Big sale at Parke Snow!

On February 4, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff


Jimmy Del Ponte
On The Silly Side

Recently
I joined a Project Star group on Facebook. Project Star was a
Somerville Title 1 summer theatre program in the late 60's and early
70's. Each summer we would put on a different musical. I knew I had
some old photos in the cellar, so I went exploring and found a copy of
the Somerville Journal and Somerville Press from August 14th 1969.
There was a photo of some of us Project Star performers in a scene from
"Oliver," the musical we were presenting that summer (I played "The
Artful Dodger"). I started flipping through the yellowed pages of the
old newspaper and decided to use this week's column to pass on some of
the interesting and fun facts I discovered from nearly 40 years ago. I
had just turned 16 years old. Yikes!

The price of the paper back
then was 15 cents and James F. Brennan was the Mayor. One of the cover
stories was "Trum Recaptures Track Crown," after an absence of five
years. Richie Salvo, Dean McKiel and Arthur Koropolous were among the
star athletes who competed with the other parks throughout the city.

Parke
Snow was having its August "White Sale" – you could get a Cannon bath
towel for $1.87 and facecloths – 2 for 87 cents. Cotton bedspreads were
$4.99, while a woven bedspread set you back a whopping $5.99. My cousin
Carol reminded me that there was also a cobbler (shoe repair guy)
downstairs in Parke Snow. They had booths where you could wait while
you got re-soled or heeled. I remember having taps on your shoes made
you very cool, and you could get them there. And speaking of shoes, the
Giant Shoe Outlet at 412 Highland Ave was having a pre-school sale.
Girls "popular T-strap styles" in smooth mock leather, black or brown,
in sizes 8 ¬Ω to 3 cost $1.39. Nurses white oxfords were $3.33. You
could buy a pair of men's work boots for $4.97. Now that's what I call
a sale. Put on those new shoes and head over to Paramount Beverage
Company at 225 Elm Street and pick up a case of beer for $2.99. Joseph
Goodell, registered pharmacist, was featured in "Pharmacy Footnotes." –
his drug store was at 852 Broadway, right in Powder House Square.

Rigazio
Brothers car dealership on Beacon St. could put you into a brand new
1969 Rambler for $1899. Other deals on the lot included a 1968 Javelin
for $2495 (remember the commercial where the carload of girls would
pull up and say " Hey Javelin"?) or a nice little (with engine in the
rear) used 1962 Corvair for 95 bucks.

Arrow Pontiac had some
good deals too. A '66 Mustang for $1495, a 1968 Firebird stick shift
for $2100, and a '61 Ford T-Bird for $495. Don't you wish you could go
back in time!

Vinny Piro announced that he would not seek
re-election as Alderman for Ward 5 so he could concentrate fully on his
duties as State Representative.

A look at the classifieds was
very entertaining. The first thing I noticed was that there were no
area codes back then. Check this ad out: "Somerville, College Ave,
Davis Square, 4 room apartment. Heat, hot water and parking included,
$160 a month." And that was one of the expensive ones. How about this
gem: "Cambridge, 4 rooms $95 a month." Furnished rooms were in the
vicinity of $20 a week. If you were going to buy a house, JJ Nissenbaum
had this one up for sale: "Somerville West, two family 6 and 6 (rooms),
Philadelphia style, 2 car garage, $22,500." Can you believe it? If you
were looking for a job and you were a registered nurse, you could pull
down $135 to $175 a week at Somerville Hospital.

Johnnie's
Foodmaster, boasting "5 stores to serve you," had some pretty sweet
deals. 5 ears for 25 cents, 3 lbs of peaches for 39 cents, 2-6 packs of
tuna for 69 cents. You could pick up some nice New York style pastrami
for a mere 99 cents a pound. Where's the beef? Hows' about some nice
Boneless London Broil for 98 cents a pound? Can't beat that with a
stick!

Colonial semi-boneless hams were on sale for 85 cents a
pound. There was a coupon for 2 rolls of Bounty Paper Towels for 15
cents. I'd be the quicker picker upper if I could pick them up for that
price today.

Well, I hope you enjoyed our little trip through
the pages of Somerville history. If you are like me you are wishing for
those days just for the deals. But they say that it's basically the
same because of salaries and the economy and all that stuff. I couldn't
believe that so many of the old ads looked so familiar. Remember
Johnnie's Foodmaster's mascot? It was the little grocer with the
glasses, mustache, apron and professor's mortarboard with the tassels.

Incidentally,
there is an updated version of Project Star that just may be ready,
this coming summer – stay tuned! Now only if we could bring back some
of those old prices and great deals, along with our youth, and our
patience, and our fighting weight, and…


You can email Jimmy direct with comments at jimmydel@rcn.com

 

Fire, police chiefs respond to safety inquiry

On February 4, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff


By Tom Nash

Following
a ladder truck accident in Boston that killed a firefighter last month,
the Board of Aldermen ordered Somerville's fire and police chiefs to
give assessments of their departments' vehicle safety measures – with
both chiefs lamenting a lack of mechanical personnel.

Speaking
at the Jan. 29 Board of Aldermen Committee on Health and Public Safety,
Fire Chief Kevin Kelleher said none of the equipment has suffered
malfunctions like the brake failure that killed Boston firefighter Lt.
Kevin Kelley Jan. 10.

"Any complaint of a brake issue, the mechanic is sent to the station – they never move the apparatus," Kelleher said.

Kelleher
said the department relies on one mechanic with emergency vehicle
certification to service all of its 14 firefighting apparatus and 15
vehicles, a situation he said was not ideal.

"Our maintenance
program, to be perfectly honest with you, is not where I'd like to see
it," he said. "Our mechanic is straight-out all the time, doing
everything."

A partnership with the Cambridge Fire Department
enables their maintenance shop to service Somerville equipment when the
mechanic is off duty.

While the department added four hybrid
Toyota Priuses to its lineup in 2007 to replace the fleet of aging
Crown Victoria sedans, Kelleher said those still in use pose the most
serious safety problems.

"Some of those vehicles are over ten years old," he said. "(The mechanic) tries to keep them together as best he can."

Asked
if the brakes have failed on a call, Kelleher said it has never
occurred, adding the most recent incident in Boston points to problems
unique to that department. "Some of (those incidents) lead you to

believe
that stuff doesn't get reported to the maintenance shop in a timely
manner," he said. "We don't leave anything to chance."

Police
Chief Anthony Holloway responded to similar safety inquiries from the
committee, saying the department also has one mechanic who services the
42 patrol cars. The cars are serviced every 2,000 miles, including
brake inspections.

 

Service Learning in Somerville?

On February 4, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff


William C. Shelton

"Anyone can be great, because anyone can serve."

"The time is always right to do the right thing."

–Martin Luther King Jr.

I
believe that citizenship is not a passive status, but an active
process. From Washington D.C. to Somerville, MA, the pathetic state of
our dreary, divisive, ineffectual and money-driven politics results in
large part from reduced citizen participation.

When citizens do
not actively engage the world, they do not understand it. They become
more vulnerable to ideology and to the simple-minded nonsense pushed by
spin doctors whose goal is to manage impressions rather than convey
truths.

The institutions that nurtured communities – extended
families, neighborhoods, churches, service organizations, unions,
precinct organizations, political clubs, fraternal organizations, and
so on – were also venues in which people discussed current events,
challenged each other's perceptions and formed opinions. As these
institutions have all disintegrated, citizens have become more
isolated. They have become more susceptible to the pabulum broadcast on
television and the hateful and cartoonish views transmitted through
talk radio.

Coming together to make a difference in their
communities is one of the few ways in which citizens now learn
political and economic reality, one of the few contexts in which they
listen to each other and test their assumptions. You can bet that
Somerville citizens who organized to change real estate developments at
Lincoln Park, Craigie Street, Park Street, Max Pack, Magoun Square,
Assembly Square, Union Square and the Inner Belt have a much better
understanding of how Somerville's politics work than do citizens who
remained uninvolved.

Another outcome of institutional
disintegration is that schools are increasingly burdened with functions
that family and community once performed. Among these are moral and
civic education. As with most subjects, civics and American history are
largely forgotten once the tests have been taken and the grades
awarded. There is little lived experience to attach these subjects to
in students' minds.

A partial solution is service learning. It
is based on what the ancient Greeks called "praxis," and advocated by
such educators as David Kolb and Paolo Freire. Students learn concepts
in their classes and learn from practicing the concepts in their
communities. The concepts guide and inform the practice; the practice
illuminates and tests the concepts.

Service learning can
involve assisting nonprofit agencies to improve people's lives. Or
older students tutoring younger students in such basic skills as
reading. Or students participating directly in political organizing.

Lisa
Grabelsky teaches at the Winter Hill Community School. Last fall she
required her students to spend three hours working in the offices of
the presidential candidate of their choice. Students initially
resisted, but once into it, they were enthusiastic. They became more
engaged in their studies. Their sense of self worth increased.

This
suggests some benefits that go beyond learning a subject. Students who
do service learning have lower dropout rates and more positive
attitudes toward school. They are better prepared for the work world.

By
working with each other and with people outside school, they form bonds
and begin to reweave the ties of community. They discover their own
capabilities by making a tangible difference in something that matters.
They often bring their parents into the life of the community.

On
January 22nd, three Teach-for-America veterans with roots in Somerville
led a community meeting to discuss possibilities for service learning
in Somerville. After a terrific presentation, attendees engaged in
lively and wide-ranging discussion.

Many thought that service
learning should be a requirement. Former aldermanic candidate Fred
Berman said that we think math or reading is important enough to make
it a requirement. If we believe that citizenship and community service
are important, we should require them as well. He suggested that
younger kids look up to older kids, and older kids can set an example
of service.

Others were more cautionary. They said that
requiring service learning puts an additional burden on
already-burdened teachers. Its quality can vary significantly based on
the teacher's enthusiasm. School Committee member Mark Niedergang
expressed ambivalence about requiring it.

Rob Hollister, Dean
of Tufts University's Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service,
suggested an alternative to requirements: create service learning
opportunities that are compelling. He added that students who have done
service learning enhance the colleges that they attend and enrich the
quality of their education. He believes that colleges can support
service learning in their local communities.

Regarding when to
begin service learning, School Committee member Mary Jo Rossetti
thought that the younger that it begins, the more effective it will be.
I agree. It's possible to find something meaningful for kids to do in
almost every grade level. Rossetti and Niedergang believe that we
should research the best practices across the U.S. and then improve on
them.

Local activist Alex Pirie anticipated that
service-learning might suffer from a disparity in students' income
levels, where the more advantaged are more able to participate. He
thinks that there are solutions, however. Others said that students
with little to do at home have become enthusiastic participants.

An
official from the Massachusetts Department of Education said that its
important to "map" services performed onto the curriculum. That is, to
effectively align service activities with their related subjects to
yield the greatest learning.

Pirie, described an unanticipated
benefit of the service learning in which he was involved. Adults are
better behaved when young people are watching them. And students'
intolerance of tedium makes meetings go faster.

By the end of
the evening, my mind was alive with the possibilities and challenges of
implementing service leaning. My ward's School Committee member, Adam
Sweeting, praised the Teach-for-America vets for bringing together
parents, teachers, union officers, School Committee members,
administrators and activists. He thought it was a great first
discussion of what is happening and what could happen. I think that
he's right, but I wonder who is going to make it happen.

 

Golden Light issue tabled as Aldermen neighbors feud

On February 4, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff


Golden Light is still at the center of a contentious and heated debate over rules vs. livelihood.

By Tom Nash

After
months of debate, the Board of Aldermen's battle over the Golden Light
Restaurant's hours seemed near a conclusion when it was taken off the
table in the midst of a vote.

A proposal to allow the Davis
Square restaurant permission to stay open until 1 a.m. on weeknights
and 2 a.m. on weekends for the next 60 days will be up for a vote again
at the Feb. 12 meeting. It will take three aldermen to table the item
again.

The votes stood 6-1 in favor of the measure when Vice
President Jack Connolly, who serves at-large, invoked Section 15 of the
city charter. The rule allows votes to be tabled when two or more
Aldermen are absent.

"It was clear to me that a lot of
information was being absorbed by everybody, and perhaps two more weeks
of waiting was not going to be crippling," Connolly said after the
meeting. "I think it would be helpful for the discussion."

Ward
6 Aldermen Rebekah Gewirtz, like Connolly a neighbor of the restaurant,
walked out of the meeting after being reprimanded for swearing.

"I
think we're making it into a much bigger deal than it is," Gewirtz said
later. "We've used (Golden Light) as something to be made an example
out of. For someone who's been in business for so long, it's important
he have the ability to keep fair hours."

The Board of Aldermen's
most recent attempt to curtail the restaurant's hours began in October
after Connolly brought up noise complaints he had received.

Gewirtz,
who beat Connolly for the Ward 6 seat in 2005 after serving 22 years as
the incumbent, has defended the establishment. She has cited both a
petition by residents in support of the extended hours and a lack of
complaints from a senior living center across the street as evidence
that the restaurant's violations have not been an issue for her
constituents.

Connolly said several Golden Light neighbors have
complained to him, and that a petition from residents opposing the
extended hours may be in the works.

The Committee on Licenses
and Permits voted to extend the restaurant's hours at its Jan. 22
meeting. The measure was approved by a 2-0 vote, with Ward 2 Alderman
Maryann Heuston and Connolly not present.

In granting the
request for extended hours, both Ward 7 Alderman Robert Trane and
Committee Chair Bruce Desmond told Golden Light owner Bruce Lam that
this was a last chance to abide by the rules – which Lam seems to have
been violating for most of his 26 years in Davis Square.

At the
committee meeting, Desmond pointed out Lam's continued violation of his
hours despite the committee's previous attempts to allow the hours to
be extended on Christmas and New Year's Eve.

"I feel like I've extended myself trying to help you…and then you violated that as well," Desmond said.

Eight
people, including Lam's first delivery person and first customer, spoke
in favor of allowing the extended hours. All speakers noted the
necessity of Lam's extended hours both as a late-night

option for Somerville residents and for the restaurant's survival.

No one showed up to speak against the request.

As
the hearing ended, Lam stressed the importance of the Golden Light to
late-night workers. "A lot of people are hungry after one (a.m.) – taxi
drivers, police after work. If you keep me open after one I'll keep the
place clean and people will have a place to eat if they're hungry," he
said.

Lam said he would put up a new signing stating his new
hours, and that he would try to keep customers seeking after-hours food
at bay.

Police Chief Anthony Holloway and Captain John O'Connor,
West Somerville substation commander, said they remained concerned that
Lam's lack of compliance with the current hours placed a burden on the
department. O'Connor said more than sixty direct patrol calls had been
requested for Golden Light in the past month and a half.

"He's
got to understand that two o'clock means two o'clock," Holloway said.
"We send officers by there and he's open 45 minutes, an hour later. He
was instructed one time to close, shook his head yes to my captain,
then stayed open."

O'Connor added that Lam had recently been
caught serving customers out of the back door after he had been
instructed three times to close.

"He needs to comply with the
rules that are out there," Holloway said. Turning to Lam, he added,
"Other than that, we don't care how late you stay open. It doesn't
bother us."

Connolly said he hopes the two weeks to consider the vote may change some votes.

"Perhaps
they'll say 'Hey maybe we need to be a little more emphatic.' I've seen
a lot of votes change over two weeks, and this will give people another
chance to heard on it," he said. "Citywide, it's not a huge issue, but
what that is doing is setting the table for more petitions for more
late night places. If it's business first and neighbors second, you've
got to draw the line."

 

Newstalk for February 4

On February 4, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff


Thursday
night at Sagra Restaurant and Bar in Davis Square, the Somerville
Chamber of Commerce will hold its monthly networking session from 5 pm
to 7 pm. All Chamber members are cordially invited to attend and bring
plenty of cards or information about your business.

***************

This
Thursday night the City Democrats will meet at the Argenziano School at
290 Washington Street at 7 pm to elect delegates to the state
convention coming up later this spring.

***************

Guess
there was a huge back up in the sewers over at the La Quinta Inn/Hotel
this past couple of weeks, seems it took 3 days to have PT Kelly and
the city to clean all the used needles and what was said to us
thousands of sexual items, that grossed out everyone there. Gives new
meaning to "check out time" doesn't it?

***************

According
to more than one source, a City of Somerville Fire Department
"employee" (not firefighter) has been getting paid as a City employee
and at the same time has access to the city's fires, and is the paid
photographer for the Farm Team's paper while on duty. We are not
complaining, but we heard from more then one source that the person is
on the scene of all the fires first and they allow him to cross over
the lines to get a better picture.

***************

Bye
Bye Birdie, the 2009 Somerville High School Musical which tells the
fictional story of a publicity stunt mounted by 1950's pop star Conrad
Birdie, will be running from Friday, February 6th through Sunday,
February 8th at Somerville High School (81 Highland Avenue). The entire
community is invited to enjoy an evening of local theatre with student
performers. Tickets can be purchased at the door and are $7.00 or $6.00
for senior citizens and children aged 12 and under. Friday and Saturday
shows start at 7:30 PM. Sunday matinée begins at 2:00.

***************

Everyone
is worried about cutbacks and layoffs, including our finest at the
Police Department, lots of talk about layoffs coming up and don't
understand why the two sub stations are opened in a city only 3.5 maybe
4 square miles large. If cutbacks come and hopefully before the layoffs
begin at the Police level they want other things cut before that
happens. The substations might be a good idea in normal times, but some
think that closing them now would help to save one policeman's job.

***************

Speaking
of layoffs, the big one is coming from Cambridge Health Alliance, and
no one should be surprised, we hear that over 350 layoffs in the next
few weeks and Somerville will be hit especially hard. Be interesting to
see how many layoffs in Somerville as opposed to Cambridge, we hope
Somerville will not be short changed again by them.

***************

By
the way we have clarify our terminology on what a "Secular Progressive"
is – all we can say is that if you Google the term, you will read it
for yourself. To all those PDSers out there that feel victimized every
time someone says something against you, at least look up the term and
get it straight. Being a Secular Progressive has nothing to do with not
believing in God – and we agree that not all the PDSers are Secular
Progressives.

***************

Long time resident and
great guy Jimmy Brennan of Bromfield Road hasn't been doing well lately
and he recently came home from the Lawrence Memorial Hospital and is
resting – we hope he's back on his feet soon and seeing that big smile
on his face.

***************

 

Local restaurants react to proposed new tax

On February 4, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff


 
Cantina La Mexicana started hosting salsa Saturday nights to draw in more customers.

By Meghan Frederico

The
new restaurant tax proposed last week by Governor Patrick is creating a
stir among those in the food industry. If approved by lawmakers, the
measure would raise the meals tax from 5 percent to 6 percent, and
would give towns and cities the option of increasing it to 7 percent.

The
Massachusetts Restaurant Association (MRA) has criticized the proposal
that, in their view, singles out one industry for an additional tax.
Small profit margins and unusually high operating expenses make
restaurants particularly vulnerable to the economic crisis, they said
in their press release. Adding, "[Restaurants] employ approximately
9.5% of the Massachusetts workforce; now is not the time to put more
jobs in jeopardy."

Restaurants around Somerville, big and small,
are grappling with what the passage of the restaurant tax could mean
for business during a time when they see customers cutting back on
spending.

The Great Thai Chef, a 38-seat restaurant in Union
Square, has already been trudging through what one server called
slowest time in its 10 year history.

"Even the regulars who used
to come in 5 times a week are now coming in 3 times a week," she said,
"it seems like everyone's trying to save money." She wasn't sure about
how the additional tax would affect their business, but said that she
couldn't imagine it being much slower. Two of the five staff members
have already left in recent months because they couldn't make enough in
tips.

But the restaurant is innovating with the hope of
attracting tentative customers. They will soon start serving Thai tapas
at night, offering a menu of small plates created with the assistance
of J.J. Gonson, a local chef who has become a local favorite with her
catering business and cooking classes.

Taqueria La Mexicana,
located a few doors down in Union Square, has also been dealing with
slower-than-usual business in recent months. Co-owners Robert and
Carolina Rendón have run the Taqueria for 13 years, attracting a
following with their tasty and very reasonably priced Mexican dishes.
This past spring they decided to expand and created the Cantina, a
bright and festively adorned dining area with a full bar.

"Whatever's
going to happen is going to happen" said Mr. Rendón about whether the
legislature would decide to approve the tax increase. His attention is
more focused right now on bringing people back in, and taking advantage
of their larger space's amenities to do this.

One way they
hope they can attract larger crowds is through live entertainment. On
Fridays, a mariachi band plays for diners in the Cantina from 8 to 11
p.m., and they recently began hosting salsa nights on Saturdays, when
they offer lessons and dancing on the Cantina's sizable hardwood floor.
They have also started serving Sunday brunch, and are considering
hosting a Tango night. Generally, they are keeping their ears open for
what their customers want.

The news of the tax increase is also
resonating just North at Highland Kitchen, the Spring Hill area
restaurant which has been serving upscale comfort food since it opened
in late 2007.

Business is still good at Highland Kitchen, a
feat that co-owners Mark Romano and Marci Joy attribute to "a great
neighborhood and a cast of regulars." The 90-seat bar and restaurant
has also become a destination for those outside of Somerville, perhaps
in part because of the high-profile backgrounds of its proprietors,
good reviews and reasonable price points.

"Hopefully the tax
won't affect our pricing," Mr. Romano said of the potential increase.
Should the measure pass, they'll have to look at their finances more
closely, but he hopes that they will be able to absorb the extra tax as
a cost of the restaurant, rather than pass it on to the customers.
"Sure it's a business," he said, "but you also want to make it
affordable for people, especially in these tough times."

Mr.
Romano hopes lawmakers take the state of the economy into consideration
when they vote on the tax increase. "For other small businesses that
are not doing as well," he added, "this measure could be the final
straw."

At the other end of the spectrum is the Ninety-Nine
Restaurant and Pub, a chain that runs 60 restaurants across
Massachusetts. Although a manager at the 220-seat Assembly Square
location declined to comment on how business has been there, the
company's president John Grady outlined the possible effects that a tax
increase would have on their business.

"I understand the
challenges the state is facing, but it is unfair to single out
individual industries" he said, echoing the sentiment expressed by the
MRA. He worries that the increase will be detrimental to business,
saying that "any time you raise the price there are going to be
customers who don't come with you."

He also drew attention to
difficulties the proposed tax increase could create for companies that
operate in multiple municipalities, saying "it could be cumbersome
trying to keep track of the different laws in different places, and
would add an administrative expense."

Mr. Grady fears that
ultimately the additional tax will affect their profitability, which
could effect their servers' hours or benefits. The number affected
would not be insignificant, since the chain is one of the largest
employers in the Massachusetts, employing about 4,200 across the state.

So as Somerville restaurants work hard to get people through
their doors, it appears that the biggest question on their mind may
actually be for their customers: how would they respond to the tax
increase?

 

TheSomervilleNews.com poll of the week

On February 4, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff


In
addition to breaking news, sports and opinion, TheSomervilleNews.com
also features a daily poll in which you, the reader, tell us where you
come down on local issues. This week's poll concerned your views on the
T's proposal to build a maintenance facility at Brickbottom and where
you thought the mayor should make the first budget cuts if they had to
be made. If you don't agree with the results, simply log onto
TheSomervilleNews.com.

Reader Comments

 

Old firestation beacon to be the gateway to Union Square

On February 2, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff


Union Square could have more than traffic to create an identity. ~Photo by Julia Fairclough

The city is looking for your clever ideas

By Julia Fairclough

Harvard
Square has the Out of Town News stand. Porter Square has the red
kinetic sculpture. And pretty soon Union Square will have its own
landmark.

The city's latest project to revamp Union Square
entails building a tower atop the old Union Square firehouse, now known
as the SCAT (for Somerville Community Access Television) building in
the heart of the square. The city's goal is to transform the building
tower into an artful beacon and landmark to signify that Union Square
is a lively cultural center.

The city is currently accepting
proposals, and in particular looking for work that is creative and bold
to attract attention. The addition will be purely aesthetic. The
deadline for proposals to the Office of Strategic Planning and
Community Development is March 3, said Monica Lamboy, the planning
office's executive director.

Lamboy looks forward to seeing a
host of innovative proposals since this area is so ripe with
enthusiastic and artistic people. Past projects-such as the winter
lights and funky metal garbage cans and benches-have shown how hard
people are working to improve Union Square.

"It's remarkable
the amount of time that people put into their neighborhood to make it
better," she said. "It really is an active community and here is a real
way to have a visual impact." Once the Green Line is extended to Union
Square, people can say, "Once you get off the train, come meet me at
the beacon," she said.

Mimi Graney, the executive director of
Union Square Main Streets is also excited about the project. She
pointed to the other squares in the area that feature an identifying
landmark. At one point, the World War I monument stood in the middle of
the Union Square plaza (it was since moved over to City Hall) and that
was how people knew they were in the square, she said.

Plus,
the SCAT building can use some upgrades, she added. It's a historic
building but doesn't define the square. "At one point the city wanted
to sell the building or find a tenant," she said. "So it's great that
people have recognized that it is such a landmark in the square."

Built
in 1903, the building once featured an octagonal cupola. The city is
looking for proposals that enhance the existing tower by attaching a
structural element or integrating an intervention that would not
compromise the integrity of the existing structure. Since the beacon
will be seen from afar, proposals must include a light element. Visit
http://www.somervilleartscouncil.org/programs/artsunion/street_arch_tower.htm
for more specifications.

Architect Walter T. Littlefield
designed the firehouse, and the square bell tower is derived from
Italian Renaissance villas. Some details, including the granite
keystones, are similar to Roman monuments. People should note the
unique brick wall pattern, a "Flemish" bond of both light and dark
colored bricks.

Another upcoming Union Square revitalization
project entails developing "structural banners" for the new light poles
along Somerville Avenue, said Greg Jenkins, the Somerville Arts Council
executive director. The council has not yet issued a request for
proposal.

 

TheSomervilleNews.com poll of the week

On February 2, 2009, in Uncategorized, by The News Staff

In
addition to breaking news, sports and opinion, TheSomervilleNews.com
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From left to right: Linda Chau, Jingni Chen and Deepikah Bhargo. Eric McWeneeny in the background.
Dylan English and Craig Leach with Paolo Gutierrez handling the microphone. ~Photos by Julia Fairclough

High School mentor group crafts a PSA on depression

By Julia Fairclough

All you do is mooch off me every day," the father growled, gripping the wine glass and waving his free arm while his son cowered in the corner of the kitchen. "All you do is eat and play games. All you do is sit around the house. I'm not made of money, you know. Awww…just get out of my sight!"

Sadly, for some teens, this is a familiar scenario. Most don't know how to talk about problems at home, and instead seek relief from alcohol and drugs. Or else they bury their feelings and isolate and become depressed. That is why members of the Somerville Positive Forces (SPF), a student group that works to prevent and address issues involving substance abuse, are creating a public service announcement (PSA) about depression in teenagers.

"Are you going to cry now?" taunted Craig Leach, who teaches TV and media production at Somerville High School. Leach was playing the father. Dylan English, a junior, who played the son, walked off the set. It was a take. It was a chilly Tuesday afternoon in the high school library, but the atmosphere was warm with enthusiasm.

"We (through the PSA) get to show people that although there is a problem with depression, there is a solution," said Sabrina Ozit, 16, who helped to collect the data from a 2007-2008 Somerville High School Health Survey about depression, which the group used for the PSA.

The depression rate at Somerville High School is slightly higher than average, Ozit explained-at 31% versus 27% nationally-as she thumbed through the report.

"We are the kids who understand (high school depression) more than adults, so we can offer realistic solutions," Ozit added. "Depression is beneath the surface, but a good friend would notice it and suggest that the person tell a counselor. Now that I've been in SPF, I realize that it's everyone's problem, and how to get help."

The PSA entails a collaboration with Somerville Community Access Television (SCAT)-via its Next Generation Producers program-under the direction of Daniel Marques, SCAT's youth media and membership coordinator and Prince Charles, the programming coordinator and youth media instructor. The PSA brings viewers through the scenario of verbal and substance abuse, which can lead to depression and it offers three hot line numbers and how sufferers can receive help. It will will air in late March on Channel 3, on SCAT's media Web site, www.saymedia.blogspot.com and on the Next Generation MySpace page, www.myspace.com/nextgenerationproducers.

The group gathers information from local resources, such as the school health survey, that would be beneficial to the community, said Lovelee Heller, the group advisor and Somerville Cares About Prevention employee. "It's the students who lead the process and choose the topics." SPF is a subgroup of Somerville Cares About Prevention.

SPF will also create a PSA about marijuana abuse, another timely topic. According to the health survey, 2008 rates of substance abuse among high school students is similar to 2006. Cigarette use increased from 14 to 15% between those two years, and marijuana use from 19 to 21%. However, rates of substance abuse were lower in Somerville than in Massachusetts as a whole, according to the report (comparing 2008 to the most recent 2005 state data).

For example, alcohol abuse among teens is at 48% statewide, but 37% in Somerville. Likewise, binge alcohol episodes were at 27% statewide, versus 21% locally. Tobacco use is at 4% statewide, versus 2% at Somerville High School, and marijuana use at 26% and 21% retrospectively.

Twenty five percent of students reported being verbally or emotionally abused by a family member and 13% have witnessed family violence, according to the survey.

Deepikah Bhargo, a junior, joined SPF because as an older sister preventing and educating about abuse issues is near and dear to her. "There needs to be communication between parents and children, which is why we want to educate everyone," she said. "There are many misconceptions about there, such as 'everyone drinks.' Not everyone does drink, but we need to educate those who do."

A few steps away, Jingni Chen, a senior, worked the camera. This is her first time working with film. Who knows, maybe I'll continue, she mused, her attention then caught by a quick burst of laughter amongst the crew as they finished another take.

"I went through some depression during my freshman year," Chen continued, when the crew took a quick break. "So I understand how it feels. It was hard for me to talk about it to others, aside from my sister. So I want to show others out there that you can talk to other people."

Senior Paulo Gutierrez, who was working the microphone, enjoys getting to know other students who he would not ordinarily encounter in the halls of the high school. He found he enjoys working on a group project.

Leach appreciates that the PSF students are stepping forward to be role models. It is more meaningful to hear how to get help for depression from a peer. It elicits a stronger message, he said.

"I love how the project is youth development focused," Heller agreed. "They look at issues in the community where they can have a positive impact, which makes for more strategies in how to reduce underage drinking and substance abuse in their community. They have great ideas."

Marques and Charles both enjoy their roles as teen program coordinators. The students are curious, creative and full of ideas. They embrace learning how to conceptualize, direct and film."It's a great thing to be a part of, to impact their lives and expose them to video," Marques said.

In December 2008, SPF conducted its "sticker shock" program by working with local liquor store merchants to put special stickers on multi-pack alcoholic beverages and on liquor store bags. The 15,000 stickers reminded adults that they should not provide alcohol to anyone under the age of 21. Stores were given the option of displaying a sign with the same message in their windows or at their checkout counters.