Orleans News

ORLEANS – The former Governor Prence Inn will stand on Route 6A for at least a few more months while town officials work to get an estimate for the cost of demolition. During a joint meeting on Aug. 26, the select board and the affordable housing trust fund board both opted against putting an article before voters at next month's special town meeting seeking authorization to raze the property. Officials hope t...

ORLEANS – In searching for a new middle school principal this summer, Brooke Clenchy didn't quite find the person she was looking for to fill the position. But the Nauset superintendent knew what the Nauset Regional Middle School needed. "I think there's joy that's missing there now, and that's one of the things I wanted to bring back," said Clenchy, who enters her second year at the helm of the Nauset distric...

New School Year Marked By Change In Nauset

By: Ryan Bray

ORLEANS – The old normal? The new "new normal?" "We're still trying to figure out what to call it," Nauset School Superintendent Brooke Clenchy said. However you term it, the 2022-2023 school year promises to restore some of the pluck and excitement that has been dulled not just in Nauset, but in districts and schools nationwide since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Two and a half years after...

ORLEANS – Since the start of the year, the new fire rescue station feasibility study committee has busied itself with exploring possible sites for a new fire station. The committee looked at municipal land and private property. A consultant was hired. A call was put out to property owners who might be willing to let their land be used for a new station. Some specific property owners were solicited directly. Th...

Short-Term Rental Bylaw Heading To Town Meeting

By: Ryan Bray

ORLEANS – An article will appear on October's special town meeting warrant seeking the adoption of a short-term rental bylaw, but the select board expressed reluctance last week about getting too far into the regulatory weeds, at least to start. Instead, the proposed bylaw, the latest draft of which was presented and discussed at the board's Aug. 24 meeting, will set up a process for allowing property owners t...

ORLEANS – Every morning, Bill Wibel walks Kent's Point. In doing so, the Keziah's Lane resident said he's noticed what he calls "a changing ecology," and not for the better. "We own this," he said of the town's waterways during a public workshop Monday to discuss a possible prohibition on the use of fertilizers in town. "We can change it, or we can watch it die." There was little debate Monday over the role...

ORLEANS – Can a "pay as you throw" program help further recycling efforts and curb the amount of solid waste coming through the town's transfer station? The select board hopes so, but board of health members have their doubts. The two boards will have a joint meeting Sept. 15 to discuss pay as you throw, which encourages recycling and aims to reduce solid waste disposal by charging people according to how much...

Mandatory Water Restrictions Adopted In Orleans

By: Ryan Bray

ORLEANS – On the heels of the state's reclassification of the Cape's drought status, the board of water sewer commissioners voted Aug. 17 to adopt mandatory restrictions governing outdoor watering until at least late September. Only hand-held and drip irrigation will be allowed through Sept. 21, the board voted. Watering will be allowed between the hours of 5 p.m. and 9 a.m. On Aug. 13, the state department...

Orleans Officials Field Sewer Questions

By: Ryan Bray

ORLEANS – As part of efforts to bring sewer to Meetinghouse Pond, the town plans to take more than 23 private roads for the installation of sewer and water mains. Town officials held a public hearing Aug. 18 to answer any questions homeowners in the sewer area had about the takings, which will be limited to the roads themselves and will not infringe upon residents' property. The 485 residents with homes on ...

Tech Project Will Bring Orleans Into The Future

By: Ryan Bray

ORLEANS – It's a digital world, and Peter Van Dyck sees evidence of it wherever he goes. "I get my eyes done at an optometrist in Boston," said Van Dyck, the town's management information services coordinator. "There's no paper at all. Everything's digitized." Orleans is among the latest municipalities to catch up with the paperless wave. In May, voters authorized spending $1 million to fund a technology mo...

Rec Chair: Orleans Residents Deserve Better

By: Ryan Bray

ORLEANS – As chair of the town's recreation advisory committee, Tracy Murphy sees what the town has the potential to offer residents and visitors in terms of programming. But speaking before the select board last week, she couldn't ignore what is currently lacking. As the summer draws to a close, Murphy said the recreation department has fallen behind in its offerings compared to neighboring towns. While Brews...

Public Weighs In On Community Center Planning

By: Ryan Bray

ORLEANS – Multi-colored post-it notes canvassed the walls of the cafeteria in the public works building on Giddiah Hill Road Monday afternoon. Together, they may offer a vision for a new community center in town. That's the hope of the town's community center feasibility task force, which held a public workshop to get input on what residents and town officials want to see out of a new building. The workshop...