2006 Report of the

Harbormaster/

Natural Resources Department

 

Several economic and environmental factors impacted boating this summer in Harwich Port and surrounding waters. As the demand for foreign oil grew, the post Hurricane Katrina price on fuel at the fuel dock climbed to an all time high: $3.41/gallon on diesel, ethanol gasoline was selling at $4.07/gallon. For nearly all power boat owners, this translated to limited recreational use to just a few outings a season due to the high cost of filling the tank. At the fuel dock sales plummeted.

 

Economics had shown that the cost of replacing the aging underground fuel tanks did not remotely match the pay back to the Town of the Saquatucket Harbor fuel dock lease. Therefore, in October the Board of Selectmen voted not to renew the lease with Harwich Port Boat Yard and close down the operation for good. Fuel for recreational boats is available at fuel docks at Wychmere and Allen harbors while commercial boats can buy fuel over the bulkhead from authorized tanker trucks.

 

HARBOR INCOME    FY06

 

 

 

Saquatucket

452,148

 Visitor Dockage

141,599

 Mooring

63,275

 Offload Permit

33,816

 Ramp

26,034

 Electric Use

25,519

 Wychmere Town Pier

25,365

 Allen Town Dock

22,031

 List Waitiing Fee

16,145

 Fuel Commission

15,838

 Ice Receipts

2,250

 Shellfish Permit

2,093

 MSA Fee

600

 Restaurant Tie-up

420

 Copying & Fax  

31

 Refund

(916)

 Allen Harbor Storage

 11,314

 

 

 

 

INCOME   TOTAL                          $837,562

 

HARBOR EXPENSES

Expenses   (actual)                                   72,677

Salaries & Wages (incl. Shellfish Lab)     217,810

 _________

Total Expenses                                  $290,477

 

NET                                     $547,085

 

 

Recreational boating is certainly not going away as is proven by the long waiting lists. However, there is little doubt that energy costs everywhere will remain high and this will impact boating and its demand. Our slip deposit program makes down payments due in December and showed a record number of 18 cancellations from boaters, mostly a consequence of this issue. One alternative, sailing, is monetarily sensible and offers itself as both relaxation and sport and may fill a power boating void.

 

We offer many thanks to Town Administrator, Wayne Melville, for his 17 years of support of the Harbormasters Office and Natural Resources Department. He is serving the same position at another coastal town, Manchester By-The-Sea. A new acting town administrator, Rene Read, was decisive in making several changes. These included moving the purchasing of all shellfish permits out of the Selectmen’s Office and placing them squarely in the hands of the Harbormasters Office, which is basically open for business during the same hours and weekends. We also took this opportunity to change the format of the new permit and have made the purchase of all permits available on-line for customer convenience. To his credit, he kept a close hand in the development of the Harbor Management Plan bringing it through its 11th revision. Our HMP, endorsed by the MA Inspector Generals Office, is a gold plated standard for other towns. His last act supported a concept of his predecessor, the transfer the Waterways Improvement Fund money back into the General Fund to reduce the tax rate. This has predictably set us up for making it harder to perform waterway infrastructure repairs, a point which the Waterways Commission now shares.  Unfortunately for Harwich, Mr. Read also moved on to become assistant TA in Mashpee.

 

Piling Issues

Piling issues remained at the top of the growing list of harbor needs, along with dredging. Four steel pilings were replaced this spring at an extreme cost of $19,000. Regrettably, a half dozen of 40 steel pilings which were installed 18 years ago and scheduled for replacement in the Capital Outlay Plan in 2012 have since collapsed and were not replaced. On the surface this may not sound catastrophic; however, the 60 such pilings each weigh more than 3½ tons. When these collapse they destroy or damage anything that is nearby. Funding their replacement with an empty Waterways Improvement Fund coffer remains a challenge which will run itself into the New Year. At this writing, there has been one failed grant application for this purpose, and another has been submitted for this purpose to the Seaport Advisory Council. If all else fails, this cost will have to be appropriated by a special Town Meeting article or emergency action. Otherwise, we will not only lose a gross amount of slip revenue but there will not be enough safe berths to go around for the numbers of boats that have contracted with the Town.

 

Long awaited improvements were made to the Saquatucket Harbor east side parking lot. A funding commitment from the State Access Board was partially utilized in the parking lot re-surfacing project. An asphalt grinding machine reduced the parking lot to sand. Lawrence Lynch Corp. was awarded the contract to place drainage basins and lay a new asphalt surface on the lot. The boat ramp portion of the project will be held off until fall of 2007 at earliest. Funding for the project was approved in the commonwealth’s supplemental budget in 2005.

 

Dredging Issues

The US Army Corps federal money to dredge small harbors such as Saquatucket in Harwich is virtually nonexistent. There is little chance of relief in the future, given an $8 trillion national debt, the massive amounts being spent on Iraq and the drain of relief money flowing down south to rebuild after Katrina. On top of this, the Bush administration has tasked the Corps with large projects in Iraq, such as the $20 million Mosul Dam repair project, while cutting the Corps budget by $600 million. Thus the Corps is short on resources it needs to do critical infrastructure projects such as dredging. This has left the Town of Harwich with the burden of funding its busiest channels.

Harbors left undredged can become so shallow that commercial and recreational boats can't use the waters. This can have an adverse economic impact. The combined ports of Chatham and Harwich, for example, were the sixth highest port in the Northeast for groundfish landings in 2004. They had a total of 116 boats permitted to catch these fish, which include cod, haddock and flounder. Cape and Islands fishermen, working out of these same small harbors, landed fish worth nearly $12.7 million paid to fishermen in 2004. That doesn't include the many more recreational boats that use these harbors or the transitory tuna and scallop fleets that add around 100 more commercial vessels to this area each summer and fall.

The following is a list of vessels with year-round or winter offloading privileges at Harwich Port (does include vessels at private marinas or vessels with tuna permits).

                         COMMERCIAL VESSELS (regular pier offloading permits)

1

Ernest

Borraccino, Sr.

Chatham

A - 1

RESTLESS

2

Greg

Tomasian

So. Harwich

A - 2

SEABAG III

3

William T.

Barker

Harwich

A - 3

TUNA ECLIPSE

4

Eric

Hesse

Barnstable

A - 4

TENACIOUS

5

Earl

LeGeyt

Hyannis

A - 5

SEAHOOK

6

Harry

Hunt

Orleans

A - 6

DANIELLE B

7

William C.

Chaprales

Marstons Mills

A - 7

REUBY

8

Tony

Coccoro

Chatham

A - 8

RISKY BUSINESS

9

Michael

Matulitis

Brewster

A - 9

MY TWO GIRLS

10

Tom

McMullen

Chatham

A - 10

Dusky 25

11

Jan

Margeson

Brewster

A - 11

GROWING OLD

12

Mark V.

Leach

Harwich

A - 12

SEA HOLLY

13

Ronald

Menard

So. Dennis

A - 13

CHAMY

14

Ronald

Braun

Marshfield

A - 14

PEGGY B II

15

Christopher

Ripa

East Harwich

A - 15

OCEAN LADY

16

Richard

Rudders

Barnstable

A - 16

KINGFISHER

17

Ian

Barker

Harwich

A - 17

MARJORIE K

18

Mark

Smith

Harwich

A - 18

GODZILLA

19

Rodney

Tavano

W. Barnstable

A - 19

MISS DOROTHY

20

Peter

Spalt

Harwich Port

A - 20

TBA

21

Roger

Tessier

East Harwich

A - 21

SEA FROG

22

Thomas

Traina

East Harwich

A - 22

SUE-Z

23

Glen

LeGeyt

Yarmouth

A - 23

MISS MORGAN

24

Ronald

Menard

So. Dennis

A - 24

JESSIE

25

Thomas

Szado

Harwich Port

A - 25

ARLIE X.

26

David

Dion

Friendswood TX

A - 26

LADY DIANA

27

Willard

Nickerson

Chatham

A - 27

THREE GRACES

28

Frank L.

Greiner, Jr.

Harwich

E - 1

MAGELLAN

29

Jay

Queenan

East Falmouth

E - 2

MICHELE

30

John

Demango

Harwich

E - 3

MISS JENNIFER

31

Christopher

Green

Harwich Port

E - 5

MILKWEED

32

Eric

Hesse

Barnstable

E - 6

MATTANZA

33

William

Barker

Harwich

E - 7

ZACHERY T

34

Robert

Luce

East Harwich

E - 8

SEAWINN

35

Mike

Terrenzi

Harwich

E - 9

KELLY J

36

Jeff

Greene

Harwich

E - 10

SEA FEVER

37

Greg

Tomasian

So. Harwich

E - 11

AMY A

38

Greg

Walinski

Harwich Port

E - 12

ALICIA-ANN

39

Tony

Furrow

Stoneington, ME

B - 1

GALE WARNINGS

40

Dusty

Ketchopulos

Rockport, MA

B - 2

SPECIAL K

41

Dan

Mahoney

Gloucester, MA

B - 3

MOONRAKER

42

Paul

Theriault

Rockport, MA

B - 4

TERMINATOR

43

Kurt

Denholm

Kittery Point, ME

B - 5

KIMBERLY ANN

44

Jan

Margeson

Brewster

B - 6

DECISIVE

45

Peter

Marshall

Essex, MA

B - 7

VENTURE

46

Paul

Unangst

Marshfiel, MA

B - 8

DESTINY

47

Wade

Behlman

Hyannis

B - 9

JENNIFER DAN

48

Michael

Pratt

Canton, MA

B - 10

SEA-VENTURE

49

Dearran

Brown

Lubec, ME

B - 11

MISTY BAY

50

Milton

Chute

Lubec, ME

B - 12

CAPTAINS LADY

51

Dan

Murphy

Dracet, MA

B - 13

BANTRY BAY

52

Louis

Williams

Swampscott, MA

B - 14

PRETTY GIRL

53

James

Wotton

Friendship, ME

B - 15

KELSEA & EMILY

54

Mark

Smith

Harwich

B - 16

JOANNE H

55

Dale

Page

Boothbay Harbor, ME

B - 17

NIGHT OWL

56

Matt

Bunnell

W. Barnstable

B - 18

TRICIA LYNN

57

David

Anthony

Lubec, ME

B - 19

KRISTEN LEE

58

Matt

Murray

Lubec, ME

B - 20

JUSTIN & JENN

59

Chris

Our

Harwich

B - 21

MISS MARY

60

Fred

Clancy

Harwich Port

C - 1

FIRE FLY

61

Frank

Greiner

Harwich

C - 2

SHACKLETON

62

Robert

Luce

Harwich

C - 3

STRIPER

63

Fred

Spencer

Weston, MA

C - 4

PAULY V.

64

Jeffrey

Foresman

Boston, MA

C - 5

TRAPANI

65

Mort

Terry

Harwich Port

C - 6

FISH TALE

66

Bob

Rice

Brewster

C - 7

SABATICAL

67

Tony

Biski

East Harwich

C - 8

TAKE IT EASY

68

Tom

Birch

Harwich

C - 9

SHANTI

69

Arthur

Brosnan

So. Orleans

C - 10

CAPT'N & TONAIRE

70

Michele

Andolina

Harwich

R - 1

SPECIAL LADY

71

Frank

Greiner

Harwich

R - 2

PEGGY LANE

72

Robert P.

Briggs

Dennisport

R - 3

SEADUCED

73

Glen

Fernandes

Harwich

R - 5

GRACIE J

74

Paul

Donovan

So. Harwich

D - 1

GOLDEN EAGLE

75

Clement

Kacergis

Harwich Port

D - 2

YANKEE

76

Alan

McMullen

Harwich Port

D - 3

FREEDOM

77

Alan

McMullen

Harwich Port

D - 4

PRESEVERANCE

 

 

 

With our permits in order we were very fortunate to get the Barnstable County Dredge to Round Cove channel at years end and rebuild the eroding barrier beach. The cap on the project was 5,400 cubic yards of sand at a total project cost of $34,830. The Selectmen accepted a gift of $14,000 from Wequassett Inn for additional beach material.

 

In a June project, the county dredge removed close to 10,000 cubic yards of sand from the “bottleneck” in the Wychmere entrance channel in about ten days. The total cost of the project was $64,500. That sand was placed in front of private homes along Saquatucket Bluffs based on a permit granted in 1993. The project was funded by both the Town and homeowner Stephen Seymour through a gift of $40,500.

 

A similar bar has grown along the Allen Harbor West Breakwater impacting the channel. Unfortunately, environmental windows and funds to do the project this year are not available.

 

 

Beach Restoration and inner Harbor issues 

Dredging is another cost necessity that benefits the rebuilding of beaches, however, reducing available funding leaves little money left after permitting expenses to do the actual work. More funds are needed if we are to be successful in keeping all of our channels open and provide an adequate quantity of sand for the beaches.

 

The Board of Selectmen has suggested the idea of putting in place a beach management program that would help resolve erosion problems facing both public and private stretches of shoreline. The town hired Coastal Engineering of Orleans to assist in instituting a comprehensive dredge and beach management permit that would allow dredging in all channels and placement of materials along all beaches. Selectmen hope this permit will help to better manage coastal beaches with a financial boost from private owners. The Board has discussed putting a committee together to examine solutions and to work with this firm in funding answers.

 

Work began exploring alternatives for how inner harbor dredging might be accomplished. Because of the nature of the soft harbor bottom muds, CAD (cell confined area disposal), inversion dredging, and borrow area concepts are being considered as a possible solution for the mooring area inside Allen Harbor. A meeting in June highlighted the skepticism that the Army Corps of Engineers has for CAD concepts, however, the Coastal Zone Management Program officials encourage CAD as a practical solution where dredging and disposal costs skyrocket. In short, a deep trench would be dug inside the breakwaters placing the quality sands from below on the beach outside the harbor. Then the muck from inside would be pumped or scraped and placed in the trench which would then be capped with sand. The DEP is requiring an Environmental Impact Report be submitted which will be costly and time consuming. Coastal Engineering is handling all of these dredging permits as well.

 

Shellfish Laboratory and monitoring

The Shellfish Laboratory located at Wychmere Harbor has been propagating shellfish for 14 years.  During that time over 24 million seed has been grown in the lab.  This year nearly 1.7 million quahog seed were raised from (1-5 mm) to an average of (11.25 mm) in size.  Our largest seed grew as large as 25 mm.  The survival rate within the lab was 98%.  This was due in part to the portion of larger seed (3-5 mm) that we started with that grew well.  While a portion of our quahog seed was purchased by the Town, the majority of the seed was the result of a DMF/County Seed Grant Program.  Shellfish seed was obtained from (ARC) Aquacultural Research Corporation in Dennis.  The Harwich Shellfish Lab was also the site of our 9th high school summer aquaculture internship program.  The six week program, managed by Heinz Proft, enabled students, MacKenzie Hamilton, Robert Peacock, and Abby McGillen, along with teaching supervisor Ms. Lara Slifka to work closely with the Natural Resources Department to monitor and maintain the Shellfish nursery during its’ busiest time. 

 

The lab, open to the general public, received over 250 visitors this year. This brought the total to nearly 4,000 visitors over the past 9 years.  Funding for the internship program was received from the Barnstable County Enhancement Grant Program and the Town of Harwich.  We were very thankful for their continued support.  The shellfish from the lab were seeded in Herring River, Allen Harbor, Wychmere Harbor, Saquatucket Harbor, Pleasant Bay/Muddy Creek, and Round Cove.  This year was the second year we did not seed Oyster Creek in Allen Harbor.  The potential for this arm of the harbor to be dredged in the near future exists. There is no reason to risk freshly seeded juvenile quahogs that may be sacrificed if this creek were to be dredged.

 

Our quahog seed continues to be tested prior to seeding (per order of the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries) for Dermo, QPX, and an array of other harmful parasites.  This has been the sixth consecutive year for such testing and once again our shellfish received a clean bill of health from the Shellfish Pathology lab in Woods Hole, Ma.    

 

The Harwich Natural Resources Department continues to receive assistance with many of our projects from volunteers.  A great deal of thanks is extended to Bob Cooney and John Reynders who spent yet another summer/fall tending to the needs of the shellfish lab. 

 

The red tide that we experienced in 2005 (the largest outbreak of red tide ever recorded in southeastern Massachusetts) did not return this year. The DMF has an extensive Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP) monitoring program in place that tests the water for algal cells and shellfish for possible contamination.  It is important to note that PSP does not affect swimmers and beach goers. 

 

Shellfish Patrol and harvest

To patrol the local shellfishing flats we again relied on the assistance provided by our dedicated group of volunteer shellfish wardens.  Ron Saulnier, Dean Knight, and Jim Coyle were very generous with their time and energy.  The assistance provided by our volunteer corps certainly makes the Natural Resources Department a more efficient, more productive group.  We thank all our volunteers for their effort.

 

2006 Shellfish Permits Sold

 

Resident Family                        282      $2820

Non-Resident Family                  65      $1950

Commercial                                  4        $160

Seniors                                      34        $102

One-Day Non-Resident            23         $345

TOTAL                                    408      $5,377

 

 

This was the first year we asked recreational shellfish permit holders to fill out a shellfishing survey when obtaining their license at the Harbormaster’s Office. However, because most permits were sold at the Selectmen’s Office where surveys were not encouraged, only 20% of the people (82) completed the survey.  Through extrapolation we were able to determine the following:

                       

2005 Recreational Survey

 

Avg. days someone went shellfishing in 2005……3.62 days

Avg. # buckets of quahogs taken in 2005/permit…1.75 (10qts)  or 177 bushels/yr

Avg. #buckets of oysters taken in 2005/permit……0.28 (10qts)  or   30 bushels/yr

Avg. #buckets of softshells taken in 2005/permit…0.54 (10qts)  or  55 bushels/yr

 

The 2005 landing was a total harvest of just 262 bushels. This meager harvest is a far cry from our 1975 town report which reported 845 resident family permits and an estimated landing of 3,125 bushels. 2005 was when we experienced the largest recorded red tide event that severely reduced the total shellfish harvest as illustrated by this survey. 

 

An incomplete survey is expected again for 2006 because permits were still being sold at Town Hall until July. Now shellfish permits are only sold at the Harbormasters Office or may be purchased with a credit card on-line through our website. When someone buys a permit we now get the previous year’s survey results.  Therefore, 2006 data will only be available after everyone has purchased their 2007 license and will be included in next year’s town report. No survey was taken of commercial harvest.

 

In a downsizing move, the Shellfish and Marine Water Quality Committee was disbanded by the Board of Selectmen due to a regular lack of quorum, lack of volunteers, and the reasoning that other committees, as the Water Quality Task Force, is taking up the slack.

 

 

Herring Run

The Herring Run remains closed due to the 3 year moratorium enacted by the Division of Marine Fisheries on the taking of herring anywhere in Massachusetts.  This means no taking of fish until 2009.  The Natural Resources Department along with our volunteer herring wardens once again recorded extremely low fish counts throughout the entire spring at our run.  We would like to thank Michael Sekerak, Garry and Sue Stephens, Jack Schultz, and Dean Knight, for the help they provided at the herring run.  Although the herring run was locked during the week, it was open on weekends to allow the public to possibly view the occasional fish.

 

This moratorium puts yet greater emphasis on this department along with the many Americorps volunteers and others we depend upon to help keep our herring runs clear of debris and blockages.  Many early spring days were spent cutting dead wood, removing brush, and clearing debris that would inhibit the migration of herring to their freshwater spawning sites. Many lakefront owners reported observing alewife fry in ponds this autumn, at least a good sign.

 

Harwich Water Quality Task Force

Local water quality monitoring continued in full force sampling Saquatucket Harbor, Wychmere Harbor, Allen Harbor, Herring River, and 13 freshwater ponds.  These areas were sampled several times throughout the summer in order to continue collecting reliable water quality for our database including nitrates, phosphates, chlorophyll, dissolved oxygen levels, and fecal coliform levels.  A project of this magnitude could only be completed with the dedication of our hard working volunteers – Pete Watson, Mary Henry, Ed McDivit, Bobbi McDonnell, John Reynders, Alan Atkinson, Chuck Winans, Stan Kocot, Alan Young, Ray Sacramone Connie Doherty, Bill Sliney, Ginny Nabors, Ellen and Chris Geanacapoulos, Trudy Goodwin, Bob Sarantis, Bud and Betsy Ferris, Bob Goodwin, John and Faith Preston, Chet Berg, Jane Chase, Kathleen Welch, May and Mike Metzger, Anne Hynes, Ralph and Jane Anderson, Charlie and Judy Donovan, Jack Lohr, Katie Mulhall, Tony and Marian Piro, Dave Mullligan, George Whitehead, George Myers, Art Winterhalter, Julie Gammon, Paul Erickson, Dick Hess, Deborah Aylesworth, Joe Seidel, Bill Clary, Walter Gonet, Ron Bellengi, Jay Kennedy, Richard and Nancy Gifford, and Herb Hansen.  The Harwich Water Quality Task Force now has a website – www.hwqtf.com.  It not only provides details about the program, but includes data collected up to this point. 

 

Interpretation of Pond Data

In August, the Cape Cod Commission published its final report “Review and Interpretation of Harwich Ponds Volunteer Monitoring Data”. The worst reported among these, by increasing level of impairment, are Sand, Cornelius, Hinckley, John Joseph, and Skinequit. Phosphorus, which has been a long-term problem in the ponds, evolves mainly from septic systems and run-off, and is a nutrient for algal blooms. Blooms use up oxygen and can lead to fish kills. The full report can be found in the town library.

 

The Town of Harwich pond monitoring volunteers have provided sufficient data to allow a prioritization of the water quality problems in the 13 ponds that have been monitored: Andrews, Aunt Edies, Bucks, Cornelius, Flax, Hawksnest, Hinckley, John Joseph, Robbins, Sand, Skinequit, Walker, and White.  Monitoring data show that all ponds have water quality concerns, although some have clear water quality impairments.

 

 

Brewster and Harwich, which share the 743-acre Long Pond, have yet to finalize a $418,000 contract to have ENSR International to treat the pond’s phosphorus load with a combination of aluminum sulfate and sodium aluminate. The chemicals bind with the phosphorus in the pond’s sediment and prevent it from entering the water column.

           

Water Sampling Programs

Harwich also continued its water quality sampling as part of the Pleasant Bay Resource Management Alliance. We thank Al and Barbara Williams, Dave Bennett, George Cooper, Alice Coleman, Dave Nolan, Martin Gardiner, Gerry Dorman, Tina Maloney, Liz Maloney, and Walt McClean for their assistance.  The website for the program is www.pleasantbay.org  Oceanographic data collection from Nantucket Sound was also completed using the Harbormaster vessel COMMANDER.  This was the ninth year that such data as water temperature, water salinity, dissolved oxygen, and turbidity were recorded from the sampling locations for our ongoing database.

 

The Massachusetts Estuaries Project Partnership for the nitrogen management of Harwich’s Embayments continued its third year.  This is a collaborative effort by the Town of Harwich and the DEP/SMAST Massachusetts Estuaries Project through the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth - School of Marine Science.  The purpose of the project is to collect data in order to protect and restore the health of the coastal embayments to the Town of Harwich through watershed-embayment nitrogen management planning.  The embayments included in the study are Saquatucket Harbor, Wychmere Harbor, Allens Harbor, and Herring River.

 

Our eighth year enforcing the The Clean Vessel Act or pumpout program went smoothly due to the dedication of our summer team of assistant harbormasters Alex Sherr, Tim McLaughlin and Keith McQuade. They not only visited many boats in Harwich waters for this important service but also educated those at the shoreside pumpout station concerning the elimination of boating waste, a source of fecal coliform.

 

Miscellaneous

Assistant Heinz Proft received an academic scholarship from the Cape Cod Community College and completed a 4 month night course entitled “The Process of Environmental Management and Decision making”. We sincerely thank Michelle Morris for her dedication holding this busy department together and Julie Melucci filling in the position during Michelle’s maternity leave.  The Principal Clerk position is pivotal to the multi-tasked Natural Resources Department and Harbormasters Office which must work in concert with the Assessing Department and Treasurers Office.

 

In May, more than 100 people gathered at the little park overlooking Saquatucket Harbor to dedicate the Alex Hass Memorial. Alex was a Brewster resident, a graduate of Nauset High School, a member of the Warriors’ sailing and swimming teams, who worked at the Harbor. He was planning on attending Massachusetts Maritime Academy when he was killed in a single-car accident in Harwich. Our sincerest appreciation goes to Neil Tomkinson, Priscilla Eastman, Phil and Donna Smith, Cheryl Poore and the Harwich Board of Selectmen for their undivided support of this project.

 

We cannot end this report without giving special thanks to our State Representative Shirley Gomes who retired at the end of this session. Throughout her many years at the State House, we called on Shirley for support in everything from writing boating safety legislation to gaining financial support for waterfront improvements. She has always been nothing less then terrific, in full support of Harwich and all the other towns of the Lower Cape, and we wish her a safe and healthy retirement.

 

Harwich’s first fulltime harbor assistant, employee William “Larry” Chandler, who is still recovering from a bicycle/auto accident in October of 2005 had little choice but retire in November after 32 years on the job.  We wish Larry the best and hope he stops by the marina often with his new free time. We are very pleased to announce the harbor dock hand position was filled by Tom Telesmanick.  Tom hit the ground running and has already begun tackling a myriad of tasks that have needed attention.

 

Respectfully submitted,

 

Thomas E. Leach, BS, CHM    Harbormaster/Natural Resources Director

Heinz M. Proft, BS, MS    Assistant