Work on seawall near lagoon at foot of Allerton Hill begins; traffic detours now in effect

Work on replacing the seawall running along Nantasket Avenue adjacent to the lagoon at the foot of Allerton Hill is under way. 

Modification to the intersection of Beacon Road, Fitzpatrick Way, and Nantasket Avenue is complete, and the town reports receiving positive responses from neighbors. 

Nantasket Avenue has been closed along the seawall. Also off limits is the seawall itself, as the town has requested that pedestrians stay away from the area and do not attempt to walk on the top of the seawall during construction. 

Pulverizing of the existing asphalt was scheduled to begin on Thursday, August 15, and underground utility work will begin next week. 

Regular updates will be posted on the town’s website, www.town.hull.ma.us.

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The one that didn’t get away: While fishing at the Gut, campers reel in a Civil War-era cannonball

By John J. Galluzzo 

The sea around Hull continues to give up its secrets. 

“I run a fishing summer camp, a day camp in the mornings,” said Graham Whelan. “We were fishing on the beach behind the seawall at the Gut.” The fish weren’t biting much, as, Whelan said, things slow down when the temperature gets too high. “It was a slow week. Too hot.” 

HAVING A BALL.  Graham Whelan shows off the Civil War-era cannonball discovered during a fishing camp he organized at Hull Gut recently. [Courtesy photo] 

It was a valuable lesson for the kids. Fishing is about much more than tying into the big one. There’s patience. There’s communing with nature, learning to work with it. You don’t have to catch fish to go fishing. 

At one point while out on the beach Whelan found something that looked suspiciously like a cannonball. Some of the kids, who had taken to exploring the beach during slow moments, casually mentioned that they had already seen it a few days earlier.  

“What? And you didn’t tell me about it?” Whelan said. 

“I did some research on my own,” he said. “I started calling all around Boston. I finally got referred to the National Guard Museum.” 

They had answers. 

The report came back in an efficient, almost military style. “Your description of this cannonball indicates it is a 12-pound solid shot, used by the M1857 Napoleon, 12-Pound Field Gun. The Napoleon fired a 12 lb. 5 oz., 4.62-inch diameter shot, very much like yours, so this places the age of the shot in the Civil War era.” This was the most common solid shot projectile of any caliber used during the Civil War by either the U.S. or Confederates. 

Was it fired from Hull? Probably not during the war, but maybe after. The Fort Revere area was only used for signal and communications purposes during the Civil War. No artillery. The most prominent military activity in Hull that could explain the presence of field guns and projectiles was the August 1868 and August 1869 Hull encampments of the First Brigade, Massachusetts Volunteer Militia. First Brigade included the First and Second Light Artillery Batteries, which were equipped with 12-pound smoothbore cannons. 

Was it fired from Fort Warren, on Georges Island? One of Hull’s treasured Civil War tales is of the Ladies Aid Society knitting socks in the Village for Hull’s soldiers so vigorously that the sounds of their clicking needles drowned out the sounds of the shots being fired during drills at Fort Warren. But Fort Warren had a notoriously difficult time finding armament. At one point, the Secretary of the Treasury declared that a single ironclad ship sent by the Confederacy could take out the fort. Secretary of the Navy Gideon Wells refused to divert a Union ironclad to the north to protect the fort. Eventually, Massachusetts Governor John Andrew had to purchase guns overseas, fitting out a fort designed for 300 guns with just 97 in 1864. More came in 1865, but so, too, did the end of the Civil War. 

“As to why the shot would have been left in the place you found, it is impossible to know,” continued the report. “Depending on where the guns were emplaced and the direction of their fire, it could have been a short round due to wet powder or mishandling. But this seems unlikely, since they wouldn’t have been firing in the direction of Fort Warren. My best guess would be that it was discarded. It was likely in a fixed ammunition configuration, connected to a sabot [a device which ensures the correct positioning of a bullet or shell in the barrel of a gun, attached either to the projectile or inside the barrel and falling away as it leaves the muzzle] with metal strapping. If any part of that were damaged or loose, it would have been tempting to just throw it away.” 

Maybe it was thrown away then. Maybe it was shot from a cannon and has rolled around the sea floor for 160 years. Most likely, we’ll never really know its history. 

For Whelan, it was the find of a lifetime, so far. Beachcombers find all manner of things on Hull shore’s. Whelan noted bits of ceramics, like old saltshakers. 

“This is by far the biggest thing I’ve ever come across,” he said. 

Select board airs concerns about beach cleanliness, MBTA bus route changes

By Carol Britton Meyer

The select board addressed a full agenda this week, discussing the new MBTA 714 bus schedule, concerns raised at the recent beach management advisory committee forum, and a Weir River Water System update.

While Route 714 bus riders are enjoying the new bigger MBTA buses – with the smaller vehicle used only when necessary – recent changes have been made to the route and schedule.

These include the elimination of the Manet Community Health Center stop to avoid the bus having to stop on George Washington Boulevard and to align better with the ferry schedule.

Eliminating the Manet stop is a major concern, Town Manager Jennifer Constable told the board, with Chair Irwin Nesoff noting that “a lot of people who go to Manet don’t have cars.”

Board member Greg Grey pointed out that rides to Manet may be available through the senior center’s rideshare program.

Ridership on the 714 is up, whether due to the bigger and more comfortable buses or the new MBTA online schedule finder, select board member Brian McCarthy said.

The idea of creating more bus stops and installing covered waiting areas at some locations was also floated.

Another meeting with the MBTA is scheduled for next week, according to Constable.

Visit  www.mbta.com/schedules/714/line to check the Bus 714 Pemberton Point-Station Street, Hingham schedule, including recent changes, a schedule finder that allows riders to choose a direction and an origin stop and to access schedule information and real-time departure predictions, as well as a PDF of schedules and route maps.

Water company working on communication

McCarthy, a member of the Weir River Water System Citizen Advisory Board, also reported that efforts to enhance communication with ratepayers is in the works.

Those experiencing water quality issues – including brown water – can report them by emailing waterquality@weirriverwater.com, while those seeking abatements for extra water used while flushing out the water in their pipes during the widespread discoloration issue earlier this summer can email abatements@weirriverwater.com.

In other news, McCarthy and fellow board member Jerry Taverna attended Monday’s beach management advisory forum and both reported hearing numerous complaints about the condition of the beaches.

“This doesn’t put the town in a good light,” McCarthy said. “We really need to keep our eyes on how we will [arrange for] a spring cleanup of the winter debris that accumulates from April 1 through August 30, when the Audubon Society does not allow vehicles on the beach due to the presence of piping plovers. Town officials need to work better to make the beach top-notch.”

McCarthy also reported that committee chair Susan Mann plans to find out if beach cleaning would be allowed prior to August 30 this year, with the safety of the plovers a top priority.

Concerns expressed about condition of the beach

Taverna noted that there “were some angry people” who expressed concern about the state of the beach. He gave an example of a large truck tire that had become embedded in the mud at low tide.

“People were asking why we don’t have a policy in place to clean up the beach,” he said.

One option to help the situation, Taverna suggested, is for Department of Public Works crews to walk the beach throughout the summer to manually remove debris if necessary.

“There are people who have bought expensive homes and want to invite their friends and family to enjoy the beach but say they are embarrassed by its condition,” he said.

At the end of the day, Taverna said, “we need to look at these and other issues as a board.”

A committee discussion will be part of an upcoming agenda.

In other business at the meeting, 50-year resident Philip Bellone, who earlier served on the zoning bylaw committee, was appointed as an alternate on the zoning board of appeals to fill a vacancy.

Also, Constable told The Hull Times in response to an email, that the light board recently approved the use of the townwide generators for another season, from October/November through March 2025, to protect residents from potential lengthy National Grid power outages.

Salt Water Club hosts a day on the water for Pappas Hospital children and young adults

By Carol Britton Meyer

The Nantasket Beach Salt Water Club hosted 15 children and young adults from Pappas Rehabilitation Hospital for Children last Saturday for a special event featuring lobster boat rides around the harbor, a view of a Boston fire boat and a state police boat offshore, and a cookout.

A highlight of the adventure was a state police motorcycle escort from the hospital to the club.

ON THE WATER. The Nantasket Beach Salt Water Club hosted children and young adults from Pappas Rehabilitation Hospital for Children last Saturday for a special event featuring lobster boat rides around the harbor and a cookout at the club. [Jennifer Whelan photo]

NBSWC member Ray Jackman, who has worked at Pappas for the past 30 years – before he retired and now part-time – arranged for cookouts in the past in cooperation with the club. They were so successful that offering an expanded event in 2023 and this year was the natural outcome.

Click here for a full gallery of images by Jennifer Lynne Photography

“Club members wanted to do something bigger and better, so now we plan to do it every year,” he said.

The Canton-based hospital, formerly the Massachusetts Hospital School, provides medical, rehabilitative, educational, recreational, transitional, and complementary alternative medical services to children and young adults ages 7 to 21-plus with multiple disabilities. PRHC, an accredited pediatric chronic care hospital, helps patients achieve their optimal level of independence in all aspects of life.

Friendships formed

“It’s a great event hosted through the club, with local lobstermen donating their time,” Jackman said. “There’s a nice relationship between club members and Pappas, where friendships are formed and families are welcome to attend, with everyone just hanging out together.“

Participating lobster boat captains were Tim Walsh, Sean McMullen, Chad Mahoney, Ron Patuto, and Eric Meschino.

It’s a nice experience when families attend these events together, “because due to some of their medical needs, it’s sometimes difficult for parents to take their kids out into the community,” he explained. “To me, it’s about kids being kids. It’s nice that the Salt Water Club has been so giving and welcoming and that the kids and club members have such a connection and know each other by name. They truly care about each other.”

‘It’s quite a partnership’

Jackman has arranged “for the Pappas kids to come to our club over the past few years,” NBSWC Director Jim Reichardt told The Hull Times. “It’s quite a partnership.”

The NBSWC also sponsors birthday and Christmas parties and other events for Pappas children and young adults, and is hosting cookouts every Tuesday throughout the summer.

The Nantasket Beach Salt Water Club, with a membership of about 250, started out as a boating club and evolved over the years into a boating and social club that supports many local causes, from the schools to families in the community in need of assistance to Pappas events, Jackman said.

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In the Sport-light: Roundup of news about Hull athletes

Compiled by Matt Haraden

FLIPPING OUT. Landon Lepenven rounds the bases and celebrates victory with backflip to wow the crowd. [Photos courtesy of Jenna Gagne]

• 12U Baseball defeated Halifax, 8-0, on Tuesday, July 30. Chase Silva was dominant on the bump, as he rang up 11 strikeouts in the Pirates’ victory. Silva allowed five hits and zero runs in six innings. Hull got on the board in the bottom of the first inning after Chase Silva homered and Gavin Griffin singled, each scoring two runs. The Pirates added to their early lead in the bottom of the third inning after Billy Littlefield doubled, Nicholas Mihal doubled, Gavin Griffin singled, and Henry Littlefield singled, each scoring one run. The team finished with 10 hits on the day. In the next game on Thursday, August 1, the Pirates defeated Hanover, 6-1. Hull opened the scoring in the first after Nicholas Mihal was struck by a pitch, driving in a run. The Pirates added to their early lead in the top of the third inning after Billy Littlefield tripled and Chase Silva doubled, each scoring one. Jacob Goodrich and Alex Provost pitched two innings in relief for the Pirates. They surrendered one hit and one run while striking out five. Gavin Griffin opened the game for Hull. The right-handed pitcher surrendered zero hits and zero runs over two innings. Griffin led the team with two hits in two at bats. Chase Silva, Billy Littlefield, and Griffin each drove in one run. The team finished 9-0-1 for first place. Playoffs begin on Tuesday, August 6 at 6 p.m. at L Street.

16U Baseball earned a first-round bye and clinched home-field advantage for the playoffs by easily dispatching Pembroke on Friday, 12-1. Hull got on the board in the bottom of the first inning after Landon Lepenven singled, Max MacEachern stole home, and Jack Gagne doubled, each scoring one run. The team accumulated 10 hits in the game. Mahoney led the Pirates with two runs batted in. MacEachern went 3-for-3 at the plate to lead the team in hits. Lepenven and Lofgren each collected multiple hits. Hull added four more runs in the bottom of the second inning on four hits. Landon Lepenven hit a home run, scoring two runs, and Kenerson singled, scoring one run. Matthew Kraus started on the hill, surrendering one hit and zero runs over two innings, striking out two and walking five. Tristan Lofgren, Will Kenerson, and Jack Gagne each threw shutout innings for the Pirates in relief. The team didn’t commit a single error in the field in this game. Hull finished the season with a 9-1 record, with playoffs starting at L St. field on Thursday, August 8 at 6 p.m. versus the winner of Holbrook/Pembroke. If the Pirates win, the championship game is Saturday, August 10 at 10 a.m.

Hull Youth Soccer In-town registration is open for the 2024 fall/2025 spring season. The in-town program is for grades pre-K through second grade. The program runs for six weeks in the fall and six weeks in the spring on Saturdays at the Dust Bowl. For more information and to register, visit www.hullyouthsoccer.com.

• Coaches and Super Fans – we need your help to report the scores and results of the latest events in Hull’s sports world! Please send local sports news and photos to sports@hulltimes.com. Deadline is Tuesday at 8 p.m. When providing details of the games or races, please be sure to include the sport/team, the players’ full names, and the final scores. When sending photos, names of those pictured are greatly appreciated, as well as who should get credit for taking the photo.

Thank you for your help!

Select Board’s future agenda topics include leases, railroad bed, capital planning goals

By Carol Britton Meyer

Future agenda items proposed by select board members in a Zoom meeting Monday afternoon ranged from developing a consistent policy for leases of town property (such as Steamboat Wharf and Jake’s) and discussing next steps for resolving railroad bed issues to moving forward with appointing the town meeting-approved capital improvement planning committee and inviting new Assistant Town Manager Stacy Callahan to introduce herself to talk about her roles and responsibilities.

Neither Town Manager Jennifer Constable nor Callahan participated.

Hull’s SELECT BOARD, shown here at an earlier meeting, held two sessions this week — a regularly scheduled meeting on wednesday and a zoom on Monday to discuss future agenda topics.

Select Board Chair Irwin Nesoff explained at the beginning of the meeting that each member would have an opportunity to share his ideas for agenda items and then determine whether there was a consensus.

Board members supported the above items being put on a future agenda, along with a discussion of the role of the select board as the town’s traffic commissioners and when they board should get involved during various projects.

This issue came up most recently during meetings about the Nantasket Avenue seawall project’s temporary traffic plan and the planned one-way road in that area.

Another item recommended for a future agenda was the historical commission’s desire to create a townwide historic resource plan and to apply for Community Preservation Act funding for roughly half of the cost and for a state grant to pay for the rest. This agenda item was recommend by Jason McCann, the board’s liaison to the commission.

Review of policies and procedures

Still other recommended agenda items include reviewing select board policies and procedures after each town election to give new members an opportunity to participate, and inviting the Hull Nantasket Chamber of Commerce to provide an update on its activities and how the board can support its efforts.

Inviting the town’s state Representative and senator for a question-and-answer session in the fall and Tipsy Tuna owners to present the sound engineer’s report requested during a recent discussion in response to some neighbors’ complaints about the high noise level coming from the restaurant are other recommended agenda topics.

Board member Jerry Taverna suggested that the town support efforts in other coastal communities asking for a halt in further state and federal plans for offshore wind farms along the Northeast coast following a recent incident in Nantucket, where a large wind turbine blade broke off, resulting in widespread beach debris.

However, the consensus of the board was to work with state officials on this issue.

“This is an important topic because of the importance of the beach to the Hull community,” Taverna told The Hull Times in response to an inquiry following the meeting.

While Hull Wind I turbine at Pemberton Point was recently demolished, Hull Wind II at the landfill remains offline, awaiting repairs.

“I was disappointed that the board didn’t think this issue warranted immediate discussion,” Taverna said. “All I was asking was for the board to draft a resolution to the governor to halt these projects until it’s determined what caused the blade issue and to come up with a better mitigation plan.”

During the board’s earlier discussion, member Greg Grey pointed out that this is “a state and federal issue” that should be addressed at that level.

Board members also agreed that a possible joint meeting with the school committee to find ways to work more closely together would be a good idea.

Recycling program idea floated

Taverna’s recommendation to start a recycling program rather than integrating recyclables with regular trash (as is currently the case) was put off until an earlier solid waste committee’s report is forwarded to board members and until the board’s next goal-setting session.

“This has been such a great process,” McCann said at the end of the session.

“We work well together in the best interests of the town,” Nesoff agreed.

Board members expressed an interest in holding similar discussions – perhaps bi-monthly – to assess what has been accomplished thus far.

“This way we can keep our eyes on the prize of what we are discussing – to check off items [that have been accomplished] and to add more as necessary,” board member Brian McCarthy said.

Nesoff also noted that the board will soon need to develop a process for evaluating Requests for Information for recreational marijuana licenses.

He would also like to revive discussions with the Department of Conservation & Recreation about the possible transfer to the town of the long-empty DCR-owned former police station across from the beach.

“It’s a shame that we have a deteriorating building like that in the middle of beach property,” he said.

That, too, is an issue to be discussed with the town’s state representative and senator, he said.

Citizens can propose agenda items

While there was no public discussion during the Zoom meeting, Nesoff said “if folks have something of importance they want to see on an agenda, they can send [their suggestions] to me or another select board member to bring them forward.”

In response to an earlier inquiry from The Hull Times, Town Manager Jennifer Constable explained that the purpose of the meeting was to provide the select board chair with a list of potential agenda items that “will then be reviewed and discussed with the town manager. [Recommended] items [that become] agenda items will subsequently be scheduled at the appropriate time,” she said.

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Agent Orange awareness stone to be dedicated at war memorial on August 10

HONORING THOSE WHO SERVED. On August 10, the town will dedicate a memorial stone at Monument Square to recognize those veterans affected by the chemical used during the Vietnam War.

By John J. Galluzzo

 As long as any military veteran group lives, they will share common bonds. Civil War veterans shared stories in Grand Army Halls, knowing that only the people in the room truly knew what each man had gone through. First World War vets had their American Legion Halls, and World War II vets their VFW posts.

Americans had never experienced anything like the Vietnam War before, either in combat or at home. Previous wars had been sanitized through newspapers and radio broadcasts. Vietnam could be seen live on television. The ugliness of war could no longer be hidden.

Even so, it was much uglier than the average American knew.

In the late 1940s, American chemical companies responded to disparate large-scale domestic herbicidal and defoliation needs – on railroad beds and roadsides, in forest understories, and for industrial agriculture, etc. – by producing a mixture of two herbicides that did the job exceedingly well but had unintended effects on humans. Placed in military hands, the mixture of 2,4,5-T and 2,4-D became known as Agent Orange.

From 1961 to 1971 under Operation Ranch Hand, the U.S. procured more than 20 million gallons of Agent Orange. The goal made sense. By defoliating areas used by the enemy, the United States would deprive them of food and tactical cover. In fact, the U.S. had picked up the idea from the British, who had done the same during the Malayan Emergency in the 1950s. U.S. military planes flew nearly 20,000 sorties over rural areas of South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia during the decade.

The toxic dioxin, 2,3,7,8-tetreachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, or TCDD, that is within the greater Agent Orange mixture, is a human carcinogen. The military told U.S. soldiers that Agent Orange was harmless. Veterans from the U.S. and all of the Free World Military Assistance Forces came home to find they were ill, their wives miscarried, and their children were being born with birth defects. By 1977, the first claims were filed pointing to Agent Orange and TCDD as the cause. Decades later, Agent Orange exposed Vietnam veterans are still dying of leukemia, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and various forms of cancer. To date, approximately 400,000 vets have died from exposure to Agent Orange.

It happened in every state in America. It happened in Massachusetts.

It happened in Hull.

“There were at least eight in Hull,” says Ed Burke, Hull War Memorial Commission member and a Vietnam veteran. “I knew all eight. Some were close friends of mine.”

The number may be as high as 11, as several veterans died without full medical explanations, but with symptoms that pointed toward Agent Orange exposure.

Inspired by a similar recognition in Weymouth, Burke became interested in creating an Agent Orange Awareness Memorial in Hull, with a dedication on August 10, nationally recognized as Agent Orange Awareness Day. The date is symbolic, marking the day in 1961 when the United States started spraying Agent Orange over Vietnam.

“I worked with the wives of some of the men,” said Burke, “and planned the ceremony with the veterans agent, the town manager and the police and fire departments.” The ceremony is set for 7 p.m. at the Hull War Memorial, to allow beach traffic to flow out of town. “We ordered a stone and added some appropriate words.” Perhaps most appropriately, among those words will be no names. The silent killer may have taken more lives than we know.

Veterans Agent Paul Sordillo sees the memorial as more than fitting.

“It’s been a long time coming. As we all know the Vietnam veterans were not welcomed back like the soldiers who fought the global war on terrorism. They weren’t treated well by the public on their return,” he said. “This is a small gesture, but with a lot behind it. It’s well-deserved. It’s the very least we can do. But most importantly it shows the appreciation of the community for veterans who had a pretty raw deal when they got back.” 

The Hull War Memorial Commission will host an Agent Orange Awareness Ceremony with the dedication of an Agent Orange Awareness Memorial Stone on August 10 at 7 p.m. at the war memorial at Monument Square. For more information or questions, contact Ed Burke, eburke137@gmail.com, 617-966-1896.

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Town seeks grants for beach management plan, study of upgrades to DPW, light plant

By Carol Britton Meyer

The town is seeking grant funds to renovate the Department of Public Works and Hull Municipal Light Plant “critical facilities” through climate adaptation measures, and another grant to help pay for an update to Hull’s beach management plan.

A Coastal Zone Management grant awarded last year funded an evaluation of the two facilities – which are both in the floodplain – including an assessment of their climate vulnerability based on past scenarios as well as future projections. Both are considered to be undersized and beyond their serviceable life.

Climate Adaptation & Conservation Department Director Chris Krahforst presented an update about the current grant to the select board last week, as well as details about the town’s recent application for a CZM grant to update the beach management plan to include climate change resilience and adaptation, while addressing emerging beach management issues.

“The dunes and beach are important for flood control,” Krahforst said. “The idea is to develop a plan that protects [those resources]. If the CZM grant application isn’t successful, we need to find [a way to pay for it], even if it’s with [town funds],” he said.

BUILDING ISSUES. The Department of Public Works garage at West Corner and the Hull Municipal Lighting Plant on Edgewater Road are being assessed for potential renovations and flood protection.

A collaborative approach “with state agencies, residents, and town agents is necessary and would be greatly facilitated by a grant from this program,” according to Krahforst.

The town has also applied for a Phase 2 CZM Coastal Resilience Grant for continued funding for the light plant and DPW facilities evaluation.

These grants are awarded to municipalities and nonprofits to address coastal flooding, erosion, and sea level rise impacts.

Identifying site vulnerabilities

The report presented by Krahforst included information gained from site visits to both facilities and conversations with staff about the condition of the structures and the surrounding sites; equipment and storage; and physical vulnerabilities of the sites to past flood events and physical features that could cause vulnerability to future events.

For instance, the DPW barn at 9 Nantasket Avenue, was built in 1946 and experienced flooding reaching the garage doors twice during current director Chris Gardner’s time on the job. and two feet of flooding in the backyard during the 2018 winter storm Grayson, as well as flooding earlier this year.

With regard to the light plant on Edgewater Road – constructed around the turn of the last century, with renovations and repairs made in subsequent years – water rose into the parking lot, came up through the manhole, and created pooling in the garage storage area, with no damage to critical equipment, during the major March 2014 storm. The building is bordered by the road in front and the coastline in the rear.

The report recommends constructing any new buildings at the design flood elevation and limiting any critical uses on the first story below the design flood elevation, or floodproofing these spaces, and includes climate resiliency measures.

Design flood elevation refers to the minimum elevation to which a building must be elevated or floodproofed based on historic or projected flood information.

Schematic design stage

Phase 2, which could begin as early as this August depending on acquiring the second CZM grant, will likely focus on schematic design for the two facilities.

Meetings will be held with abutting property owners regarding the potential acquisition of adjacent parcels to potentially expand the footprint of the two existing parcels, with the goal of designing new or retrofitted climate-adapted facilities for both the DPW and HMLP. Other options also are being explored.

The project team presented one additional privately-owned site outside of the floodplain on Nantasket Avenue that would be large enough to house both facilities – the former Worrick Mansion property at 36 Nantasket Ave. There has been limited interest in this option, but it could be revisited.

On the other hand, Town Manager Jennifer Constable thinks that option should continue to be considered.

“We’re very limited when it comes to completely relocating” because so much of the town is in the floodplain and there’s limited land available, she said.

Pre-permitting conversations with state agencies will be held and an implementation plan detailing next steps for advancing the designs created, along with discussion about potential funding for the project.

“I would prefer to get these facilities out of the floodplain,” Krahforst said.

Another issue is how the town will pay for these projects. Krahforst explained that some state and federal funding may be available for planning on the state side and for construction and implementation on the federal side.

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In the Sport-light: Roundup of news about Hull athletes

CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS. Top sailors in the Hull Yacht Club’s recent Scorpion Bowl races include optimist green fleet winners Ethan Murphy of the Winchester Boat Club, Colin O'Brien of the Cottage Park Yacht Club, and Caroline Egan of the Hingham Yacht Club [Below right]. ABoVE, Kai Bucklen, who sails out of Hull Yacht Club, came in first in the Optimist Championship blue fleet, as well as first overall in the Optimist Championship line. He is holding the flag and flanked by the other Optimist Champ winners. In the larger group BELOW, the winners of the 420 fleet pose with their awards and class flags. [Skip Tull photos]

Compiled by Matt Haraden

• News from the Hull Yacht Club: A season-high 23 boats hit the line Thursday, July 26 evening under a clearing sky with variable winds. Tom Monti and the Race Committee had a tough job setting a square course but managed to get in two races in challenging conditions. An outgoing tide didn’t help, as many boats were pushed over the line early forcing multiple general recalls. On the bright side, there were a bunch of practice starts in a crowded fleet, which will pay dividends in the nationals later next month. The fleet welcomed newcomer Chris Kostyla sailing Outlier on the course for the first time this season. Joe Berkeley and Dave McGrath on roger that!, along with Steve Clancy and Meredith Richardson on Razzmatazz battled it out, while Dave and Melissa Nelson were close behind on Tough Cookie. Bill Bradford on Full Circle was right behind Tough Cookie and secured a fourth place for the evening. The combination of Maureen and Sydney Hebert in Fandango scored sixth in the first race, which may make it tough for Mike to get back on the boat. Lindsey and Carly on Rebel Girl turned in a fine performance, while Oakie Dokie continued to move up this season.

• U12 Baseball defeated Norwell, 13-11,on Tuesday, July 23. Christian Silva had a home run, double, and single, and Dom Ramos had three doubles. The team came back to win despite trailing 11-5 in the fourth inning. The Pirates got on the board in the bottom of the first inning after Billy Littlefield singled, scoring one run, and Christian Silva homered to left field, scoring two runs. They added one run in the second when Henry Littlefield singled , making the score 4-0. The Pirates went ahead 13-11 in the bottom of the fifth after a steal of home scored one run, a Dom Ramos double scored two runs, and Jacob Goodrich drew a walk, bringing in one run. Will O’Connor pitched two innings of scoreless ball in relief. The next day, the team defeated East Bridgewater, 9-3, thanks to seven runs in the fourth inning. Nicholas Mihal tripled, scoring two, Billy Littlefield tripled, scoring one, Chase Silva singled, scoring one, Gavin Griffin singled, scoring two, and a steal of home scored one run. Dom Ramos pitched four innings in relief, striking out nine. Will O’Connor allowed zero hits and zero runs over two innings, striking out five. Despite trailing by as many as four runs, the Pirates rallied to defeat Scituate, 8-6, on Friday, July 26. The team got on the board in the second inning when Nicholas Mihal walked ahead of Chase Silva home run to centerfield, scoring two. Scituate flipped the game on its head in the bottom of the third, scoring six runs on two hits to take a 6-2 lead. The Pirates jumped back into the lead in the top of the fifth inning after Evan Doyle doubled, Alex Provost doubled, and Christian Silva singled, each scoring one run. The team totaled 12 hits in the game.16U Baseball improved to 7-1 over the weekend, beating Middleboro, 5-2, on Friday, July 26, with only eight players able to make the game. Hull had to play with only two outfielders and was still able to prevail. Jack Gagne drove in four runs on three hits to lead the Pirates past Pembroke, 14-0, on Saturday, July 27. The team won thanks in part to nine runs in the fifth inning. Liam Conneely doubled, scoring one, Brayden Roberts singled, scoring one, Gagne singled, scoring two, Will Kenerson singled, scoring two, and Christian Truglia drew a walk, scoring one run. Hull tallied 14 hits in the game. Roberts, Gagne, and Conneely each collected three hits. Kenerson had two hits in four at-bats. Conneely started the game pitching, with Logan Griffin catching. The starting pitcher surrendered two hits and zero runs over five innings, striking out eight and walking six. The team showed solid defense, with Max MacEachern and Jack Gagne turning a double play in the game and Christian Truglia, Landon Lepenven, and Matt Kraus tracking fly balls in the outfield. The Pirates welcome Pembroke to Hull at L Street at 6 p.m. on Friday, August 2 in the next game.

SETTING SAIL. The Hull Yacht Club's Scorpion Bowl Junior Regatta has been growing in popularity, and this year set a new record with more than 120 boats and 160 sailors from a dozen yacht clubs from all over Greater Boston area. Sailors ranging in age from seven to 16 years old competed in two days of racing in Optimist and 420 sailboats. [Skip Tull photo]

• Coaches and Super Fans – we need your help to report the scores and results of the latest events in Hull’s sports world! Please send local sports news and photos to sports@hulltimes.com. Deadline is Tuesday at 8 p.m. When providing details of the games or races, please be sure to include the sport/team, the players’ full names, and the final scores. When sending photos, names of those pictured are greatly appreciated, as well as who should get credit for taking the photo.

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Select board’s goals include focus on development and capital plans, communication

CASE CLOSED. Town Counsel James Lampke is retiring after more than four decades on the job. He and his family – son Dan, daughter-in-law Amanda, and wife Cindy – were joined by friends and current former colleagues to celebrate the occasion at the Hull Lifesaving Museum last week. Look closely - you’ll see many familiar faces in the crowd. [Skip Tull photos]

By Carol Britton Meyer

The select board updated its annual goals and objectives at its June 20 retreat, after which department heads were asked to submit their own set of plans to the board

“Over the course of August, department goals will be merged with what the board discussed about their own goals and objectives to come up with a strategic plan to present to the board in September,” Town Manager Jennifer Constable said at last week’s select board meeting.

The select board’s list includes economic development; community development, transportation, housing, open space and recreation, capital, and resiliency planning; communications; and general planning, including:

• Ongoing implementation of the Unified Work Plan approved by the board in 2020 that integrates eight earlier plans and studies focused on the revitalization of the Nantasket Beach area and offers a strategy for short- and long-term implementation; continuing the town’s collaborative relationship with the Department of Conservation and Recreation; and reviewing the town’s vacant commercial property bylaw, which provides, in part, that owners of vacant (not used for 90 consecutive days or more) nonresidential buildings must maintain those structures and also register with the Community Development & Planning Department within seven days after the unit becomes vacant. The 2018 town meeting approved this bylaw, sponsored by the Economic Development Committee, in an effort to promote economic health and vitality of area businesses and business districts by improving the appearance of buildings once they become vacant.

• Continuing to work with the MBTA to support efforts for more reliable ferry and bus service; encouraging neighborhood and civic groups and business leaders to maintain and improve public spaces; reviewing the South Shore Mobility Study to identify opportunities for Hull, including possibly seeking an on-demand shuttle; and considering speed control measures in the Kenberma area.

• Providing ongoing support for the affordable housing committee on strategies and actions in support of the goal to create more affordable housing in town.

• Updating the town’s open space and recreation plan and potentially seeking grants to do so; consideration of the implementation of an “adopt-a-park” program; and working with the DCR to improve conditions at Fort Revere.

• Creating a capital improvement plan, reviewing capital funding policies, and historical asset planning.

• Identifying areas of Hull that are at the greatest risk from climate change and beginning to develop mitigation strategies; ongoing fortification of the continuous dune system; promoting “green” infrastructure; updating the beach management plan; and developing an emergency response and recovery plan.

• Updating the town’s communication policy and committee handbook; requesting biannual legislative updates from Hull’s state Representative and Senator; and exploring the addition of communication staff and increasing the current IT staff.

• Working with the council on aging to implement recommendations from the recently-completed needs assessment report aimed at enhancing the lives of Hull’s growing senior population now and in the years to come. By 2035, 43% of Hull’s population will be age 60 or older, according to the study.

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