Opinion

Our View: Who’s Responsible?

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

It’s a familiar and predictable refrain after storms. The lights go out and I need a warm place to shelter from the storm. Who’s responsible? I need a hot meal and a shower, and a place for my pet. I can’t tell my relatives I’m safe because my cell phone stopped working. Who’s responsible? Let’s add a new one. A flooded road is keeping me from accessing my home. Who’s responsible? We are. All of us. Once...

Letters to the Editor, Jan. 12

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Rentals Are Businesses Editor: In your "Minding your business " column dated Dec. 29, the principals of a vacation rental company state that simple logic shows that vacation rentals do not take up workforce housing. Their argument, while obviously self-serving, is illogical. Many if not most of the rentals are used far more by renters than owners, many of whom own multiple properties or are corporations. T...

Our View: Roads And Bridges

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

Roads can have many different meanings and purposes. They are, first and foremost, ways to get from one place to another. A road can be an eight-lane superhighway or a narrow dirt path. A familiar road can provide comfort and assurance that home is nearby. A foreign road can be scary and intimidating. A road can bring people together or divide them. Roads can take us to new and exciting places or bring us where w...

Our View: A Heroic Start To 2023

By: The Cape Cod Chronicle

Chronicle readers will be forgiven for feeling a bit of Helping Neighbors overload, given that our campaign to help the Family Pantry was featured in the last seven editions of 2022. But now that the fundraiser has successfully concluded, we can’t miss a chance to start the new year with some happy news. We reported last week that the drive had reached its goal of raising $100,000, but at the time we didn’t kn...

Our View: Another New Staff Member

By: The Cape Cod Chronicle

The Cape Cod Chronicle this week announced the addition of our newest staff member. The 14-week old kitten, playful and affectionate, fills a void we’ve been feeling since the death of her predecessor some time ago. Rescued from a no-kill shelter, she’s gray, or in printer’s lingo, a kind of halftone. In that way, she breaks with tradition; our previous office cats – Buddy and Trigger – were (naturally) black ...

Letters To The Editor: Jan. 5, 2023

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Support EV Charging Stations Editor: Phrases like “putting the cart before the horse” and “if you build it, they will come” came to mind as I read the letters over the last two issues on the electric vehicle (EV) charging stations that apparently are being discussed for Harwich Port. While these EV charging stations probably won’t see the light of day in 2023, it is a concept that really should be followed ...

For Auld Lang Syne

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

It's always sobering to look back and realize how many friends and acquaintances left us during the past 12 months. From town officials to community volunteers, neighbors and folks who made important contributions years, sometimes decades ago, its astonishing to realize the extent to which we rely on the time and talent of people to make our towns function on all levels. It is with sorrow, but also with gratitude...

Letters to the Editor, Dec. 29

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Please Make The Donuts  Editor: Our family comes to visit Chatham once or twice a year and one of highlights of our time in Chatham is going to Chatham bakery and getting their delicious donuts. These donuts are exceptionally good and we love their perfectly crispy outside and their soft inside. These may be the best donuts we’ve ever had. Our family was concerned when we heard that the bakery is changing own...

Our View: A Sobering Year

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

It's been a sobering year in many ways, with dramatic developments locally, nationally and internationally. The war in Ukraine, the Jan. 6 committee findings, the mid-term elections, and the growing disparity on Cape Cod between housing and the cost of living for workers and still-escalating real estate prices driven by the second home market combined to create a challenging environment for Cape Codders. Housi...

Letters to the Editor, Dec. 22

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Hate Crimes Spike In State Editor: It was recently reported that hate crimes in Massachusetts spiked 31 percent in 2021. Former President Donald Trump certainly added fuel to that fire, so to speak, not only in Massachusetts but nationwide by recently trashing Jewish leaders for displaying a "lack of loyalty" over his hosting of a dinner for two Hitler loving, Holocaust denying anti-Semites. Donald Trump...

Our View: The End Of An Ira

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

We note with sadness the passing of Ira Seldin, member of the parks and recreation commission and husband of the late Dr. Florence Seldin. Mr. Seldin was an involved citizen who had thoughtful opinions about the topics that matter to Chatham. He was a voice of reason and often advocated common sense. And he had a playful sense of humor. In covering sometimes mundane town hall news, The Chronicle’s reporters oc...

Our View: Halfway There

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

We’re firmly in the holiday season now. The Thanksgiving leftovers are mostly a memory, Santa Claus has arrived on the Lower Cape by boat, fire truck and helicopter, and we’re rapidly approaching the time when “last minute gift ideas” become appealing. That means that we’re in the thick of our annual holiday Helping Neighbors campaign to support the Family Pantry of Cape Cod. And happily, you and other readers...