|
This week's stories: (click on the headline
to jump to story)
|
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:
Hooksett
School, Hooksett
Town (for May elections), Allenstown,
Auburn, Candia,
Epsom and Pembroke.
|
Suncook
'Bygone Brides' revives memories for Suncook
residents
|
By AMY FORTIER
Correspondent
The Meet me in Suncook organization, founded
in 1998, is committed to preserving the history and heritage
of the Suncook area. They have held many fundraisers such as
historic walking tours and elegant dinners to raise funds for
projects like restoring the clock tower in downtown Suncook and
placing historic markers.
Their most recent fundraiser, an exhibit titled "Bygone
Brides," was a different way for the Suncook community to
experience its history.
On Sunday, March 21, the Meet Me in Suncook organization exhibited
a collection of wedding dresses contributed by women from the
Suncook, Allenstown and Pembroke area that spanned the entire
20th century in the St. John the Baptist Parish Hall on School
Street. The $5 admission allowed visitors to tour the collection
of dresses and photographs and then sit down to an elegant tea
with china cups and a huge assortment of cakes, cookies and other
sweets that was itself reminiscent of a bygone era.
Jan Shichkin, a Suncook resident and member of the Meet me in
Suncook committee, conceived the idea to display the wedding
apparel of local women as a new way of exploring Suncook's history.
"We have done a lot with buildings,"
she said "and this is a more personal way to remember the
past."
"Originally I though of a fashion show," said Shichkin,
"but I wanted something different, something that would
appeal to the ladies as an enjoyable gathering and to look at
something that would bring back memories."
|
|
FIFTIES SUNCOOK BRIDE Pauline
Boisvert, of Suncook, stands next to the dress she wore for her
wedding in 1953. Her dress, which she bought in Manchester, was
made with a style of lace that was popular in the '50s. (Amy
Fortier Photo)
|
Memories were certainly abundant at the event. The wedding dresses,
which came from the 1920s and spanned every subsequent decade
till 2000, were exhibited with wedding photographs, many of which
were black and white or hand tinted. The owners of the dresses
shared their memories and stories with other women around the
tea tables.
When Shichkin was seeking out the dresses, the floodgates of
memory were opened for many local women. They began to remember
and share their stories. Even the evolution of the dress styles
was telling of history the dresses made during the war
years were much simpler, whereas the dresses from the '50s were
very frilly with lots of lace, sequins and beadwork, and were
worn with large hoop skirts and petticoats.
Ingrid Lemaire, chairman of the Meet Me in Suncook committee,
said seeing the women come together was what made their work
so gratifying.
"This is what community is all about; people want to identify
with a place and reflect on the past."
Allenstown
No ATV trails, thanks to a typo
By RUSS CHOMA
Staff Writer
rchoma@yourneighborhoodnews.com
Neighbors of Bear Brook Park have won their
battle against all-terrain vehicle trails in the state park
at least for this year.
On March 11, the New Hampshire Senate voted to stall a piece
of legislation, Senate Bill 349 (SB349), that would have
allowed recreational trails for ATV users into the park.
Neighbors have battled the trails for several years, but in the
end it was a typo that blocked the recreational vehicles from
Bear Brook Park.
| The trails were originally
approved with an older piece of legislation, known as House Bill
1273. However, after the legislation was already written, lawmakers
discovered a mistake in the text of the bill. Lawmakers sponsoring
that bill had intended to say that no trail can come with 400
feet of any public well in the park. Instead, the legislation
mandated the distance from the wellhead must be 4,000 feet. Because
there are several wellheads in the park, this effectively prevented
trail construction. |
"That's what it was, absolutely
a typo. One extra zero. As soon as the people from Allenstown
heard about it, they came in droves and hung their hat on the
mistake."
State Sen.
Robert Flanders
|
This legislative session, Sen. Robert Flanders sponsored SB349,
which would have reduced the 4,000-foot limit back to 400 feet.
The March 11 vote by the Senate sent the bill to a study committee
and will not be brought up again this legislative session.
Allenstown resident Armand Verville, a Bear Brook neighbor who
has been active in opposing the trails, said he was pleased with
the recent vote. Verville said he hopes the new study on the
issue will settle the question.
"I really do believe in the system," he said. "If
the trails end up in Bear Brook, it's because they were meant
to be. But I simply feel that (right now) it's not appropriate
and I think they've got a lot of problems to resolve."
Flanders said he was frustrated that trails were going to be
blocked by what was essentially a typographical error.
"That's what it was, absolutely a typo. One extra
zero," he said. "As soon as the people from Allenstown
heard about it, they came in droves and hung their hat on the
mistake."
Flanders said he introduced a letter from the anonymous staffer
who made the error taking blame for the mistake, but the Allenstown
residents were able to sway enough support.
The trails have received significant opposition from not only
adjacent landowners but from Allenstown police and town officials.
Allenstown's state senator, Jack Barnes (R-District 17),
who voted against the measure, said the town was struggling for
tax dollars and the trails would not help the situation.
"A concern is that 51 percent of the town is taken up by
the state park that doesn't send any taxes for the town," he
said. "And how are the police, already on a limited budget,
supposed to patrol? If someone gets hurt, who pays to go in there?
"
Flanders disputed this reasoning and said the real reason for
opposition by Allenstown residents was much simpler.
"It's 'Not in my backyard!' There's no other reason,"
he said. "And my position is those ATVs are here. We don't
like them, they're nasty things, but we still have to make a
place for them."
Flanders went on to say that blocking official trails would not
be solving anything.
"I think they're making a big mistake, because they think
by not having any trails they're going to keep people out, and
they're not," he said.
Verville disagreed and suggested that opening up legal trails
would only encourage ATV-ers to stray farther into the park.
"Our argument is that even if they put the trails in there,
the ATVers do not want a nice flat comfortable trail," he
said. "They want a challenge. They want hills, they
want mud, they want wetlands to run through. They want excitement."
Both Verville and Barnes said they were worried that another
amendment to HB1273 might be slipped into an unrelated piece
of legislation later in the session.
"I'll be all awake looking for that, and everything that
comes across I'll look at," Barnes said. "I will be
watching and hopefully something doesn't slide by me. And if
it does, there will be a problem with whoever slipped it through."
Hooksett
Town Meeting
Hooksett town budget up 14 percent this
year
By TIM RYAN
Staff Writer
editor@yourneighborhoodnews.com
Voters will head into the town's deliberative
session of Town Meeting with a number of warrant articles to
debate, including a plan to utilize the Hooksett Village School
as a community center and town hall space.
The meeting will take place Saturday, April 3, at 1 p.m. at Cawley
Middle School; the vote on the budget and warrant items will
be Tuesday, May 11. The deliberative session is the last point
where voters can amend the ballot before it goes to a vote.
Voters will be deciding on the $12,883,164 town operating budget,
which has a $1,577,856 increase over last year's budget of $11,305,299.
That's an almost 14 percent increase just for the operating budget.
They'll also consider 28 other warrant articles.
Town Councilor George Longfellow said there is a lot on the ballot,
but the items are there for a reason.
"I would rather not see a default budget," he said.
"The things wouldn't be in there if they weren't important."
Article 10, which was unanimously supported by the council, asks
voters to approve acceptance of the Village School and more than
15 acres of land for governmental, civic and public education
use. The measure would also include $75,775 for the maintenance
and utilities for the site.
Longfellow said the measure would ease the strain on existing
town buildings.
"It's a great opportunity," he said. "Now we have
to see how the people decide."
Article 3 asks voters to approve $460,000 in bonds for the construction
and expansion of the sewer system on Deerhead Street, Bartlett
Street, Fairview Circle and Castle Drive. The measure was submitted
by petition, and is recommended by a council vote of 4-2.
Several articles were unanimously recommended by town council.
Article 5 asks voters to approve a withdrawal of $85,000 from
the solid waste disposal special revenue fund to purchase a replacement
tractor for the trailer that hauls solid waste.
Other articles the council unanimously recommended include a
plan to place $20,000 into the town's computer development fund;
to place $16,800 into the transfer station live-bottom trailer
capital reserve fund; $10,000 for the establishment of a capital
reserve fund to update assessing records to meet certification
criteria; $25,000 for the town's emergency radio communication
system capital reserve fund; and $65,000 for the library HVAC
system development capital reserve fund.
Also recommended by a majority of the council is $150,000 for
the establishment of a capital reserve fund; $70,000 for the
fire department's air packs and bottles capital reserve fund;
$90,000 for a six-wheel dump truck with a plow and sander for
the highway department; $10,000 for the establishment of a fire
department computer capital reserve fund; $15,000 for the police
computer system development capital reserve fund; $10,000 for
the parks and recreation facilities development fund; and a measure
to enter into a lease/purchase agreement for a vacuum sweeper/catch
basin cleaner for the highway department, with $32,960 as the
first payment.
Recommended by the council in a 4-2 vote are $54,294 for pay
increases to non-union town personnel; $25,000 for establishing
a capital reserve fund to build containment sheds for recyclables
at the transfer station; $40,000 to establish an expendable trust
fund for repairs on town buildings; $91,822 for a full time
engineer; $23,000 for a staff car for the fire department; $50,000
from the parks and recreation capital reserve fund to reimburse
the Hooksett Youth Athletic Association for lighting at Peterbrook
Park; and $15,013 for a part time purchasing agent.
By a 5-3 vote, the council recommended $60,000 for the establishment
of a capital reserve fund for the design of a municipal town
building.
A few items on the ballot received even 4-4 votes and thus were
not recommended by a majority of the town council. Those include
$34,086 for a part-time building inspector/ code enforcement
officer; $30,000 for the establishment of a capital reserve fund
for aerial photography; $25,000 to purchase a pickup truck with
a plow for the highway department; and $59,680 for 10 call firefighters.
Several items that will go before the voters were not recommended
by a majority of town council members. The council did not recommend,
by a 5-3 vote, $61,588 for the first year's payment of a fire
engine truck; by a 6-2 vote, $40,000 to establish a capital reserve
fund for Access TV equipment; and by a 6-0 vote, a petition for
the town to rescind the prior authorization to raise funds to
add a composting operation to the existing wastewater treatment
plant.
Auburn,
Candia
Snowstorm forces birth
on highway
Candia woman has fifth
child on Route 101 in Auburn
By JUDITH DIONNE
Staff Writer
jdionne@yourneighborhoodnews.com
The snow fell heavy and
steady outside. The two women sat quietly inside the maroon mini-van.
It crept along Route 101 west in Auburn heading towards the Elliot
Hospital in Manchester. The driver concentrated on the road,
the passenger was wracked with labor pains, which had been steady
since before they left the house at 6:15 p.m on Tuesday, March
16.
The passenger, Denise Perry of Candia, was kneeling, facing the
rear of the car, holding the backrest of the seat. The contractions
intensified, coupled with incredible pressure. She knew what
she was feeling meant one thing: Her fifth child was coming,
now, in the van.
 |
"I never expected
anything like this to happen," she said. "With my previous
four labors, I had two cesarean sections and two V-BACs, (vaginal
births after cesarean). Although, compared with my other children,
Leah was pretty small, weighing 7 pounds, 9 ounces. My fourth
child, Michael, was 10 pounds 2 ounces," said Perry.
Earlier in the day, when Perry began feeling contractions, she
wasn't sure it was labor. It felt more like stomach cramps than
contractions, she said. When she was certain it was labor, around
3 p.m., she was so busy getting things in order for the family,
she lost track of time and didn't pay attention to timing her
contractions, she said.
"I knew when I called
the doctors they would want to know how far apart the contractions
were," said Perry. "When I finally stopped to time
them before 5 p.m., they were under five minutes apart."
Shortly after she spoke to someone at the doctor's office,, she
called close friend Katie Bard of Manchester and waited for her
arrival, said Perry. Because Denise's husband, Michael Perry,
is serving in Iraq, Perry is staying with friends in Candia.
They weren't home, so she called Bard.
|
IS THAT A SMIRK? Denise Perry
holds her little surprise, Leah, one week old, while big brother
Michael, 1-1/2, leans over his sister to give her a kiss. (Judith
Dionne Photo)
|
"Before we left the house we really didn't talk much, Denise
was in a lot of pain. I wasn't thinking we should stay and call
an ambulance. I had one thing on my mind and that was to get
Denise to the hospital," said Bard.
"I knew I had to have been 10 centimeters dilated (ready
for delivery) when I left the house because of the amount of
pressure I was feeling, but I just had to go," said Perry.
They got in Perry's Ford Windstar minivan because it was better
in the snow than Bard's small Honda car. Unfortunately they were
traveling during the heaviest part of the storm, in rush hour
traffic, and they weren't making very good time, said Bard.
"Because of the traffic and the snow, it was very slow going,"
she said. "I couldn't be urgent during a situation where
you needed to be urgent. I just felt like there was nothing I
could do, so I just kept driving."
Within minutes of leaving the house, Bard said Perry was quiet,
then suddenly said she wasn't going to make it and asked her
to call an ambulance, which she did.
"I called 911 on my cell phone and just kept driving. I
couldn't do anything else. Then the baby was born right there
on the front seat," said Bard.
"I gave three pushes," said Perry. "After the
second one, I reached down and held Leah's head and eased her
out."
After the baby arrived, Bard pulled over into the breakdown lane
just before Exit 1 and kept talking to the 911 operator. They
wrapped Leah in some of the clothes Perry was bringing to the
hospital and waited for help to arrive, she said.
"The 911 operator told us to tie off the umbilical cord,"
said Perry. "Katie and I took a shoe lace from my sneaker,
although I had a knot in it so it was kind of hard to unlace.
I tied it off and held Leah on my lap and waited," said
Perry, smiling.
Auburn Fire and Rescue arrived before the ambulance did, said
Auburn Fire Chief Bruce Phillips. They asked Perry if she wanted
to cut the baby's umbilical cord and she did.
"My husband Mike got to cut the other baby's cords, so it
was kind of nice I got to cut Leah's," said Perry.
Next, Phillips said, they made sure mother and baby stayed warm
until the ambulance came. They also draped the van in blankets,
so they could have privacy, he said.
After the ambulance arrived and took the pair to the hospital,
Bard said she followed along to make sure everything was all
right with her friend and the baby.
Since they've been home, Perry said they've been in touch with
Mike, a medic in the military. Sad he missed the delivery, Mike's
pretty excited by the whole thing, she said.
"Although, I think if he'd been home this wouldn't have
happened because he's so in-tune to me, he would have gotten
me to the hospital on time," said Perry.
Candia
Public's last chance for
input on Master Plan is March 30
By JUDITH DIONNE
Staff Writer
jdionne@yourneighborhoodnews.com
Growth is an inevitable
offshoot of life. Plants and animals, people and communities
grow. However, if growth is not monitored, it can be overwhelming.
If a garden is not watched, it will be overrun with weeds and
die. If a person does not watch what they eat, obesity and poor
health are inevitable. The same goes for growth of a community
if it is not monitored, congestion, pollution and overpopulation
will ensue.
The apparent question however is: Who monitors the growth? Obviously,
the garden is watched by the gardener and a person must govern
their own wellbeing. Watching a community is tricky, however;
the wrong people can restrict a community and make it uninviting
or leave it completely unchecked.
In the case of Candia, a group of dedicated volunteers emerged
from the "Envision Candia" steering committee and the
planning board's master plan subcommittee. These groups formed
the Master Plan Committee, which is in the final stages of updating
the town's Master Plan, a document that guides growth in town.
The committee is holding its final public meeting on Tuesday,
March 30, from 7 to 9 p.m., at the Henry W. Moore school. Following
the meeting, the group plans to present their work to the planning
board at its April meeting for one last hearing.
"The committee needs final input on the 10-year implementation
plan, which will be the focus of this meeting," said Ron
Thomas, committee chairman. "We need the community's reaction
to it, suggestions and criticism of it."
"To be successful, the committee will need decisive input
on corrections to the plan and last-minute suggestions and comments,"
agreed Candia resident and committee member Al Couch.
The result of the committee's two years of work is a master plan
that covers three key areas of the town's natural, built and
social infrastructures, said Thomas. Its two volumes include
the vision statement and land use implementation plan, which
will be the primary focus of this meeting.
To put the finishing touches on the Master Plan and make certain
it will work for the town, the committee needs a large number
of residents to turn out and participate, said Thomas. They hope
to have a wide cross section of people to make certain everyone
has a final say in readying this document.
A draft of the Master Plan was handed out at the Town Meeting,
said Thomas, and they told everyone about the meeting. He also
said they'll be serving refreshments and even have door prizes,
hoping that will encourage a larger turnout.
|