Friday, November 2, 2012

Generous Offer

Fireworks Storage:

 

From: Larry Holmes  

To: M. Sharra; S.Walker

To the ZBA, Planning, Building, Code Enforcement and the Selectmen:

November 2, 2012
 
In regards to the hearing for a variance due to hardship for the fireworks storage at the Lawrence property. Correct me if I am wrong, but a hardship would seem to be if there were no other alternatives for the person applying for it? As I have previously mentioned I can see many other viable alternatives and I am willing to take it a step further...
 
I have a three plus acre parcel of land off of Fairground road. The trees have already been cut and it would not take much to clear it, level it and put in an access driveway where these storage containers could be stored. This land is not near any houses, office or workers and there is a pond there for emergency water. It would be the same road that they would use if they were to store it where they are asking to, so I do not see that the Lawrence's would have an issue with the traffic since they already are willing to accept it. The property is hidden behind the tree lines and cannot be seen from the main road. I would stipulate that they put up a fence and lights. They could even go as far as hiring security to patrol the area (I'm sure that Gene Parks would do it for a reasonable price). And I would donate all of the rent to the Winchester schools to use for their athletic and music departments for the next three years...

Thursday, November 1, 2012

NO BOMBS IN OUR COMMUNITY PLEASE!

Larry Holmes monadnockenterprise@yahoo.com



to msharra, swalker
To Zoning, Planning, Code Enforcement and the Selectmen:
November 1, 2012
I am asking everyone who is involved in this decision to realize the life threatening risk that is at stake and to use common sense, good judgment and to be responsible with your duties to the residents of Winchester regarding their safety and security and the towns liability and accountability should something catastrophic happen.
Now let me ask you all this question. A variance requires a hardship and this person is claiming that he has to move these trucks because his insurance co. has now notified him that he is in a flood-zone. A hardship to me would be if he had no other options of where to put them, yet I see many other better suited options in and around town and they are not surrounded by homes...
The possibilities that come to mind are Kuliclks, Oneal's Mill, the lady who owns the discount store in town has several locations that would work well and my biggest question is that if the town is currently renting space to this person at the old tannery site, then why not move him to the sand pits and continue to collect the money? Can the town afford to turn away money? Are our taxes not high enough already? Shouldn't we be looking for ways to reduce the tax burden on our residents since we are already the highest in the state???
There are also other options in Hinsdale, Swanzey and Keene that could and should be looked at.
Everyone who is part of the town system has an obligation and is accountable for these types of decisions and you should all be concerned about doing the right thing...
Below are my top concerns regarding the placement of these containers:
1) Acts of nature; forest fires & lightning strikes could set off these bombs.
2) Mischievous youth trying to get into the trucks for some fun could set these off by accident.
3) Crooks and vandals could accidentally ignite them.
4) They could be set off on purpose by someone.
5) They could be used for terrorist acts.
6) My families safety and security.
7) My animals safety & security.
8) The decreased property values of all the surrounding homes due to the dangerous nature of the stored explosives.
9) The fact that anyone who is trying to sell their property in an already down market, will now have to disclose the fact that there are large amounts of explosives stored close by.
10) And this should really be number one is the fact that there is a school less than a quarter mile from where these will be stored. If children are playing in the school yard and these go BANG; it could be tragic! Lets not forget that many of these explosives are also missiles and that what goes up, down and sideways will it something somewhere...
Below is a video of a test explosion on one 20' trailer with fireworks stored-in it (My Neighbor is asking to store nine 40' trailers!) 
This is a quote from a container that went up in Bainbridge this year "I heard that a man was target shooting along with his daughter, and a shot ricocheted into the storage trailer. I heard he was going to pay for the fireworks that were destroyed. Saw it on a couple of TV news broadcasts last night. They didn't mention that some of the fireworks were for Bainbridge. But then Seattle news almost never mentions Bainbridge, or talks about us in the forecast or anything. It's funny.
But a wild story. They played the 911 tape, which by the way is a lousy thing to do. What does it say about us when we sit back and listen to 911 recordings for entertainment?
Anyway, the guy is supposedly going to pay for what was destroyed, so we should be okay."
PLEASE DO NOT ASSUME THAT NOTHING IS GOING TO HAPPEN. TAKE THE NESESARY SAFETY AND SECURITY PRECAUTIONS TO PREVENT A DISASTER; IT IS YOUR DUTY...
YouTube - Videos from this email


To the ZBA, Planning, Selectmen, Building & Code Enforcement Depts.
Nov 1, 2012
 
FYI - You may also be saving the lives of those who work and live at the Lawrence property as they want to store these next to their office, garage and house.....
 
I would suggest checking the required regulations with the states fire marshal and OSHA before making any decisions....





Enschede fireworks disaster


The neighborhood of Roombeek on fire
The Enschede fireworks disaster was a catastrophic fireworks explosion occurring at the SE Fireworks depot on 13 May 2000, in the eastern Dutch city of Enschede.
The fire led to an enormous explosion which killed 23 people (including four firemen) and injured 947.[1] The first explosion had a strength in the order of 800 kg TNT equivalence, while the strength of the final explosion was within the range of 4000-5000 kg TNT.[2] The biggest blast was felt up to 30 kilometres (19 mi) from the scene.
SE Fireworks was a major importer of fireworks from China and supplier to pop concerts and major festive events in the Netherlands. Prior to the disaster it had a good safety record and met all safety audits.[3]


From: Larry Holmes <monadnockenterprise@yahoo.com>
To: "msharra@winchester.nh.gov" <msharra@winchester.nh.gov>
Cc: "swalker@winchester.nh.gov" <swalker@winchester.nh.gov>
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2012 3:49 AM
Subject:


To the Winchester Selectmen, Planning, Zoning, Code Enforcement and Building Department:
Oct. 30, 2012
 
As the abutter of Lenny Lawrence and his plans to store nine tractor trailer loads of fireworks on his property that abuts mine I have to stress my concerns over safety and security issues and what would be done to address these....
 
In addition to increased truck traffic and noise I am worrisome for the safety of my family, our animals and my property.
 
I would ask that if they are permitted to store the explosives on their property that they do so at a minimum of 1000 feet from my land and that they have safety and security measures in place. If they were to store them down at their sand pits and have a plan for fire in place it would be acceptable to me.... I would also like to move forward with asking the towns permission to rezone my property for commercial use as I am now surrounded by commercial enterprise and constant trucks, traffic and noise from Plum Pak, Lawrence Excavating and the newly rezoned sand pits.
 
I had planned on submitting a site plan for senior citizen housing before the end of the year in the area next to Fairgrounds road and will still do so if I cannot get my property rezoned for commercial use. I think that it would be good for the town and our neighborhood. As I have said from day one "I have no problem with working with anyone; but everyone should be treated the same".
 
Please pass the link below on to everyone to view as it is a video of a fireworks explosion accident that occurred in 2000 killing 23 people; As you can see it is a serious concern...
 
 
Regards,
 
Abutter
 
207 Kent Street LLC
YouTube - Videos from this email

Monday, October 15, 2012

Tensions in Winchester


Tensions in Winchester


Regarding Larry Hill’s letter (Sentinel, Oct. 7):

Ever notice how people accuse others of what they themselves are doing? A smart person told me it’s a tool used to control what people believe and it’s called “projection.”


With his nasty attacks on others in Winchester, Larry Hill is projecting.

Just who is disrupting the work of the planning board and demanding that people resign? Who is hurting the reputation of Winchester? Who has the agenda? Who is doing the slandering? Who wants to change the rules so he can have his own way? Who is encouraging another law suit? Who is attacking just two of the four people who voted in a way he didn’t like?

What’s really, really funny about his tirades is that he abstained from voting.

Why did he abstain? Does that serve his “oath,” the board or the town? Was he trying to serve two masters and escape accountability? Can he claim the moral high ground in objecting to anyone’s vote when he didn’t vote at all?

His vote could have wiped out the one he calls biased. If he’s afraid to vote, or playing sneaky games, he should resign.

Hill screams bias (fueling a court challenge) because one member has a friend whose husband is an interested party. Friendships aren’t bias or conflict of interest. If they were, no one could ever vote in a board in a small town where everybody knows everybody.

If he really opposes conflicts of interest maybe he should support a conflict of interest ordinance.

Year after year voters put in a petitioned article to define conflicts of interest, but the good ol’ boys network makes sure it’s wiped out at deliberative sessions. They don’t even suggest changes. They just torpedo the whole thing.

Hill lied about the budget committee losing in court, too.

The selectmen’s attorney picked the budget committee’s attorney. He went along with the new committee and caved in to the selectmen.
The original budget committee, me included, never had a chance to defend itself.

The selectmen didn’t win a legal case. They acted like dictators to rig a deal outside of court, without any testimony or defense.

BOB DAVIS
893 Old Westport Road
Winchester

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Public Hearing Ocotber 24th, 2012

Town of Winchester
Board of Selectmen
Notice of Public Hearing

For those of you who don't subscribe to the Sentinel or get down to the Town hall regularly:

Notice is hereby given the the Town of Winchester Board of Selectmen will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, October 24th, 2012 at 7:00PM in the Winchester Town hall for the ongoing Town of Winchester Sidewalk project in the NHDOT Transportation Enhancement Program. A representative from the engineering firm Hoyle, Tanner & Associates will be in attendance to present the project and answer questions. 
All interested parties are encouraged to attend and participate.
 
Questions may be addressed to the Winchester Town hall, Office of the Selectmen, 1 Richmond Road, Winchester, NH ( 03470)  (603)239-4951

This is Margaret Sharra's expensive brainstorm to add more costs to our already overburdening tax bills.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Don’t use religion in politics

Don’t use religion in politics
At our last board meeting, Larry Hill gave me a friendly greeting of “hello” and then, an hour later, read a malicious letter requesting that I resign from the planning board. You stated that you had been reading from the Book of James and felt compelled to write to the board. My immediate thought was, perhaps you should read Matthew 5:39 — as I have for the past four years.
Wielding religion in a local government meeting shows a lack of understanding of our secular laws.
The current and past chairmen have ruled our board like dictators and you jumped right on board with this barbaric behavior. I am constantly amazed at how you and other board members are convinced that if you think it, it must be a fact.
All board members were elected because of their different professional backgrounds and experiences. We are not cookie cutter replicas of the individuals you seem to hold in the highest esteem (those who don’t believe in transparency, honesty or integrity).
My college professor has a clever saying that applies to the use of religion as a weapon, “You don’t win any points in heaven.”
KIM GORDON
P.O. Box 25
Ashuelot

Motion was loud, clear, but silence was deafening

Motion was loud, clear, but silence was deafening
What does an oath mean?
When I was elected to the Winchester Planning Board, I took an oath to serve the residents to the best of my ability. As did all others who serve on respective board. I’m finding it very difficult to work with a group who are of the same mind.
During the Winchester Planning Board meeting of Sept. 17, I asked two board members and one alternate to voluntarily resign due to their conduct such as concealing their involvement with parties who may have an interest in a matter before the board, unwarranted attacks on board members and a town employee assigned to the board, slanderous remarks and innuendos meant to belittle other board members, absolute slander and lies to discredit members who refuse to involve themselves in their agenda to control the town.
I am told by credible sources that their conduct on other boards and committees is consistent with their conduct on the planning board. The conduct of one member, who is on the budget committee, resulted in a suit by the town against the committee to approve funding for operating capital, the town won and the budget committee lost.
The real losers were the residents of Winchester who will find the cost of both attorneys ($10,000) added to their tax bills.
This type of bullying for personal gain or agenda must stop. What industrial or commercial developer would want to consider Winchester when the town turmoil is revealed? How much more would Winchester have benefited had these energies been devoted to striving together for the goal of growing Winchester in a productive and tax reducing manner? How much damage has been done? Who knows how many tax yielding projects have we lost due to our conduct?
When I asked for the voluntary resignations of Jennifer Bellan, Kim Gordon and Brian Moser, I posed the request as a motion if another member wished to register a second. The silence was deafening. What does an oath mean?
LARRY HILL
107 South Parrish Road
Winchester

Court battles take toll

Legal costs add up against town budgets

 By Garrett Brnger Sentinel Staff
 
WINCHESTER — Small-town politics can come with a big price tag.
The town of Winchester has spent a considerable amount of time and money in recent years dealing with legal cases — 2.1 percent of last year’s operating expenses. While one nearby town has spent more and another much less on legal expenses, Winchester is unique due to the variety of its cases.


Winchester spent $63,038 in fiscal 2012 on legal expenses — the majority of it on court battles. Between fiscal 2009 and 2011, it spent $50,190, $39,436 and $34,866, respectively.

Town Administrator Joan C. Morel estimates only about $8,000 of the 2012 sum was spent on costs unrelated to court cases, such as appraisals or legal advice.

This year looks to be no different. The town’s legal expenses are up to $12,419 since its fiscal year began in July. The budgeted amount approved by voters is $25,000 for the entire year.

In the 2011 calendar year, Swanzey spent $15,390 in legal expenses. The town has almost 2,900 more residents than Winchester and its budget this year of $7.2 million is almost twice that of Winchester’s. Since January, Swanzey has spent $9,723 on legal costs.
However, Swanzey Town Administrator Shane O’Keefe said the expenses are “entirely unpredictable” and occur incidentally.

Richmond is an example of that. In 2006, Winchester’s neighbor to the east spent $7,565 on legal expenses out of a a budgeted $4,900. Five years later in 2011, the town spent $70,398 — more than nine times that amount. In 2010, it spent $50,761.

A handful of cases each year cause the majority of the expenses, said Richmond Town Administrator Roberta A. Fraser, who is also chairwoman of the Winchester Selectmen.

Though Fraser did not have a bottom-line number for Richmond’s court battles from 2007 to 2011 with the St. Benedict’s Center, she said it’s “safe to say the number is in the tens of thousands.”

A reassessment fight with Public Service Co. of New Hampshire in 2011 and ’12 cost the town $45,740, not including the $11,781 settlement. It also contributed to both the preceding year’s sum and the $24,044 Richmond has spent on legal costs since January.

The difference between Richmond and Winchester is the number of cases, Fraser said. While Fraser estimates Richmond has about a half-dozen cases a year, Winchester, which has a population about four times as large, has 17 cases on its 2012 legal calendar.

Winchester does have a strong record in court. Neither Morel nor the town’s attorney, Bart L. Mayer, could remember a case in which the town did not prevail. But Morel says they all cost money.
“We do ask for legal fees; we haven’t been granted any,” Morel said.
Some cases in Winchester are filed by the town to enforce zoning codes and ordinances such as trash-filled yards, but this year the town is the defendant in a majority of cases.

Defendant or plaintiff, the cases in Winchester and Richmond often have some common features, Fraser said.

Winchester resident Terrance P. Qualters has been involved in nine cases against the town since 1981, said a clerk at the Cheshire County Superior Court.
The town has taken several properties from Qualters due to back taxes, and has taken him to court to remove him from the properties. However, Qualters has fought the town on each step because he believes the town government is corrupt.
“I don’t like this town (government) of Winchester one single bit,” Qualters said.

The town is such a popular adversary, it has even faced itself. This year the town almost had $419,000 in spending disallowed because selectmen filed suit against the budget committee.

Although the case was settled through a consent decree, it still required the town to pay for two lawyers.
In some cases, the town gets blamed no matter what happens. For example, both the applicant and opponents of a proposed Dunkin’ Donuts in Winchester have brought the town to court over the same project.

When the Winchester Zoning Board granted S.S. Baker Realty a zoning variance in 2008 for a proposed combination convenience store, gas station and Dunkin’ Donuts, local grocery store Kulick’s Inc. appealed the decision. The case reached the N.H. Supreme Court, which upheld the board’s decision in September 2010.

The town is back in court over the same project now, but against S.S. Baker, which is appealing the Winchester Planning Board’s rejection of the project.

Kulick’s owner, Stanley S. Plifka Jr. is not surprised by the volume of legal action the town sees.
Winchester is filled with cliques and personalities who clash, Plifka said, and “with the decisions the town makes, they’re lucky they don’t get sued more than that.”

That extends to officials in town government. In March 2011, planning board member Kim N. Gordon filed an affidavit in a case against the town alleging then-board Chairwoman Margaret Sharra had acted inappropriately during an asphalt plant application.

As a result, selectmen considered removing Gordon from the board but ultimately did not. Gordon filed a right-to-know suit against the town afterward, alleging she should have been allowed to attend a non-public meeting in which selectmen considered a letter from its legal counsel.

Gordon was unsuccessful in both the right-to-know request and her attempt to get the town to pay her legal fees from the selectmen’s deliberations.

Sharra, who is now the town land use administrator, said the appeal process for land use cases can be frustrating but does not begrudge people who use it. She just wants them to think twice about filing suit against the town.

Friday, September 28, 2012

$600,128.61

That's the total sum of back taxes owed to the town ( us ) for the year 2012. There's been a lot of chatter around town and here on the blog about getting businesses to come here and ad to the tax base. Well it may surprise you to know that quite a few of these delinquent taxpayers are businesses and others are town employees and board members. $600 hundred thousand this year, around $500 thousand last year and when December's bill comes out that total is only going to climb higher. While bringing business to Winchester is important, getting them to pay their fair share in taxes is more important. Our Selectmen seem to be very selective on whom they chase to recover back payments too, thus adding to the problem.

A list of all the people and businesses that owe back taxes can be found by doing a search on the Town of Winchester's web site using this link .. https://nhtaxkiosk.com/?KIOSKID=WINCHESTER.

It may surprise you to see which businesses shirk their responsibilities and add to our burden.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Engineering firm asking students to 'dig into science'

Opportunity for Winchester students ..


SOMERSWORTH — Once again an engineering firm hopes to encourage the next generation of science and technology lovers through a contest for students in New Hampshire and Maine.

The second annual Dig Into Science with S. W. Cole Engineering contest is challenging students in kindergarten through grade 12 to produce a short video — no more than two minutes long and featuring no more than five students — explaining how science, math or engineering can be used to make the world a better place.

This year, seven winners, chosen from the various offices within the company, will receive $1,000 grants to use to organize a field trip or extra-curricular activity during the current school year involving science, technology, engineering or math at one of the 20 pre-approved programs or centers in the area.

The firm, headquartered in Bangor, Maine, remains a long-time supporter of education of science, technology, engineering and math, which are known as the STEM subjects, due to “the importance of these fields in the northern New England economy,” according Jennifer L. Booth, marketing and business development specialist for the company.

The contest provides an opportunity for students in New Hampshire and Maine to learn about the STEM subject “in a way that they might not have in a traditional classroom setting in addition to supporting some STEM-related programs in the area,” Booth said.

“New approved programs in NH include the Cheshire Children’s Museum in Keene and Ruggles Mine in Grafton,” Booth said.

Booth said the firm decided to initiate the contest last year after receiving numerous requests for donations in STEM-related organizations. As they have limited resources, she added, the company couldn’t support the demand without trying something else.

Last year, winning entries in New Hampshire came from Boynton Middle School in New Ipswich and Portsmouth Middle School.

For more information or to enter the contest, go to swcole.com/dis2012 or facebook.com/SWColeEngineering.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Store dispute: Swanzey sued

When they won't take no for an answer ..

By Garrett Brnger Sentinel Staff

SWANZEY — The developers of a Dollar General store rejected by the Swanzey Planning Board have appealed that decision in Cheshire County Superior Court.
Zaremba Group LLC asserts in the court documents that the board ignored expert evidence and public utility laws in making its decision.
It also alleges the board acted in bad faith by having inaccurate minutes and referencing reasons for denial in the official decision that were not included in the motion.
Zaremba asks for a reversal of the decision by either the board or the court and for the town to pay for its attorney fees.
The land developer applied to build a Dollar General store at the corner of Route 10 and Cobble Hill Road. The 9,100 square-foot proposed building raised a multitude of concerns from residents, many of which hinged upon traffic safety.
However, it was fire protection that was behind the planning board’s decision on Aug. 9. The board found the developer had not secured a source of water for the store’s sprinkler systems and voted 6-1 to deny the application.
Prior to the board’s decision, the West Swanzey Water Company had denied water access to the project for its sprinkler system. West Swanzey Water President Sally Brown said the water system could not handle the additional stress, due to aging machinery.
Zaremba argued, to no avail, that pressure tests of the system show the system has the water to meet project needs, and because it’s a public utility, West Swanzey Water must provide the project with water.
However, as board Vice Chairman Scott Self noted during the board’s decision, “that sounds like it’s going to be a court battle and in the meantime you’re going to go ahead with your plans, but you should have an alternate in place providing that case does not go the way you plan.”
With no such alternate plan, Zaremba’s proposal was denied.
The developer asserts in its court petition the board relied “on personal opinions despite both the legal requirements placed upon public utilities and the field data establishing that the West Swanzey Water Company provided adequate water for fire suppression for the proposed use.”
As a result, Zaremba asks in its petition for the board to reverse its decision within 30 days. Failing that, it asks the court find the board’s decision unreasonable or illegal.
Zaremba also says the minutes from the board’s Aug. 9 meeting do not accurately reflect the discussion between members, the motion or the reason for denial.
The group made a transcript of the meeting and submitted it to the board, noting the errors, the document says.
Zaremba asks to be awarded its attorney’s fees, saying the board acted contrary to expert testimony and its records of the decision are inaccurate.
The Swanzey Dollar General project is one of several the Zaremba Group has been pushing for in the area. Other towns include Marlborough, Jaffrey, Bennington and New Ipswich.
The group’s proposal in Winchester was rejected in July on the grounds that its proposed 9,030 square-foot building was too large for the district in which it was proposed.
Zaremba did not appeal that decision.
Garrett Brnger can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1436, or gbrnger@keenesentinel.com.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

EEE reaches region

By Jacqueline Palochko Sentinel Staff


FITZWILLIAM — Two emus in town have tested positive for eastern equine encephalitis (EEE), a serious disease transmitted by mosquitoes.
As a result, the risk level for EEE in Fitzwilliam has gone from remote to high, according to a news release Thursday from the N.H. Department of Health and Human Services.
The surrounding towns of Richmond, Troy, Jaffrey and Rindge have been elevated to moderate risk level for EEE.
The two emus, and a horse in Derry that also tested positive for the disease, are the first animals with EEE in the state.
There have been no positive tests for animals with West Nile virus, another mosquito-borne disease, according to the Health and Human Services department.

Symptoms in humans may include high fever, severe headache, stiff neck and sore throat. They usually occur four to 10 days after a mosquito bite. There is no treatment for the disease, which can lead to seizures and coma. There is a high mortality rate for those who contract the serious encephalitis form of the illness.

The N.H. Public Health Lab tested 4,018 batches of mosquitoes so far this season, according to the news release.

In 2009, state officials confirmed EEE in an emu in Alstead and an alpaca in Greenfield.

To prevent EEE and West Nile, the state agency advises people to remove standing water, old tires, tin cans, plastic containers and ceramic pots because mosquitoes breed in water.
When outside at night, Health and Human Services also recommends wearing long pants and long-sleeved shirts. People should also use an insect repellent. The threat diminishes with the first frost.
For information and questions about EEE and West Nile virus: 1-866-273-6453 or visit www.dhhs.nh.gov.
Jacqueline Palochko can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1409, or jpalochko@keenesentinel.com.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Larry Hill should resign from the PB for his actions

Dissenter hits Winchester board 

 

 By Garrett Brnger Sentinel Staff 

By Garrett Brnger Sentinel Staff
 
WINCHESTER — A planning board member’s call for three other members to resign went unheeded and mostly undiscussed Monday night.

Board member Larry Hill delivered a three-page letter to the board calling for fellow board members Brian D. Moser, Kim G. Gordon and alternate Jennifer Bellan to resign from the Winchester Planning Board and any other town boards or committees.

Calling their actions “vandalistic” and “slanderous,” Hill alleges in his letter that the three “are determined to disrupt the board and attack the integrity of the remaining board members for reasons unknown.
“Unless the disruptions, attacks and unfounded allegations stop immediately, I am very tempted to bring forth a petitioned Warrant Article to dissolve and eliminate the Planning Board.”

Hill’s letter, meant to act as a motion, was not seconded by any of the other six board members at the table, including Moser and Gordon. Only Moser responded.

“The fact that we don’t agree all the time is not (a) reason to say that people should not be on the board. A board that agrees all the time is a joke,” Moser said.

Although Hill writes he had “decided to put everything on the table,” the only actions he attributes to a specific person are to Moser and his Aug. 25 letter to the editor, which Hill calls “slanderous.”

In his letter to The Sentinel, Moser accused another member of the board, whom he didn’t name, of being “a rubber stamp for certain interests.” He also repeated comments he had overheard in a restaurant from an unnamed businessman that “those people in Winchester can be bought off with a bag of groceries.”

Hill called out Gordon for failing to recuse herself from recent deliberations over a proposed Dunkin’ Donuts, because she is a friend and walking partner of Stanley S. Plifka Jr.’s wife. Plifka, owner of Kulick’s Inc., opposed the project. The board rejected the plan and the applicant is now appealing the decision.
Gordon said this morning she and Plifka’s wife do not discuss town business, including the Dunkin’ Donuts proposal, and said there had been no reason to recuse herself during the deliberations on the proposal.

Hill accuses “an alternate” of disruptive behavior and contributing to attacks against the town land use assistant and former planning board member Margaret Sharra.

The incident he refers to occurred during the board’s July 16 meeting, when Bellan objected to being denied the right to speak while she was sitting as an audience member. She was eventually allowed to voice her concerns about the Dunkin’ Donuts project, which Hill believes was the wrong decision. Hill writes that Bellan unfairly blamed Sharra for blocking her from speaking.

Reached after the meeting, Bellan said she believes she was correct in addressing the board with her concerns.

Some of Hill’s other unattributed allegations include wearing hats in a public forum and frequently voting in the negative “even on such matters as approving the meeting minutes.”

After the meeting, Moser, still wearing the black hat he donned in the meeting, said he had voted against approving the meeting minutes since he began serving on the board, because they were not accurate.

Similarly, Gordon said she had voted against approving the minutes for three years because her suggestions for changes or corrections are ignored.

Gordon, Bellan and Moser all said they would not resign. Their terms finish in 2013, 2014 and 2015, respectively.

Moser also serves on the budget committee, and Gordon is the planning board representative on the Historic District Commission.
Garrett Brnger can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1436, or gbrnger@keenesentinel.com.

Friday, September 14, 2012

Principal Promoted

By Kaitlin Mulhere Sentinel Staff


WINCHESTER — School board members have appointed Winchester School’s principal as interim superintendent for the 2012-13 school year.
James M. Lewis took over the administrative position in the district Monday, when former Superintendent Kenneth R. Dassau’s contract expired.
Lewis will continue some of his duties as principal, and Assistant Principal Pamela B. Bigelow will take on some new responsibilities, school board Chairman Trevor S. Croteau said.
“We feel that he’s more than capable of doing a great job at that position, and he was more than happy to fill that role for us,” Croteau said. “His heart is in our school, and we want to find someone like that who’s going to put their full effort into making things work, and Jim is doing that.”
Lewis started as principal of the kindergarten-through-8th-grade school in 2009. Prior to coming to Winchester, he worked as an assistant principal in Candia for seven years.
Board members will begin a search in January or February to hire a permanent superintendent, Croteau said.
Dassau served as superintendent of the district for about a year after N.H. School Administrative Unit 38 — which covered the Winchester, Hinsdale and Monadnock Regional districts — dissolved. In June, he notified the board of his intent to resign.
He continued in the position throughout the summer to help the board search for candidates to replace the director of technology and the business administrator, who also resigned in June.
The technology director and business administrator jobs were two of the central office positions whose salary and hours were reduced, without a reduction in job responsibilities, for the 2012-13 school year. Those cuts were in response to a voter-approved $10.8 million budget — about $675,000 less than what the school board recommended and $250,000 less than the previous year’s budget.
Earlier this month board members hired Lori Schmidt as business administrator, and last week the school board approved contracts for Wes Vaughn as technology director and Suzanne Cooper as director of student services to oversee special education.

Kaitlin Mulhere can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1439, or kmulhere @keenesentinel.com

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Fight the Winchester wall

Fight the Winchester wall
When Ronald Reagan told the USSR to “take down that wall,” I don’t think anyone thought he meant to move it to New Hampshire (Winchester).
Maybe the actual wall isn’t here, but it’s close to that. The selectmen have tried to close the gates against the people’s voices.
As taxpayers and citizens, you can no longer go to a selectmen’s meeting and ask a simple question. You must put your question in writing and submit it to them for review. Then they will decide if they will let you speak at a meeting. They will “let you know” ... Sometime.
It gets better than that!
In towns like Winchester, the town pays a set membership fee to the Local Government Center. The center offers a variety of services, including group insurance plans. But mostly it provides legal advice to help all town officials obey the laws, which are very complicated and confusing.
The legal service has always been used by any member of any town board, commission or standing committee, to ask questions about RSAs, and also the proper operation of town government.
Now the selectmen have decided that only the selectmen can call or email the center. All the questions have to be screened through them.
This means we are paying for a service they are trying to stop us from using. What don’t they want other elected and appointed officials to know?
How many boards and committees will get in trouble now that they can no longer get quick answers to sticky procedural problems?
Can you say, “Bring on the lawsuits”?
If you think this is going to make things better, it won’t.
If you don’t care about higher taxes, wasted tax dollars, and special treatment for the obedient lackeys, stop reading.
“We the People” means we are supposed to get what we choose. Selectmen are not supposed to be the bosses of other elected officials.
The people know where I stand and what I believe. Am I the only one who thinks this is wrong?
If we let the selectmen do whatever they want, we might just as well put a wall around the town, cut our phone and Internet lines and do what we’re told to, like obedient little subjects of our self appointed dictators.
Not me.
BRIAN MOSER
168 Clark Road
Winchester

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Appeal filed over gas station plan

By Garrett Brnger Sentinel Staff

WINCHESTER — Developers for a proposed combination Dunkin’ Donuts and gas station rejected by a town board are taking their case to court.
Project applicant S.S. Baker Realty Co. LLC filed an appeal of the Winchester Planning Board’s decision in Cheshire County Superior Court. The company alleges the board’s decision was based on perceptions, rather than facts, about traffic concerns, and that some planning board members had conflicts of interest and were biased against the proposal.
S.S. Baker Realty proposed building the combination convenience store, gas station and Dunkin’ Donuts on its property at the northeast corner of the Routes 10 and 78 intersection.
The planning board denied the company’s application 4-2 at its July 16 meeting, citing a concern the proposal “overwhelms the lot” and three safety issues: the left turn onto Route 10, cars possibly parking on the highway shoulder, and the potential overflow from a drive-through onto Route 78.
Board member Larry Hill abstained, saying he did not understand parts of the motion.
Teofilo Salema — the manager of S.S. Baker Realty and the owner of five other Dunkin’ Donuts, in Keene, Swanzey and Hinsdale — says he has done everything the board has asked of him.
The application’s traffic study was approved by the N.H. Department of Transportation, but was disregarded by the board because of anecdotal concerns, he said.
“They had nobody. They’re assuming they know better than the (Department of Transportation) and the people on the traffic study,” Salema said.
“Why did I spend so much money on traffic studies when they already knew what was going on?”
The appeal also alleges during the public hearings, “it became clear certain members of the Planning Board were acting improperly, had conflicts of interest or were otherwise biased against the Application, and these members should have been disqualified from hearing the Application.”
The petition does not directly accuse any board member or outside influence but asserts the board’s failure to remove biased members or those acting improperly resulted in unlawful hearings, deliberations and votes.
The appeal makes only an oblique reference to specific incidents through a quote from the board’s July 16 meeting minutes:
“(Gus) Ruth reminds the board of certain happenings of this board during the public hearing process such as (Kim) Gordon passing papers to Kulick’s attorney and other members passing ‘personal’ papers from one member to another then another. He does not believe this will look good in court.”
During the May 21 meeting, Gordon handed attorney Kelly E. Dowd a folder of site plan review regulations, according to the meeting minutes.
“She (Gordon) was sharing information with the other attorney in front of everybody,” Salema said in an interview. “That’s unacceptable.”
Kulick’s opposed the project through its attorneys during the public hearings. The store, located on Route 78 less than a half-mile from the intersection, runs gas pumps.
Owner Stanley S. Plifka Jr. told The Sentinel in July that if the proposal were to go through, “you’re going to have three gas stations you could physically throw a baseball to, and that makes no sense to me.”
Salema and his land use agent, James P. Phippard of Brickstone Land Use Consultants, implied a connection between Plifka and Gordon on at least two occasions during the public hearing and deliberations process.
Minutes of the the board’s May 21 meeting show when Gordon asked Phippard if the applicant would consider removing the gas pumps from the proposal, Phippard “replied no he would not do that for Mr. Plifka.”
And when Gordon introduced the motion to deny the application at the board’s July 16 meeting, and a fellow board member advised her to include her reasoning, Salema, who was in the audience, supplied one for her.
“Kulick’s,” he said.
Reached Sunday by telephone, Gordon and Plifka said it was the first they had heard of the appeal.
Plifka declined to comment, and Gordon denied the implied bias.
“There’s no bias for me ... there was no reason to recuse myself,” she said.
No hearings or conferences on the case have been scheduled yet.
Garrett Brnger can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1436, or gbrnger@keenesentinel.com.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Severe Weather Warning

 

Severe T-Storm Watch Until 11pm for ALL of NH. Storms will race across NH this evening. Any storm may be accompanied by damaging wind in excess of 60 mph, large hail, torrential downpours, and frequent lightning. There is a small chance of a tornado. If any storm approaches your area, seek shelter in the lowest interior room of your home and stay away from windows. You can track any storm with our Interactive Radar through the link below. Stay safe! --
http://www.wmur.com/weather/radar?id=wxfb

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Standing firm on board

Standing firm on board In reference to Larry Hill’s recent letter to the paper about Winchester Planning Board.
Is the problem real?
Or is it simply ignoring responsibility to the public in order to promote a personal agenda?
Well let’s talk about it.
First the PA system in the Winchester Town Hall works just the way it should. All that people have to do is use the mikes properly. That means talking directly into them.
Now to a member of the planning board, who was appointed, not elected, and made a mistake by not voting the way he was told to because he wasn’t paying attention, and wanted a do over: If you’re not going to listen and ask questions, why be on the board?
Do you think of yourself as a rubber stamp for those with certain interests? You also can’t abstain from the vote when you think the fix is in and your vote isn’t needed.
You also have to listen to and understand, the motions being made to be sure you say yes or no at the right time to please your handlers.
Here’s a radical idea: If you don’t know what you’re voting on, don’t vote.
Now for the fun stuff. While I was in a restaurant in Keene, across the bar from me a group of people were talking and laughing when one person asked a businessman how it was going with the planning board in Winchester, and I heard him say, ”Those people in Winchester can be bought off with a bag of groceries.”
At the time, all I could think of was “why would someone who put the fix in brag about it while he was drinking?”
Be assured, some of us members can’t be bought off at any price.
BRIAN MOSER
168 Clark Road
Winchester

Thursday, August 23, 2012

WINCHESTER- NEW FROM ARCADIA PUBLISHING!

I am pleased to announce the upcoming release of LOCAL authors Carol Lamprey Poole and Dorothy Doolittle Farnan’s pictorial history book Winchester, from Arcadia Publishing.  Set to publish on Monday, September 10th, this new title reconnects people with their past through vintage images – images that may even include you, your family and your friends.  We would be honored to have this new book featured on your website to help spread the word about its release!  I have attached a press release and a JPG of the book cover for your perusal.

If you have any questions or need more information, please feel free to contact me directly.  I can be reached at 843-853-2070 x 181 or cjeffers@arcadiapublishing.com.

Wishing you every success!
                                                                                                                                           
Chanler Jeffers
Sales and Marketing Specialist, North and MidAtlantic
Arcadia Publishing
Explore more than 8,000 titles at www.arcadiapublishing.com

 

Monday, August 20, 2012

MORE censorship by our town leaders

In the past, members of boards and committees could contact the LGC ( Local Government Center .. http://www.nhlgc.org/ ) to seek advice regarding procedures, revised statutes, state regulations and any other questions that come up during hearing processes. Our Town Administrator and Board of Selectmen now want to stop this from continuing and censor legal advice and information from the LGC to board members who have questions. Our tax dollars pay for this service and it should not be up to those questionable people in power to determine who has the right to seek out information. Once again they show exactly what their agenda is and along with Tedford's attempt to do away with due process, the public's right to be heard at their meetings, it's quite obvious what they seek is COMPLETE CONTROL !





Thursday, August 16, 2012

Sneaky moves in Winchester

The only part of the doughnut the folks of Winchester will get is the hole. It appears that four members of the Winchester Planning Board are absolutely intolerant of any mistakes.
When one member immediately acknowledged that he had mistakenly voted (probably because of the horrendous audio conditions in the town hall) and asked to change his vote, he was denied. At the following meeting, there was a motion to reconsider the motion in question to allow him to record his vote as he intended.
The member was not at this meeting due to emergency surgery.
An alternate was asked to sit in his place at this meeting. The motion for reconsideration was made, which would have allowed that member to record his vote, along with all other members, at the next meeting he would attend.
There are four members who saw to it that this would never happen.
While some may wonder if the four members who voted against reconsideration was self serving, either for themselves personally or for a friend, the fact remains that our taxes may now reflect an increase to pay unnecessary legal expenses and our revenues will not increase by the taxes generated had the project been approved, not to mention the 10 lost jobs.
Just some food for thought the next time your are in the voting booth.
LARRY HILL
107 South Parish Road
Winchester

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

What Are You Afraid of Sherm?

 I gotta call them as I see them and this is just plain wrong and 100% censorship. It looks like our town Selectmen and women have something to hide and don't want to answer any questions about their questionable conduct in allowing transgression after transgression by town employees and themselves. Talk about censorship. If this doesn't get under the skin of every single tax paying voter in town and get them thrown out of office I don't know what will. Light up the town's switchboard and tell them what you think about this proposed new policy ... 239-4951

.. and remember who NOT to vote for if you want an open and honest town government.

Winchester board reviews comment policy 

Posted: Wednesday, August 15, 2012 12:15 pm | Updated: 11:34 am, Wed Aug 15, 2012.

WINCHESTER — The town’s selectmen are debating eliminating the public comment section of the board’s weekly meetings. Selectman Sherman Tedford made the suggestion during the board’s Aug. 8 meeting, according to draft minutes.
The public comment time allows residents to bring concerns or questions to the board during a meeting.
Anybody wishing to address the board would need to put their requests in writing in advance and be placed on the agenda, Tedford said.
Tedford’s reasoning is twofold: The limit would allow the board to determine if the matter was meant for public or nonpublic discussion, and would allow the board to invite anybody whose reputation might be affected by an item discussed to attend.
It would also allow the board to research the issue in question, he said.
Chairman Roberta Fraser said she understood the reasoning but did not agree.
Selectman Gustave A. Ruth said in a telephone interview this morning that the board’s main concern is protecting town employees’ reputations, but he did not believe the public comment section should be done away with entirely.
“We don’t want to hide everything, but certain things (you don’t know) until the discussion is over if they should be public or not,” Ruth said.
The board did not vote on the issue, and Town Administrator Joan C. Morel said selectmen would take it up again at tonight’s meeting.
Information that Morel received from the Local Government Center, Inc., a support resource for municipalities, indicates removing the public comment section would be legal.
According to the center, the board only has an obligation to accept public comment during a public hearing, but not during a regular selectmen’s meeting.

 

Sunday, August 12, 2012

A voter ID law is a no-brainer

How does one begin to answer those who want to suppress a law for voter ID? A law that will guarantee the ability of all “eligible” citizens during an election to cast a safe ballot.

One would like to believe that any intelligent, law-abiding, “legal” citizen would want his or her vote protected. That each legal vote is not cast out by a vote from an “illegal” resident, a vote that is cast by a legal citizen, just not a legal resident of the city, town, or state they happen to be in on an election day.

Recently, a letter appeared in the paper stating that the Cheshire Republican Party did a voter fraud check and that is incorrect. It was a private citizen, and I am the citizen who did a very small mailing. It was done predominately in the area surrounding Keene State College following the 2004 election.

Out of 75 mailings, 35 first class post cards were returned undeliverable. With the assistance of Bill Gardner, secretary of state, and then-Assistant state Attorney General Bud Fitch, the voters in question were investigated. Five of the voters were found to be registered not only in Keene and Rindge, but also in their hometowns or state, although the investigation did clear them of voting in more than one location.

From this same group, the Attorney General’s Office notified the voters in question that they cannot continue to have an out-of-state, or town driver’s license while registered to vote in Keene and Rindge.

They were advised they had 60 days (RSA 261:44 -2005) to change their licenses to a valid New Hampshire driver’s licenses, and for those with out-of-town New Hampshire driver’s licenses, they have 10 days (RSA263:9 - 2005) to update them or risk being removed from the local voter checklists.

The AG’s office did find one case of fraud by a person who was not, nor ever, a resident of Keene. Once the information was validated, a bench warrant was issued. The remaining voters were primarily students who moved back to their “legal” residences and it was requested they be removed from local checklists.

This again brings us back to the persistent and serious problem of students voting in their “host” state, as opposed to voting in the state of legal residence. No student should be prevented from his or her right to vote and that is why we have absentee ballots.

The tired overworked mantras of those who want to go against the laws of our land are tossed around ad nauseam. Oh, the poor, minorities, infirm, and anyone in between will be disenfranchised!

Not a word of it is true: The poor are provided free identification, the infirm are provided absentee ballots.

Who would have thought in 2012 this country would need to rise up and fight for the rights of religious groups across the country.

The fictitious “war on women” is nothing more than a smokescreen to hide the outright anti-Catholic sentiment that is being promoted by the present administration.

We are witnessing untold damage by a “minority” of union thugs, and when we should have the assurance of our top law enforcement leader, Attorney General Holder, to protect our rights, he blatantly refused to prosecute those (Black Panthers) who physically prevented citizens from voting in the last general election.

What can we expect in the upcoming election?

MARILYN HUSTON
362 Roxbury St.
Keene

Friday, August 10, 2012

Swanzey Board nixes plan for store

Fire protection a sticking point; no Dollar General



By Garrett Brnger Sentinel Staff |

SWANZEY — A proposal for a Dollar General store was killed because of its fire protection plan.
The planning board voted Thursday night to deny Zaremba Group LLC’s application to build a Dollar General store at the corner of Cobble Hill Road and Route 10. Only Chairman Glenn W. Page supported the application.
The crucial issue was the proposed sprinkler system for the 9,100-square-foot building. The system called for relying on West Swanzey Water Co. Inc. to provide the water, but the company has refused, saying its system could not take the strain.
Although Zaremba Group attorney Silas B. Little 3rd argued West Swanzey Water was legally required to provide the property with fire protection, planning board Vice Chairman Scott Self replied that had yet to be determined. In the meantime, he said, Zaremba had failed to find an alternate plan.
“You’re in a position where you think you can force a private water company to hook up to your building, and maybe you can. I don’t know,” Self told Little. “But that sounds like it’s going to be a court battle and in the meantime you’re going to go ahead with your plans, but you should have an alternate in place providing that case does not go the way you plan.”
Board members referenced a letter dated May 8 from West Swanzey Water President Sally Brown that stated the water system could not support any more emergency fire protection systems. Based on this and a wariness over the system’s capabilities, Zaremba was told at the July 26 planning board meeting to provide another fire protection plan that did not rely on West Swanzey Water, such as a cistern.
Instead, Zaremba stuck with the sprinkler plan.
During Thursday night’s meeting, Michael J. Joanis, a fire protection engineer from Covenant Fire Protection, testified on behalf of Zaremba Group that when he tested the water pressure for the site it met all of the requirements for the sprinkler system.
Little argued under West Swanzey Water’s public utilities commission tariff, anyone in the company’s service area is entitled to water service and therefore the fire protection plan was valid.
Nothing beyond “anecdotal evidence” had been produced to prove adding Dollar General would be a burden to the system, he said.
“We have relied on both field data and filings with the public utilities commission, and I think they are entitled to a dignity and deference that far surpasses anecdotal or possible qualifications as to the ability of this West Swanzey Water Company to provide fire protection,” Little told the board.
Reached Thursday night, West Swanzey Water Co.’s Brown said adding Dollar General to the system would stress the system’s machinery too much since one of the pumps is more than 60 years old and does not work well.
Little said Brown had refused to meet with Dollar General or its engineers. Brown declined to answer when asked about Little’s comment.
Water supply was not the only thing board members knocked the plan for.
Several members continued to voice concerns about traffic safety issues they believed would arise by adding another driveway to the area.
Little said there was no basis for concern and that Zaremba’s traffic study showed no problems with the plan. An independent review of the traffic study requested by the board had also agreed on “all fundamental points,” he said.
Little also protested the suggestion that Zaremba pay for a sidewalk between Cobble Hill Road and Gomarlo’s Food and Circus.
The board’s selectmen’s representative, Nancy Carlson, disagreed with Little on all points and their exchanges became increasingly terse as the meeting drew on.
At one point, Little accused Carlson of having pre-judged the application because Carlson and the other selectmen had opposed the project’s driveway permit.
Although it denied Zaremba’s application, the planning board approved the subdivision of Stephen and Joan Pappas’ lot, where the project was to be located.
Little and other project representatives declined to comment on the decision.
Zaremba, a Cleveland-based land development company, has proposed several Dollar General projects in the area. One such proposal in Winchester was blocked three weeks ago when it failed to get a key variance from the town’s zoning board.
Garrett Brnger can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1436, or gbrnger@keenesentinel.com.