Your opinions are an important part of the Plymouth Independent. We welcome your letters and commentaries. All we ask is that you follow some commonsense guidelines.
For starters, we need to know who you are. Any submission must include the author’s full name, an email address, and a phone number (for verification purposes only). If you’re writing as a representative of a group or organization, please state that. Standing behind your opinion gives it heft and credibility. You can even share links to pertinent sources if it helps make a point or bolster your position.
But while we encourage a robust exchange of ideas, we don’t have the resources to fact-check letters and essays filled with speculative statements and assertions that venture beyond the realm of opinion. We also won’t accept political endorsements, local or otherwise. Anything that even hints of discrimination or hate will be rejected outright. Good taste is a good thing. Brevity is an asset – getting right to the point saves us from cutting your copy, and helps to ensure that people will read what you have to say.
Put simply, we’ll show as much latitude as possible, but we reserve the right to not publish any submission that doesn’t meet those modest standards.
Now, with that out of the way, let’s hear from you. Send your letters or commentaries to: letters@plymouthindependent.org. We’re looking forward to it.
It’s no coincidence and certainly no surprise that just days before an election, the Plymouth Independent suddenly publishes a list of recycled accusations, anonymous claims, and old political gossip targeting me. If any of these allegations had a basis in truth, why are they showing up now? Why wait until voters are heading to the polls? I’ll tell you why: because this was never about journalism. It was about politics, pure and simple. For years, I have been a fighter…
The idea that a mayor would guarantee a more efficient – and effective – local government, is a ‘big lie.’ It’s an attractive notion, of course. When things don’t go our way – whether it’s the Red Sox or Town…
Dear editor, Thank you for Mark Potheir’s article on Town Meeting’s refusal to cut 1% of the budget. I haven’t watched the meeting, but I do wonder about the quality of the data members receive. Through a prospective town meeting…
In 1622, Plymouth held its first town meeting. At the time, the town had roughly 100 residents. With such a small population and no broader governmental structure to rely on, town meeting was both practical and effective. It allowed citizens…
On April 9, 2026, a Superior Court Judge issued the following Preliminary Injunction sought by the Airport Commission: “The Town Manager and the Town are restrained and enjoined, directly or indirectly, from acting in any manner involving the care, custody…
The Town of Plymouth has engaged consultant Weston & Sampson to develop a Comprehensive Wastewater Management Plan (CWMP) that will gradually begin providing sewers where they are most needed. It has also appointed a Citizens Advisory Committee (CAC) to ensure…
Betty Cavacco and Dick Quintal are running as a Team for Select Board. They say that it’s getting too expensive to live here in Plymouth. Right! For Sure! They want to fix things primarily by “making the most of what…
The Plymouth Select Board needs intelligent leaders who base decisions on data driven information, reason, and sound judgment. That is why I am voting for Kevin Canty. Kevin Canty does the research and has the analytic acuity to discern what…
I appreciated Al DiNardo’s letter regarding a “return to limited government “. I especially appreciated his willingness to use the Firefighter Safer Grant as an example of the way local governments collude with the state to circumvent the limits of…
The recent article, “Group announces effort to abandon Town Meeting,” highlights a push to fundamentally alter Plymouth’s governance. While proponents seek a new structure, any move away from our current system must reckon with Plymouth’s unique geographic reality. We are…
I am running for re-election to the Select Board because I believe that Plymouth needs proactive and thoughtful leadership with a forward-looking plan to guide our Town into a more sustainable, inclusive, and economically vibrant future. I am a local…