Local NPR for the Cape, Coast & Islands 90.1 91.1 94.3
The Point

Local News Roundup: Mashpee Schools End Home Visits; Animals Make Art; Scallops Saved

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

The Buttonwood Park Zoo in New Bedford is conducting an online fundraising auction featuring art made by zoo animals. Pictured is "Rainbow Connection," a paw print by Amy the Black Bear.
Buttonwood Park Zoo

WCAI News Director Sean Corcoran hosts a discussion with journalists about the top local news stories of the week. Joining him this week are Patrick Cassidy of the Cape Cod Times; Andy Tomolonis of the New Bedford Standard-Times; Joshua Balling of the Nantucket Inquirer and Mirror; Caitlyn Russell of The Register (Dennis-Yarmouth); Nelson Sigelman of the Martha's Vineyard Times; and Tim Wood of the Cape Cod Chronicle.

Among the stories they discuss this week: a developer in Provincetown is selling parking spots for $35,000 each; the Bourne Board of Health has concerns about wind turbines being erected across the town line in Plymouth; cleaning up contaminated groundwater and wells in Barnstable could cost $3 million, and the town wants the county to pay for it; the Cape Cod National Seashore has crafted a plan to protect shorebirds and their eggs, but the effort could come at the expense of some local predators; Town Meetings in Sandwich and Brewster conclude some long-running issues in those communities; a Harwich selectman pleads not guilty to an assault charge; the Mashpee School Committee ends what apparently is an unwritten policy that had the schools superintendent visiting the homes of new students; dogs are running free in Harwich, and some conservation officials are concerned; Yarmouth creates a new town government committee to tackle addiction issues; islanders on Nantucket step up to save young scallops that found themselves stranded outside the water; New Bedford's Buttonwood Park Zoo is auctioning off animal art; and a judge rules that the Wampanoag Tribe of  Gay Head-Aquinnah cannot open a gambling parlor in the tribe's recreation hall.

Stay Connected