NORTH SHORE RESTAURANTS PUT A FRESH SPIN ON RESTAURANT WEEK

NORTH SHORE RESTAURANTS PUT A FRESH SPIN ON RESTAURANT WEEK

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The Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce is excited to announce the new Dine Out Cape Ann.  Cape Ann is throwing away the tired restaurant week model and taking a fresh approach aimed at highlighting the unique flavor of each participating restaurant. The two week event will take place October 25th –  29th and November 1st –  5th, 2015, in restaurants throughout Cape Ann.

Participating restaurateurs have been asked to create exclusive menu options that embrace their particular venue and highlight what makes them unique – from dishes that feature local seafood to signature cocktails and food pairings. This new spin culminates in a wide array of exceptional dining experiences that make up Dine Out Cape Ann.

Cape Ann visitors, as well as locals, are invited and encouraged to indulge in the unique tastes of the area.  This two week event provides plenty of time to experience the creative menu offerings at a number of different restaurants on Cape Ann. Enjoy!

Participating restaurants to date include: Alchemy, Cala’s, Latitude 43, Ohana, Jalapeños, The Franklin Cape Ann, Windward Grille, Cape Ann Brewing Company, Lobsta Land Restaurant, Sea Glass Restaurant and Lounge and Seaport Grille.

For more information on this event, please contact the Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce at info@capeannchamber.com or 978-283-1601.

Community Stuff 9/10/15

THE WRITER’S BLOCK With  John J. Ronan

Season Premier to be Cablecast  September 24 and October 1, 2015

Cape Ann TV and Gloucester resident John J. Ronan have announced the 26th season of the television series, The Writer’s Block with John J. Ronan. The award-winning series is one of the oldest, continuously-running public access shows in New England. In 2005, The Writer’s Block was awarded First Prize for an Educational Program Series by the New England Cable Television Association.

The Silver + 1 Season begins with the student winners of the spring Poetry Without Paper contest, sponsored by the Gloucester Lyceum. Students of elementary, middle, and high school age will read and discuss their poetry. The program will be cablecast Thursday, September 24, 2015 at 8:00 p.m., and repeated one week later. All of the year’s half-hour programs will present interviews with literary figures and artists from varied backgrounds.

John Ronan, producer and host of The Writer’s Block, is a former Gloucester Poet Laureate and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellow in Creative Writing. He is also a journalist and film producer and teaches writing and film as Professor Emeritus at North Shore Community College. (theRonan.org)

“Cape Ann TV is dynamic force for culture on the Cape and we are proud of The Writer’s Block record,” Ronan declares. “Twenty-six seasons is a long run in any market, at any level. This season will be our best yet!”

Community Stuff 9/9/15

Standard GMG Disclaimer:

Good Morning Gloucester Does Not Endorse Candidates and this press release should not be indicative of a an endorsement or non endorsement of any candidates.  We do not back politicians but do post candidacy announcements.

Thursday night Sefatia kickoff

Event Details:

Join us at The Gloucester House on Thursday, Sept. 10, 2015 from 6:30PM to 8:30PM for Sefatia’s Campaign Kickoff event! No tickets and open to all but donations will be accepted. Also campaign hats will be on sale at cost for $10.

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Hello Joey

I represent Cape Ann Figure Skating Club (non profit organization) — and we are looking to get the work out that Skating Lessons start soon.

email: CapeAnnSkatingClub@yahoo.com

http://www.cafsc.org

The Talbot Rink (O’Maley School) on Saturday at 12 Noon!

ALL AGES

ALL LEVELS

6 Week Sessions are only $120.00

Groups run from Sept 22 – Dec 19th

Anything you can include about us in your emails to Gloucester would be greatly appreciated!
Thank you!
Diane Schoonover – Cape Ann Skating Club / Board of Directors

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Rockport Police Offer Back to School Safety Tips

With a new school year now underway, Chief John Horvath and the Rockport Police Department would like to remind community members about several important safety tips and procedures.

Students in the Rockport Public Schools returned to class on Wednesday, Sept. 2.

“Transitioning back to school is an exciting and busy time for families,” Chief Horvath said. “We want to remind parents and guardians to continue to practice these safety tips to keep their children safe while returning to the daily routine of the school year.”

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH) reports that approximately 400,000 students in the state are transported to school by buses every year. While school bus travel is generally very safe, the majority of related injuries occur when boarding or exiting a bus because of passing traffic or due to walking in one of the bus driver’s blind spots. Children ages 4 to 7 are at the highest risk of injury.

Chief Horvath recommends parents follow safety procedures outlined by DPH to prevent accidents this school season:

• Educate children on safe bus riding and walking behaviors when getting on and off the bus.

• Teach young children to take five giant steps (10 feet) in front of the bus and to wait for the driver’s signal before crossing.

• Develop appropriate bus pick-up/drop-off policies.

• Closely supervise children under age 10 who must cross the street after exiting the bus.

“Our primary concern is for the safety of our residents,” Chief Horvath said.  “We are reminding drivers to be extra alert behind the wheel and watch out for children as they enter and exit the bus as well as navigate the crosswalks.”

Parents who drive their children to school are asked to please obey the traffic laws in the neighborhoods with schools. Chief Horvath would also like to remind drivers to allow extra time to get to work in the morning due to slower speed limits in school zones and school buses, which are now out on the roads making several stops.

The fine for illegally passing a school bus is a maximum of $200. Repeat offenders may have their licenses suspended.

If walking to school, or when exiting the bus, parents and guardians should educate students about safely crossing the street. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health reports that pedestrian injuries are the second leading cause of unintentional injury-related death among school-aged children 5 to 18 years old.

Most injuries to children in kindergarten through third grade occur when they run into the street mid-block, while older students are most often hurt at intersections. To prevent potential tragedies, children should

• Be aware of pedestrian hazards and how to avoid them

• Know traffic signs and signals, and safe walking zones

• Wait for the “walk” signal at a crosswalk, or for a crossing guard to signal the OK to proceed into the street

Additionally, before sending your child off to school in the morning, Rockport Police recommend checking backpacks to make sure they are a tolerable weight. The American Chiropractic Association advises that backpacks should weigh no more than 10 percent of a student’s body weight, as heavy pressure can negatively affect the skeletal and muscular development in children.


Good Morning,

Can you please share the following or share our Facebook page :  GLOUCESTER FLAG FOOTBALL

THANK YOU!!

Glen McEachern

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Now at The Studio Restaurant: 1/2 off all appetizers every NFL game day.

For Cape Ann Dining News-
http://www.capeanneats.com

Joey Ciaramitaro's avatarcapeanneats

TheStudio_NFLSundays_Blog_Update (2)
For more information- http://studio-restaurant.com/
or Facebook here

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Last Night’s Cook On The @STOKGrills Charcoal Drum

Kate Prepped the feta/turkey burgers and Atomic Buffalo Turds and I manned the grill.
Have I told y’all how much fun I’ve been having cooking on my grill this year?

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Hard Rock AIC presents “I Really Like You” for Travel Agents Across North America for Travel Agent Appreciation Month. Best sales force, best all inclusive!

Kate is the first one in the video. Very proud of her performance!
She is a rock star in every way.

More 2015 GMG Community Schooner Festival Photos

 

Peter Digre submits- Three Masted Schooner

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Elinor Teele submits-

A huge thank you to the captains, crews, and organizers! 
I’ll be posting highlights of the day – including individual schooner portraits – to my Flickr account (https://www.flickr.com/photos/44056487@N03/) and photo blog (http://squamcreativeservices.com/photography/photography-blog/) this week.
All photos will eventually make there way into my Boat & Ship Gallery: http://squamcreativeservices.com/photography/photography-gallery/boat-ship-photography/.
If any of the crew would like a digital copy of a photo, they can contact me via my website: http://squamcreativeservices.com/contact/.
Here’s to Gloucester! 
Elinor Teele

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John Sullivan submits-

Joey a little inspirational poem about Columbia schooner design from past now living in present. 

Submitted by John Sullivan
The Columbia stem to stern shear balance of line taunt lines massive power of a lost age takes the wind out of my sails. If one is to be resurrected give me a steel hull where losing a wooden plank will not send me to the bottom. With ease she glides by other more mortal boats and her full sails from top mast down speak of a daring past of wind power. For millennia a steady breeze was the hope of all at sea. We have fallen overboard as we reach for more of everything leaving the past locked in irons. The boat is a compromise of past and future but bow to the dream of its builder. Hail Columbia grand lady of the sea may you have fair winds.

Dave Moore remembers Fred Bodin!

Joey,

I came on board GMG 8/01/13 and when Fred came on-board he responded to an email I sent him 10/17/13. He also posted on GMG about carrying messages a military veterans and he was there like a long lost friend.

“Don’t judge each day by the harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant.” Robert Louis Stevenson

I told him in my email about growing up that way and the challenges like a trusted friend I knew all my life! It was his giving hand like in the native culture I grew up around! Carry in one share with the other…It was in that light that I shared this item by a friend DJ Vanas story and link below. I met  DJ through his books and wisdom, he also was a Capt USAF (Dave The sponge of how and why)…In that light I would like to share this in Fred’s memory.

Thank You! God Bless you Fred until we meet again!

Dave & Kim His friends from far-a-way place (South Korea)! Thank you Fred for your wisdom and lessons of Character & Integrity your “Secret Ingredient of friendship”!

Dogtown’s Present Inhabitants, 1908

Posted on October 16, 2013 by Fredrik Bodin 10 comments

Dogtown was still used, even after it was abandoned. This photo, taken by Alice Curtis on July 30th, 1908, shows a cleared landscape and fenced roads. Just over the hill is the City of Gloucester. Now it’s a nature preserve donated by Roger Babson. It’s very overgrown and is very interesting. Dogtown was part of early American history, not much of which was recorded. But when I go there, I can kind of feel it. It’s eerie, and a lot of people feel the same way.

What is the “Secret Ingredient”

By D.J. Vanas © 2008 Below.

https://www.facebook.com/buildingwarriors

http://www.amazon.com/Spirit-Run-D-J-Vanas-ebook/dp/B00G2MB9BO/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1390412282&sr=1-1&keywords=Spirit+on+the+Run

By D.J. Vanas © 2008
You know the feeling of making paper mache with your kids and the sloppy strips of wet paper aren’t sticking to the balloon and you realize you forgot to add flour?

Or when you’re eating at your favorite restaurant, ordered your favorite dish and it’s good, but something seems off and then you hear the new cook forgot to add basil.

When that secret ingredient is missing, it can unbalance the whole experience. Life is much like this in that we can be happy with our families and careers but allow ourselves to get too busy to incorporate the secret ingredient that makes life even sweeter our friends.

My friend Dave got married recently and it felt like a homecoming that I truly needed. Dave, Bobby, Syuk, Mike, Andy and me reminisced about attending the Air Force Academy and the years spent at Los Angeles Air Force Base, living in Hermosa Beach on the beach. We savoured the memories of the sand, the sun and those significant moments in our early lives and careers. We also talked about our current and future goals and dreams.

The irony wasn’t lost on me either when I remembered how we all used to worship the sun, had more hair, could play all day, dance all night and would discuss the challenges of dating or living with roommates until the wee hours. After 18 holes of golf, we were all sunburned, one had a hurt arm, another, a sore back. We spent the day discussing the challenges of marriage and living with kids. On the dance floor at the reception, instead of tearing up the rug, I almost tore a ligament in my knee.

My, how times have changed but our friendships have not. They still run deep and are a source great happiness for me. Sharing time with these people who continue to mean so much was like adding an ingredient to my life I didn’t know I was missing.
A similar experience happened at the UNITY Conference a couple weeks ago where 1,000 Native youth gathered from across the country. I saw special people that have inspired, supported and encouraged me for many years now. Dawn Chase was one of the very first clients to hire me so many years ago. We’ve remained close friends since and she calls me soonka or little brother. Russ Coker, an inspiration to me, who first beat cancer and then went on to win a Tough Man contest! And I’ve known Chance Rush, Pearl Yellowman and Jeri Brunoe since we were all starting off as speakers.

Over the years we’ve had deep, powerful conversations about personal challenges and those confronting our Native communities; we’ve shared times with our families and continue to cross paths as we serve Indian Country. And a hug and words of encouragement from the Odawa firecracker, my auntie Bea Shawanda, is always like medicine to my spirit!  

I’ve been with the friends above through the ups and downs of life – through promotions, great achievements, getting our education, new careers, marriages, celebrations, the birth of our children and successes. We’ve also been together through deployments, layoffs, divorces, health problems and losing those we love. They’re the kind of friends that keep you laughing until it hurts and cry with you when that time comes. They have made my life richer and my highest hope is that I’ve served them in the same way.

In our Native cultures, we revere the great circle of life birth, growth, gaining wisdom, passing it on to others and then passing into the next world. But in that great circle, I believe there are many smaller circles. Some of these we complete starting and ending a relationship or a job. But some of these smaller circles continue to turn when it comes to lifetime friends and relationships.

Sure, some friends come and go through the years, but the great ones are worthy of treasuring and preserving.
Find friends that inspire your dreams, not expire them for you. I remember critical moments in pursuit of my dreams where my friends would encourage me through fear and get me back on track. I remember talking to my friend Bobby when I was doubtful and reconsidering my decision about leaving the military to pursue the dream I’m living today. He said, You only live once better make it count. Go for it. I wonder where I’d be today if instead of inspiring my dream, he helped me to expire it, saying something like yeah, that will be pretty tough if not impossible. Better to play it safe.”    
Make opportunities to reconnect. Accept that wedding invitation, attend that conference or go on that group vacation you got a call about. And if there aren’t any opportunities to reconnect, then create them! It can be as simple as a call or e-mail to reconnect or planning a retreat.

It’s too easy to get too busy and then we start to neglect those secret ingredients that make this journey so fulfilling and fun. In fact, I hope you make a commitment that when you’re done reading this article (and you’re nearly there) you will reach out to those great friends you’ve lost touch with or simply have allowed yourself to become too busy to be in touch.

Make a call, shoot an e-mail, set up a lunch or a visit. Don’t let your treasured friends drift away. Our lives are less without them.

Dave Moore (Ret USAF) “Character & Leadership is not a popularity contest. You don’t establish such expectations because they are easy, you don’t make them because they are cheap and you don’t make them because they’re popular –you make them because they’re right. – Mentor and retired Lt Col Commander Mike K.

TIMELAPSE: Largest HMS Prince of Wales delivery

Source:
Published on Sep 4, 2015

The Aircraft Carrier Alliance welcomed the largest section of the second Queen Elizabeth Class aircraft carrier to Rosyth Dockyard last week, following its voyage from BAE Systems in Glasgow where it was built.
Lower Block 04 is the largest hull section of HMS PRINCE OF WALES, the second of two new aircraft carriers being constructed by the Aircraft Carrier Alliance, and contains the hangar, machinery space, mission systems compartments and accommodation.
The 11,200 tonne section of hull was transported by a sea-going barge and travelled around the north coast to reach the assembly site, a journey of more than 600 miles over five days.
On her arrival, the block was floated off of the specialist barge and moved into position in dry dock, ready to join the other sections already in place.
The aircraft carriers HMS QUEEN ELIZABETH and HMS PRINCE OF WALES are being delivered by the Aircraft Carrier Alliance, a partnering relationship between BAE Systems, Thales UK, Babcock and the Ministry of Defence.
The Queen Elizabeth Class will be the centrepiece of Britain’s defence capability for the 21st century. Each 65,000-tonne aircraft carrier will provide the armed forces with a four-acre military operating base, which can travel up to 500 miles per day to be deployed anywhere around the world. Operating the Joint Strike Fighter Lightning II jets and a number of types of helicopter, the QE Class will be versatile enough to be used across the full spectrum of military activity from warfighting to providing humanitarian aid and disaster relief.

CFCA Community workouts

Joey Ciaramitaro's avatarCape Ann Wellness

We will be offering community workouts for anybody that wants to check us out or wants to get a good workout in. We will be starting this , Saturday September 12th at 9am at Crossfit Cape Ann, the cost is $5 and the proceeds will be donated to local causes.

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Community Stuff 9/8/15

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Ken Knowles submits-

I created and installed a permanent painting 8 x 12 feet in the lobby of BankGloucester. It depicts the Mayors cup Race. It is one of my greatest pieces  It is covered and will be unveiled on Sept 10 Thurs at 7:15 pm. Immediately following will be a live auction of one 20×24 inch oil version to benefit Wellspring House.
All are welcome to come support this cause.

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Regional Demolition Review Workshop, hosted by the Gloucester Historical Commission
Monday, September 28, 7-9PM, Kayrouz Auditorium, Gloucester City Hall, 9 Dale Ave.
Open to the public. Free. Find out what a Demolition Delay Ordinance would mean for you and your community.
See how demolition review is working in nearby cities and towns.
M. E. Lepionka, Co-Chair, Gloucester Historical Commission

Monochromatic and random waves generated in the Flowave tank.

Source:
Published on Oct 13, 2014

Monochromatic and random waves generated in the Flowave tank. Also single and multiple water spouts.
http://www.flowavett.co.uk/ – find out about FloWave
http://frontiersmagazine.org/making-w… – more information about how waves are generated

K-9 Kuts Job Opening

Hey Joe this is Troy, Julies husband. We are looking for a grooming assistant for the shop. Could you post this on the blog/website?

Dog Grooming Assistant needed for K-9 Kuts. 30+ hours a week. Hourly wage above minimum. Willing to train. Respond with e-mail to troy.petrillo@gmail.com.

Many thanks,

Troy and Julie

2015 GMG Community Gloucester Schooner Festival Photos

Sherman “Pat” Morss Jr submits-


Carl Gustin Schooner Columbia Festival Photos-


Ann Kennedy is Back In Town-

“Waiting For The perfect shot

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Joey,
I know there is a lot of talk about the schooner COLOMBIA in town for the festival this weekend.  Everyone knows it was built in Florida at the “state of the art” Eastern Shipbuilding Group but there is a little bit of Gloucester in everything.  As a point of interest, I did the wood carving work for the Captain’s Quarters in the schooner here in my East Gloucester Studio. The carved details were shipped down to Florida for installation. 
warm regards,
David
Calvo Studio
235 East Main St
www.calvostudio.com

Community Stuff 9/7/15

Gloucester Public Art

THE CITY OF GLOUCESTER & THE COMMITTEE FOR THE ARTS WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU

Following community discussions about public art in Gloucester, the City and the Committee For the Arts have hired consultant Elizabeth Keithline of Wheel Arts Administration to gather information and make recommendations on a public art policy.

In order to accurately begin to formulate what this policy should contain, Keithline would like to hear from Gloucester residents about the following questions:

· What is your vision for public art in Gloucester? What would you like to see happen here?

· Do you have any recommendations on how that vision can become a reality?

· Name and/or describe public art in Gloucester that you like or don’t like.

· Do you have any recommendations on how Gloucester can improve its public art processes?

· Do you have any specific recommendations on what a public art policy for Gloucester should contain?

Please feel free to email your responses, or any information you care to share, to elizabethkeithline@gmail.com or call 401/578-4313. All comments are unattributed.

Keithline will be conducting a public meeting at City Hall on Wednesday, September 30th at 7:00 pm. She will give a brief presentation on possibilities in public art and report out on the interviews that she has conducted. A second meeting will be held later this fall to present a draft of the new policy.

For further information on public art: http://www.americansforthearts.org/by-topic/public-art

Elizabeth Keithline is an artist, curator, arts writer and arts administrator. Among other projects, she has conducted public art assessments for the State of Rhode Island and the City of Boston. For more information: http://www.elizabethkeithline.com/



Elizabeth Keithline

Artist, Curator & dba Wheel Arts Administration

http://elizabethkeithline.com/


Meeting on Thursday, September 10, 2015 6-7:30 PM

Hi Everyone,
Our next Cape Ann Painter and Photographer Meeting will be held on Thursday,September 10 at Cape Ann Giclee, 20 Maplewood Ave, Gloucester from 6-7:30 PM.
Please bring something you have been working on to share.
Thanks to James and Anna Eves for hosting our meetings at Cape Ann Giclee and to James for being such an excellent facilitator.
Enjoy this last of the summer weather!
Alice Gardner


JH Men's Night

Only Three XL Baby Blue Hoodies Made and Available for purchase/ Only Five Caps Left and there won’t Be any more of the Current Style Cap reordered

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To purchase one of only three made baby blue XL with navy logo hoodies – http://gmg.storenvy.com/

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Also available in the GMG store- only 5 GMG embroidered caps, and one full zip grey technical jacket.  When this particular run of these caps is gone they will no longer be available.

Available at the GMG Store- http://gmg.storenvy.com/

Kathryn Goodick Candidate for Ward 4 City Council Press Release

Boilerplate GMG Political Statement:

Good Morning Gloucester Does Not Endorse Candidates and this press release should not be indicative of a an endorsement or non endorsement of any candidates:

 

My name is Kathryn (Piraino) Goodick and I am running for Ward 4 City Council in the upcoming November election. By way of introduction, I am a life-long resident of Gloucester and the daughter of the late Grace (Ventimiglia) and Rosario Piraino. I grew up on Orchard Street, attended Hovey School, Fuller School, Central Grammar and Gloucester High School. You see, I am Gloucester, through and through.

After graduating from Gloucester High School, class of 1976, I didn’t take what my parents would call the “right way”. Like so many others, instead of going off to college, I went straight to work. I was fortunate enough to land a position that afforded me great opportunities as I climbed the corporate ladder – all this on a high school education! With the voices of wonderful mentors, they encouraged me to obtain my college degree. I started going to Salem State College – now a university – and graduated in 2010 cum laude with a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration. My parents didn’t live to see that day, but I know that they would be very proud of me.

I have been married to my husband Doug for 23 years. We built our home in historic Dogtown Common over twenty years ago and we are blessed to have a modern blended family. Doug and I are the very proud parents of our children Lauren (20) and Adam (16), as well as Doug’s daughter Kelly (from his marriage to Nancy Goodick). Lauren is a junior at Salem State University and Adam is a sophomore at Gloucester High School. In addition, Doug’s daughter Kelly (Mahoney), her husband John, and their two boys Ethan and Connor round out our immediate family.

As a wife, mother of two, and a Director of Human Resources at SwervePoint, my life is devoted to helping others. The job of ward councilor requires a proactive person, and that is me! In my personal and work life, when there is a problem to be addressed, I tackle it head-on. I will bring the same energy and focus to serving the people of Ward 4.

Though I have never been actively involved in politics, I was thrown into it earlier this year when I received my property tax bill and discovered that our current City Council had voted to shift the water debt to the taxpayers. This vote was taken with little to no communication to the taxpayers, and the bills sent in the mail with no explanation of why they were so severely increased. This is not how the city of Gloucester should treat the taxpayers.

The vote on the water debt shift, and the lack of transparency surrounding it, set off my personal quest to make a change in the way the city is handling our money. After letters to the editor, and speaking out at City Council and School Committee meetings, I helped to form Gloucester Citizens for Responsible Government. In the process of taking action on behalf of the taxpayers, I realized that many of our elected officials aren’t truly interested in transparency or listening to the residents. There is a decided lack of answers and too many closed doors. So, I decided to take action and run for office.

I don’t know when it happened or how it happened but, I feel that our beautiful city has lost its way. We are tangled in bureaucracy and everyone trying to take credit for action they did nothing to deserve. We can do much better. It is time to elect people to office that are not politically entangled, concerned about their own political clout, and have lost sight of why they were elected in the first place. I am running for office for the first time to take action and make positive changes. When I say “transparency”, I actually mean transparency. When I say, “I want to hear what you have to say”, I actually mean that I want to hear what you say. When I say that our schools are good, you can trust me because my children actually attend Gloucester schools.

In Ward 4, there are many issues that concern me including the damages to our water reservoirs; the lack of police patrolling the outlying areas that are not “downtown”; the roads, sidewalks, and cross walks that need repair; the damages to our open spaces in Dogtown and to the quarries from visitors who leave their trash and swim, along with their animals, in our drinking water. Ward 4 residents are lucky to live in a beautiful area of the city, and our property taxes are higher as a result. Unfortunately, the ward is often overlooked in favor of downtown issues, and I want to change that when I sit on the Council.

Recently, I attended a meeting of the residents of Lanesville and was horrified to hear of the lack of support that they have received. The trash around the quarries, the heavy drinking at the quarries, visitors who park for the entire day which leaves the businesses unable to have adequate parking which impacts their business. After the meeting was over, I jumped into action contacting the mayor to get some relief to the residents of Lanesville. The police and DPW quickly got into action. There are many ways to resolve these problems and the residents are eager to put those ideas forward to the City. They deserve to be heard by our DPW, Chief of Police, and City Council, and I will work hard now, and as their Ward Councilor, to make sure these issues get property addressed.

Ward 4 and the City of Gloucester needs fresh ideas to address the problems we face. We can’t make changes by electing the same people over and over again to run our City. I am new to politics, and will bring a new perspective to solving the issues we face, which is what our city sorely needs.

Please contact me at GoodickWard4@Gmail.com, or 978-879-6205 if you would like to discuss the issues facing Ward 4 and the City of Gloucester. Please join me at my campaign kickoff event this Friday, August 28th at 7 p.m. at my home at 10 Dogtown Road in Gloucester, or at my Ward 4 Meet and Greet event on Monday, August 31st at 6:30 p.m. downstairs at the Gloucester United Methodist Church. I want to meet and hear from YOU about how to make our ward and city better!

I am passionate and committed to making a difference and I know that I have the skills, talent, and ability to do this – for you, your children, and the future generations! Let’s make Gloucester great!!

All my best,

Kathryn Goodick

Candidate for Ward 4 City Council