Browntail moths are down, but not out

Browntail moth caterpillars can be identified by the two distinctive orange dots at the tail end and white tufts along the sides.

Browntail moth (BTM) aerial surveys revealed a decrease in populations in some areas of the state; however, there are still some towns that have high concentrations of winter webs. These include areas in towns surrounding Sebago Lake, communities in a line from Livermore Falls to Falmouth, and communities in Dedham.

It is not unusual to have single trees or clusters of trees with elevated populations amongst areas with low populations due to the caterpillars’ hitchhiking nature. Communities that have BTM winter webs in their trees should make plans to remove and destroy the webs before April. Clipped BTM webs can be destroyed by soaking them in a bucket of soapy water overnight or by burning them in a contained fire – read our Winter Checklist for Browntail for tips on how to manage BTM in the winter.

If winter webs are not removed and destroyed before next month, the caterpillars will emerge from the winter webs and begin feeding on host trees, causing defoliation and increasing risk for their hairs to cause an irritating rash in humans. Even small numbers of webs can result in thousands of wandering caterpillars come spring (there are dozens to several hundred caterpillars in each web).

There are only a few weeks left to remove BTM winter webs before the caterpillars emerge in mid-April.

Money was a main topic at China select board meeting

by Mary Grow

Money was a main topic at the March 24 China select board meeting in several different ways, from fairly big items (including review of budget committee recommendations related to the June 10 town business meeting warrant and proposed future expenditures) to the price of trash bags for Palermo residents using China’s transfer station.

The latter, Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood reported, will increase from $2.60 to $3.00 for a 33-gallon bag, effective April 1.

The China Budget Committee, meeting March 17 (see the March 20 issue of The Town Line, p. 3), disagreed with the select board on four proposed June 10 expenditures.

The major change was a recommendation to increase town employees’ salaries by 2.5 percent next year, instead of the 3.5 percent select board members had recommended.

At the March 24 meeting, Hapgood read a letter from another town employee advocating for the higher increase and added her comments, and a third employee watching the meeting on line chimed in.

After three-quarters of an hour’s debate and several failed votes on different suggested increases, select board members went with a recommendation for a 3.25 percent increase, on a 4-0-1 vote, with Chairman Wayne Chadwick, Blane Casey, Jeanne Marquis and Thomas Rumpf in favor and Edwin Bailey abstaining.

Hapgood said after the meeting that the pay issue will again be on the budget committee’s agenda at their April 2 meeting. If budget committee members do not agree with the select board, she said, the June 10 town meeting warrant will say the budget committee voted not to recommend all expenditure articles that include employee salaries.

Budget committee members on March 17 further advocated cutting from the list of social service organizations a $500 donation to Northern Light Home Care and Hospice, because of the impending closure of Waterville’s Inland Hospital; adding back in the $500 donation to the American Red Cross that the select board had deleted; and increasing the PFAS fund by $1,000 to cover a new pump that Hapgood said is needed soon.

Select board members agreed with the budget committee on all three items. Votes were unanimous, except that Rumpf dissented on donating to the Red Cross.

Their first monetary discussion of the evening was with China Village Volunteer Fire Department Chief Joel Nelson, who repeated and re-explained his request for a new pumper truck, at an estimated cost of $650,000 or more (see the March 13 issue of The Town Line, p. 3).

Select board members again postponed a decision, asking for more information, on used trucks – Nelson had found there are not many available – and on possible grants. The delay means the request will not be submitted to voters in June; it could be on a November ballot.

After 20 minutes’ debate over the agreement with Rent.Fun that will provide a rental stand for kayaks and paddleboards, Chadwick made a motion to authorize the town manager to sign the agreement – and was the dissenter on a 4-1 vote to do so.

The kiosk, arranged by Recreation Committee chairman Martha Wentworth, will be at the head of China Lake’s east basin, near the causeway east of China Village. Proceeds from the rentals will be shared between Rent.Fun and the town; the contract spells out finances, maintenance and repairs and sundry other details. Chadwick and other board members were concerned about how long it will take the town to earn enough to recoup its initial investment.

Hapgood had shared with board members Sheldon Goodine’s resignation as chairman of the town building committee. The fireproof vault its members planned is about to be built.

Board members debated whether the committee should be considered a one-time vault committee, or an on-going building committee tasked with recommending future changes to town properties. A majority decided it should continue as an advisory body and be asked to develop a five- or 10-year building plan, and rejected Goodine’s resignation.

Bailey was the lone dissenter; he praised Goodine’s leadership, but held the committee’s work was finished.

Other pre-town-meeting topics included review of proposed revisions to the town’s Budget Committee Ordinance, which the select board unanimously endorsed; and Hapgood’s explanation of an article that would repeal China’s June 2017 ordinance titled “Ordinance Prohibiting Retail Marijuana Establishments and Retail Marijuana Social Clubs in the Town of China.”

The marijuana ordinance, she explained, is no longer needed, because the state has taken over; state regulations now protect the town.

The March 24 select board meeting was preceded by the members meeting as the town board of assessors. In that capacity, they rejected a request from the Branch Pond Association, Inc., to be exempted from paying taxes on the Branch Pond dam.

The request said that the dam has been rebuilt, by the Maine Council of the Atlantic Salmon Federation, with a fishway added. It was valued at $30,800 in 2024; it serves no economic purpose and does not generate income; the 2024 tax bill was $360.36.

The Branch Pond Association claimed an exemption on the ground that it is a charitable organization. Assessor William Van Tuinen had reviewed the exemption letter and concluded the organization is not purely charitable, because its charter also calls for benefits to nearby landowners.

Van Tuinen recommended the exemption be denied, and the select board agreed on a 4-1 vote, with Rumpf opposed.

The next regular China select board meeting is scheduled for Monday evening, April 7.

Vassalboro cemetery committee mulls over which trees to take down

by Mary Grow

During a short March 17 meeting, Vassalboro Cemetery Committee members decided the survey of trees in the Nelson Road Cemetery should be redone before the town seeks a contractor to take down any of them.

Committee member David Jenney said after previous discussions with cemetery committee and conservation commission members, Timothy Basham, owner of Basham Tree Service, Inc., in South China, had marked five of the seven pine trees in the cemetery for removal, as potential hazards.

Jenney was not convinced the other two pines should be left.

Committee members Jane Aiudi and Cindy Spaulding said they had trouble distinguishing Basham’s marks from other pieces of tape and flagging in the cemetery. Since residents, too, were supposed to weigh in on what trees should be removed, they recommend a clearer marking system.

Aiudi and, from the audience, conservation commission member Steve Jones wanted more information on the grading system Basham used to decide what trees should go.

Chairman Savannah Clark said she will ask Town Manager Aaron Miller about having the work redone to meet the concerns.

Committee members briefly discussed three other matters.

— Clark said select board members seem to favor adding insurance to cover town volunteers, like residents who inspect and help maintain cemeteries, in the 2025-26 budget.
— Committee members are not sure whether they are allowed to spend interest from cemetery funds, with select board approval. Apparently the auditor has said no; but Aiudi and Jenney are sure interest has been spent in the past. Clark will clarify with Miller.
— Committee member Jody Kundreskas reported that stone restorer Joseph Ferrannini, of Grave Stone Matters, in Hoosick Falls, New York, will be in Vassalboro from July 10 to July 13. Committee members will decide later where to ask him to apply his expertise.

The next Vassalboro Cemetery Committee meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday, April 21.

Vassalboro select board discusses town recreational program future

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro select board members began their March 20 meeting with a short discussion of the town recreation program, since resident Michael Phelps had attended the meeting to hear about it.

Now that Community Program Director Karen Stankis has resigned, town officials are pondering whether to continue the program they approved in 2022, go back to youth sports only or develop a new option.

Select board members proposed continued discussion at the March 25 budget committee meeting and at their April 3 meeting. They agreed on one point: cooperation between the town and the school, which has included sharing facilities, ought to continue.

The major items on the March 20 agenda were continued discussion of the town’s personnel policy and a review of the fund policy.

The personnel policy, which has been discussed at multiple meetings since the spring of 2024, will be reviewed once more and forwarded to the town’s attorney for his review. Board members hope to have it ready to take effect July 1.

Discussion of the fund policy included consideration of the shortage of available money in late summer: Vassalboro’s quarterly taxes are paid at the end of September, November, February and April, leaving a five-month gap.

Town Manager Aaron Miller does not expect any financial problems before the September taxes come in.

Board members considered briefly rearranging tax due dates. Action, if any, was postponed until another discussion at the April 3 select board meeting, with auditor Ron Smith, head of RHR Smith & Company, invited to participate if he is available.

In other business March 20:

Board members unanimously approved closing the transfer station on Easter Sunday, April 20.
Miller said the technician who planned to make repairs to the town office boiler advised replacing it instead, as he feared one repair would merely lead to another and another. Miller will seek quotes for a replacement.

The next regular Vassalboro select board meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Thursday, April 3.

VASSALBORO: Revised plan for safer transfer station facilities expected

by Mary Grow

At their March 20 meeting, Vassalboro transfer station task force members decided on new instructions for engineer Jeff Senders that they expect will give them a revised plan for a safer facility.

The group, with select board members and transfer station staff, have talked for several years about redesigning the Lombard Dam Road facility to eliminate the need for residents to back up to a hopper to dispose of trash.

An earlier design that included a drive-through building has been replaced by a simpler idea, providing covered hoppers that residents can drive alongside. Other proposed improvements include covering all waste containers against rain and snow; minimizing two-way traffic; and, if station manager Adam Daoust has his preference, putting cement pads as bases wherever any form of disposables is stored.

Daoust and task force members discussed installing scales, to weigh things like demolition debris. Currently, according to the town website, disposal of demolition debris requires a demolition permit from the transfer station, with fees based on volume.

Earlier recommended improvements were designed by Waterville-based A. E. Hodsdon engineers. In November 2023, Vassalboro select board members sought bids to build a 60-by-80-foot Hodsdon-designed metal building at the transfer station.

Receiving only one bid, from SENDERS science, engineering and construction in Camden, they postponed action. Company head Jeff Sanders visited the facility in January 2024; at a Jan. 25 meeting, select board members contracted with the company to redesign the facility, help seek grants to fund the work and get required permits.

By November 2024, Senders had submitted three versions of a plan, each with a roofed, open-ended drive-through area and separate entrances from and exits onto Lombard Dam Road. New station manager Adam Daoust told select board members at a Nov. 13 meeting the plan seemed overly complicated; he recommended adding covers over two hoppers and leaving the two-way driveway.

Meanwhile, the town had foreclosed on a property adjoining the transfer station on the east, opening the possibility of buying land for a future expansion. This possibility is complicated by a woods road running off Lombard Dam Road, which may or may not have a legal right-of-way, and by wetlands and a small stream on the property.

Town Manager Aaron Miller has had the adjacent property surveyed. At the March 20 task force meeting he said he had hired an appraiser to value it.

Under current state law on foreclosed properties, the town is allowed to recoup all costs associated with the property before paying the heirs what is left of the appraised value – or, perhaps, buying some land from them.

Before the meeting, task force member Douglas Phillips had visited China’s transfer station. He approved of the small drive-by bins provided for residents with only a few bags of trash and recommended Vassalboro find space for similar bins, if emptying them frequently will not be too much extra work for Daoust and his assistant.

Phillips said China staff use a forklift to empty the bins; the Vassalboro facility doesn’t have one. No one knew whether all available types of small bins require a forklift.

Task force members and Daoust came up with a list of what they want Senders to include in a revised plan. They asked for three options, as with the previous Senders plan.

The next task force meeting will be scheduled after Miller finds out how much time Senders needs to provide the requested plans.

Update on plans for improving water quality on Webber Pond

Webber Pond.

Watershed survey planned for May 15 – 17

submitted by Susan Traylor
Webber Pond Association, Chairman of the Water Quality Committee

Given worsening water quality in recent years that has resulted in nuisance algal blooms (including harmful cyanobacteria), in 2024 a group of local community volunteers sought and obtained state and federal grants, along with support from the towns of Vassalboro and Windsor, the China Region Lakes Alliance, the Sage Foundation, and Lake Stewards of Maine/Maine Lakes to develop an updated Watershed Based Management Plan (WBMP) for Webber, Three mile and Three cornered ponds. This “Tri-WBMP” will include a 10-year “Action Plan” to help restore water quality in all three ponds.

A WBMP is an important planning tool for restoring water quality in lakes that don’t meet state/federal water quality standards. Webber Pond and Threemile Pond are listed as “impaired lakes” because they don’t meet state standards, while upstream Threecornered Pond is listed as “threatened” based on available water quality data. The previous WBMP for these interconnected ponds expired in 2015. We need an updated WBMP to request state and federal funding for restoration efforts. Water and sediment sampling and analysis are underway to update our understanding of the cause of the recent water quality declines, and to assist with developing science-based recommendations to restore (Webber and Three mile) and to protect (Three cornered) water quality.

In addition to sampling, a watershed survey will be completed this spring on all 3 ponds to identify areas where polluted stormwater runoff (primarily soil erosion) is resulting in excess phosphorus in the ponds. Excess phosphorus is the primary cause for severe algae and cyanobacteria blooms.

Volunteers are needed to assist with the watershed survey planned for May 15-17, 2025. We will be providing more information for potential volunteers in the next couple of weeks. The survey is non-regulatory and participation is voluntary. Landowners do not need to be present for the survey, but they are welcome to participate and ask questions.

With the help of a team of experts, the data collected will be analyzed and used to develop a list of recommendations and estimated costs for improving water quality over the next 10 years. The Tri-WBMP should be completed by late 2026/early 2027. Approval of the plan will allow local project partners to seek additional state and federal funding to implement recommendations. The ultimate goal is to improve water quality, prevent toxic algae blooms and enhance recreational use of the ponds, with benefits to property values and the local economy.

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Vassalboro Ctr. / Getchell’s Corner

Getchell’s Corner church (Photo by Roland D. Hallee)

by Mary Grow

When Henry Kingsbury started his detailed description of the Town of Vassalboro in his 1892 Kennebec County history, he named six “post hamlets” and five “prominent localities.” Each post village was also a “manufacturing and mercantile” center, he said.

The first village he named was then called Vassalboro, or Vassalboro Corners, and had been first known as Getchell’s Corner or Corners, recognizing early settler John Getchell Sr., and his sons. Alternate spellings of Getchell include Getchel, Gatchell and Gatchel.

Kingsbury wrote that John Getchell bought the area where in 1892 the stores stood, and his sons “were scattered above and below, along the river road.”

(The river road was what is now a section of old Route 201, called Dunham Road, along the Kennebec. Current Route 201 is farther from the river; the old road roughly parallels it for about a mile. Dunham Road forms a four-way intersection with Station Hill Road, which ends at the river, and a short connector between old and new roads named Alpine Street.

Getchell sons Kingsbury named were Abial (or Abiel), who settled south of the blacksmith named Stephen Hanson, and John Jr., on the east bank of Southwick Brook. (Contemporary maps name neither of the small brooks that flow into the Kennebec north and south of the four corners.)

Kingsbury also mentioned a brook “back of Isaiah Gifford’s residence” that might have been Southwick Brook. He wrote that there was “evidence” the brook had been dammed and “tradition” telling of a pail factory and an ashery that Jacob Southwick had run.

(An ashery, Wikipedia says, “converts hardwood ashes into lye, potash, or pearlash,” all ingredients in soap-making.)

These factories must have been well above the Kennebec, because Kingsbury said Southwick ran a plaster mill downstream from them on the east – inland – side of the river road.

At the mouth of the brook, Kingsbury wrote, John Getchell’s sawmill had “gone into decay” before 1816. In 1816, Southwick and Prince Hopkins built a large tannery near the remains of the mill that apparently ran until Southwick died in 1855.

(Jacob Southwick’s brother, Dr. Edward Southwick, built a tannery in North Vassalboro that was in 1820 the largest in New England, according to both Kingsbury and Alma Pierce Robbins, in her 1971 Vassalboro history.)

There were two other tanneries at Getchell’s Corner, Thomas Frye’s “near Philip Hanson’s barn, in the rear of the hotel” and Thomas or Ebenezer Frye’s in an old currier’s shop on what was in 1892 George S. Smiley’s lot.

FamilySearch says Thomas and Ebenezer Frye or Fry were brothers, two of Joshua and Mary (Jones) Frye’s eight children born in Vassalboro between 1790 and 1806.

The Corner area hosted at least four 19th-century boot and shoe factories, Kingsbury said. Franklin D. Dunham started the biggest one about 1835, in a building that used to be in front of his 1892 house; when it burned, he moved into a building south of the post office, where the business ran until 1879 or 1880.

Dunham sometimes had as many as 100 people working in his factory. “He turned the business into the manufacture of brogans prior to and during the civil war,” Kingsbury wrote.

(Wikipedia defines a brogan as a heavy, ankle-high boot and says brogans or something similar were common military footwear, including for both Civil War armies.)

Getchell’s Corner Grange (Photo by Roland D. Hallee)

The other boot and/or shoe factories were owned by Joseph Estes, in the building that was in 1892 the Grange Hall, contemporaneously with Dunham and sometimes employing 50 hands; by Caleb Nichols, above his store; and by William Tarbell, in a building “on the green next north of the Congregational chapel” that had been moved and converted to a stable by 1892.

There were also at least two hat shops and one clock-maker (Oliver Brackett) at Getchell’s Corner.

By 1892, the major industry was the Portland Canning Company’s 1882 factory that processed primarily corn and apples – in 1890, “over 6,000 one-gallon cans of apples,” Kingsbury wrote.

Kingsbury did not date the first store in the settlement, which he said John Getchell Sr., ran. A “corner store” still operating in 1892 was built “early in the century as a double store,” shared by Joseph R. Abbott and Daniel Marshall. It went through a succession of owners, including Southwick and Hopkins, and Nichols in partnership with one of the Prescotts, Josiah or E. W.

The hotel mentioned above Kingsbury said was Vassalboro’s first. Daniel Marshall opened the building that became the hotel as a tavern “soon after the war of 1812,” and it went through a series of owners and was still open in 1892.

When daily stagecoaches between Augusta and Bangor ran through Vassalboro, the hotel was a stop where horses were changed, Kingsbury said.

“Tradition” said there was another hotel in a house that burned in 1830, “probably the house in which John Getchell had the first store.”

So many businesses required a local bank, Kingsbury wrote, and in the 1820s the Southwicks organized Negeumkeag Bank, which ran until around 1840, with Dr. Edward Southwick (Jacob’s brother, Kingsbury said) president. Kingsbury said the bank was capitalized at $50,000, and quoted a Jan. 1, 1829, state report that “showed its bills in circulation to be $51, 615.”

After the bank closed, Kingsbury said, the Southwicks moved “the queer old strap, wrought iron safe” to Burnham, where they ran a tannery.

The Getchell’s Corner post office opened April 1, 1796, Kingsbury said. The first postmaster was Jeremiah Fairfield; his successors to 1892 included Abial Getchell (March 25, 1818 – Jan. 14, 1826) and his son, Goodloe H. Getchell (Sept. 23, 1845 – March 2, 1852). Thomas Frye served as postmaster for two short periods in the early 1840s and early 1850s.

Writing in 1971, Robbins said there had been “many changes in both buildings and location,” but there was still a post office at Vassalboro “now more familiarly called Getchell’s Corner,” as there is in March 2025.

Robbins wrote that Miss A. Howard founded Vassalboro Academy, a school for young ladies, at “Vassalboro Corner” in April 1837. Kingsbury said the school building was “used for religious as well as secular instruction.” The Methodists bought it in 1868, after meeting there for several years, and made it into a Methodist church. Robbins said it remained in use “until the fire in 1886 [probably an error for 1896; see below].”

The first Vassalboro Masonic Lodge was organized at Getchell’s Corner in June 1827; it moved to North Vassalboro in 1870. After the Civil War, Kingsbury described a second Masonic Lodge, Negeumkeag, established in 1872, which in 1892 “owns its hall and numbers forty-six members.”

Kennebec Lodge, I.O.O.F. (International Order of Odd Fellows) started in December 1889, using the Masonic Hall.

Oak Grove Grange, founded in North Vassalboro in May 1875, moved to Getchell’s Corner (date unspecified) and in 1892 had its hall “a few rods south of the Congregational chapel,” with a store the Grangers had opened in November, 1889.

Houses mingled with the other buildings, and farms surrounded the business and residential center. The 1856 map of Vassalboro shows more than three dozen buildings at Getchell’s Corner; by 1879, there were fewer, but the area was still designated Vassalboro Corner.

In 1850, Robbins said, the railroad was run along the east side of the Kennebec from Augusta to Winslow, mostly at first to serve John D. Lang’s woolen mill, in North Vassalboro. By 1861, passengers as well as freight were important; Robbins wrote of residents in horse-drawn buggies meeting summer people arriving at the Riverside and Vassalboro (Getchell’s Corner) stations.

According to Robbins, the railroad may have been the village’s undoing. “It was never proved without a doubt that the sparks from the Maine Central engines set the fire that burned nearly the whole little village of Getchell’s Corner,” she wrote.

This event was in 1896 – Robbins gave no exact date. Losses included the hotel and post office, businesses and stores and about 30 houses. Getchell’s Corner never recovered.

Captain John Getchell Sr.

The FamilySearch website says Capt. John Getchell, Sr., was born in South Berwick on Feb. 23, 1747 (Ancestry says around 1741). On Nov. 21, 1766, he married Sarah Cloutman (1745 or 1746 – 1835) in Kennebec (County?); the couple had at least four sons and a daughter. He died Oct. 14, 1818, in Vassalboro.

The sons, according to this source, were William (1773 – ?); John Jr. (1777 – 1853); Abiel J. (1779 – 1855); and Josiah (1796 – 1896). Daughter Susan was born in 1782 and died in 1815.

FamilySearch has little information about William.

John Jr. was born in Vassalboro; he married Elizabeth Bunker on April 5, 1795, in Vassalboro, and they had at least five daughters between 1797 and 1814. He is buried in Vassalboro.

Abiel married Letitia Harwood on Jan. 20, 1802. Three of their eight children, Captain John and Sarah’s grandchildren, stayed in Vassalboro, to wit:

— Goodloe Howard Getchell, born Nov. 23, 1802, in Vassalboro and died there in 1875.
— Mary Ann, born in Vassalboro July 3, 1804, married Samuel Gibson and died in Vassalboro, aged 99.
— Abiel John, born in Wiscasset in 1814, but lived in Vassalboro in 1850 and was buried there after his death in 1861 (as was his widow, the former Ann Plummer, who died Jan. 23, 1906).

Of Abiel and Letitia’s other children, Horatio was born April 22, 1807, and died July 24 the same year; Lucretia Harwood, married in 1841, was in Iowa in 1870 and died in 1888 in Arkansas; Alexander Hamilton lived in Wales, Monmouth and Greene; Hiram was born in Monmouth and later lived (and died) in Brownfield; and Hannah Margarete Cochran was born in Sebec and died there in 1861.

Josiah Getchell, Captain John and Sarah’s youngest son, was born in Brunswick, FamilySearch says, and seems to have had no Vassalboro connection.

WikiTree offers a completely different John Getchell, also called Gatchell and Getceell, born in Scarboro April 25, 1719. On Nov. 7, 1742, this John Getchell married Mary Barbour, of Brunswick. He served in the Revolutionary War.

John and Mary’s two daughters and four sons (Dorcas, Samuel, John, Mary, Hugh and Robert) were born between February 1743 and September 1754. WikiTree gives no birthplaces.

It does, however, say that on June 23, 1768, Getchell bought from the Kennebec Proprietors land on the east side of the Kennebec (“in what is now known as Sidney” – an error, the Sidney that separated from Vassalboro on Jan. 30, 1792, was and is on the west side).

WikiTree continues about this John Getchell: “He held many important town offices in Vassalboro, being the largest land-owner there, and residing at what is still known as Getchell’s Corner.”

To add to the confusion, some maps locate Getchell’s Corner farther south in Vassalboro, near Taber Hill; and on-line sources offer an Elihu or Eliha Getchell, Sr. (1766 -1838), who (according to FamilySearch) was born in Berwick; married Mary Savage in 1787, in Hallowell, and had at least four sons and four daughters; lived in Vassalboro “for about 30 years”; and died in Medford. The Ancestry website connects this Getchell family with Tabor (Ancestry’s spelling) Hill in Vassalboro.

Main sources:

Kingsbury, Henry D., ed., Illustrated History of Kennebec County Maine 1625-1892 (1892).
Robbins, Alma Pierce, History of Vassalborough Maine 1771 1971 n.d. (1971)

Websites, miscellaneous.

CORRECTION: This article has corrected a reference (third paragraph) from the print edition which referred to Route 202 when it should have referred to Route 201 instead. Thank you to the reader who caught the error.

Endicott College announces local dean’s list students

Endicott College, in Beverly, Massachusetts, has announced its Fall 2024 dean’s list students.

The following students have met the requirements:

Augusta

Oliver Parker, English, Katherine Parker and Walter Parker;

China

Emily Clark, Nursing, Stacy Clark and Christopher Clark;

China Village

Hailey Hobart, Education, Deborah Hobart and Daniel Hobart

Jefferson

Elizabeth Greenleaf, Liberal Studies;

Winslow

Alexi ONeil, English, Michelle O’Neil.

WPI announces Fall dean’s list

A total of 2,393 undergraduate students at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), in Worcester, Massachusetts, were named to the university’s fall 2024 dean’s list.

The following students were named to the dean’s list for Fall 2024:

Kaitlyn Henry, of Augusta, class of 2028, majoring in Computer Science;

Lily Ker, of Waterville, class of 2027, majoring in Interactive Media and Game Development;

Emiko Peck, of Waterville, class of 2028, majoring in Mathematical Sciences.

Erosion control discussed by conservation commission

Janice Clowes, president of the Vassalboro Historical Society, captured the silhouette of the monument in the park, next to the historical society building.

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro Conservation Commission members continued discussion of plantings in Monument Park, in East Vassalboro, at their Feb. 12 meeting. As at previous meetings in December 2024 and January 2025, they came to no decision (see the Jan. 2 issue of The Town Line, p. 2, and the Jan. 16 issue, p. 3).

Their goals are to improve erosion control along China Lake and Outlet Stream, while preserving views of the lake, and to create a demonstration erosion control garden. Issues are what to plant, where to plant and how to pay for plantings and maintenance.

They decided they should visit the area before making a decision, and scheduled a meeting there at 5 p.m., Tuesday, March 25.

Another ongoing discussion was about trees in China cemeteries, a topic that requires cooperation with the town’s cemetery committee. Commission Chairman Holly Weidner plans to confirm with Town Manager Aaron Miller that the plan he proposed last fall remains in effect.

In new business Feb. 12, Weidner reported briefly on meetings she attended about the TriWatershed Management Plan, which includes Webber Pond, Three Mile Pond and Three Cornered Pond; and about China Region Lakes Alliance plans.

CRLA is currently without an executive director. Weidner said board members are interviewing candidates to oversee the summer 2025 Courtesy Boat Inspection (CBI) program, intended to protect regional lakes from invasive species.

Weidner proposed Conservation Commission members review the town ordinance that established the commission and defined its duties, to make sure the document is up to date and to consider how well they are implementing it.

The commission is allowed to have seven members; it now has six, Weidner observed.

The next Vassalboro Conservation Commission meeting is scheduled for Wednesday evening, April 9.