Sen. Pouliot visits with Vassalboro select board

by Mary Grow

Matt Pouliot

District #15 State Senator Matthew Pouliot visited the Vassalboro select board’s Feb. 16 meeting to speak briefly about legislative issues and to ask what’s important to Vassalboro officials and residents.

He began with the state-wide need for affordable housing and the problem of balancing responses to state issues with local control. The example he gave is the 2022 Maine law allowing auxiliary housing and duplexes on lots zoned for single-family residences.

In response to an earlier email from board member Chris French about the difficulty of finding licensed codes enforcement officers, Pouliot said legislators have no proposals yet, but there is talk of an incentive to Maine community colleges to provide training.

Board members, town manager Aaron Miller and audience members told the senator local issues include upgrading the transfer station (Miller suggested a state infrastructure grant); municipal staffing, as town employees retire or deal with health issues; and ambulance service, as Delta Ambulance joins others in Maine in asking municipalities for an annual payment.

Pouliot said one bill about ambulance service has been introduced.

He added that he has introduced legislation about siting solar farms. The purpose, he said, is to encourage solar development on sites like capped landfills, ledgy areas and PFAS-contaminated land, rather than on good farmland.

Pouliot offered his email address, mpouliot57@gmail.com, and said he welcomes constituents’ emails.

Select board members’ main decision Feb. 16 was to create a new transfer station task force and appoint its seven members: Dan Bradstreet, Amy Davidoff, select board member French, Doug Phillips, Zach Smith, Maggie Stickle and Jim Webb.

Miller and transfer station manager George Hamar will be advisors to the task force. French said the group will examine facility operations and equipment, recycling options, grant opportunities and other relevant topics.

Vassalboro’s trash hauling contract was on the Feb. 16 agenda; the current contract expires in August, select board chairman Barbara Redmond said. Miller had two quotes. Action was postponed to the board’s March 16 meeting; Miller asked Hamar to see if he could get figures from additional haulers.

Also postponed for a month were further discussion of:

  • Changing the town office entrance to make it handicapped-accessible, while Miller gets more information on alternatives;
  • Bids for a generator at the town office, until other budget figures become more definite;
  • Revisions to Vassalboro’s Marijuana Business Ordinance, until Miller and board members make sure it matches state law and consider whether to recommend additional changes; and
  • Revisions to Vassalboro’s No Parking Ordinance, pending consultation with the state Department of Transportation.

Further discussion of the proposed 2023-24 town budget is scheduled for a March 9 meeting.

In other business, selectmen unanimously authorized road foreman Eugene Field to buy a $9,000 bush hog for roadside mowing, with the intention of adding to the 2023-24 budget another $9,000 for the currently-unavailable flail mower Field said does a better job. Field reported he was unable to find a roadside mower to rent this summer.

Select board members have canceled their March 2 meeting, because only one member was available that evening. The March 9 and March 16 meetings are scheduled to start at 6 p.m. in the town office meeting room.

Vassalboro planners approve re-use of country store

East Vassalboro Country Store

by Mary Grow

At their Feb. 7 meeting, Vassalboro Planning Board members approved reuse of the East Vassalboro Country Store; continued discussion of the proposed solar ordinance; postponed two applications on their agenda because applicants were not present; and rejected an unusual request to pre-approve a new business.

Tim and Heather Dutton applied in January to reopen the store at the East Vassalboro four corners, initially as a pizza and sandwich shop (see the Jan. 12 issue of The Town Line, p. 3). Board members asked for additional information, which they received before the Feb. 7 meeting.

Parking was a major issue. Dutton’s revised plan shows three parallel parking spaces on Main Street (Route 32) in front of the store and head-in parking off Bog Road behind the store.

Board members found the proposal meets all town ordinance criteria and approved it unanimously and without conditions.

They spent almost an hour rediscussing the draft solar ordinance, intended to become a subsection of Vassalboro’s Site Review Ordinance.

Board member Douglas Phillips had reorganized suggestions from earlier discussions and incorporated the town attorney’s comments – “she thought it was pretty good,” he said.

After discussion of the time-line to the June town meeting (the complete warrant must be ready by Thursday, April 27, and the written-ballot voting that will include local elections and a vote on the ordinance is scheduled for Tuesday, June 13), board members scheduled a public hearing on the draft ordinance for 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 28.

Board chairman Virginia Brackett said the draft will be on the town website as soon as possible.

Several members of the Main Street Maine coalition, the group formed after a commercial solar project was proposed for an area between Route 32 (Main Street) and Outlet Stream north of Duratherm Window Company, asked when board members would heed their concerns.

Board members pointed out they had made several additions to the ordinance that the group had suggested. They will take testimony at the public hearing and can make changes that they consider appropriate after the hearing, Brackett said.

She and Phillips reminded the group that the ordinance, if approved by voters, will govern all future commercial solar developments in town; it is not site-specific. Testimony at the hearing about specific characteristics of the Route 32 area will be irrelevant.

North Vassalboro resident Ray Breton questioned whether requirements, like buffering around a solar array, will be enforced. The solar farm on Route 32 in East Vassalboro is supposed to be screened from the road by trees, he said.

Owner Bernie Welch said he planted trees; “it takes a while for them to grow.”

Main Street Maine members repeated their complaints to select board members at the end of that board’s Feb. 9 meeting. Jessica Murray, an environmental consultant and Vassalboro resident, talked again about wetlands protection, setbacks and other issues in the ordinance. Breton told select board members, “I feel like we’re going nowhere with the planning board.”

Select board chairman Barbara Redmond reminded the group that Vassalboro has no zoning ordinance to limit placement of commercial developments and recommended they bring their concerns to the Feb. 28 public hearing.

Miller offered them copies of the current draft of the ordinance.

The applications planning board members postponed on Feb. 7 were from James Ruby to open an auto inspection and light repair business in his garage; and from SunVest Solar to extend its permit for a solar farm on Webber Pond Road, and, codes officer Bob Geaghan said, to reduce power output.

Board members found that SunVest had received a first six-months’ extension in September 2022, because Central Maine Power Company had not acted on its application to connect to the grid.

Board members were not sure if the moratorium on solar projects Vassalboro voters approved in November 2022 allows them to do anything for SunVest. Phillips and Dan Bradstreet recommended seeking legal advice.

If the board can consider SunVest’s request, Brackett and Paul Mitnik want a written application with more information.

The final request at the Feb. 7 meeting was from a realtor with a client who wants to buy a Route 3 property, if he is guaranteed he can open a fencing company there. He also wants to add a mobile home – there is one on the lot already – with a well and septic system.

Brackett said the board cannot guarantee approval without reviewing an application. She advised the realtor to have his client provide as much detail as possible about his plans for a pre-application conference, which can be on the planning board’s March 7 agenda if the client is ready in time.

Vassalboro school board discusses various topics

Vassalboro Community School (contributed photo)

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro school board members discussed various topics at their Feb. 14 meeting, excluding the 2023-24 budget. The budget will be the topic of a Tuesday, March 7, workshop, set to begin at 5:30 p.m. instead of the usual 6 p.m. at Vassalboro Community School (VCS).

Principal Ira Michaud reported on both ends of the student enrollment. Eighth-graders made their annual visits to high schools they might attend – Erskine Academy in South China, Waterville and Winslow high schools – and are excited about their prospects. Screening for next year’s kindergarten and pre-kindergarten classes is scheduled for May 3 through 5.

Michaud commented that since Feb. 14 was celebrated both as Valentine’s Day and as the 100th day of school this year, “to say the energy was boiling over is an understatement.”

On another in-school note, Superintendent Alan Pfeiffer reported that “Our lost and found is robust.” If students or parents do not claim their missing items by March 31, they will be donated to charity; board chairman Jolene Gamage recommended sending them to the Olde Mill, in North Vassalboro.

Pfeiffer said the school received a $10,000 gift willed by the late Mary Vannah, of Vassalboro. He recommended a committee be set up to recommend use of the money.

The overall budget remains in good shape, finance director Paula Pooler reported, and the school meals program, which ran in the red for several years, has a surplus of over $60,000 so far this school year.

During the extremely cold spell Feb. 3 and 4, water pipes froze and burst in three places, Pfeiffer said. Flooding was confined to the kitchen, where drains got rid of the water. After an immediate repair, more work was to be done over the February vacation week (Feb. 20 – 24), with the goal of preventing a recurrence.

Assistant principal Tabitha Brewer shared information on truancy and absenteeism. Attendance has not recovered fully from the covid-caused turmoil, but is improving, she said; school staff work with families to get students back to classes.

Pfeiffer and Michaud both praised the VCS Parent-Teacher Organization.

A VCS parent asked about the school’s Gifted and Talented Program. Pfeiffer recommended she talk with Brewer and curriculum coordinator Carol Kiesman.

Board members accepted the resignation of kitchen manager Mary Dumont. She and art teacher Susan Briggs are retiring at the end of the school year; Pfeiffer said both positions will be advertised soon.

Pfeiffer expects to need to schedule another budget-focused meeting after the March 7 one. The next regular Vassalboro school board meeting will be the evening of March 21.

2023 Vassalboro ice fishing derby prizes

2023 Vassalboro ice fishing derby prizes

*$300 North Country Rivers White Water Rafting trip for two, won by Mary Beth Sica.

*$260 Natanis Golf Course Tomahawk Course & Cart (for 4), won by Carol T.

*$220 Natanis Golf Course Arrow Course & Cart (for 4), won by Lori London.

*$150 donated by Reliance Equipment won by Duane Farnham who donated it back to the VBA.

*$122 DeWalt DCB102 charger from Winslow Supply won by Chase Prye.

*$100+ 24M-6 Vehicle battery; carrier, terminal combo wrench, terminal protection kit, and ice scraper & snow broom from 201 Battery, Tire & Service won by Alan Johnston.

*$100 donated by Future Forests won by Scott Folsom.

*Two $50 prizes donated by Maine Savings Federal Credit Union won by Chris Thompson and the Blactentons.

*Miracle II Product ($18) from Sandy’s Magic Scissors won by Candy Manacchio.

*$50 from Maine Adirondack Chairs won by Peter Leach.

*$30 from Curly’s Carpentry won by Jake Swan.

*$50 from Pleau’s Market won by Raymond Maccacchio.

*Two $25 cards from Hussey’s General Store won by Noah Rau and Carol T.

*Two $50 cards from Central Maine Motors won by Donald Breton and Carol T.

*$20 Kat’s Creations Penguin won by Carol T.

*$10 Mistletoad Shop flower vase won by Gidney.

*$10 Mistletoad Shop small crate won by Sue Vashon.

*$10 Pam Butterfield’s Sloth quilted lap blanket won by Yvette LaChance.

Vassalboro select board takes first look at 2023-24 budget

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro select board members held their annual preliminary budget review the afternoon of Feb. 7, proposing several new expenditures and letting new town manager Aaron Miller show how quickly he is mastering the finances of a town he’s served only since Jan. 2.

No decisions were made on 2023-24 budget recommendations. Discussions continued at a Feb. 9 meeting and will continue at future meetings, with the budget committee scheduled to begin its deliberations in mid-March.

Voters make spending decisions at the annual open town meeting, set for 6:30 p.m. Monday, June 5. Annual elections and referendum voting will be Tuesday, June 13.

Select board chairman Barbara Redmond, who currently does not intend to run for another three-year term, proposed a minor and so far undefined cost increase: raising select board members’ pay from the current $1,100 a year. They put in “a lot of hours,” she said.

Chris French, who will be senior board member and presumably chairman in 2023-24, agreed. More generous compensation might encourage more younger people to run for the board, he suggested.

Town employees’ salaries were discussed in connection with the administration, transfer station and public works budgets, as talk bounced back and forth among those departments. Feb. 7 proposals were for a raise of either eight or 10 percent, varying from one department to another, each figure including a two percent step increase for continuing employees.

French and Miller believe the town needs two more employees, one full-time and one part-time.

French wants a new person who would work for public works and the transfer station, as needed – for example, driving a plow truck during storms and making sure the transfer station always has two attendants, as a safety measure.

Miller would like another town office employee who would regularly take over counter duties during lunch hour, would be available when an employee was on vacation or out sick and would be trained to fill in if an employee left.

Budget committee member Douglas Phillips asked from the audience if this employee could be shared with the school department.

There was agreement that both ideas need additional discussion, including with other department heads involved. Meanwhile, Miller will get cost estimates.

Other topics raised included:

  • For the town office, the remodeled entry previously discussed (see the Feb. 9 issue of The Town Line, p. 3); Miller’s proposal to redo the lobby floors, at an estimated costs of $1,600, and add water-absorbent mats at the entrance; a new copier, with Miller and board member Rick Denico, Jr., recommending buying over leasing; and French’s proposal that the select board “go electronic,” working from laptops instead of paper.
  • For public works, French’s proposal to start a reserve fund for the next new truck (Miller reported that the newest one arrived Feb. 8); and, briefly mentioned under the heading of longer-term capital improvements, a new trailer, a new truck and an addition to the public works garage.
  • For the transfer station, the increase in tipping (disposal at a landfill) fees that took effect Jan. 1 (more than $4 a ton); and the hauling contract that expires in the coming budget year, leaving the future price uncertain.

Redmond said police chief Mark Brown has asked for 20 hours a week instead of 15, with a commensurate pay increase; and animal control officer Peter Nerber has asked for $300 a month instead of $250.

Vassalboro fire chief Walker Thompson talked about the volunteer fire department’s needs and about funding sources other than local taxes, like grant possibilities.

Thompson said he sees no need for a new firetruck for at least another five years, with luck. The most recent purchase will be paid off in three years, select board members figured; the annual payment is almost $72,000.

Miller commented that Vassalboro has only that one debt payment; not all Maine towns are in such good financial shape.

The chief would like a new boat. The current one, a 14-foot aluminum fishing boat, was a gift from Winslow in the 1990s; Thompson recommended a new boat designed for its proposed use. The old one, which has a new motor and a good trailer, could be sold; he expected it would appeal to a fisherman.

Thompson told select board members he hopes to earn a SHAPE (Safety and Health Award for Public Employers) award from the Department of Labor, which would require “a ton of work” but would make firefighters safer and reduce insurance costs. Vassalboro’s department is already very good and well organized, he said, but the goal is still worthwhile.

He also recommended doubling the fire chief’s $1,600 stipend (whether or not he is re-elected chief next month), citing his many duties and responsibilities besides fighting fires. French asked for an estimate of time spent on fire department business.

* * * * * *

Vassalboro select board members held their second budget discussion the evening of Feb. 9, adding almost three hours after Tuesday’s two-plus hours and still leaving major issues undecided.

A lack of information delayed some decisions. For example, town manager Aaron Miller is waiting to hear from the school department about a joint bid for diesel fuel, and he needed to ask First Responders’ chief Daniel Mayotte some budget questions.

Board members also need to reconcile differing opinions. How large an increase to recommend for town employees’ salaries is a major one.

Looking at a national cost of living increase (COLA) of about 6.5 percent, board chairman Barbara Redmond recommended a two percent step increase plus a four percent COLA for all employees, a 6 percent total. Board member Chris French thought the personnel policy and salary scale the board approved meant a six percent COLA plus a two percent step increase, for a total of eight percent.

Redmond said French’s interpretation would mean if inflation goes back to a negligible level, future annual pay increases would be only two percent. French fears Redmond’s interpretation would make it harder for Vassalboro to compete for employees.

Until salary recommendations are firm, amounts for the town’s share of Social Security and Medicare cannot be determined, as they are percentages of salaries.

Miller tentatively added $9,000 to the administration budget for temporary staff, as an alternative to the part-time position board members discussed two days earlier.

Discussion of the public works department continued after Road Foreman Eugene Field left the meeting to join his crew in dealing with Thursday evening’s snowstorm.

Before he left, Field reported that the new roadside mower ordered last year and due in February might not arrive until November, unless Field will settle for a rotary mower instead of the flail he prefers. Board members will need to discuss whether to budget for contracting out mowing for 2023, if a contractor with free time can still be found.

Field urged appropriating funds to pave Vassalboro’s dead-end gravel roads, as a way to save on future maintenance. Redmond is hesitant to approve the work for 2023-24, hoping paving costs will come down.

The Feb. 9 meeting included a re-review of transfer station issues (the proposed advisory committee, tipping fee increase and hauling contracts) and the police and fire departments (including the request for a new water rescue boat, which Redmond said will be on the Feb. 16 select board agenda).

From the audience, budget committee member Michael Poulin asked about a new item in the draft 2023-24 budget, the request from Delta Ambulance for $65,445, or $15 per resident (according to census data), to continue transporting Vassalboro patients.

The service has made comparable requests to all municipalities it serves. Board members do not know whether if some towns decide not to pay, the remaining towns’ requests will be increased. Miller said he has not heard that any other town has made a decision.

French said Vassalboro has few alternatives. Augusta’s ambulance service would charge more; Winslow’s service is not interested in adding Vassalboro; Waterville has not replied to the inquiry he sent just before their city manager resigned; and it would be extremely expensive for Vassalboro to start its own transport service.

Karen Hatch, Vassalboro’s new community programs director, explained her request for $63,123, an increase of over $9,000 from the current year. She is asking for more hours, and presented a list of proposed program and events.

In addition to the youth sports Vassalboro’s recreation program has sponsored for years, Hatch is adding activities for residents of all ages. Wednesday senior cribbage has started and Thursday evening cribbage is scheduled to be added March 2; Zumba classes at Vassalboro Community School are also to begin in March.

Planned summer events include a music series and a movie series. Hatch is looking for a location for a community garden and is seeking grant funds for an ice rink next winter.

Vassalboro Public Library Director Brian Stanley has asked for additional funds so the library can be open another six hours on Thursday afternoons. Board members want to see a more complete picture of the library’s finances before they discuss the increase.

Vassalboro select board members hold a regular meeting at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 16.

Vassalboro Community School second quarter honor roll (2022)

Vassalboro Community School (contributed photo)

GRADE 8

High honors: Bryson Stratton. Honors: Madison Burns, Peyton Dowe, Xavier Foss, Adalyn Glidden, Kylie Grant, Caspar Hooper, Jack Malcolm, Henry Olson, Noah Pooler, Grady Sounier, Payton Thorndike, and Mackullen Tolentino. Honorable mention: Owen Couture, Ryley Desmond, Eilah Dillaway, Bailey Goforth, Spencer Hughes, Bryella Leighton, Olivia Leonard, Sawyer Livingstone, Alexis Mitton, Josslyn Ouellette, and Kaleb Tolentino.

GRADE 7

High honors: Benjamin Allen, Juliet Boivin, Gabriella Brundage, Zoey Demerchant, Ryleigh French, Drew Lindquist, Caleb Marden, Judson Smith, and Reid Willett. Honors: Tristyn Brown, Lucas Cormier, Paige Perry, Bentley Pooler, Trinity Pooler, Abigail Prickett, Hannah Tobey, and Alana Wade. Honorable mention: Grayson Atwood, Kayden Renna, Brooke Reny, and Leigha Sullivan.

GRADE 6

High honors: Basil Dillaway, Zoe Gaffney, Cheyenne Lizzotte, Agatha Meyer, Emma Robbins, Adrian Sousa, Grace Tobey, Autumn Whitmore, and Ava Woods. Honors: Samuel Bechard, Peyton Bishop, Bryleigh Burns, Emily Clark, Ariyah Doyen, Tess Foster, Fury Frappier, Baylee Fuchswanz, Allyson Gilman, Savannah Judkins, Jack LaPierre, Kaitlyn Lavallee, Mia McLean, Elliot McQuarrie, Jaelyn Moore, Weston Pappas, and Kassidy Proctor. Honorable mention: Mason Brewer, Bayleigh Gorman, Lillyana Krastev, and Kaylee Moulton.

GRADE 5

High honors: Mariah Estabrook, Aubrey Judkins, Lucian Kinrade, Sarina Lacroix, Juliahna Rocque, and Cassidy Rumba. Honors: Zander Austin, Lukas Blais, Twila Cloutier, Xainte Cloutier, Samantha Craig, Riley Fletcher, Aubrey Goforth, Leah Hyden, Landon Lagasse, Isaac Leonard, Arianna Muzerolle, Olivia Perry, Elliott Rafuse, Charles Stein, Haven Trainor, Lillian Whitmore, and Cameron Willett. Honorable mention: Aliyah Anthony, Jayson Booker, Grace Clark, Kaylee Colfer, Wyatt Devoe, Brandon Fortin, Camden Foster, Dawson Frazer, Chanse Hartford, Jaxson Presti, and Isaiah Smith.

GRADE 4

High honors: Alexander Bailey, Hunter Brown, Kamdyn Couture, Braiden Crommett, Cooper Grant, Simon Olson, Landon Quint, Willa Rafuse, Alexis Reed, and Robert Wade. Honors: Ryder Austin, Rylee Boucher, Maverick Brewer, Reese Chechowitz, Chase Fay, Ashlynn Hamlin, Avery Hamlin, Sophia-Lynn Howard, Tanner Hughes, Kendall Karlsson, Aria Lathrop, Brooklyn Leach, Landon Lindquist, Jackson Robichaud, Keegan Robinson, Christopher Santiago, and Asher Smith. Honorable mention: Molly Dearborn, Levi Demerchant, Liam Dowe, Hunter Green, Gabriel Tucker, and Brady Waldeck.

GRADE 3

High honors: Freya Caison, Camden Desmond, Tucker Lizzotte, Evelyn Meyer, Sawyer Plossay, Oliver Sugden, Alivia Twitchell, and Mayla Wilson. Honors: Parker Bouchard, Titus Caruthers, Parker Estabrook, Marley Field, Emma Freeman, Norah French, Henry Gray, Olivia Hartford, Brayden Lang-Knights, Finn Malloy, Bryson McKay, Gage Nason, Preston Richmond, Raegin Rodgers, Trenten Theobald, Roman Wentworth, Sawyer Weston, Haley Witham, and Alivia Woods. Honorable mention: Ember Irwin and Maksim Lacroix.

Vassalboro select board discusses improvements to town office, other on-going issues

by Mary Grow

At their Feb. 2 meeting, Vassalboro select board members continued discussion of better outside lighting and handicapped accessible front doors at the town office; improvements at the transfer station; and other, mostly on-going, issues.

They made a decision on the town office lighting, and expressed approval of Ben Gidney’s suggestion regarding parking at the East Vassalboro four corners.

Town Manager Aaron Miller reported, and board members unanimously accepted, a price quote from AMP Electric, LLC, of Augusta: $2,100 for new outside lighting on the town office building, plus $500 to install electrical connections so the new door controls can be plugged in.

Mindful of neighbors, Miller said the lights will be shielded, downward-directed and on timers.

The manager had two bids for handicapped buttons at the front door, for $5,300 and $5,800. Board and audience members discussed maneuvering a wheelchair into the space between the two outward-opening doors and then into the building and decided it would be difficult, perhaps impossible.

Alternative suggestions included putting the handicapped access at the building’s back door or remodeling the entranceway to lengthen the distance between the doors. Board members postponed action while Miller explores options and costs for the latter proposal.

Gidney raised the East Vassalboro parking issue because Tim and Heather Dutton seek planning board approval to re-open the former East Vassalboro Country Store. The store is in the northwest corner of the intersection of Bog Road (coming from the west), Main Street (Route 32, running north-south) and South Stanley Hill Road (coming from the east).

Gidney, who lives across Bog Road from the store, recommended parking be banned on the south side of the road as far west as Vassalboro Public Library.

If the store re-opens and customers park across Bog Road, he sees two potential safety issues: pedestrians crossing the road, and parked vehicles blocking the view of the stop sign at Main Street.

Dutton had no objection; he has maximized parking on the north side of Bog Road behind the store, he said.

Following the board’s Jan. 19 discussion of the transfer station on Lombard Dam Road (see The Town Line, Jan. 26, p. 3), transfer station manager George Hamar and select board member Chris French developed three proposals for changes. Board members again considered appointing a working group or committee to consider improvements.

They also discussed Vassalboro’s solid waste disposal contract with the waste to energy facility in Hampden that hasn’t operated for almost three years, while waste is landfilled in Norridgewock. They asked Miller to review it to see if the town can exit.

After almost another hour’s discussion of the town personnel policy, board chairman Barbara Redmond said she will review the new draft, looking especially at changes that will have budgetary consequences.

In other business, board members canceled their March 2 meeting, because two of the three will be out of town. They might schedule a special meeting the prior week, depending on how fast 2023-24 budget discussions progress.

Vassalboro Public Library Director Brian Stanley asked if the library could be added to the list of potential recipients of federal ARPA (American Rescue Plan Act) funds developed at the Jan. 19 select board meeting. Redmond said she and Miller will review available funds and requirements for using them.

French praised Vassalboro’s plow drivers for their hard work in recent storms.

Vassalboro select board members had preliminary budget reviews scheduled for Feb. 7 and for 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 9. Their next regular meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 16.

Indiya Clarke named to Wofford College’s fall 2022 dean’s list

Indiya Clarke, of Vassalboro, has been named to the fall 2022 dean’s list at Wofford College, in Spartanburg, South Carolina.

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Weather events

by Mary Grow

James North and Ruby Crosby Wiggin, quoted last week, were not the only local historians to mention the Year without a Summer. And 1816 was not the only unusually cold spell – though it was the longest spell of (fairly) consistently cold weather – recorded in the central Kennebec Valley since the settlers’ arrival.

The 1995 history of Maine, edited by Richard W. Judd, Edwin A. Churchill and Joel W. Eastman, reminds us that 1816 was also known as “Eighteen-hundred-and-froze-to-death.” The authors of the chapter on agriculture (James B. Vickery, Judd, and Sheila McDonald) offered it as an example of what they called Maine’s “fickle” climate.

Part of Alma Pierce Robbins’ history of Vassalboro is a summary of major events by year. 1816 she distinguished as “the year of ‘NO SUMMER,'” when “people planted their gardens with their mittens on!” July was the only month in 1816 when it did not snow in Vassalboro, she wrote.

Her account is contradicted by the authors of the Fairfield bicentennial history. Their chapter titled “Disasters” begins with “the year of no summer.” Spring was late, they wrote, with frost in May; but crops were doing well enough until central Maine got six inches of snow on June 6.

“The same thing happened on July 9 and again on August 21,” they wrote. Like other historians, including those cited last week, they wrote that the weather was one reason Maine people moved west.

They added, “The Ohio Hill road is said to be so named because of the many that left from here.” (Fairfield’s Ohio Hill Road is the section of Route 23 that runs from Route 201 a little south of the Goodwill-Hinckley School to Fairfield Center.)

* * * * * *

Other historians described, in more or less detail, other cold days and weeks before and after 1816.

Linwood Lowden quoted an early sample in his Windsor history, a March 17, 1762, letter from an Alna resident named Job Averill to a man in Massachusetts. (Alna is on the Sheepscot River, less than 20 miles downstream from Windsor.)

Averill described “a most terrible winter the snow has been for seven weeks past and is now near four feet deep and no business could be done and people are like to lose all their cattel….” Cattle were dying and people going hungry, he said.

North wrote in his Augusta history that 1780 was another cold winter, when Kennebec Valley residents were already stressed by the hardships of the Revolution. There was “uncommonly deep” snow that lasted into late April and the Kennebec River was frozen down to the coast.

The spring of 1785 saw the latest ice-out recorded up to the time North finished his work in 1870. He dated it by contemporary records of people crossing the river on the ice on April 22 and April 24, the ice moving on April 25 and ice-cakes from up-river still floating past Fort Western on May 1.

January 1807 saw another cold spell, according to North’s history. He quoted temperature readings for the end of the month: 22 degrees below zero on Jan. 20, minus 18 on Jan. 21, minus 24 on Jan 22, minus 32 on Jan. 23, a warming to minus 16 on Jan. 26 and a low of minus 34 on Jan. 27.

There was a major snowstorm in Augusta on May 6, 1812, with high wind. Snowfall was variously estimated at six to 18 inches. The Augusta Herald quoted a man said to be old enough to have “lived in three centuries” who “did not remember colder or more severe [May] weather.”

Windsor historian Lowden followed his report from 1762 with a quotation from the Thursday, Jan. 29, 1857, Kennebec Journal commenting on the extremely cold weather: “The night of Friday last [Jan. 23] was the coldest ever felt by any living inhabitant of Maine.” On Saturday at dawn, “the thermometer at the Insane Hospital registered 42 degrees below zero,” with readings elsewhere in Augusta from 37 to 40 below.

* * * * * *

Ruby Wiggin mentioned in her history of Albion multiple events related to weather and other natural phenomena – either she was unusually attentive to such events, or the small town was unlucky. For example, she wrote that there were few local records of the Year without a Summer, but people she spoke with in the 1960s remembered tales of the “grasshopper year” that she said was almost 50 years after 1816.

That year grasshoppers ate most of the farmers’ hay, as well as “other leafy crops.” Wiggin told two stories.

One Albion resident had no hay for his oxen. He kept them alive by feeding them hemlock branches and meal, buying the latter with money he earned making and selling ash baskets.

Another man found the grasshoppers had spared the hay on what Wiggin called Poplar Island on Bog Road. After ice-in, this farmer was able to cut two loads – for which someone offered him $100. He refused, because his own animals needed to eat.

(Contemporary Google maps show Bog Road crossing what appears to be a tributary of the Sebasticook River, with an island slightly downstream of the bridge – Poplar Island?)

Wiggin also noted the adventure of Lester Shorey, who lived on Drake Hill, in southeastern Albion. He attended a Grange meeting in 1901, probably on Dec. 7 (the Saturday on which that year’s anniversary meeting was held); and because the day’s hard rain had flooded out bridges over most of the streams between Center Albion and his house, it took him more than eight hours to find a road home, via Palermo.

Two historians noted a spectacular natural event in August 1787, although they disagreed on the exact date.

William D. Williamson, in his 1832 history of Maine, described an incident “too rare to be passed unnoticed.” On Aug. 26, 1787, around 4 p.m., “A ball of fire, apparently as large as that of a nine pounder” was seen in New Gloucester, Portland and elsewhere, “flying through the air in a south-western direction, at an angle of more than 45 [degrees] from the ground, when it suddenly exploded three times in quick succession, like the discharge of as many cannon, with reports resembling thunder-claps.”

There was no earthquake, Williamson wrote, but “buildings were shaken” and smoke seen. The noise was heard “as far east as Frenchman’s bay, and westward at Fryeburgh.”

North wrote that on Thursday, Aug. 30, 1787, around mid-afternoon, Colonel (Joseph, probably) North, Captain (Henry) Sewall and Ebenezer Farwell were exploring possible routes along which to lay out a road from Cobbosseecontee to Bowdoinham. Sewall recorded in his diary an aerial explosion that he compared to “a small cannon”; he and his companions “supposed it to be the bursting of a meteor.”

North pointed out that Sewall’s date differs from Williamson’s.

There was an earthquake in central Maine on Dec. 23, 1857, between 1 and 2 p.m., North wrote; it was felt in Lewiston, Augusta and Waterville, among other places. He wrote that in addition to the earth shaking, “The noise attending it, as heard by those in buildings at Augusta, was as of an immense weight in the air moving from the south and descending diagonally through the roof with a rolling and crashing sound….The noise passed off to the north with a prolonged rumbling.”

* * * * * *

Henry Sewall’s diary, for part of 1787 (mentioned above) and consecutively from 1830 to 1843, is one of three that Charles Nash quoted parts of in his history of Augusta, published in 1904. He also reprinted excerpts from Martha Ballard’s diary (1785-1812) and Daniel Cony’s diary (1808-1810).

(Your writer views with amazed admiration the historians who first turned such documents, hand-written and perhaps time-damaged, full of unexplained references, into sources of information for future generations.)

With varying frequency, all three diarists recorded weather and other natural phenomena, both routine and extraordinary. Examples follow.

Ballard sometimes ignored the weather for days on end; sometimes wrote briefly of blustery wind, snow or rain, cold or warmth, clouds or clear sky; occasionally mentioned a rainbow, or an odd color in the sky. On March 27, 1786, and again on May 1, she wrote that northern lights had appeared.

The summer of 1787 was apparently a chilly one. On Sunday, July 1, Ballard wrote “We had ice an intch [her spelling] thick in our yard south side of the house this morn.” On Aug. 4 (a Saturday) she recorded “A very severe shower of hail with thunder and litning [her spelling], began at half after one, –continued near one hour. I hear it broke 130 pains [her spelling] of glass in Fort Western.”

On March 22, 1792, Ballard wrote: “Cloudy, morn; clear the rest of the day. The sun eclipsed.” Later in the week, her husband and son were sugaring with a neighbor. The ice in the Kennebec was gone on April 3, and a friend sowed peas on May 5.

Daniel Cony was 56 and had lived in Augusta for 30 years when he wrote short diary entries in 1808, 1809 and 1810, Nash said. Often an entry was only a few words about the day’s weather.

For example, July 1808 was hot and wet; Cony recorded temperatures of 90 degrees or higher on July 1, 16, 17 and 23. August he summarized as “Dry, fine season to gather in the grain.”

Oct. 10, 1809, was another hot day, with the thermometer reaching 96 degrees in the shade. November Cony summarized as “extreme cold,” with the Kennebec frozen by Nov. 23; but between Dec. 5 and Dec. 16 mild weather with rain took out most of the ice.

According to Henry Sewall, late December of 1830 was similar to early December of 1809. The Kennebec had frozen over “passable for teams” by Nov. 22; but a “warm rain” on Christmas Day “broke up the ice.”

For Dec. 31, he wrote: “Warm and wet, which took off every vestige of snow, raised the river, expelled the ice, and took the frost out of the ground, so as to render the roads muddy and deep and the travelling bad.”

Sewall noted the May 1832 flood described in the Jan. 12 issue of The Town Line. In 1833 he commented on two phenomena: a meteor shower early the morning of Nov. 12, with “meteors flying in all directions over the horizon, which produced an effect like lightning”; and on Dec. 26 a total lunar eclipse.

There was a “considerable eclipse of the sun” on Nov. 30, 1834, but, Sewall wrote, it was “rendered invisible by the clouds.”

On Dec. 23 of that year, Sewall wrote: “Received a Fahrenheit Thermometer from Boston.” He used it to record the Christmas Day temperature, eight degrees below zero; but the next diary record is not until Sunday, Feb. 18, 1838, when the temperature rose from 15 below to 25 above.

The March 31, 1836, entry is an interestingly oblique reference to the coming of spring: “The stages continue to run eastward on runners, though they begin to use wheels westward.” The Kennebec opened April 12 and closed Dec. 1 that year.

Sewall noted his 91st birthday on Oct. 24, 1843, and apparently discontinued his diary at the end of the year. He died Sept. 5, 1845.

Main sources

Fairfield Historical Society Fairfield, Maine 1788-1988 (1988).
Judd, Richard W., Churchill, Edwin A. and Eastman, Joel W., edd., Maine The Pine Tree State from Prehistory to the Present (1995).
Lowden, Linwood H., good Land & fine Contrey but Poor roads a history of Windsor, Maine (1993).
Nash, Charles Elventon, The History of Augusta (1904).
North, James W., The History of Augusta (1870).
Robbins, Alma Pierce, History of Vassalborough Maine 1771 1971 n.d. (1971).
Wiggin, Ruby Crosby, Albion on the Narrow Gauge (1964).
Williamson, William D., The History of the State of Maine from its First Discovery, A.D. 1602, to the Separation, A.D. 1820, Inclusive Vol. II (1832).

Vassalboro select board, WPA officials meet

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro select board members, Webber Pond Association leaders and other interested parties held the joint meeting they planned back in November 2022, on Jan. 25.

At the Nov. 10 select board meeting, Association president John Reuthe and Department of Marine Resources staff member Nate Gray said the lake had poor water quality in the summer of 2022, mainly due to the warm weather that encouraged algae growth.

Town Manager Aaron Miller said the group at the Jan. 25 meeting discussed two requests from Reuthe, for better water quality monitoring equipment and for improvements at the outlet dam. Reuthe had no cost estimates for either.

Dam work would be aimed at making it easier to lift the boards that control outflow, so the water level in the lake could be managed more easily, Miller said. Installing a winch is one possibility.

Group members discussed possible sources of funding, including grants from out of town sources; and Miller said they considered seeking to involve neighboring towns and area environmental organizations.

Miller expects another discussion will be scheduled.