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Newspaper Archive of
Barnstable Patriot
Barnstable, Massachusetts
July 18, 2014     Barnstable Patriot
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July 18, 2014
 
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CONTINUED FROM PAGEA:1 which provides beds and some services to area homeless throughout the year. "I was so impressed by theplanyou puttogether," said Gornstein. "I have never seen this type of collaboration. We had to find a way to come up with the funds to get the program going." He added that he feels programs from other regions will use the NOAH program as a source of guidance as they work to establish similar support systems in their communities. "I think there will be a lot of lessons learned in how you run the program that other provider communities will want to know about ," Gornstein said. The Cape Cod Five Cents Charitable Foundation also made a $10,000 donation to help defray operating costs of the new day program , which provides area homeless with a place to go during daytime hours. Previously, the shelter closed in the morning and reopened in the afternoon. With limited options for the region's homeless people, many were forced to bide their time on the streets. The new program offers a place for people to go, and assistance they need. "What excited us about funding the program is that it has so much community suppor.t," said Bert Talerman , executive vice president of The Cape Cod Five Cents Savings Bank. " Rick Presbrey of the Housing Assistance Corporation said that while the event was momentous , it was simply a "preface to the real story," which will ultimately be the success of the NOAH Shelter day program. M e a n w h i l e , participants in the HousingWithLoveWalk, includingHebert's cousin Ernie Hebert , to whom he passed along Murray's shoes, resumed their trek toward Sandwich, their bright yellow shirts a testament to the vibrant sp irit traveling with them.to help defray operating costs of the new day program, which provides area homeless with a place to go during daytime hours. Previously, the shelter closed in the morning and reopened in the afternoon. With limited options for the region's homeless people, many were forced to bide their time on the streets. The new program offers a place for people to go, and assistance they need. "What excitedus about funding the program is that it has so much community support ," said Bert Talerman , executive vice president of The Cape Cod Five i Cents Savings Bank. " Rick Presbrey of the i Housing Assistance i Corporation said that ! while the event was j momentous , it was \ simply a "preface to the i real story," which will j ultimately be the success j of the NOAH Shelter day j program. M e a n w h i l e , participants in the j HousingWithLoveWalk, j including'Hebert'scousin j Ernie Hebert, to whom j he passed alongMurray's j shoes, resumed their trek j toward Sandwich, their j bright yellow shirts a ; testament to the vibrant j spirit travelingwiththem. WALK ... ttHMHHHBBHHnHHIHHHHBB | BBBJBJttttBJBBj&jBB . 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I El Zf SI H ¦ ]H^ R nn?,e M 0 Ad^ I S ^SM " «" *» Aft e aiii f lilSiMaiMi l -. ji™ www.BeatiAuto.com ssis PIOTUPESFORILLUSTRATIONPURPOSESONLY.DEALERNOTRESPONSIBLEFORTYPOGRAPHICALERRORS.|T0WELLQUALIFIEDBUYERSWITHAPPROVEDCREDIT INLIEUOFCASHINCENTIVE ,MONTHLYPAYMENT M I' l l % I ¦ J ¦LIP * ¦ I I I » ISS1VJ9FOREVERY$1000FlHANCTiD EXCLUDESCOBVETTES "MUST0^ 08LEASEN0NGMVEHICLEINTHEHOUSEHOLD 'ALLPR ICESPLUSTAX REG TTTLE&S0CTAKEDELIVERYBY7/3114 'M Id jj i L*4 H *M j *Ml i 1 * 1 i ^4-B ' EDWARD F.MARONEY PHOTO WARNING - This sign appeared in the town parking area across from the disputed beach access. It was not put there by the town. j CONTINUED FROM PAGEA:1 j ideas and opinions. Pointingto the "utter chaos" of Ocean j Street between South Street and Hy-Line j docks in the summer, Patrick Princi said, j "The area is like a concert that lets out 10 times a day. There's no management | at all." With all the private property there, ; he said, "I don't know what we can do I as a board. It seems the town has tried j to take steps closer to the waterfront." Matt Teague said a public-private ; partnership in which a company would i get a 30-year lease to build a parking I garage has worked in other communities. ; "It canbe tastefully designed and located, i and operated by a private entity,"he said. For Felicia Penn, who lives in the i area described by Princi, it's all about enforcement. "It seems this town has never had the appetite to look at that whole south of i South Street area," she said. "They have ; never, ever, ever stepped up to the plate and required the businesses to solve the parking problem." Penn said town zoning "clearly puts the burden of solving parking problems i on the business," noting that "all new, expanded or intensified uses must provide adequate off-street parking." Stepping up on parkingcouldworkwell for the town financially, Penn argued. "There is a ton of money in this enterprise," she said, "or else they [private lot operators] wouldn't be doing it. The town has left it up to private individuals who happen to own property down there to provide parking. It's absurd." Penn scoffed at planners who say off-site lots and shuttle services are the solution. "This is America," she said. "Everybody likes to park right in front of the front door. There's plenty of property down there [where] we could solve the problem." Through public-private partnerships involving all parties, Penn said, "we i should commit to cleaning up the harbor ; district." She foresaw "a multi-level I parking garage with services on the first I floor and a penthouse on top. It'd have j a heck of a view." David Munsell recalled former town I manager John Klimm's observation that ! downtown had traffic problems, not ; parking problems. He said a multi-level garage behind some building near the harbor would help, but the town hall parking lot, he thought, would be a great place for such a structure. RayLangsaidaplanningboard parking subcommittee would demonstrate members' seriousness about the issue. He saw that not only as a way to surface solutions but to also interview legislators and others regarding funding possibilities. Chairman Paul Curley observed that "we're giving away a significant resource in this town. We let people park for free all over town. We don't give away sewerage, we don't give awaywater. This is a resource of the town.Not havingfree parking is probably part of the solution." Curley called attention to "the spreading amoeba of illegal semi- permitted lots outside the downtown area. It's gonna be a blight." Jo Anne Miller Buntich, the town's growth management director, said Assistant TownManager Mark Ells has convened a group of town officials that has been meeting for many months on parking maters. "One of the items being analyzed and looked at is the whole regulatory framework for parking in downtown Hyannis," she said. Noting that "we have become in a way a parking lot for Nantucket,"Princi pointed to distant ferry parking for long- stayvisitors to the Vineyard in Falmouth and bemoaned its lack here. At meeting's end, Curley had agreed to meet with Ells and convey the board's thinking, accompanied by Lang and member Steve Helman. The issuewillbe brought up at aregular meeting later this year, which will allow public comment. PARKING ... CONTINUEDFROM PAGEB:8 Mathewson saw firsthand the profound positive impact music can have on people , particularly on her own mother,Ellefi, as shelived resiliency with breast cancer prior to her passing in 2007. Mathewson was deUghted when members of the Barnstable Village Business Association , including directors Joe Berlandi and Jitka Borowick , along with Roberta Miller of the Cape CodArt Association and Town Council Vice President Ann Canedy, encouraged her to participateintheJailhouse Jam concert series, which will also feature Harry French (Aug. 12) and Sarah Swain and the Oh Boys (Aug. 26). "We put the Jailhouse Jam together in the hopes of bringing the people together through music," said Mathewson , who returned to Cape Cod three years ago. She said the timing of her performance coincides perfectly with her numerousprofessional endeavors in Barnstable Village, which include teaching music, offering musical solace to patients in hospice and palliative care and working with clients through Sounding Still Wellness, through which Mathew son ' encourages healing via music and meditation. "For me to be right in Barnstable Village is amazing," she said. "The Cape has changed. It feels like who I am could be accepted here." Bringing music to the village through Jailhouse Jam, Mathewson said, is thrilling. "I'm excited to just be playing in my home village,"she said. "Plus, it makes me look really cool to my nephews, Owen and Caleb, and my niece and nephew Saraellen and Midhael." Mathewson absolutely loves being an aunt. "Being an aunt is pretty much one of my all-time favorite roles right now," she said. She is also overjoyed to be bringing spirituality and song to the people through the Jailhouse Jam concerts, as well as through her participation in the upcoming Love Yoga Fest (loveyogafest. com), Open Mic night at the Cotuit Center for the Arts, the Yoga and Music KIDS program with Kristen O'Toole at St. Mary's Episcopal Church, and singing at the Barnstable Village Farmer's Market. For Mathewson, it's all j about weaving herself i into the local community \ by doing what she can to j make it marvelous. . "I feel very grateful to j be a part of that, and I \ feel people value that," j Mathewson said. "I've, j wanted to do this my whole life, and never ; thought I'd do this on Cape Cod. Just coming back here is healing for me." The Jailhouse Jam concert series will take place July 22 with Alicia j Mathewson, Aug. 12 with Harry \ French,andAug.26withSarah Swain i and the Oh Boys. Shows begin at I the Jailhouse Stage at 7 p.m. and VOICE ...