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Clifton Improvement Association seeks treasurer

The Clifton Improvement Association (CIA), a local organization that operates, maintains and improves Beach Bluff Park and the adjacent parking lot, is seeking a treasurer to serve on its board of directors

The primary responsibilities of this volunteer position are to prepare financial reports for review at monthly board meetings, manage expenses and

LETTErS POLIc Y file reports. The CIA’s outgoing treasurer will remain on the Board and is available to help with the transition. The treasurer must be able to manage financial accounts, reconcile bank statements, manage cash/ check receipts, maintain CIA books and records, create budgets and report actuals to budget.

Generally, letters should not exceed 500 words. The Marblehead Current reserves the right not to publish submissions over the word limit and may instead return the letter to the writer for editing.

Letters must include: org if you are interested in learning more about this role or visit our website, CIABeachBluff. org, for more information about our organization.

1. The author’s name.

This is an ideal position for a member of the community who would enjoy the opportunity to be a part of the organization and support its mission to maintain, beautify and educate the community about its park and the surrounding coastal environment. The CIA also welcomes other community members to become involved in various committee roles.

2. The name of the street the author lives on in Marblehead. Only the street name will be published next to the author’s name — not their full address.

3. Author’s daytime/cell phone number (not for publication) for verification purposes.

Email President@ciabeachbluff.

As a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, the CIA’s mission is to preserve, protect, and improve the scenic, historic and natural character of the local open and public

4. If letters seek to introduce into a discussion purported facts that are not commonly known, writers may be asked to provide the source for those purported facts.

5. Letters must be received by 5 p.m. Wednesday to be published in the spaces through information, education and advocacy. Beach Bluff Park, which sits on the border between Swampscott and Marblehead, and the adjacent parking lot at the corner of Atlantic and Seaview avenues in Marblehead, are owned by the CIA and are maintained by private funds generated through membership, donations, and gifts. following Wednesday’s print edition of the Marblehead Current. Letters will be published to our website at the earliest opportunity, after verification.

Email submissions to info@ marbleheadnews.org.

EDITOrI a L

Sour taste lingers

At quick glance, one could see that no one seems 100% satisfied with the compromise that had been expected to allow the tennis courts at the Veterans School reopened for pickleball last week as a sign that the Recreation & Parks Commission did its job.

However, look closer, and you can see the opposite is true.

To review, the group Marblehead Pickleball raised about $65,000 to help convert four tennis courts at Vets into six dedicated pickleball courts. Then, this fall, it partnered with Rec & Parks to create four additional pickleball courts at Seaside Park.

But even though Marblehead had been enjoying an unseasonably warm winter, the pickleball nets came down in January. The town’s pickleball players — some 400 strong — were mystified and struggled to get a clear explanation.

Apparently, at least part of the rationale was that the contractor who had worked on the Seaside courts reported that pressure from the pickleball nets was causing the posts to which they were attached to lean.

Might the same group that raised such a substantial sum to convert the courts in the first place have agreed to pay for the repairs? They were never offered that deal, it seems.

Though it was not raised at the Feb. 7 Rec & Parks meeting, at least one pickleball player says she had been told that the nets came down because the town was concerned about liability.

Even if the department needs a refresher course on the state’s recreational use statute, G.L.c. 21, §17C, which shields property owners who freely open their land for recreation in the absence of wilful, wanton, or reckless conduct, any such concern has never prompted the department to cordon off the town’s basketball courts or fields.

Nearly a quarter century ago, in his groundbreaking book “Bowling Alone,” Robert D. Putnam demonstrated how people had become increasingly disconnected from family, friends, neighbors and democratic institutions.

You don’t need to be a social scientist to know that the social fabric has hardly been mended in the years since. True, something resembling “communities” have emerged on social media, but online discourse — even in its best form — has proven to be less than nourishing.

The “online disinhibition effect” — the tendency of people to act out more frequently or intensely than they would in person — is always lurking. At least one study suggests we are ruder to one another online due to the lack of eye contact.

Now, add a once-in-a-century pandemic to the mix. In a May 2021 American Perspectives Survey, Americans reported having fewer close friendships than they once did, talking to their friends less often, and relying less on their friends for personal support.

Enter pickleball, which in Marblehead and elsewhere has shown the ability to break through and buck these trends. We may be bowling alone, but we are playing pickleball with a partner — or three. When neighbors come together for some friendly face-to-face competition, they are getting some stress-relieving exercise to boot.

Given the obvious benefits, one would think that a commission with “recreation” in its name would bend over backwards to keep a good thing going.

Yet to the bitter end, the pickleballers had to fight to get the commission to give an inch.

Why, exactly, did the commission need to delay the reopening of the courts until Tuesday (Feb. 22), instead of allowing play over a long holiday weekend? Unclear.

And why did the courts then not reopen as planned on that Tuesday? Sure, the weather was less than ideal. But in the first half of the week, some pickleball players showed up ready to play, only to be greeted by locked gates.

Tell us again, too, why players are being required to supply their own nets? Or why pickleball programming has not been a priority for Rec & Park — if for no other reason than to allow the town to reap a return on Marblehead Pickleball’s investment?

We do not mean to diminish the challenge our local boards often have in balancing competing interests. Nor do we doubt the testimony from neighbors of the Veterans School courts that the sounds of pickleball play in winter travel more easily in the absence of a canopy of vegetation that exists in other seasons.

Nonetheless, given the obvious benefits of allowing the pickleball players to pursue their passion, the baseline for the Recreation & Parks Commission should have been “what can we do to keep the courts open?” Closing them should have been a last resort, and getting them reopened should not have required the pickleballers to go to war.

As the Current was going to press, pickleball — specifically a “sound mitigation request” — was again on the agenda for the Rec & Parks’ Feb. 28 meeting.

Representatives of Marblehead Pickleball told the Current they planned to attend and have no objection to sound mitigation. They just want to play.

Here’s hoping that, by the time this editorial hits the streets, some common ground will have been found. Right on its website, the Recreation & Parks Department describes its mission as “to enhance the environment and the quality of life for the residents of Marblehead.”

Yes, the mission statement goes on to talk about “care and maintenance” of parks and fields. But the people come first, as it should be.

Perhaps current members of the Recreation & Parks Commission should recite the mission statement at the start of meetings and pledge themselves to its stated hierarchy — people first, then facilities.

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