Report on ‘town hall’ meeting

The headline for the Springfield Republican article on last night’s “town hall” meeting about prospects for the new Cathedral-Holyoke Catholic high school said speakers expressed hope, cynicism, and frustration.

There are several related articles available from the website and, as always, the comments are “lively.”

Yesterday’s meeting was sponsored by the Committee for Cathedral Action. The diocese is holding a meeting for parents of students at Cathedral, Holyoke Catholic, and St. Michael’s Academy April 13 at St. Thomas the Apostle School, West Springfield.

Statement from Committee for Cathedral Action

The following is text of a March 22 statement from Alfredo DiLascia, chairman of the Committee for Cathedral Action, in response to recent decisions made by the Springfield bishop about the future of CHS.

(Mr. DiLascia also penned a March 23 op-ed column for the Springfield Republican offering insights and recommendations on a new Catholic regional high school in Western Massachusetts).

Cathedral at the 11th Hour
Prior to 2008, the Diocese had Holyoke Catholic all but closed. What prevented this were four heroic alumni who spearheaded a high energy grassroots campaign to save their school. The Diocese relented due to very strong pressure and built Holyoke Catholic on a residential street corner, with no campus, inadequate parking, no athletic fields, no gymnasium, and other high school facility shortcomings. That was their answer.

Regarding Cathedral, it was abundantly clear that a circle of high level clergy, lay people, and others who offer paid services to the Diocese wanted to close Cathedral. They encircle the Bishop and for the last several years have been allowed to exercise undue influence and power. They attempted to poison the water with a constant stream of negativism concerning Cathedral, and they still are being allowed to do so today.

Where are we today? They are going to combine Holyoke Catholic and Cathedral into a “regional high school.” What they don’t mention is that Cathedral was already a regional high school. They took information from a limited number of “stakeholders” and now have retreated to secret, non-transparent planning from which they will spring upon us their final decision. Remember, these are many of the same people who were dead set on closing Cathedral. After they announce their plan, it will be too late.

I had a chance to serve on a marketing committee for Holyoke Catholic. What I saw from alumni who served was a deep and vocal passion for THEIR school. I believe that much of this passion was stirred by the fact that they almost lost their beloved school. Even though we have prominent alumni on our CCA committee we frequently asked ourselves…. Where are the Cathedral alumni? Why aren’t they speaking up? Why aren’t they taking action? Well, now, more than ever before, this is the time.

Do you know where the new school will be located? Will it only be a ‘right-sized’ small school and not what we really need for the next 50 years? Will it have the full athletic and other facilities that the students deserve? Will the full ethical and moral amount of insurance and FEMA monies be applied to do the job right? How will the school be managed? Will we follow the same path as before or learn from the some 25 successful Catholic secondary schools that have been provided the Diocese. By their own admission, Catholic schools in the Diocese have been failing under their leadership. They don’t have to!

Now, more than ever, before they announce their plan that you may not like, is the time to speak up and voice your opinion. This includes all Cathedral alumni and Holyoke Catholic alumni … and everyone on this e-mail distribution. Send it to others, as well. Don’t complain later. Act now. You can make a difference if you act now…but not after they announce. It will be too late.

How much do you care about Cathedral? About Holyoke Catholic? About Catholic Education in the Diocese of Springfield?

Send a Letter to the Editor at:  letters@repub.com

or, with respect, send a letter to:
Most Reverend Bishop T. Rozanski
Diocese of Springfield
76 Elliot Street
Springfield, MA 01102

Thank you and God Bless,
Alfredo DiLascia

Decision announced, big questions unanswered

CHS_snow

Work continues on the shell of CHS, damaged extensively by the June 2011 tornado, but to what end is unclear.

The future of Cathedral High School remains unclear, despite the recent announcement from the Diocese following months of study.

Cathedral will continue, but merged with Holyoke Catholic High School, according to an announcement Feb. 23 by Springfield Bishop Mitchell Rozanski reported in the Springfield Republican. The two may operate as a single entity at a temporary location as early as this fall. The Purple Gaels?

The bishop said he was continuing to study the question of whether the current CHS building on Surrey Road should be rebuilt.

Updates on CHS

Bleak_CHS

The future of Cathedral High School remains in flux. While efforts by students, parents, and alumni to bring about a rebuilding of the school are underway, word from the relatively new Bishop of the Springfield Diocese is making those efforts uncertain.

The Committee for Cathedral Action has a Facebook page. It is undertaking numerous activities, including a “Keep the Momentum” event last Thursday that attracted more than 400 people. You can also contact the group by email — cathedralaction@gmail.com — for more information.

At the same time, the Springfield Republican reports that Bishop Mitchell Rozanski said the Diocese cannot sustain the level of financial support for Cathedral that it provided in the past.

The school building on Surrey Road was heavily damaged by the June 2011 tornado that struck Springfield and other parts of Western and Central Massachusetts. After federal funds and insurance money became available in early 2014, then-Bishop Timothy McDonnell announced at a March press conference that the school would be rebuilt on site. Demolition of damaged areas is underway, but Bishop Rozanski said the Diocese would rethink its decision following discussions with “stakeholders,” designated by the Diocese and not including the Committee for Cathedral Action, this coming weekend.

Diocesan officials told the Republican the Bishop would announce his decision by mid-February.

CHS Board of Trustees statement on rebuilding

The Cathedral High School Board of Trustees would like to send a message to our Cathedral Community.

We were surprised and disappointed by the letter from the Diocese on Thursday (November 6). Like you, we believed this issue to be settled and, based on that, have put a tremendous amount of energy into raising the Endowment for Tuition Assistance and putting plans in place to improve the school so that it was an even better educational program when we returned to Surrey Road. The administration and staff have been incredible in moving the school forward in its temporary quarters and have been innovative in reaching out for new technology and programming.

We understand the responsbility the Bishop feels to make the best decision possible on the school and are confident that we will once again prevail in this latest process. There is a natural time and place for the anger and disappointment regarding this latest hurdle placed in front of us. We do believe, however, that we need to turn that anger and disappointment into positive action. The process we will be going through in the next few weeks is promised to be transparent and fair. We expect that the meeting minutes will be published on a pubiic website so that many can be heard. We need the Cathedral Community to be the loudest, most informed and respectful group heard for the next few weeks. We need everyone that truly cares to join us in letting the Diocese know that Cathedral matters … to us, to Springfield and to the overall Catholic community.

Thank you for your support.

The Cathedral High School Board of Trustees

‘Commitment’ to rebuild CHS now in doubt

Demolition work has begun on the CHS building damaged by the June 2011 tornado.

Demolition work has begun on the CHS building damaged by the June 2011 tornado.

The new bishop of Springfield has pulled back from the “commitment” to rebuild or replace the tornado-damaged Cathedral High School made by his predecessor only nine months ago.

The Springfield Republican reports that Bishop Mitchell Rozanski, who took office in August, wants to “review opinions and options” before committing to a particular decision on the future of the school. The bishop’s announcement, contained in a press release November 7, generated responses of frustration and anger from local officials and CHS supporters, as well as heated comments on the newspaper’s website.

Here are links to articles about the controversy:

Future of Cathedral High School in Springfield uncertain, bishop says

Springfield leaders react with frustration, anger over Cathedral High School rebuilding delay

Diocese spokesman on Cathedral High School: We are not the enemy

Readers respond to stories on questions about Cathedral High School’s future

 

A grand event

It was a grand event. We all talked . . . and remembered . . . and talked . . . and were reminded . . . and talked. I just got back from 12 days in New England and hope soon to be able to post many photos from the events. If you have some you would like to share, please send them via email.

More than 100 members of the Class (list below) registered for the reunion.

(This is a list of class members. Many attended with guests.)

Geraldine Achin Sarnelli
Josie Albano Pelligrini
Ben Aleks
Pamela Alifano Basile
Elaine Ambrose Atkins
Kristine Anderstrom
Rita Arsenault Spencer
Jacqui Artiano Ruest
Pat Bagge Harmon
Michael Baker
Sara Batista Iwaniec
Anne Belleville Rosso
Janet Boyer Hourihan
Ray Brassard
Jane Buckley Peterson
Eloyce Bujnicki Pierog
Charlotte Chartier Lawrence
John Collins
Judy Cross Donahue
Ed Crowley
Judy Curto Hourihan
Maureen Davis Heasley
Caroline Demers Tougas
Bill Devlin
Dianne Dillon
Holly Donahue Scortino
Paul Donahue
Linda Duchesne Ferrero
Paul Dufresne
Joe Fallon
Carol Ferraro McKay
Joe DeCaro Fitzgerald
Mary Fitzpatrick Brassard
Bill Fleming
Mary Foy Holmes
Marlene Galiarducci Christy
Doris Gaudette Leduc
Diane Girouard Theriault
Richard Grout
Joan Hamel Sagendorph
Tom Hamre
Susan Hartley Mantoni
Bill Hartung
Peggy Hogan Szych
Tim Holt
Kevin Hourihan
Mary Hurley
Marion Jones Johnson
Patricia Kane Gittes
Roger Kasmer
Patricia Kelley Conz
Mona Klicka Daponde
Susan Knox Monaghan
Roger Krass
Lynn Lacavita Duffy
Ed Lambert
Karen Lariviere Audette
Mary Lattinville McCormick
Janet LaVallee Holden
Ellen LeClair Zuk
Bill Liquori
Bill Lyons
Rosemary Lyons
Maureen Lyons
Bob McCann
Nancy McCarthy Gagne
Bill McDonald
Patricia Matthews Vey
Jim Montanari
Peter Mulvagh
Anne Murphy Kellner
Fr. Tim Murphy
John Murtaugh
Martha Noonan Murtaugh
Nancy Norris Gates
Marilyn O’Day McClellan
Mick Ogulewicz
Kevin O’Malley
Reid Oslin
Barbara Pantuosco
John Patterson
Carol Phillips McCarthy
Maureen Pollard Hershel
Bob Pouliot
Elizabeth Poirier Thompson
Roberta Quiriy Phaneuf
Pat Raimondi Liquori
Helen Reid Stewart
Carole Riendeau Lanza
Peter Robillard
Tom Robinson
Kathryn Stevens Patterson
Patricia Sheehan Rugowski
Donna Roy Nodurf
Gene Ryzewicz
Sandra Saletnik Dukette
Mike Semanie
George Shannon
Barbara Shean Lippert
Tom Sheedy
Ray Siwinski
Linda Smith Szenkum
Ron Somers
Maureen Spring Fontaine
Nancy Thompson
Luke Turgeon
Francie Veale Cornwell
Paul Vey
Bill Wagner
Edmund Wallace
Bob Winship
Terry Yesu

Sister James Martin, SSJ

SrJamesMartinThe Springfield Republican reported earlier this month that several members of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Springfield were leaving the Mont Marie Motherhouse, relocating to eastern Massachusetts as a cost-saving measure. Among them was Alice Kenney, 86, known to us in the early Sixties as Sister James Martin. (Thanks, Mick Ogulewicz, for pointing me to this information, and my apologies for being tardy in posting.)

This photo appeared with the article. Sister James Martin/Alice Kenney, who was in her early- to mid-30s when we were at CHS, is standing. How many other members of the faculty 1960-64 are alive?

SrJamesMartin_now

If we need another reminder of time passing, the Mont Marie Motherhouse was the subject of much attention during our senior year at CHS. In the effort to raise funds for its construction, students conducted a magazine drive, which kicked off with a rally (PantherPix picture below; note the poster “Unite for the Black and White”). Ultimately, our class brought in the least(!), but overall CHS students exceeded the $30,000 goal by more than $25,000.

MagazineDriveKickoff