Opinion

Letters to the Editor, April 5

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Fundraiser Livens Up The Landscape   Editor: What’s a great way to brighten March’s cold and dreary landscape? Spend an evening surrounded by the generosity of the Chatham year-round community! With remarkable support from more than 165 merchants, tradesmen, local businesses and volunteers, the 11th annual Tools of the Trade was a delightful night out and an incredible gift for the families of Monomoy Co...

Russ Allen: Has Spring Really Sprung?

By: Russ Allen

“There is no ‘spring’ on Cape Cod! The weather just stays winter-like well into April or May – then suddenly it’s summer!” Many Harwich residents, washashores and “true Cape Codders” alike, annually repeat these sentences like a mantra: Their truth often remains unquestioned. However, after almost 12 years living here, I respectfully offer a different opinion: Spring not only exists here, but it may be the bes...

Letters to the Editor, March 29

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Look To Kennedy's Words Editor: Hear! Hear! to Anne Broderick for your “Trump Is A Real Leader” letter. Trump’s ideology of less big government interference does indeed help promote self sufficiency. Let so-called liberals look back to president Kennedy’s inauguration words, “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country,” as a point of inspiration if they have difficulty w...

Tim Wood: Students Lead The Way

By: Tim Wood

We are fortunate. We live in a state that has strong gun laws and ranks first in the nation in terms of gun safety and death rate by guns. There hasn't been a mass shooting here since 2000, when seven people were killed at Edgewater Technology in Wakefield. One of the weapons used in that incident was a variant of an AK-47 assault rifle. In 2004, when the U.S. Congress allowed an assault weapons ban put in ...

Our View: A Beneficial Tax

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

For years local officials have been discussing imposing a tax on short-term rentals as a way to even the playing field between the summer rental of private homes and hotels and motels, which now must pay a state-imposed room tax. The rooms tax is currently 5.7 percent, and local towns can add up to 6 percent, though few charge up the limit. Chatham, for instance, currently applies a 4 percent tax to hotel and mot...

John Whelan: A Resilient Shanty

By: John Whelan

“It’s only a shanty In old shanty town The roof is so slanty it touches the ground That tumbled down shack by an old railroad track Like a millionaire’s mansion it’s calling me back.”   Ted Lewis and his band performed the song in 1932 in the movie “The Crooner.” It was a huge hit and became the number one song in the country and stayed there for 10 weeks. Many artists have recorded this great s...

Letters to the Editor, March 22

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Recalls Old Radar Station Editor: Your article on the expansion of the Union Cemetery at the former site of the Gap Filler SAGE radar installation, ESS Station Chatham, brought back memories of researching my 2007 novel, “Stepping Stones.” In the course of writing, I was able to contact some radar veterans who provided details and some photos of the Chatham site. The two buildings were very rudimentary, and...

Our View: A Welcome Restoration

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

The restoration of the South Harwich Meetinghouse is a perfect example of a public-private partnership coming together to benefit the community at large. The historic structure, built in 1836 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was in poor condition when the Friends of the South Harwich Meetinghouse stepped in to oversee its restoration. It's been a long process – 13 years – but finally, la...

Letters to the Editor, March 15

By: Cape Cod Chronicle Readers

Disagrees With 'Restoration' Characterization Editor: With all due respect to Mr. Myers’ letter (“Projects Have Added Value,” March 8), Merriam Webster defines restore as to bring something back to its original condition and/or use. What was done to the Wayside Inn and the Mayflower was not a restoration; it was “Invasion of the Building Snatchers.”   While the exterior may resemble the original, the inside...

Andrew Buckley: Time For A Bash

By: Andrew Buckley

He came to us at dusk, or rather, us to him in a parking lot of a motel west of Fall River, on the other side of the Braga Bridge. When I asked if he’d peed yet, Judi said, “Yes, on the way, on my son.” Just about a week earlier, Sofie had been at the Animal Rescue League in Brewster and found a beautiful pointer pup. It had been a regular stop for her, the lover of animals. Sofie could be on fire, running to ...

Editorial: Not Good Enough

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

Yesterday, students across the nation walked out of their classrooms and for 17 minutes honored the students and teachers killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., one month ago. With the Florida students leading the way, young people around the country are protesting the failure of those in government, the adults who are supposed to protect them and our country, to do anything meaningful ...

Our View: Bury The Wires Already!

By: Cape Cod Chronicle

Living without electricity is fun for a while, but it gets old fast, as thousands of Cape residents can attest after last weekend's nor'easter. While some were fortunate to not lose power, many were out for 24, 36, 48 or more hours, growing colder and losing more perishable food by the hour. If you own a generator, you became the most popular household in the neighborhood. But more and more, communications and...