Opinion

Letters To The Editor: April 7, 2022

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Potential Gas Price Solution Editor: If Donald Trump was currently president, his solution to the record high gas prices nationwide would probably be to have officials look into the possibility of running vehicles on bleach, since Trump's suggestion of injecting bleach worked so well in eliminating COVID-19. Mike Rice South Wellfleet   Observations On Harding’s Beach Editor: I was intrigued b...

Our View: A Safer Airport? Really?

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

Just as certain political factions gain support by stoking the fear that their base is being replaced by “the other,” so too do critics seek to curtail operations at Chatham Municipal Airport by relying on the fear factor. The sponsors of two proposed bylaws – petitions that will appear on the May 14 annual town meeting warrant – hope to limit use of the airport by cutting back on the usable landing area of th...

Letters To The Editor: March 31, 2022

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Recover Drainage Correction Costs Editor: What had been a non-issue since the Riverbay neighborhood was built in the late '60s all changed this past month. Due to the disregard of the natural topography and respect for our environment, a local builder/land developer was allowed to take a piece of land in August 2020 and totally alter the landscape. It had been a natural swale landform which allowed rainwate...

Letters To The Editor: March 24, 2022

By: Alan Pollock

The Story Of Nauset's First Church Editor: The article “Happy 225th Birthday, Orleans” (March 10) neatly sums up the history of Orleans. Your readers might be interested to know how intertwined that history is with The Federated Church of Orleans. When the first seven families from Plymouth Colony settled in “Nauset,” they were required to build a church before they could establish a township. In 1646 th...

Our View: A Compromise On Housing, Open Space

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

The Chatham Select Board made the right choice in backing an article for the May annual town meeting that, if approved by voters, would set aside four acres of town-owned land along Middle Road for affordable housing. The town's open space committee had requested that a perpetual conservation restriction be placed on all 19 acres of this particular parcel, which is contiguous with some 70 acres of land that su...

Our View: Share The Burden

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

The process of lowering nitrogen in the region's waterways to reach acceptable water quality levels is a slow one. It takes time, and significant money, to install sewers or other treatment methods that remove nitrogen from wastewater, and it takes longer still for clean groundwater to migrate to coastal embayments and begin the process of recovery. It's self evident that doing so is good for the environment a...

Letters To The Editor: March 17, 2022

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Preserve The Goose Pond Forest Editor: It is clear there is a housing crisis on the Cape. It is also clear there is a climate crisis, and it affects every living thing on the planet. The United Nation's Sixth Assessment Report on global climate change, released on Feb. 28, paints a dire picture. The Earth is heating up at a pace unmatched in recorded history. We can avert the worst consequences of climat...

Our View: Add Health Club To Senior Center Study

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

If the Chatham Select Board does not fold the former Chatham Health and Swim Club into an ongoing feasibility study of potential senior center locations, officials risk once again losing a town meeting vote on a new facility to serve the town's growing senior population. There's significant interest in the community in at least investigating how the health club – closed since the pandemic began and on the mark...

Letters To The Editor: March 10, 2022

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Don't Pass Up Opportunity Editor: The former Chatham Health Club building, with its pool, is a wonderful resource for townspeople of all ages. We should try to save it. Babies to seniors would benefit and everyone in between. It would keep us moving, walking, and exercising. It lowers stress and improves well-being. We have lost the pool at Broad Reach and we miss it. This is an opportunity, but it is go...

Our View: 7,000 Miles Away

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

Despite the importance of the local news we cover, it's been difficult to focus this week given what's going on half a world away. Although Ukraine is more than 7,000 miles from Cape Cod, today's ever-present media, both mainstream and social, make the war there as immediate as a blizzard in our backyard. Photos of Russian tanks lining highways leading to Kyiv are chilling. The scenery is familiar; it could be...

Letters To The Editor: March 3, 2022

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Time For Unique Thinking Editor: As the Chatham COA was so focused on a new building, they did not notice that many seniors were filling their active lives with activities/programs without ever entering the COA building. Chatham seniors recognize themselves as part of a community, a feeling of fellowship with others sharing common interests. The Chatham Health Club could bring "health" benefits to all. G...

Letters To The Editor: Feb. 24, 2022

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Boat Deserves A Mooring Editor: The Atlantic Workshop boat saga reminds me of a story about my dad. Willard Salter lived 30 years in Orleans and among his volunteer jobs he was a selectman, which he found a thankless position. Near the end of his job stint, a citizen complained that a “For Sale” sign on his beetle cat in the front yard violated sign bylaws. My dad, in his characteristic wit, wrote a lette...