China resident proposes to have Hometown Heroes flags installed in town

China Town Officeby Mary Grow

At their May 19 meeting, China select board members were presented with a proposal to have Hometown Heroes banners in town.

Resident Jacinth Allard, who was unable to attend the meeting, had proposed to Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood that China join other area towns – Clinton and Benton were mentioned – with flags honoring individual veterans. With Hapgood’s encouragement, Allard provided select board members with information on the program.

Hapgood explained that each flag has a photograph of the service member and relevant information. Allard had presented two pages showing flags in a variety of colors and designs.

Veterans’ families are expected to pay for their flag and the hardware to hang it. Permission to attach the flags to power poles, and municipal approval, are needed.

Allard had approached Central Maine Power Company and was waiting for a reply, Hapgood said.

Select board members unanimously approved the idea and voted to continue to follow up with Allard.

The other major issue May 19 was left over from the board’s April 22 meeting: approval of remaining TIF (Tax Increment Financing) Committee’s recommendations (see the May 1 issue of “The Town Line,” p. 3). On April 22, board members ran out of time before acting on the town’s three requests; Hapgood added them, plus one, to the May 19 agenda.

Board members unanimously approved $490 for Mid-Maine Chamber of Commerce dues and $15,000 for the 2025 China Days celebration.

They approved another $15,000 for a 2025 summer intern, on a 4-1 vote, after a discussion of past interns’ usefulness. Hapgood supports the idea, and board members Edwin Bailey, Blane Casey, Jeanne Marquis and Thomas Rumpf agreed, despite some reservations. Board chair Wayne Chadwick argued that since past interns had brought in no new businesses, it is time to scrap the program.

A request for $7,504 for Kennebec Valley Council of Government dues was postponed two weeks, as members wondered what KVCOG has done for the town to justify the money. Hapgood and audience members mentioned collective purchasing (culverts and road salt, for example) and help with planning.

In other business May 19, select board members:

Approved draft mission statements from the town’s transfer station committee and building committee.
Accepted a bid for this summer’s roadside mowing, choosing Pierce Works, LLC, of China over a competitor whose proposed hourly rate was called “too open-ended” and “worrisome.” Hapgood said Pierce had the contract last year.
Accepted the low bid for carpentry for the new vault at the town office, from Foote Construction, of China. Casey abstained, because he was involved in arranging for the bidding.
Appointed ballot clerks and set town clerk’s and registrar’s hours (the normal town office hours) in preparation for the June 10 annual town business meeting.

The next regular China select board meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday, June 2. Board members hope to be done by 7 p.m., so they can accept invitations to tour China’s three fire stations after the meeting.

Vassalboro school board catches up on old business after budget sent to town office

Vassalboro Community School

Vassalboro Community School (contributed photo)

by Mary Grow

With their 2025-26 budget recommendations in final form and forwarded to the town office, Vassalboro School Board members had time to catch up on other business at their May 13 meeting.

A main item was updating the Vassalboro Consolidated School building, opened in 1992. Tom Seekins, from Portland-based Energy Management Consultants, was invited to continue discussions started in January and February.

Seekins and board members developed a set of priorities, which Seekins had organized into four options. He estimated the cost of each, considering both prices of equipment and labor and projected savings from energy efficiency.

Timing was another element. Seekins discussed how long it should take to get various components, and how to schedule work to minimize interference with summer activities and fall classes.

Board members voted unanimously to authorize Energy Management Consultants to proceed with the first option. Seekins listed the following seven projects, which he called “critical upgrades to aging systems that impact energy efficiency, occupant comfort, and long-term facility resiliency.”

A ventilation upgrade, consisting of replacing two 34-year-old air handlers with modern Energy Recovery Ventilation (ERV) units that will improve indoor air quality and save energy.
Terminal equipment replacement, specifically replacing deteriorated, unreliable “cabinet unit heaters,” mostly in the corridors, with high-efficiency units.
Installation of a modern – digital, instead of pneumatic (relying on compressed air) – building-wide Energy Management System (EMS) for better control and monitoring.
Weatherization, especially, but not merely, replacing deteriorated exterior doors.
Installation of a Variable Refrigerant Flow (VRF) system on the second floor, to provide, efficiently, year-round comfortable temperatures in rooms that now get too warm in summer.
Adding modern lighting, easier to control and more efficient.
Doing two indoor jobs: replacing the first-floor suspended ceilings and “targeted concrete repairs in the lower level.”

The company will prepare final plans, seek competitive bids and oversee work. The first payment from Vassalboro will be due as part of the 2026-2027 budget, not next year, Superintendent Alan Pfeiffer said.

Pfeiffer commended school board members for making the decision to go ahead with the work, calling them “good stewards of the building” who are trying to solve its aging problems before they turn into disasters.

Also pending, Pfeiffer said, are summer maintenance work, to include a lot of painting; installation of school zone lights on Webber Pond Road, according to recent information from the Maine Department of Transportation; and, with assistance from the town public works department, actions to reduce congestion on roads by the school as parents pick up children at the end of the school day.

Pfeiffer said later in the week he is consulting with others to develop a plan to improve the traffic situation. No decisions have yet been made.

Board member Jessica Clark, tracking relevant Maine legislative actions through her membership on the Maine School Boards Association legislative committee, reported that a bill to make the November election day a Maine holiday is “looking good” this year.

Town officials have talked of holding state elections in the VCS gymnasium. If they do, and if school is closed for the day, another day (like snow days) will have to be made up in June; and board members have discussed other complications (see the April 17 issue of “The Town Line”, p. 2). Having school closed for a state holiday would be simpler.

Pfeiffer reported for Finance Director Paula Pooler that the school system is still within its 2024-25 budget, and should be okay, narrowly, at the end of June.

Board members acted on numerous appointments as new teachers moved from probationary status onward.

The next Vassalboro School Board meeting will be postponed from Tuesday, June 10 (Election Day), to 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 11, so that board members will know whether voters have approved the 2025-26 school budget.

Vassalboro voters have the school budget on the warrant for their Monday, June 2, open meeting, which begins at 6:30 p.m. in the VCS gym. On June 10, when polls are open for written-ballot voting from 8 a.m.

Vassalboro select board receives satisfactory news on finances

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro select board members got satisfactory news about town finances at their May 15 meeting.

Auditor Ron Smith, head of RHR Smith, Auditors, in Buxton, said the audit for the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2023, is done, and the audit for the year that ended June 30, 2024, will be shared in draft form within a week.

Vassalboro’s surplus account, about $1.7 million as of June 30, 2024, meets recommended standards; it would keep the town running for 90 days in a financial emergency. The Vassalboro school system’s separate surplus is also adequate, Smith said.

Smith was followed by Matt Weaver, from Damariscotta-based First National Wealth Management, who reported that Vassalboro’s investments are doing well so far this year, despite financial uncertainties.

“Overall, we’re please with how the portfolio’s performed,” he summarized.

Weaver recommended no changes in Vassalboro’s conservative financial strategy.

Much of the May 15 meeting was spent re-discussing the draft personnel policy with three town employees. Select board members heard their comments and answered their questions.

In other business, the public works crew was complimented on one project and authorized to go ahead with another.

Select board member Michael Poulin and Town Manager Aaron Miller praised the almost-finished pavilion at Eagle Park, on Route 32 (Main Street), just north of East Vassalboro Village. Public works employee Shawn Bragg said while the crew was working on the roof, a group of bicyclists stopped and had lunch there.

Conservation Commission members plan to add picnic tables made at Vassalboro’s Maine Adirondack Chairs, on Holman Day Road.

Miller said the school department had asked to have the public works crew help with a to-be-planned project to lessen congestion when parents pick up students at the end of the school day. Select board members authorized use of town employees’ time and town materials, if the work is approved by relevant state departments (transportation and, board member Chris French suggested, environmental protection).

Miller proposed taking advantage of an offer of a 150-hour summer intern to help in the town office, from the Muskie School of Public Service at the University of Southern Maine. The only cost to the town, he said, would be to send the person to an August workshop. Select board members approved by consensus.

French said a resident asked about mooring a boat in China Lake, near the East Vassalboro landing. Miller advised talking with Kennebec Water District officials, who are concerned about protecting the lake that is their water source.

French raised three issues for future discussion: updating town ordinances, updating the town’s TIF (Tax Increment Financing) document and enlarging the select board. He has repeatedly recommended a five-person select board; perhaps, he suggested, the question could be put to voters in November.

The next regular Vassalboro select board meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 29. The preceding Monday, May 26, town functions will be closed for the Memorial Day holiday.

Vassalboro planners approve one application for addition to cottage

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro Planning Board members approved the only application on their agenda at a brief May 6 meeting.

Keith and Lise Marlowe had applied for an addition on the back of their cottage, at 148 Park Lane, in the Three Mile Pond shoreland zone. Architect Tobias Gabranski, from Bath, and builder David Tyrol, from Vassalboro, explained the plans.

The only other topic was a brief discussion of the junkyard on Riverside Drive (Route 201), in which the property is in violation of conditions past planning boards imposed.

The three board members present – acting chairman Paul Mitnik, Douglas Phillips and Marianne Stevens – found the application met ordinance requirements and unanimously approved the permit.

The only other topic was a brief discussion of the junkyard on Riverside Drive (Route 201), licensed and operated by Olin Charette and/or his son. Mitnik and Stevens pointed out ways in which the property is in violation of conditions past planning boards imposed.

The most serious violation, in Stevens’ opinion, is lack of adequate access for fire engines, which are supposed to be able to use either of two gates and to drive around the entire inside area.

Codes Officer Eric Currie intends to consult Fire Chief Walker Thompson and to review files on the Charette property.

The next regular Vassalboro Planning Board meeting is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 3.

China road committee looks at two roads, parking lot & bridge

by Mary Grow

China Road Committee members spent their May 8 meeting talking about two roads and a parking lot in the northwestern end of town and a bridge in Branch Mills, on the eastern boundary.

The roads are Maple Ridge, which runs from Vassalboro northeast through China into Winslow, and Neck Road, which dead-ends on the west shore of China Lake, north of The Narrows, the water connection between the lake’s east and west basins. At their April 22 meeting, China Select Board members asked road committee members’ advice on resurfacing part of Maple Ridge and the end of Neck Road (see the May 1 issue of The Town Line, p. 3).

Director of Public Services and committee chairman Shawn Reed said ideally, a section of Maple Ridge Road through a boggy area should be rebuilt, but rebuilding would cost too much. By consensus, committee members recommended a shim coat to level and strengthen the roadway plus a surface paving coat.

They recommended the same treatment for the end of Neck Road, using for the surface coat LCP. LCP, the Maine Department of Transportation website says, means Light Capital Paving, or maintenance surface treatment, usually 5/8 inch of paving with, Reed said, extra asphalt in the mix.

The China Baptist Church parking lot near the causeway at the head of China Lake’s east basin is used by boaters and swimmers as well as church-goers. Pastor Ronald Morrell joined committee members in discussing options for improving it.

They decided the best choice, for people using the lot and for water quality in China Lake, would be to install catch basins for runoff and have the lot repaved.

The town has bids for paving the parking lot, a part of the paving bids on which select board members postponed action on April 22. Road committee members expect local contractors to bid on the installation of catch basins, to be followed by repaving.

Reed said state inspectors recently pointed out several problems with the Branch Mills bridge over the west branch of the Sheepscot River – not serious enough to close it or even to impose a weight limit, but needing attention.

The main issue is that the road surface has been repaved repeatedly without removing old paving. Weight has increased, and drains are too far below the paving and curbing not far enough above it.

Reed plans to consult with a state transportation official, seeking advice on whether to plan repairs or to start a reserve fund for a new bridge.

The present bridge dates from 1931, committee member Dale Peabody said.

Vassalboro local election slated for June 10

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro town clerk Cathy Coyne reports the following candidates for elective office have qualified for the June 10 local ballot.

For one three-year position on the select board, incumbent Frederick “Rick” Denico, Jr.

For two three-year positions on the school board, incumbents Jessica Clark and Amy French.

For a one-year term on the Sanitary District board of trustees, Ericka Roy.

For two two-year terms on the Sanitary District board of trustees, Lisa Miller and Donna Daviau.

Vassalboro local elections will be held Tuesday, June 10, with polls open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., in the town office building, at 682 Main Street, between East and North Vassalboro.

Vassalboro cemetery committee continues talks on trees

by Mary Grow

Four members of the Vassalboro Cemetery Committee met April 28, mostly to continue discussion of who’s in charge of tree removal in cemeteries. In the audience were Holly Weidner, chairman of the conservation commission; Frederick “Rick” Denico, Jr., chairman of the select board; and, until he had to leave for another engagement, Town Manager Aaron Miller.

Since last fall, the cemetery committee and the conservation commission have been discussing which body has jurisdiction over trees growing in Vassalboro’s 27 (at least) cemeteries.

The five-page draft document Miller prepared traces the debate to March 2024, when, he wrote, a crew cutting trees in the Methodist cemetery on Bog Road,in East Vassalboro, at the cemetery committee’s direction, unknowingly cut a tree planted under the Project Canopy program.

Weidner said the tree was actually just outside the cemetery; Project Canopy trees are required to be on public land, like the road right-of-way. Because it was cut, she said, the conservation commission did not apply for a 2025 project canopy grant, being unable to certify the town had taken good care of earlier trees.

Cemetery committee member David Jenney recognized, and regretted, the need to “cut a lot of handsome trees” in order to “protect monuments honoring the dead”; although, he added, the trees will eventually die anyway. Denico pointed out that even a healthy tree can be blown over in a windstorm.

Miller said his document, titled Trees and Stones: A Balancing Act in Vassalboro Cemeteries, was intended not as an ordinance or even a policy sheet, but as a summary with recommendations, to guide future decisions. It begins with a description of the problem and a reference to other Maine towns’ experiences; discusses funding, perpetual care and town obligations under state law; summarizes local responsibilities; and ends with a list of recommendations.

Cemetery committee chairman Savannah Clark had added comments to the draft. Committee members made additional changes before approving it for reference to the select board.

This year’s cemetery work, including cutting trees, is scheduled to be in Vassalboro’s Nelson and Farwell-Brown cemeteries. Clark said an arborist examined trees in both and marked those to be removed.

Miller, Denico and Clark agreed that the town does enough to inform residents of planned cutting, by having the selected trees marked and by advertising meetings at which cemetery maintenance is discussed. Most Vassalboro public meetings are also broadcast and recorded.

In response to the concern about Project Canopy trees, Weidner said the conservation commission is compiling a list and map that will show everyone where they are.

Three other issues were mentioned.

Miller said Public Works Director Brian Lajoie is consulting with state labor department personnel about getting public works employees trained to work from a bucket truck, so the town won’t have to hire someone with a boom truck.
The manager said he is looking into insurance for the town volunteers who repair cemetery stones; he hopes to have coverage by June.
Committee members discussed what, if anything, state law or regulations say about how deep cremains need to be buried in a cemetery.

The next Vassalboro cemetery committee meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday, May 19.

Vassalboro select board updated on first responders grant money

by Mary Grow

Dan Mayotte, co-founder and director of Vassalboro’s First Responder unit, updated select board members on grant funds at their May 1 meeting.

Mayotte said after the Vassalboro unit was upgraded to advanced EMT (Emergency Medical Technician) status last year, part of a $17,500 state grant was used to send assistant director Josi Haskell and member Matt Olsson to advanced training school, where both earned high honors.

More money than expected is left over. Mayotte asked for and received select board approval to spend it on two more projects:

Since the annual Maine First Responders conference has been discontinued, sending six interested members to a three-day conference in Connecticut; and
Temporarily increasing stipends for volunteers who respond to emergency calls, a use recommended by the state grant administrator with whom Mayotte consulted.

Mayotte said he hopes to receive a larger grant later this year that he and members plan to use to duplicate the rescue unit’s advanced life support equipment. Currently, this equipment is housed at the Riverside fire station; another set at the North Vassalboro station would reduce response time.

Select board members endorsed the idea.

Board members finished two items of continuing business.

Town Manager Aaron Miller shared the latest copy of Trees and Stones: A Balancing Act in Vassalboro Cemeteries. Select board chairman Frederick “Rick” Denico, Jr., summarized the April 28 cemetery committee meeting he attended, during which the document was discussed and changes suggested (see related story).

Board members approved the document, labeling it a mission statement for the cemetery committee, and thanked committee chairman Savannah Clark for her work. Miller plans to post Trees and Stones on the town website, which has a category called “Cemeteries” listed on the main page.

The manager presented the ninth draft of the warrant for the annual town meeting June 2 and June 10, with the school board’s revised budget articles. Select board members accepted it.

Elizabeth McMahon attended the meeting to talk about the Vassalboro Public Library’s 2025-26 budget request. Library officials had requested a $3,000 increase, but both the select board and the budget committee recommend continued funding at last year’s $71,000 level.

McMahon said library officials were disappointed, but understanding. She warned that cuts in federal funding for the state library will affect local libraries; Vassalboro might have to start charging for services like interlibrary loan that are now free.

Miller said a 12-year-old home-schooler who visited his office recently was “a pretty passionate supporter” of the library’s programs.

Miller and board members reviewed a multi-page 2024-25 financial report showing where Vassalboro stands. The manager expects no major cost overruns at the June 30 end of the fiscal year.

The next regular Vassalboro Select Board meeting is scheduled for Thursday evening, May 15.

Large turnout for China’s public hearing on May 5

An unusually large number of residents turned out for the China Sweet Treat Social and public hearing on May 5. (contributed photo)

by Mary Grow

China select board members got updates on the community garden and Thurston Park, accepted Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood’s idea of contracting with a professional grant-writer and presented the annual Spirit of America award for volunteerism at their May 5 meeting.

Planning Board chairman Toni Wall received the award – to her surprise – in recognition of her years of work on the board, during which she has spent a great deal of extra time creating and updating town ordinances.

Hapgood proposed connecting with a professional grant writer in Liberty to see if he could help China find and apply for outside funds. His fee is $60 an hour, she said, and she proposed contracting for 10 hours of research.

Board member discussed how much direction he should have, seeking the happy medium between learning about grants they didn’t want and missing information on grants they hadn’t realized could be useful. They unanimously approved spending up to $600.

Thurston Park committee chairman Jeanette Smith again raised the issue of access to the park. Currently, people drive in from the north, over the unpaved Yorktown Road coming south from Albion. The road is so bad that people keep asking for access from the south end; landowner resistance is a problem there.

Hapgood said she has been discussing the road with Albion officials. Smith is seeking cost estimates for paving the China section of the north approach. Select board member Edwin Bailey suggested the grant-writer might be helpful.

James Hsiang presented an update on the community garden, sponsored by the China for a Lifetime Committee and located on the town-owned lot south of the town office complex. The wooden raised beds have been built, the soil to fill them is due soon and two volunteers will spread it in the beds, he said.

Lakeview Lumber, in China, donated lumber for a 6-by-8-foot garden shed. Hsiang asked for, and select board members unanimously granted, permission to build the shed on the town’s land.

About half the almost three dozen beds are still for sale, Hsiang said. If not all are sold by the deadline he is about to set, he plans to use some to raise vegetables for the China Food Pantry.

Hsiang plans a variety of summer events, not all garden-related, to bring visitors to the community garden.

The select board meeting was followed by a short recess, during which the ever-increasing group enjoyed cookies and cupcakes. By the time the public hearing on the June 10 warrant articles started, more than two dozen residents had filled the meeting room, a turn-out Hapgood and select board members greeted with pleasure.

This hearing was on the already-approved warrant on which voters will act at the polls on Tuesday, June 10. Some of the questions raised at the hour-and-a-half hearing dealt with timing: why not a hearing before the warrant is final, while changes can be made?

The answer, from officials and other audience members, was that the warrant had been discussed for months at publicized meetings of the select board and the budget committee: residents’ comments would have been welcome.

Several people again proposed going back to the pre-covid open town meeting, so that voters could ask questions before they voted and perhaps amend some of the articles.

Select board chairman Wayne Chadwick, and others, replied that too few people attended the open meetings, 100 or so compared to 1,000 or so who voted by written ballot.

“One hundred informed people versus one thousand uninformed people,” former select board member Joann Austin protested.

South China Fire Chief Richard Morse asked what happens if voters reject an article, for example voting not to appropriate funds for town administration. Art. 13 asks voters to approve (as in prior years) a statement that if an article does not pass, the amount appropriated in the current fiscal year “shall be deemed adopted” for the new FY beginning July 1.

In other words, Hapgood and Chadwick said, defeating an article authorizing an expenditure does not reject the purpose, just the funding. Should such a thing happen, select board members would have to try to get by on the previous budget; or dip into surplus; or call a special town meeting to re-present a request for money.

The manager clarified a related issue: the terms “undesignated fund balance,” “unassigned balance” and “surplus” all mean the same thing, the money China has available as emergency back-up. As of June 2024, China’s surplus was about $1.8 million, she said.

Hapgood and board members explained meanings of and reasons for specific warrant articles about which questions were asked. The recording of the hearing is on the website, chinamaine.org, under Live Streaming, May events.

China’s CEO named Municipal Employee of the Year by Mid-Maine Chamber

China Codes Enforcement Officer, Nicholas French

China’s Codes Enforcement Officer, Nick French, was recently awarded Municipal Employee of the Year by the Mid-Maine Chamber of Commerce.