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Updated: 4/21/05

The Goffstown News ­ June 10, 2004

 

This week's stories: (click on the headline to jump to story)
24-7 fire service urged
Towns wage war on milfoil



Goffstown

Old Home Day 2004

 

WITH A SPRING IN THEIR STEP ­ Dancers from Dance Visions perform for the crowd at Goffstown's Old Home Day on Saturday, June 5, on the town common. Old Home Day organizers reported a record turnout for the day's activities, with over 1,000 people strolling through the Village to enjoy performances, play games and eat. (De-J Cejka Photo)

BUDDY SYSTEM ­ The sack race on the town common was a big hit with Emilee Juveilleux, 5, and CaraBeth Norklun, 5. (De-J Cejka Photo)

LUNCH BREAK ­ Art Rose serves up a hotdog to Goffstown Selectman Barbara Griffin.
(Daymond Steer Photo)

Kameron Thompson, 5, gets his face painted by April Hotchkiss of Weare. (Daymond Steer Photo)

HAVIN' A SPLASH ­ Rayna Sage, 3, reaches out to catch a balloon full of water during the balloon toss on the common. (De-J Cejka Photo)

EASY, BOY ­ Kayla McNamara of Weare pets a llama brought to Old Home Day from Scruton Homestead of Farmington. (Daymond Steer Photo)

BOYS IN BLUE ­ From left, Lenny LaMarca, Andrew Connelly, 6, and Mike Gorman represented the Dunbarton Police Association, which brought along a 1968 Chevy for viewing. (Daymond Steer Photo)


Goffstown

24-7 fire service urged

By DAYMOND STEER
Staff Writer
dsteer@yourneighborhoodnews.com

Selectmen gave Fire Chief Frank Carpentino 30 days to report on the economic feasibility of providing 24-hour fire and emergency medical service to the town.

They issued the directive during their meeting on Monday, June 7.

In doing so, selectmen urged Carpentino to speak with the local firefighters' union about the possibility of changing to 24-hour service.

"The economic factor in this is going to be a big player," said Chairman Robert Wheeler.

Several weeks ago, a petition began circulating which was signed by almost half of the 54 on-call firefighters, asking selectmen to allow the chief to write and present a 24-hour full-time staffing plan.

The petition calls for at least one of the three fire stations to have full-time employees 24 hours per day, seven days a week. The call staff would be used as needed.

"What was once a few calls a month or week has turned into several calls every night," said a letter to selectmen from call firefighters. "Many of us have come to the realization that we can no longer work our regular jobs, spend time with our families, enjoy our hobbies, complete routine tasks around our homes, take a vacation, attend training, respond on calls and cover the station."

Despite the workload, not all of the on-call firefighters signed the petition.

Selectman Barbara Griffin noted 24 out of 54 on-call staffers, who are mostly from the Pinardville station, signed the petition.

"I'm not sure I'm hearing¨ a ringing endorsement from the call staff," she said.

Deputy Fire Chief Mark Hurley said the Pinardville and the Church Street fire stations are staffed with full-time firefighters from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. On-call staff take over on the weekends from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

The East Goffstown station is open 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday when enough on-call staff members are available. On the weekends, the station is closed, Hurley said.

The call firefighters cover after 6 p.m. Monday through Friday and on the weekends after 5 p.m., plus holidays, said Carpentino.

"It consumes quite a bit of time," said Carpentino. "When they became on-call firefighters, this is not what they had in mind," noting many call force members thought they would only supplement the full-time staff.

In their written statement, the members of the call staff also argued that 24 hour coverage would enhance the department's overall performance.

Goffstown

Towns wage war on milfoil

By LARA SKINNER
Staff Writer
lskinner@yourneighborhoodnews.com

Signs reminding boaters to clean any plants off their boats and motors are at the Glen Lake boat launch in Goffstown.

Conservation Commission Chairman Collis Adams said the town put the signs up in 2000.

He hasn't heard any reports of milfoil in the Goffstown lake, but said boat traffic is pretty heavy in Glen Lake for a body of water its size.

Signs are the only warning boaters get at the lake.

"It's like anything else," Adams said about setting up something like an inspection station for boats. "It takes time and people."

In Weare, however, the battle against milfoil is more aggressive.

Last September, the Lake Horace Landowners' Corp-oration asked the selectmen to put up a gate at the Chase Park boat launch. Variable milfoil hadn't made an appearance in the lake yet, but the corporation wanted to have an inspection station at the launch before milfoil became a problem.

One season of unchecked growth can lead to a milfoil infestation. Clear water along the shores of lakes and ponds can get choked with the red-stemmed, leggy, aquatic weeds before a boater can say "gone fishing."

Communities across Sou-thern New Hampshire are dealing with infestations and trying to prevent the growth of variable strains of milfoil before it starts.

South of Weare in Francestown, for example, a patch of milfoil was spotted in Scobie Pond last summer.

Scobie Pond empties into Middle Branch, and both water bodies are part of the Piscataquoq River watershed.

People who are concerned about the health of ponds, lakes and rivers are the first line of defense in keeping milfoil under control.

"It really kind of depends on people like myself," Jill Rolph of Francestown said. "Or other people on the pond that can watch it carefully."

Rolph was taking an evening trip in her kayak on Scobie Pond last summer when she saw some suspicious-looking plants in a popular fishing spot on the west side of the pond.

She is a member of the Scobie Pond Preservation Association, a group of summer and year round residents who are stewards of the pond.

Variable milfoil is a generic looking weed that is often mistaken for a local species of plant. The aquatic weed has a long red stem, and groups of leaves form concentric circles of three all of the way up the stem.

Like most weeds, milfoil can take root and grow very quickly. All it takes is one little piece of a grown plant to break off of the stem and float to a clear spot. Once there, the cast away takes root, and will eventually flower and spread even more.

Pieces of milfoil that have hitched a ride on the side of a boat or an outboard motor are just as much of a threat. This is why Weare voters approved a $3,000 expense to set up a boat inspection point for Horace Lake.

Once milfoil gets a good grasp in a lake bed, the most a community can hope for is to keep the plant's growth under control, Amy Smagula said.

Smagula is the project coordinator for the Invasive Aquatic Plant division of the state Department of Environmental Services.

"If (milfoil) goes unseen or unnoticed for a season or more it certainly can get out of control," she said.

The state started a volunteer program called Weed Watchers. Last summer, Smagula published the first annual newsletter for the program, "Weed Watchin.'" It is a source of information and identification tips for people who are trying to stop aquatic weed infestations before they start.

The first report of variable milfoil in a state lake was in 1965 for Lake Winnipesaukee, Smagula said. Sunapee and Squam lakes were the next to show up with an problem, and then the weed was seen in Rindge.

Residents near Gorham Pond in Dunbarton reported milfoil in the pond bed four years ago. However, Smagula said, the town missed this year's application deadline for an herbicide treatment to control the weed.

An herbicide treatment was scheduled for Scobie Pond on Tuesday, June 8.

Rolph said she was told that residents should not swim in the water for at least a day after the treatment.

She said she hopes that the herbicide, plus controlled weed pulling done by trained weed watchers on Scobie Pond, will keep the milfoil under control.

A few kayak trips out to the same spot to look for the weed haven't turned up any signs of it so far, Rolph said.

Milfoil is most likely to take root in lakes and ponds because the water is slow moving, Smagula said. Rivers and streams flow a bit too fast, though sometimes milfoil ca take over a spot where there isn't as much water movement.

New Boston and Goffstown don't have the same risk of a milfoil infestation as towns with ponds and lakes.

Smagula said she is supposed to conduct a pond survey of the area this summer to see if milfoil has spread beyond Gorham and Scobie ponds.

Mostly, she will respond to reported sightings of the weed. False alarms do come in to her office all through the season, she said. But a false alarm is better than catching an infestation too late.

"If the infestations are small, then it's absolutely possible to eradicate it," she said.

Winnipesaukee was caught too late. Smagula said the lake gets five herbicide treatments a year, and she hasn't seen any drop in the milfoil population.

Details about the volunteer weed watcher program are at: www.des.state.nh.us/wmb/exoticspecies\.

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