Jo Cameron
Edgecomb
Jo Cameron
So where were you all last Saturday morning? The all-important public
information meeting the Planning Board held to acquaint us all with the
amendments to the Land Use Ordinance, which, incidentally, includes the
Appeals Board Ordinance, was attended by seven Planning Board members, two
Selectmen, one Town Planner, one Appeals Board member, and six - count
them! - six members of the Edgecomb general public.
However, in the benign ways of local government, you have some options.
Go into the Town Hall (Quiz: When are the Town Office hours?) to pick up a
copy of the Ordinance amendments, read them, and send your recommendations
to the Planning Board, which you can
do on the Web site (see below). Or mail your comments to the Planning
Board, Edgecomb Town Hall, P.O. Box 139, Edgecomb, ME 04556. Or call them
up, or buttonhole them in the supermarket. Or tell me.
So who is on the Planning Board? Your neighbors and mine: Katharine
Braid, David Boucher, Ann Peaslee, Bruce Cameron, Barry Hathorne, and
alternates Jarryl Larson and April Lawrence. Let your fingers do the
walking for their phone numbers.
On Thursday, March 20, come to the Planning Board's Public Hearing at
the Town Hall at 6 p.m., before the regular Planning Board meeting at 6:30
p.m.
Also, remember, nomination papers are still available for one Selectman
for three years, one Planning Board member for three years; one School
Board member for three years; one Town Treasurer for one year; one Town
Clerk for one year; one Tax Collector for one year; one
Road Commissioner for one year. The petitions require at least 25 valid
Edgecomb resident signatures. The deadline for turning in these papers is
April 3. If you are not a candidate, you can sign these petition papers,
most of which will be available on the Town Clerk's desk during business
hours, Mondays, 7 to 9 p.m., Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1 to 5 p.m.
The Great Council of Red Men, Tarratine Tribe, wants to make their
meeting place on Route 27 available for other groups' meetings, as well as
private and public receptions of all kinds. If you have a need for a
venue, call Bruce Farrell, 322-4218, who is in charge of promotion and
development for the Council. The Red Men is a men's organization with a
long history, stemming even prior to the dumping of tea into Boston Harbor
in 1765.
Kindergarten Alert: If you have a child in your family, or know of a
child who may be entering the Edgecomb Eddy Kindergarten class in the
fall, please call 882-5515, so that the school can begin gathering a class
list. 'We will be arranging for kindergarten screening in the spring, and
we don't want to miss anyone!' says Dean of Students Lisa Clarke. A child
is eligible for kindergarten in Maine if he/she is five years old by
October 15, 2008.
The next Wiscasset Bypass meeting will be Thursday, March 20, 6:30
p.m., at the County's 9-1-1 Communications Building. These meetings, for
evaluating the many public comments which have been received, are
scheduled every two weeks, so in April, Thursdays the 3rd and the 17th.
These meetings are always open to the public.
Sing Secant, Cosecant, Cotangent, Cosine! In my recent account of the
several mathematics competitions around Maine, I should have noted
Edgecomb student Charlotte Nutt, a member of the first-place Center for
Teaching and Learning's team. She and her teammates will be at the
state-level team competition at Colby College March 15.
The Wearing of the Green - my new cookbook, "Celtic Folklore Cooking,"
says 'was originally not associated with St. Patrick's Day, but was used
as a bit of sympathetic magic to encourage the arrival of springtime and
the prosperity of the crops.' The color green is beloved by the ancient
Irish spirit world, which as we all know, has managed to survive the long
troubled history of the Republic of Eire, and has a powerful foothold in
this country. For instance, leprechauns, once cobblers to the court of
Faerie, will repair only your left foot shoes.
Hopping around looking for the other shoe at 234 River Road, 633-2978,
jocam@midcoast.com.
This column appears in the Boothbay Register, The Lincoln County News,
the Wiscasset News-paper, and at www.Edgecomb.org. |  |
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