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FREE HOMETOWN NEWS DELIVERED TO EVERY HOME IN TOWN March 14, 2013 ◆ Volume 14 – Issue 11 A FREE Weekly Publication Town Attorney Recommends Impact Fee Suspension JAY HOBSON LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ own attorney Mike Ramsdell advised the planning board that it recommend suspension of all impact fees to the town council, pending the outcome of an audit currently being conducted of the town’s impact fees by court order. After discussion, the board voted 9-0 to follow Ramsdell’s advice. In a Rockingham County Superior Court decision dated Dec. 31, 2012, the court found that the town’s impact fee program, in place since 1994, has at times been illegal and that refunds are due to parties who paid the illegal fees. The decision also said that, “The court sees that a full accounting of the impact fee program to be the only solution to the town’s widespread misfeasance.” The court then ruled T Gods & Goddesses Katie LaCerda is dressed as Demeter, goddess of the harvest, at South Elementary School’s Mythology Night, featuring fifth grade KEY students. The March 6 evening event included a mythological guessing game, and the students displayed the projects they have been working on recently. See more photos page 15. Photo by Chris Paul Planning Board Adopts Updated Master Plan JAY HOBSON LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ he Planning Board has adopted an updated master plan that the Master Plan Steering Committee has spent nearly two years crafting. Master Plan Steering Committee Chairman Lei- T tha Reilly and committee member Mike Speltz spoke to the Planning Board on Wednesday, March 6, at a continued public hearing on the document. The town’s master plan by state law must be updated every 10 years. Planning Board mem- ber Chris Davies asked Reilly, who left her seat as a member of the Planning Board to present the document, if “the general feeling from the populace in Londonderry wanted to preserve things as they are. Is that a correct and accurate continued on page 7 that the town employ an independent auditor to fully audit the town’s impact fee collections and expenditures since the program’s creation in 1994. Acting Town Manager William Hart chose Melanson-Heath, the auditing firm that has been the town’s auditing accountant, to undertake the impact fee audit. The auditors looking at the impact fees are from a different branch of the firm and not the same ones who do the annual fiscal audit. Town Planner Cynthia May passed along to the board the recommendation of Ramsdell at the board’s meeting Wednesday, March 6. “His recommendation is that the town immediately suspend all implementation and collection of all impact fees until the audit that is currently taking place be completed pursuant to the court order, and therefore staff recommends that the planning board table the public hearing on the school impact fee update until after the audit is complete. At that time the public hearing will be renoticed,” May said. Planning Board member Laura El-Azem made a motion to table the hearing until after the audit, seconded by Lynn Wiles. The vote was 9-0 to table the hearing. May then requested that traffic and all other impact fees be suspended. She said planning staff requested a recommendation to the town council that the impact fee system be immediately suspended until after the audit has been completed. Planning Board member John Laferriere asked what would happen if any projects were to come before the board in the interim. Ramsdell spoke continued on page 10 ◆ ◆ Mitigation Plan in Works for Proposed Exit 4A KATHLEEN D. BAILEY LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ lans are continuing to move along for the controversial proposed Exit 4A off Interstate 93, with cooperation from the Woodmont Commons developers as part of the next stage. Derry Town Administrator John Anderson reported on the progress at the March 5 Derry Town Council meeting. P The towns – Derry and "mitigation package." Anderson explained, Londonderry - and agencies are currently working "When you build a highon the Federal Environcontinued on page 8 mental Impact Statement, or FEIS, Anderson said. PRESORTED STANDARD Anderson said the US POSTAGE PAID towns are working with the federal and state LONDONDERRY, NH 03053 Permit #57 ECRWSS "resource agencies," including the New Hampshire Department of EnviPOSTAL PATRON ronmental Services (DES) and U.S. Army Corps of LONDONDERRY, NH 03053 Engineers to develop a ◆ PAGE 2 L ONDONDERRY T IMES ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 Londonderry Police Department Loses One of Its Own PENNY WILLIAMS LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ T he Londonderry Police Department has lost one of its own. Sgt. Russell L. “Russ” Goodnow, 63, of Londonderry died March 7, 2013 in the Elliot Hospital, Manchester, following a brief illness. Goodnow, who was born in Brockton, Mass., was a resident of Londonderry for most of his life and was employed as a Sergeant with the Londonderry Police Department, where he worked for 34 years. Goodnow was a valued and involved police officer and his chief, Bill Hart, said, “Russ Goodnow was a good man and a great friend. He was the longest serving Police Department employee in (its) history. For more than two decades he managed the LPD police fleet; in doing so he made LPD the envy of other agencies in the state. “Many times I and Chief Ryan before me received a call from other PDs asking how did you do it,” said Hart, who is also Londonderry’s Acting Town Manager. “He made the lease program work so well for taxpayers that the PD fleet is cheaper today in absolute dollars than it was in 1994. Russ was honest and graceful every day in dealings with everyone: coworkers, vendors, friends. He drove a hard bargain, stopped every day to see how his fleet and his police department was doing, and was a good friend. “He made more of a difference with his life of service than most people I know,” Hart concluded. “I am better for having known him.” Goodnow managed the Town’s police fleet for over two decades, and kept it at a peak of readiness and effectiveness. In addition to that, he mentored the new Loose Denture? Dr. Erik Young DERRY DENTAL ASSOCIATES 7 PEABODY ROAD, DERRY, NH 03038 goal, and that is “how best police officers who joined can I serve?” Even as his illthe force, giving them the ness began to take a harsh support and knowledge toll on him he was working they needed to become hard at getting our new good officers. fleet up and running. Londonderry Police Indeed, I would tell every Captain Gerald Dussault young police officer that if said, “Sad that he has they can do half as well as passed, but happy that I Russ did as far as their loycan give you my thoughts alty, dedication, and comon a very good man. We mitment, then they shall be will miss him dearly. Know twice as good as we could that as I set these thoughts ever hope them to be!” to paper that it is with a Dussault added that on heavy heart; I have lost a a personal note, “I have lost dear friend, and the Lona man who had become donderry Police Departone of the fixtures of my ment has lost a man who career. Through my nearly through his actions, dem28 years as a Londonderry onstrated daily a deep and Police Officer, Russ Goodabiding love of both that agency and the Town of Londonderry Police and now was always there for me with pleasant conversaLondonderry. Fire Departments tion, a kind word, or most “Russ Goodnow’s life as displayed the flag and a Londonderry Police Offi- directed the crowd at the important, sage advice. With his passing we have cer may be summed up service for Sgt. “Russ” lost a man who was our last quite accurately using Goodnow on Monday at link with the ‘old’ Londonthree words: loyalty, dedication, and service,” Dus- Peabody Funeral Home derry Police Department, a on Mammoth Road. department which at one sault added. “I know of no other person in this agency sessed those qualities to time was housed in an old past or present that pos- the degree that ‘Rusty’ did. barracks building at GreAll of his actions at work nier Field (long before it were geared towards one became the Manchester- Tired of your denture not fitting right? Do the teeth stick out or does it have no suction? You went to one of those big chain dental offices and they put you in a one size fits all set of teeth. The problem is your mouth is one-of-a-kind! Come see the difference at my office. I'll listen to you, give you an honest take and present a list of options that you can choose from. 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It is still difficult to process that I will never again see him in the dispatch center early on a weekend morning, sipping a coffee. When asked why he was in early on his day off, he would typically reply, ‘I just stopped in to make sure everything was all set.’ Always dedicated and eager to serve!” Among the other achievements of Goodnow over his years of service to Londonderry and its police department was to found what is now known as the Sgt. Russell Goodnow Firing Range in Londonderry. Burial will be in the spring in Pleasant View Cemetery, Londonderry. Donations in his memory may be made to the American Cancer Society, 30 Speen St., Framingham, Mass. 01701. To send a condolence or for more information, visit www.peabodyfuneralhome.c om. The complete obituary is on page 3. Daniela E.Verani, M.D., P.A. 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You're at As a Family Practitioner for over 20 years in Southern increased risk of bee stings if you live in an area New Hampshire, I have treated new borns to individuwhere bees are especially active; your work or als in their GoldenYears. My staff and I believe that prehobbies require spending time outside or you live vention is the best cure. And we like to do it the oldin an area with beehives nearby. fashioned way, by listening and caring for each patient as Bee sting symptoms include an instant, sharp if they were our own family. At the same time, we do burning pain at the sting site; a red welt at the not ignore the innovations that are taking place in medisting area; a small, white spot where the stinger cine and participate in the EPIC electronic medical punctured the skin and/or slight swelling around records in conjunction with the Elliot Hospital. the sting area. 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NEW PATIENTS WELCOME ◆ L ONDONDERRY T IMES ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 PAGE 3 Town Council Suggests Same Day Deliberative Session with School JAY HOBSON LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ own Council chair John Farrell has asked Acting Town Manager William Hart to look into the possibility of having the town deliberative session and the school district deliberative session on the same day. “The credit actually belongs to (Town Councilor) Tom Freda,” Farrell said. “He asked me if it T were possible to have the two deliberative sessions one after another to possibly have a greater turnout.” Farrell made his request at the Monday, March 4, Town Council meeting. He asked the council to direct Hart to contact Superintendent of Schools Nathan Greenberg to see if the school district would be amenable to the idea. OBITUARY Sgt. Russell Goodnow Sgt. Russell L. “Russ” Goodnow, 63, of Londonderry died March 7, 2013 in the Elliot Hospital, Manchester, following a brief illness. He was born in Brockton, Mass., on Feb. 9, 1950, a son of the late Arthur E. and Arlene (Dickerman) Goodnow. He was a resident of Londonderry for most of his life and was employed as a Sergeant with the Londonderry Police Department, where he worked for 34 years. His work with Londonderry Police was broad: he managed the Town’s police fleet for over two decades; he acted as a mentor to every young police officer who came aboard; and he was an example of police service to community every day he served. He was the founder of the Sgt. Russell Goodnow Firing Range in Londonderry. He loved to fish. He was a member of the Southern New Hampshire Flying Tigers R/C plane club. He is survived by his wife, Mary (Foley) Goodnow of Londonderry; two sons, Shaun Goodnow of Londonderry and Christopher Goodnow and his wife, Nicole Ledoux, of Manchester; one daughter, Michelle Goodnow of Manchester; three grandchildren, Cody Goodnow, Taylor Goodnow and Cale Goodnow; three siblings, Joan Ayube of Middleboro, Mass., Jan Sniger of Worcester, Mass., and James Goodnow of Epsom; his mother-in-law, Olga Foley of Londonderry; family member, Kristen Gore of Litchfield; and several nieces and nephews. Calling hours were held March 12 in the Peabody Funeral Homes and Crematorium, Londonderry. Funeral services were held Wednesday, March 13, at 11 a.m. in the funeral home, 290 Mammoth Road, Londonderry. Burial will be in the spring in Pleasant View Cemetery, Londonderry. Donations in his memory may be made to the American Cancer Society, 30 Speen St., Framingham, Mass. 01701. To send a condolence or for more information, visit www.peabodyfuneralhome.com. “Honesty, Integrity & Attention to Detail” Additions • Decks • Kitchen & Baths Windows & Siding • Basement Remodels 603-432-8599 • applewoodconstruction.net “A long time ago in the ‘90s, there would be a joint deliberative session and we’d have hundreds of people turn out,” Farrell said. “Back then we’d fill up the old gym at the high school and even have people in class- rooms,” Farrell said. Contacted Friday, Freda said he thinks it would be good to see both the school and town articles and the complete tax rate at the same time, and that with them being together, it would be OBITUARY more convenient for residents and could possibly increase attendance at the session. Greenberg said Friday that Hart had contacted him about the idea. “That’s not a decision that I would make,” Greenberg said. “When the school board meets again on the 19th of March, we will discuss it then,” he said. OBITUARY Eugene LaPlante Annabel LaPlante Annabel E. LaPlante, 72, of Derry died March 8, 2013 in Villa Crest Retirement Community in Manchester. She was born in Chicago, Ill., on April 27, 1940, a daughter of Verne and Mary Jane (Schaefer) Smith. Mrs. LaPlante had been a resident of Derry for the past 8 1/2 years, formerly living in Traverse City, Mich. She was a graduate of Creighton University, Omaha, Neb. She was an avid reader and loved to travel. She enjoyed attending her grandchildren’s sporting and dance events. She was a communicant of St. Jude Parish in Londonderry. Her husband of 48 years, Eugene B. LaPlante, died the following day on March 9, 2013. She is survived by one son, Ryan LaPlante and his wife, Tracy, of Londonderry; one daughter, Megan Seleny and her husband, Paul, of Derry; four grandchildren, Jessica LaPlante, Alexander LaPlante, Conor Seleny, and Caitlin Seleny; and two brothers, Rusty Smith of Des Plaines, Ill., and Steve Smith of Clarendon Hills, Ill. Calling hours were held Wednesday, March 13, from 5 to 8 p.m. in the Peabody Funeral Homes and Crematorium, 290 Mammoth Road, Londonderry. A Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Thursday, March 14, at 9 a.m. in St. Jude Parish, 435 Mammoth Road, Londonderry. A memorial celebration is being planned for August in Charlevoix, Mich. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, 501 St. Jude Place, Memphis, Tenn. 38105. To send a condolence or for more information, visit www.peabodyfuneralhome.com. Eugene B. LaPlante, 76, of Derry died March 9, 2013 in the Elliot Hospital in Manchester. He was born in Chicago, Ill., on Nov. 28, 1936, a son of the late Edward (Ted) and Rita (O'Brien) LaPlante. Mr. LaPlante had been a resident of Derry for the past 8 1/2 years, formerly living in Traverse City, Mich. He attended Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wis., and was a U.S. Army veteran serving during the post-Korean Conflict era. He frequently attended his grandchildren’s sporting events. He was a communicant of St. Jude Parish in Londonderry. His wife of 48 years, Annabel E. LaPlante, died one day before him on March 8, 2013. He is survived by one son, Ryan LaPlante and his wife, Tracy, of Londonderry; one daughter, Megan Seleny and her husband, Paul, of Derry; four grandchildren, Jessica LaPlante, Alexander LaPlante, Conor Seleny, and Caitlin Seleny; and four siblings, Catherine Maravetz of Westfield, N.J., Greg LaPlante of Kankakee, Ill., Colette Maravetz of Columbia, Md., and Jeff LaPlante of Westville, Ind. He was pre-deceased by his brother William LaPlante of San Jose, Calif. Calling hours were Wednesday, March 13, from 5 to 8 p.m. in the Peabody Funeral Homes and Crematorium, 290 Mammoth Road, Londonderry. A Liturgy of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Thursday, March 14, at 9 a.m. in St. Jude Parish, 435 Mammoth Road, Londonderry. A memorial celebration is being planned for August in Charlevoix, Mich. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, 501 St. Jude Place, Memphis, Tenn. 38105. To send a condolence or for more information, visit: www.peabodyfuneralhome.com. New Clients Always Welcome! Visit handelwithcarevet.com for special offers 33 Crystal Avenue, Derry, NH 432-1404 Complete veterinary services for dogs, cats, birds, and exotics. RE/MAX 1st Choice 123 Nashua Road, Unit #20 Londonderry, NH 03053 Phone: 603-425-2400 Fax: 603-434-2599 www.nh-moves.com E-mail: remax@nh-moves.com Each Office Independently Owned and Operated RE/MAX 1ST Choice is a supporter of Children’s Miracle Network REASONS FOR RE/MAX 1ST CHOICE 1. Full time professional Realtors available when you need them 2. One stop shop, on-site Mortgage and Title Services available 3. 15 Years servicing Southern NH and Northern MA 4. Realtors who know and live in the community ◆ PAGE 4 L ONDONDERRY T IMES ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 Letters Editorial No Dinosaurs Here Whenever a daily newspaper goes up for sale – the Boston Globe is a case in point –words of gloom and doom about the future of newspapers are sure to follow. And when people talk about the death of newspapers, they tend to lump all of them together. Big mistake. Most of us, even the most diehard print readers, turn to the computer or Smartphone or iPad when we want up-to-the-minute international or national news. Where else are you going to get current news, not a story that was out of date 24 hours ago when the daily went to press. The world of news has indeed changed, and the internet is the change agent. But try to find the menu for the monthly Knights of Columbus dinner or the details of the new Spanish Club fundraiser. Look for what daily editors sneeringly call the “minutiae” of planning or zoning board meetings, something they say no one is interested in – forgetting the people whose investment in their homes could be sorely impacted by a planning or zoning decision. Where do you go to get that kind of news? To your community newspaper, which more often than not is a weekly, often is free – such as the Nutfield Publishing papers - and in the best of cases – again as in the case of this paper - has owners with a direct stake in the community. And is published in newsprint. You can see your children in photos from varsity games or in school – and cut them out. You can find out your neighbors’ opinions on the letters page. And you can check the police log to see what the ruckus was all about. And yet we hear all the time that people don’t have the time to read newspapers. Tell that to the readers who call to ask us to include a notice in the calendar at the last minute. Tell that to proud parents announcing their baby or their child’s engagement. Tell that to someone who would love to have something kept out of the police log. Those things matter because people do indeed read the newspaper. For consistent reporting of local events, week in and week out, your hometown newspaper fills the bill. And we know it gets read. We won’t go the way of the dinosaur. There’s far too much going on in town to keep us busy for years to come. The Londonderry Times is a weekly publication. It is mailed to every home in Londonderry free of charge and is available at a number of drop-off locations throughout the town. Serving Derry Serving Chester, Hampstead and Sandown Nutfield Publishing, LLC 2 Litchfield Rd., Londonderry, NH 03053 tel: 603-537-2760 • fax: 603-537-2765 send e-mails to: londonderrytimes@nutpub.net www.nutpub.net Editor – Leslie O’Donnell Owner/Publisher – Debra Paul Art Director – Chris Paul The Londonderry Times is published through Nutfield Publishing, LLC a privately owned company dedicated to keeping residents informed about local issues and news in the town of Londonderry. All articles submitted for placement in the Londonderry Times are welcome and subject to review/editing and/or acceptance by the publisher. Decisions of the publisher are final. Views contained within submitted and published articles do not necessarily represent the views of the publisher or Londonderry Times. No articles, photographs, or other materials in the Londonderry Times may be re-published, re-written or otherwise used without the express permission of the publisher. Sequestration To the editor: Let’s set the record straight on those who place the blame of sequestration on Wall Street for not paying their fair share and being the cause of all our economic problems. Cognizant readers should understand that this is as far from the truth as you can get. First of all, the sequestration was President Obama’s idea and he approved it. Second, he should be happy. But instead of leading, he’s campaigning on how bad it’s going to be, that is until he realized that it wasn’t getting much traction so he stopped. Well, how bad is it? Let’s see - less than a 2 percent cut across the board this fiscal year, and a total of 2.4 percent for this and the next fiscal year combined. Does anyone logically believe that there is less than 2.4 percent waste in the government? Can you believe that a 2.4 percent reduction, still leaving more in the Treasury than just one year ago, is enough to cause this “catastrophic” chaos? There was no need to furlough people, to shut down White House tours, to threaten to close National Parks, to reduce entitlement program office hours, etc. This is the low hanging fruit, the decisions that make headlines; in other words, it was purely political because it’s what the media will print and what the administration wants you to believe. The effects of sequestration could have been humanely managed by Executive Order or the President could have accepted the House’s offer to give him the power to decide where to make the cuts (instead of across the board), where it wouldn’t hurt people or cause unnecessary closures, but he refused. He could have led, but he didn’t. Don’t let the rhetoric and headlines mask the truth – the President could easily have managed a 2.4 percent cut spread over two fiscal years without missing a step – if only it were applied to the waste and duplication and not to the areas that hurt the people. Doug Thomas Londonderry ––––––––––––– North Korea Threatens U.S. To the editor: General Kang Pyo Yong of North Korea recently said, “When we shell (the missiles), Washington, which is the stronghold of evils, will be engulfed in a sea of fire.” The North Korean National Defense Commission stated, “In the new phase of our century-long struggle against the United States, we do not hide the fact that various satellites, long-range missiles that we will continue to launch and high-level nuclear tests we will conduct will target our sworn enemy, the United States.” North Korean intransigence on the discontinuation of its nuclear weapons and missile development programs has fostered the current volatile situation with the United States. It has conducted three nuclear weapons tests and long-range missile tests in recent years. The missiles could possibly reach Hawaii, Alaska and the West Coast of the U.S. We need to ensure our early warning detection systems can shoot down their missiles and we need to review our contingency plans targeting their missile and nuclear sites. We need adequate deterrent forces in the region, including a robust South Korean military. We might want to consider encouraging Japan, an ally, to enlarge and strengthen its military capabilities. Donald A. Moskowitz Londonderry –––––––––––––––– Bipartisan Effort To the editor: On Wednesday, March 6, the New Hampshire House voted to accept a bipartisan solution to a problem faced by 77 communities across our state. With a vote of 302-34, we accepted a solution to a promise made by the state and about to be broken. When the state budget estimates were being considered, there was an error in the process that told towns that they could expect the same level of Stabilization Grant as in the prior year. School budgets were presented and voted on at school district annual meetings and deliberative sessions all over the state based on this misunderstanding. Without quick action, school districts would have been forced to cut back or ask the voters for more money. When the error was discovered, it took very little time for Senator Molly Kelly to step forward to address the issue; Senator Sharon Carson and I signed on to cosponsor the effort, which created the funds to keep the promise made to our community and 76 others. continued on page 5 Londonderry Times welcomes letters of up to 500 words on topics of local interest, and prints as many letters as possible. Please e-mail your letters to the Londonderry Times at londonderrytimes@nutpub.net. All letters must include the writer’s name, address and phone number for verification if needed; name and town of residence will be printed. Londonderry Times reserves the right to reject or edit letters for content and length, and anonymous letters will not be printed. ◆ L ONDONDERRY T IMES ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 PAGE 5 Stantec Chosen as Londonderry’s Third Party Reviewer JAY HOBSON LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ own Planner Cynthia May has announced that Acting Town Manager William Hart “has made the determination that the planning board process that had occurred in the fall of selecting the third party engineer consultant was conducted in accordance with policy, and staff recommends that the planning board refer to the decision of Nov. 7, 2012 to retain T Stantec as the third party engineer and review consultant to the Town Council for approval of a contract that has yet to be written.” May made the announcement at the Planning Board’s Wednesday, March 6, meeting. Planning Board member Laura El-Azem moved the motion and Lynn Wiles seconded. The vote was 8-1, with Tom Freda casting the sole no vote. The review process last fall included three other firms. The candidates – CMA Engineers with RSG and Ironwood Design Group, Dubois and King with ORW Landscape Architects and Planners, Destefano Architects and transportation specialist Lucy Gibson and Stantec – were interviewed. Following each interview, subcommittee members and town staff were asked to fill out interview evaluation scorecards, and were ranked using a score of zero, five or 10. Zero means “does not meet expectations,” five is “meets expec- tations, “and 10 is “exceeds expectations.” The scores were submitted without discussion and Stantec was chosen as the third party consultant to review land development applications. Stantec has been the town’s long-time consultant, and concerns were noted last fall about its longevity and the cost for people to do business in town because of Stantec. In other business March 6: • Liberty Utilities, a utility company that will be taking over the New Hampshire business of National Grid and has chosen the former Blue Seal Feeds corporate headquarters in town to house its own New Hampshire headquarters, received the approval of the planning board for its site plan on a 9-0 vote. • The Stonehenge subdivision approved in 2009 received an additional one-year extension also on a 9-0 vote. • Woodmont Commons, the 600-plus acre ◆ Planned Unit Development that is conducting numerous meetings to discuss various aspects of its proposed master plan in order to “keep it more manageable,” according to developer Pillsbury Realty LLC, asked for a continuance from March 13 to March 27 to hold the next installment of its meetings. Because the March 13 meeting was to hear Woodmont only, that meeting will not take place. The extension was granted 9-0. ◆ Letters Continued from page 4 As a result, Londonderry will be receiving the more than $300,000 it was told it could expect from the State of New Hampshire. Londonderry Superintendent of Schools Nate Greenberg said, “Passage of SB 40 is of significant importance, as failure to do so would require us to curtail purchases of supplies, equipment, materials and, in all likelihood, significantly limit the hiring of substitutes during the remainder of the school year.” Instead of wasting time making political points, the New Hampshire Senate and House moved quickly to come to agreement across the aisle to provide the necessary funding to make this right. There were no misleading statements, no finger-pointing; the legislature simply recognized the problem, and worked together to find a common sense New Hampshire solution. I hope that this might serve as a model for other Londonderry Times Delivered Free Every Thursday 537-2760 issues facing our state: how to present a responsible balanced budget, how to deal with damaged bridges and roads, how to fund the promise of an adequate education for our young people in an age of intense international competition. These are not easy problems to solve. They require thoughtful discussion and a refusal to add empty rhetoric to serious potential solutions. When we can face squarely and honestly the difficult fiscal issues facing us, and focus on finding New Hampshire solutions to New Hampshire problems, then we do our best to serve our commu- nity, our state, and all the working families and others who look to us for leadership. Let’s use the bipartisan intention to solve problems as a way to move New Hampshire for- ward to better schools, better infrastructure and a healthy business and economic climate. Lisa Whittemore State Representative D-Londonderry ◆ PAGE 6 L ONDONDERRY T IMES ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 St. Peter’s Chili Cookoff Aids Habitat for Humanity PENNY WILLIAMS LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ ore than 100 people participated in the St. Peter’s Episcopal Church Chili Cook-off on Saturday, March 9, sampling and voting on the 22 chili M entrants in the contest. The event was a fund raiser for Greater Manchester Habitat for Humanity, which is in the process of restoring and renovating a three-family dwelling at 50 Hosley St. Three celebrity judges St. Peter’s Episcopal Church was a busy place late Saturday afternoon, with more than 100 people tasting and voting on the 22 chili dishes entered in a Chili Cook-off, a fund raiser for the Greater Manchester Habitat for Humanity. Photo by Penny Williams sampled the chili: State Senator Sharon Carson, RLondonderry; Londonderry Firefighter Lt. Jonathan Cares; and Dan Mancini, owner of Derry’s Halligan Tavern. Everyone who purchased a ticket was free to sample the 22 chili offerings and was also asked to vote on their favorite. Children could vote as well. The Celebrity Judges Award went to the chili cooked by Brian Smith. The People’s Choice chili was cooked by John Roller, and the Kids’ Choice went to chili prepared by Peter Hall. According to organizer Lee O’Connor, the event raised more than $1,000, all of which will go to the Greater Manchester Habitat for Humanity and its Hosley Street project. “That’s about twice what we expected,” O’Connor said. St. Peter’s congregants are involved with the Habitat for Humanity project and Liz Rakich, representing the Greater Manchester Habitat for Humanity organization, said the chili cookoff would be a big boost to the project’s efforts to complete the Hosley Street dwelling. The building was damaged by fire in 2007 and sat empty and untouched until Greater Manchester Habitat for Humanity, with the help of the City of Manchester, using Neighborhood Stabilization Program funds from Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and HUD Community Development Block Grant funds, began work on the building. Rakich said, “We are renovating it to meet Energy Star standards and when it is finished, we will sell it to three low income families as condos. This fund raiser is a big help. Not only will the funds help us to finish the project, but will also help us to raise awareness in the community about Habitat for Humanity and what we do.” ◆ ◆ LHS Musicians at Jazz Festival JAY HOBSON LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ ondonderry High School A ssistant Music Director Serge Beaulieu took more than 50 students from the jazz ensemble, jazz combo and jazz lab band to the University of New Hampshire for the annual L Clark Terry Jazz Festival on March 9. Terry, according to Beaulieu, is an acclaimed jazz trumpeter. “The festival is an adjudicated event but not a competition,” Beaulieu said. “The concerts are given throughout the day, but there are no rankings. There are awards to the top three performances and an honorable mention given to the fourth.” This year six musicians from the jazz combo, 26 musicians from the jazz lab band and 21 musicians in the jazz ensemble attended the event. Sign up for 3 months and Receive a FREE Gee MOREAU’S TRAINING CENTER WWW.MOREAUSTRAININGCENTER.COM 421-4732 • 206 Rockingham Rd., Londonderry Judo • MMA • Boxing • Combaive Ju-Jitsu • Strength Training ◆ L ONDONDERRY T IMES Master Plan Continued from page 1 read of what you heard? Was that a dominant theme?” “I wouldn’t say it was a dominant theme, it was one of many,” Reilly responded. Speltz said it was more accurate to say the town is “bifurcated. “There are those as you say that would like to see the town remain just as it is, and those that would like to see changes in the direction of more housing options, better transit, better ways to get around town without an automobile, more things to create a more holistic community,” Speltz said. Speltz said the plan “rather cleverly” addressed that split in attitude by saying 80 percent of the town would be untouched and the remaining 20 percent would be planned. Davies said he liked that part that had targeted areas and asked if those areas would fall under form-based zoning, “where we would say this is what is permitted and this is what is not permitted?” Reilly said “activity centers” are mentioned in the revised plan, and those areas “kind of take on their own character, where they are what surrounds them and the attributes that they have.” Reilly said when it comes to the execution, “form-based code is one tool that could be used.” According to the master plan, form-based coding “shifts the emphasis from use and instead looks to form and character as the primary organizing principles.” “The plan isn’t saying that it has to be form-based code, it’s simply saying that the ordinances we have now in place, in those areas, would not permit you to do the things that we’ve envisioned for those areas,” Reilly said. Reilly said the pictures were meant to illustrate what could be done and not necessarily what would be done because some people will look at the picture and say, ‘that’s not what I think it should look like.’ “The language supports the idea of what we were trying to encapsulate,” Reilly said. Davies said he still “couldn’t get my head around that Londonderry isn’t a place where folks with an average income can come to, there are still opportunities in town.” Davies said Woodmont Commons could bring opportunities for average income housing to town and the plan didn’t address that. “We wanted to ensure throughout the process that there was something for everyone in Londonderry, so there are diversity of housing choices in the plan, and if that is achieved through Woodmont, great. At the end of the day, the planning board is the one who is going to say ‘yes’ or ‘no, we already have enough of that,’” said Reilly. Planning Board member John Laferriere, refer- ring to a chart in the plan that breaks down land use, said that Woodmont, at 600-plus acres, was significant “to say the least” and asked how much of Woodmont was incorporated in the chart and if it not, how much would the chart change if it were incorporated. Reilly said Woodmont was in the 20 percent available development section of the chart and Laferriere asked, “then of that 20 percent, how much of it is Woodmont?” Speltz replied that the 20 percent represented about 4,000 acres, so it would be 600 acres out of 4,000 or about an eighth. Laferriere asked if Woodmont fell under the new plan and Town Planner Cynthia May said that Woodmont fell under the old plan and current zoning ordinance. As a Planned Unit Development or PUD, Woodmont has its own ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 master plan. Laferriere asked the percentage of residents who had input in the Master Plan process, and Reilly said 400 people attended meetings over the course of the process and through a survey conducted by the University of New Hampshire, 500 were surveyed about the plan. Board member Laura El-Azem said she think Londonderry has a terrific opportunity to draw on the young professional demographic and that there was no other place in southern New Hampshire that can draw on that demographic, with its disposable income. Board member Maria Newman said she keeps hearing statistics that the population is aging and that young people are leaving, and she thinks there needs to be a way to draw them back. “It’s one thing when they leave to go to college and that’s expected, but wouldn’t it be nice that we would have some of these activity centers that would give them a reason to want to come back,” Newman PAGE 7 said. Laferriere said the “implementation committee” mentioned at the end of the master plan should be amended to read “planning board,” and resident Edward Combes asked why the board wanted to do away with the implementation committee. He was told that wasn’t meant to do away with implementation, but that the implementation would be handled by the planning board. The board accepted the plan 9-0. ◆ ◆ Police Warn of Phone Scam he Londonderry Police advise residents of a phone scam that is occurring. Police said that in the past week, people have been receiving calls from 603-732-0338 and 347-6889985. The male caller states T he is looking for information about an “education or military experience” survey that had been filled out online, and states it will take only a minute for him to ask a few quick questions to see if the recipient is a match for the survey. Police say the caller is persistent in his inquiries. Anyone receiving a call from either of these numbers is asked to contact the Londonderry Police Department at 4321118 and ask to speak with an officer. ◆ PA G E 8 L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 Keno Could Be Education Funding Source for New Hampshire JAY HOBSON LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ tate Representative Al Baldasaro, R-Londonderry said that he is “very pleased” that the State House is looking into the possibility of the game of chance called Keno coming to New Hampshire. According to Baldasaro, Keno is similar to the lottery numbers that are drawn weekly on tele- S vision. “Players can choose four to 16 numbers and the machine can pull 20 different numbers up to 80,” he explained. “The player matches the numbers they’ve chosen against the numbers chosen at random by the machine and if they match, the player wins and is paid out immediately. The machine pulls numbers every five min- utes.” Keno is popular in Massachusetts and is found in gas stations, convenience stores and other venues. “It’s a way to bring money to our education system, as our state constitution requires all lottery money to go to education,” Baldasaro said. Baldasaro is House Bill 520’s prime sponsor and said the House passed the bill last week. The Senate is expected to vote on it within a month. “This game could bring $60 million to $80 million in additional revenue to the state education system. It could increase rooms and meals tax revenue as people come out to their favorite restaurant and play, it could boost Whippersnapper’s business and Legion halls and other places,” Baldasaro said. According to Baldasaro, House Bill 520 is supported by the Lottery Commission and would have five members of the legislature study the idea - three from the House, appointed by the Speaker of the House - and two from the Senate, appointed by the President of the Senate. The committee would be directed to study if and how to implement Keno in the state. The bill also states the “committee shall report its findings and any recommendations for proposed legislation to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Senate President the House Clerk, the Senate Clerk, the Governor, and the State Library on or before Nov. 1, 2013. Contacted Thursday, March 7, Acting Town Manager William Hart said he had not been formally made aware of the action taken by the board regarding the fee suspension and that when he was, he would make the appropriate recommendations. He said he had indeed met with the auditors that day and he expected them to prepare a report. Ramsdell said that by the time the board meets later this month, he would have more information. “We’re really talking about a short window of time. I think given the number of issues that exist, it’s prudent for you to stay things at the moment and we’ll be able to make a decision in a few weeks,” Ramsdell said. Laferriere still sought to determine what would happen for people coming in with projects until then. “It depends on whether the board and the town decide to re-implement the impact fee program,” Ramsdell said. “The board doesn’t meet again until the 27th, so I don’t think anything can happen in the three-week period where you’d have to make some sort of retroactive decision,” he concluded. Ramsdell said he didn’t think the fees could be retroactively applied to projects that come for- ward during the fee suspension. “So I guess they’ll get a free ride until after the decision,” board member Chris Davies said of any such projects. “Yes,” Ramsdell replied. Board member Lynn Wiles asked what would happen if the board did nothing, and Ramsdell said the impact fees would remain in place as they are now, but because of the lit- igation, he thought the potential was greater, if there turns out to be a significant problem, for things to be exacerbated than there is to miss out on an impact fee over the next three weeks. Wiles made the motion for the planning board to recommend to the town council the suspension of all impact fees. Laferriere seconded the motion and it passed 9-0. ◆ ◆ Impact Fee Continued from page 1 to the issue, saying he and the acting town manager were meeting with the auditors on Thursday, March 7, and would have a better idea as to the situation after the meeting. “I’ll have a better idea after the meeting as to how things are going and where we stand and what the issues are,” Ramsdell said. Easter is Early! 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VETERINARY HOUSECALLS (603) 860-9855 Just Heat & Eat! From the Merrimack Valley Area Check us out online for our daily specials www.mrsteermeats.com Mr. Steer Sells Only Certified Angus Beef 27 Buttrick Rd, Londonderry, NH • Rte. 102 434-1444 HOURS: Mon. – Fri. 8 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. • Sun. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Competitively Priced Services are delivered where you are! Vaccination Bloodwork Ultrasound Sick Visits Surgery Dentistry Digital X-Ray Euthanasia Tel: 1-(603)-860-9855 - P.O. Box 57. Chester NH 03036 - www.ArkAnimalHomecare.com doctor@arkanimalhomecare.com ◆ L O N D O N D E R RY T I M E S OBITUARY David Day David Day, 63, of Manchester died March 8, 2013 at the Elliot Hospital, Manchester after a brief illness. He was born on Aug. 11, 1949 in Boston, Mass., a son of the late David (Gladstone) and Donna Shirley (Pyne) (Wyman) Day. He was educated in Greater Boston schools and graduated from Chelsea High School. He had a sales and management career spanning nearly 45 years, most recently retiring from Bob’s Discount Furniture as manager of its Lowell, Mass., store. He previously lived in Londonderry. He is survived by his wife of 39 years, Helena (Lozowski) Day of Manchester; three children and their spouses, Lisa (Day) (Przybyla) Cochran and her husband, Patrick, of Manchester, Karen (Day) Baldasaro and her husband, Jason, of Manchester, and David Alan Day and his wife, Sarah, of Raymond; seven grandchildren, Haleigh Przybyla, Liam Cochran, Zachary Baldasaro, Hannah Baldasaro, Kaylyn Day, Lillian Day and Olivia Day; one brother, Alan Day of Rocklin, Calif.; one sister, Patty (Day) Cook of Salem, NH; and many nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by one sister, Joyce Day, and a nephew, SPC Michael B. Cook Jr. A Celebration of Mr. Day’s life will be held Friday, March 15, at 11 a.m. in the Peabody Funeral Homes and Crematorium, 290 Mammoth Road, Londonderry, with an hour of visitation from 10 to 11 a.m. Memorial contributions may be made to a charity of one’s choice. To send a condolence or for more information, visit www.peabodyfuneralhome.com. ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 PA G E 9 South School Teacher Creates Exercise Video JAY HOBSON LONDONDERRY TIMES ————––––––————–◆ outh Elementar y School fifth grade teacher Jodi Daron has created an exercise video for and with her students, and the video can be found online for anyone who wants to join in and get or keep fit. “I’m very much into fitness myself, I’ve been exercising forever, and I used to teach aerobics at the Workout Club,” Daron said. “I’m on the Wellness Committee and we decided to do this program for kids where they would record their exercises. “At the all-school meeting, some of the teachers were demonstrating some of the exercises you could do, like riding your bike, and my demonstration was different things that you could do in front of the TV, like squats and lunges and jumping jacks,” Daron said. “After that, several people said to me S that I should do a fitness video, so that weekend I made one with my own children and I showed it to (Principal) Mrs. (Linda) Boyd, and she thought it was great. “I decided to put out a monthly video,” Daron added. Daron said that in January, she invited kids from her homeroom to join her during recess to make a video. That video is on the South School website at www.londonderry.org/sou th/ under the “video” tab. “I wanted to show everybody that anyone could do it, and so I asked my young kids to take part,” Daron said of the video. Her children are in first and third grade at South. Daron said she and the students practiced different exercises for a cardiovascular program in the classroom. She plans to have a different format every month. Her most recent video has cardiovascular elements and muscle conditioning, and uses squats and “floor work.” Next month the video will feature a guest yoga instructor. “The kids love doing it and in my classes I always incorporate movement and exercise breaks and yoga,” she said. “(The kids) bought into it because they see me and they see how excited I am and I talk a lot about health - eating well and having a healthy lifestyle. They love it and they’re really good at it.” Daron said the kids also love being on TV and representing their school. “I invited whoever wanted to come, so these kids that are in the video willingly gave up their recesses to practice,” she said. “I practice once a week, but in the first video we practiced whenever we could.” Daron and her student volunteers make a new video the first Wednesday of every month. • 8’x12’ kitchen (20 linear ft.) • Dovetail drawers • Crown molding • Undermount sink • Decorative hardware • Delivery & Installation • Lifetime cabinet warranty Appliances not included. Full remodeling services available. OUR CABINETS ARE "MADE IN AMERICA" HAIR OFFER EXPIRES 3/31/13 UPDATE FAMILY HAIRCARE, TANNING, SKIN & NAILS NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY • WALK-IN ANYTIME – HIRING STYLIST! – Hair Cuts $17 REG. CUTS w/ Wash & Condition TANNING Shampoo Super Store $39+Tax 50% OFF one month Unlimited Most Popular Products A Fresh Alternative in Carry-out Meals Sunday Special 12 oz. 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EVERY SUNDAY! 176 Mammoth Road, Londonderry Find us on (603) 437-2022 • www.coachstopnh.com ◆ PAGE 10 Exit 4A Continued from page 1 way, public road or private project, it will impact wetlands and wildlife habitats. You need to come up with a mitigation plan" to replace the land that has been affected.” These can take various forms, Anderson said: "land for land," giving L ONDONDERRY T IMES money to the resource agencies so they can purchase land and other options. "They prefer a 'one to one' situation," Anderson said of the resource agencies. "If you're impacting vernal pools, they want you to purchase and protect other vernal pools. If you're affecting deer wintering grounds, they want ◆ M ARCH 14, 2013 you to purchase land for deer wintering grounds." In April 2012, according to a letter from Christopher Bean, project manager, DES, the Corps, and the project team visited several sites suggested by the two towns' Conservation Commissions. At first the Sawyer property, a parcel in South Derry, was identified by the agencies as being suitable. But they are also looking at the Caras property off Windham Road, which is bordered by Frost Road and Windham Road and abuts conservation property. Bean wrote in a memo, "Work on finalizing the FEIS document is currently on hold pending development of the finalized mitigation package." The agencies and proj- ect team are looking for mitigation for the Hyrax and Associates property, also part of Pillsbury Realty Development, the developers of Woodmont Commons. Bean wrote, "The FEIS cannot be processed without accounting for the HP (Hyrax/Pillsbury) development...HP is currently coordinating with the Resource Agencies to finalize their mitigation package." A field meeting with resource agency officials to review a potential mitigation site in Londonderry is being set up, Bean wrote. The money is there for the engineering studies, Anderson said: Gov. Maggie Hassan and the Executive Council have authorized the funds. Now they are waiting on the mitigation from Hyrax/Pillsbury before proceeding. ◆ ◆ Locals Elected to Democratic Party Office he New Hampshire Democratic Party held its State Committee Meeting and elected six officers and five members of the Rules Committee. Pam Jorgensen of Londonderry was elected as one of six members of the T NHDP Rules Committee. Attorney Dan McKenna of Derry was elected to his first term as Legal Counsel for the New Hampshire Democratic Party (NHDP). McKenna is an attorney at the firm of Maureen Raiche Manning PLLC. He served one term in the New Hampshire House, currently serves as a member of the Derry School Board and is on the Board of Directors for Southern New Hampshire Services. 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