The North Carolina House and Senate each passed bills that would require centralized reporting of Giglio letters, creating a database that law enforcement agencies could consult when hiring new officers. The letters say which law enforcement officers are deemed too untrustworthy to testify in court.
Gouldsboro seeks new police chief
GOULDSBORO The police chief’s position is to be advertised this week and the search launched for the successor of John Shively, who abruptly resigned May 4.
In his resignation letter, Shively blamed a series of unfounded complaints against him including a recent one that resulted in him taking and passing a polygraph test. He also took issue with the fact that those same allegations since have been reported to the Hancock County District Attorney’s Office.
Town Manager Andrea Sirois said she planned to post the police chief’s job on Wednesday. She said the Gouldsboro Police Department’s remaining officer, Adam Brackett, still works for the town. Until a new police chief is hired, Sirois says the Hancock County Sheriff’s Department and Maine State Police will be handling emergency calls.
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Neil Zolot / medford@wickedlocal.com
After 52 years of cutting hair in Medford Square, John Giglio, 71, is retiring.
Giglio’s seen hair styles change, changes in the city and customers get older and bring in their own kids for haircuts.
“You get to know a lot of people and families in this business,” he said. “It’s a great business. You build relationships with people.”
“You’d be hard pressed to find anyone who’ll say anything bad about John,” said his colleague Steve DeBenedictis. “He’s walking away from friends as well as customers.”
When Giglio started out, it wasn’t a great time to be a barber, given the unkempt long hair many men wear sporting at the time in the hippie era. In the late 1970s disco years, men’s hair was still long, but customers wanted styling. That gave way to the cropped new wave style of the 1980s and the hip-hop style of the 1990s and 2000s when many customers wanted designs shaved into their even shorter hair.