the Manchester portion of the road, which could hinder traffic in and out of the park.

But the Department of Transportation informed Forest he was not allowed to shut off the road in that way, he said.

Either way, Forest said that the main purpose of his proposal was to get the attention of the Goffstown Planning Board, which he said was not adequately listening to the complaints of the town's citizens, or keeping them informed of future plans for the park.

"The only reason I did this is because I was getting 20 calls a week, many from people in Goffstown, who said they weren't being notified and that they weren't allowed to speak at the town's hearing," Forest said. "It was all I could do."

But, after meeting with Wheeler, Forest said he would agree to amend his proposal, and instead call for an extension of the hours when commercial trucking is currently prohibited on the road.

As it stands, Manchester already restricts commercial truck traffic on the road from 9:30 p.m. to 7 a.m.

And at Manchester's traffic safety committee meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 15, Forest said he intends to submit an amended proposal that would prohibit commercial truck traffic starting at 8:30 p.m., one hour earlier.

And while he said he knows that his amended proposal will not restrict trucking as much as some Goffstown residents or his own constituents would like, it will make a dent in the overall traffic.

"The people who are against the park are still bound to be upset, but this will help to slow truck traffic down at night," Forest said.

This is especially true, he said, given his understanding that future plans for the park could call for 24-hour truck traffic in and out of the facility.

However, Town Planner Stephen Griffen said no tenants have been announced for the area, but that the town has approved plans for a subdivision and for two buildings there. The area is slated for light industrial use and has been for many years, he added.

Members of the Manchester Goffstown Back Road Citizens Group, which opposes the industrial park, did not return repeated calls for comment.

Forest said he believes that other aldermen on the traffic committee will approve of his amended proposal.

"There were other aldermen who were in favor of closing the road, but I believe I can get support for this," Forest said.

Wheeler added that Goffstown is working to keep good working relations with the city of Manchester ­ relations that were somewhat strained by Forest's recent threat.

"It was never our intention to not cooperate with one another," Wheeler said. "Goffstown and Manchester have a long history working together to solve issues like this."


Goffstown

The new Miss Goffstown

 

 

Kyle Polichronopoulos of Hooksett was crowned Miss Goffstown by reigning Miss New Hampshire Alyssa Spellman on Sunday, Aug. 22. Polichronopoulos is a member of the Manchester Wolves Dance Team. The Miss Goffstown Scholarship Pageant is sponsored by the Optimist Club of Pinardville, which supports youth activities in the Goffstown/Pinardville area. Polichronopoulos will now go on to the Miss New Hampshire Scholarship Program Pageant.
(De-J Cejka Photo)

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