Roundup: Balducci’s Charlotte, Compo’s Polar Plunge, Club 203’s Party …

As Balducci’s prepares to close, it’s already said goodbye to Charlotte.

Yesterday, some of her many friends also said goodbye.

The longtime, much-loved cashier — now 94 years old, whose tenure goes to back half a century to its Hay Day days — received a surprise retirement gift: over $3,100.

The money — raised online — was the brainchild of Dan Frank. He too started out as a customer, and became a close friend. (You can still contribute, through Sunday; click here.)

Charlotte (with flowers), and grateful customers. Dan Frank is in the center.

Dan says, “Charlotte and I had a wonderful trip. It was filled with a lot of emotion from friends and especially co-workers, who are sad to see Balducci’s coming to an end.

“Charlotte put a smile on everyone’s faces. It warmed my heart to see how happy everyone was to see her. She is blown away by all the love she’s received from all of you.”

After Dan brought Charlotte home, she taped this message of thanks:

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Sure, the first day of 2026 was cold and windy. It’s January 1 in New England.

And yeah, the folks who ventured to Compo Beach yesterday stayed (largely) in their cars. The few who went out walking were bundled up well.

Except for a very small group, who gathered for the annual “Polar Bear Plunge” at 10 a.m., when the sun was not even directly overhead.

And among that tiny crew, most “plunged” quickly into Long Island Sound, then raced back to their vehicles.

Except for these dudes. They frolicked in the water for a full 10 minutes.

They’re probably still warming up.

(Photo/Larry Bartimer)

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Among their many other activities, the Senior Center offers an intriguing meeting this month.

On January 12, Westport Police Detective Erin Shaw will chat informally about scams, police matters and ID theft, and address members’ questions and concerns.

Meetings are by appointment only. Call 203-341-5099 to reserve a spot.

Detective Erin Shaw

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Club203 is not wasting any time kicking off the new year.

The first social event of Westport’s organization for adults with disabilities is Tuesday (January 6, 6:30 to 8 p.m., Westport Country Playhouse barn).

It’s an interactive experience with Sensei Palardy, including face painting and mask making with friends from MoCA\CT. Calise’s Deli caters, so the food will be great.

Click here to reserve a spot, and learn more about Club203.

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You can almost taste the frigid air in today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature photo.

Tomoko Meth captured the wintry scene, at Longshore’s ER Strait Marina.

(Photo/Tomoko Meth)

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And finally … Roger Miller was born on this date in 1936. The country music singer/songwriter died in 1992, at 56, from lung and throat cancer.

(Did we mention it’s a new year? And that means you can make a 2026 contribution to support “06880”? Just click here — and thank you!)

[OPINION] No Notice. No Hearing. No Say: The Cribari Bridge Story

Longtime Bridge Street resident Werner Liepolt keeps a close eye on the Cribari Bridge project. Today he describes 3 meetings, over the past 2 years.

February 15, 2024

At a meeting of the Western Connecticut Council of Governments, former 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker released Statewide Transportation Improvement Program funds of $4.1 million previously withheld by former 1st Selectman Jim Marpe, to the Connecticut Department of Transportation to start the Cribari Bridge Project.

May 15, 2025

At an “invitational” meeting in the Town Hall Auditorium, CTDOT, with Tooker in attendance, announced they were replacing the bridge with “a preferred option,” one that can accommodate all vehicles.

Invitations were based on the inactive-since-2018 Planning Advisory Committee list of stakeholders. This meeting was neither publicly noticed by Westport’s town clerk nor on the CTDOT Project page for the William F. Cribari Bridge. The few Westporters who learned of it had to request an invitation.

Cribari Bridge (Painting by Werner Liepolt)

December 18, 2025

At another “invitational” meeting held at 6 p.m. in Room 201 of Town Hall, Mandy Ranslow, supervisor, Cultural Resources CTDOT, confirmed their “preferred option” is to demolish the William F. Cribari Bridge. As CTDOT had determined this was an “adverse effect,” they offered to move it wherever the town wanted.

CTDOT officials said that tractor-trailer trucks would not be restricted by structural limits on the preferred option replacement bridge, and that it was up to Westport to deal with it.

Invitations to this meeting were sent to only a few consultants; several did not receive them. Attendance by elected officials depended on forwarded emails and word of mouth.

My published opinion piece in the Westport Journal and a sentence introducing Wendy Crowther’s tribute to the bridge in “06880” were perhaps the only publicity for the meeting.

The public hearing that didn’t happen

Curious as to how all this happened without any attempt to inform the public  —you — and elicit your views, which is required on federally funded projects that involve nationally registered historic properties (there are 24 on the east bank of the Saugatuck, and more across the river), I researched whether the “invitational” meetings were publicly noticed.

The 1877 Hotchkiss-Wheeler House on Bridge Street is on the National Register …

Questions and answers

Regarding the May 15 meeting, the town clerk replied: “This was not an official meeting of the Town, which is why it does not appear on the Town calendar. It appears that the State simply used the Auditorium to host the event. Any questions regarding the publication or notice of this event should be directed to the State DOT.”

I directed my question to James Barrows, the project manager. and got an answer: “Thank you for your inquiry and for your interest in the State Project 0158-0214.

“To ensure your request is handled efficiently and in compliance with the Connecticut Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), we kindly ask that you submit a formal FOI request through the CTDOT website. This process helps us track, process, and respond to all FOIA requests in a consistent and timely manner.”

Under federal law (Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act), the public must be informed and meaningfully involved before historic resources are evaluated, impacts determined, and alternatives narrowed.

In this case, those steps occurred out of public view. The community is now being presented with an offer of mitigation — a stage that only follows a formal finding of adverse effect — without having had the required opportunity to help identify historic resources, evaluate impacts, or advocate for avoidance and minimization.

… as is the 1932 Anna E. Dolan House. It’s the first one on the right, after crossing the river on the Cribari Bridge from Saugatuck.

Your right to be heard

I have posted a petition, which I will forward to the Federal Highway Administration, Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, and our Congressional representatives, asking for oversight to ensure that our rights to be heard are honored. Please sign it.

I have also filed the Freedom of Information request as suggested by the CTDOT project manager, asking for all records pertaining to the William F. Cribari Bridge Project.

Next steps

What you should do: Submit written comments to the Federal Highway Administration, the Connecticut Department of Transportation, the Connecticut State Historic Preservation Office, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation requesting the complete Section 106 and NEPA administrative records.

Ask how and when the public was consulted prior to the adverse effect finding, and formally request that alternatives and avoidance options be reopened for transparent public review.

Contact all our local elected representatives and the Select Board, with your need to have your voice be heard.

(“06880″‘s Opinion pages are open to all. Email submissions to 06880blog@gmail.com)

(“06880” is your hyper-local blog. We rely on reader support to bring you news, features, photos and much more. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #3179

Saugatuck Church just after midnight today, with freshly fallen snow. (Photo/Jonathan Prager)

WASA Alert: 2 Puppies Need Homes

A couple of weeks ago a young Westport resident was planning his trip back home from Louisiana, for the holiday break.

He packed his bags — and a litter of puppies.

He had learned about them when they popped up on his social media feed. They were being kept outside, and needed homes.

He and a friend picked up them up. He contacted friends and family here. Driving to Westport, he was happy. Adopters had been found for all 8 pups.

But rescues are never easy. Two adopters flaked out. Suddenly, 2 puppies needed homes. His own house was not an option.

Rennie …

He called many individuals and organizations, even for a temporary home. No one could help.

The young man found his way to Earth Animal. They suggested he reach out to Westport Animal Shelter Advocates.

All their slots were full, with locally abandoned or surrendered dogs.

But Westport animal control officer Joe Saponare approved their transport to Westport Animal Control. They are safe, loved, and receiving WASA-funded veterinary care at Schulhof Animal Hospital.

… and Rusty.

The pups — named Rusty and Rennie — now need forever homes. They are sweet, cuddly and well-socialized.

They’re about 10 weeks old, and believed to be collie-yellow lab mixes.

Potential adopters can contact WASA by phone at (203) 557-0361, or email: wasa1@optonline.net. Click here, then scroll down for their Petfinder link.

Roundup: Christmas Tree Pick-up, Longshore Ladies Golf, Carmen de Lavallade & Geoffrey Holder …

Only a few spots remain for one of the greatest offers of the new (or any) year: Scout Troops 39 and 139’s pick-up and (sustainable) removal of your once-beautiful, now dried-out Christmas tree.

It’s a win-win-win: convenient and affordable pick-up for residents; free mulch and conservation material for the town — and the only fundraiser of the year for the Scouts.

The event is all day, on January 10. Troops will pick up over 800 trees, in every neighborhood.

The suggested donation of $25 per tree — less than most services — helps fund a full year of Scout meetings, experiences and gear.

Click here for details, and to sign up. NOTE: The deadline to register is Sunday (January 4).

Who you gonna call? Scout Troops 39 and 139!

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Sure, it’s New Year’s Day. There’s snow on the ground. We’ve got 79 days left till spring arrives.

But it’s not too early to think about golf.

The waitlist for the Longshore Ladies 9 Hole Golf Association opens tomorrow (Friday, January 2).

Membership offers access to league play, tournaments and skill‑building opportunities. This year, the League expands from 130 members to 135. Information for the waitlist and the forms can be found on the League’s website

Click here for information on the waitlist, and forms.

LL9HGA member Maria Mondino’s drive landed just 8 inches from the pin.

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Actress/dancer/choreographer/Kennedy Center Honors winner for lifetime achievement and contributions to American culture Carmen de Lavallade died Monday in New Jersey. She was 94.

For many years, she was associated with and married to Tony Award-winning actor/dancer/director Geoffrey Holder.

Yesterday, “06880” reader Karen Brailsford learned that the couple were married on June 26, 1955 at Christ & Holy Trinity Episcopal Church. A reception followed at the Westport estate of actress/producer Lucille Lortel.

Geoffrey Holder and Carmen de Lavallade, after their wedding at Christ & Holy Trinity Church. (Photos/Saul Mauriber via the Beinecke digital collection /Yale University)

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Westport Police made 3 custodial arrests between December 23 and 30.

A 30-year-old Norwalk man was charged with larceny, attempt to commit larceny, payment of less than $500 using a revoked/stolen credit card, and failure to appear, following an investigation into a March credit card fraud report, with multiple purchases made at Home Depots in multiple states. The suspect was someone the victim previously employed as a contractor. He was unable to post bonds of $240,000.

A 29-year-old New York City man was charged with failure to appear, after being arrested on an unrelated matter in New York. He was unable to post bond of $150,000.

A 21-year-old Westport man was charged with disorderly conduct and threatening, after a verbal disturbance. He was unable to post $5,000 bond.

Westport Police also issued these citations:

  • Disorderly conduct: 1 citation
  • Breach of peace: 1
  • Texting while driving: 1
  • Traveling unreasonably fast: 1
  • Failure to obey stop sign: 1
  • Failure to drive in the proper lane: 1
  • Operating a motor vehicle without a license: 1.

 

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Canada geese often act like they own our beach.

Not in the summer, guys.

But in winter — when no one is watching, except “Westport … Naturally” photographer David Cross — well, maybe they do.

(Photo/David Cross)

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And finally … January is named after Janus. The Roman god of beginnings is often depicted with two faces. One looks back to the past; the other, forward to the future.

(Looking for a New Year’s Resolution? How about: “I resolve to help support ‘06880,’ my hyper-local blog, to the best of my ability”? Then click here to make that resolution come true. Thank you!

Happy New Year!

For several years, “06880” rang in the new year with an iconic photo: The “blue marble” image of Earth, suspended in space.

Taken by Apollo 17 astronauts in December 1972, for half a century it symbolized the beauty and fragility of our planet, and the interconnectedness of us all.

Three years ago, I went intergalactic.

In the years since the James Webb Space Telescope beamed its first pictures back to us, the world has been mesmerized.

We thought we knew how vast and amazing the universe is.

Now, we realize, we don’t know the half — or the hundredth, or squintillionth — of it.

Gazing at photos like the one above, we realize how insignificant we truly are. Our planet is just one grain of sand, on an obscure beach, in an out-of-the-way location.

We really don’t matter at all.

Except to us.

Take a look at that photo again.

That landscape of “mountains” and “valleys” speckled with glittering stars is actually the edge of a nearby, young, star-forming region in the Carina Nebula. For the first time, we see stars being born.

We look billions of light years into the past. That’s crazy stuff.

So — back here on Earth, in our tiny ZIP code in our small state in our big country in our average-sized planet — we have to wonder: What actually matters?

Is it whether our new athletic field is grass or turf? Is it whether we build a parking deck downtown? Is it the inconvenience of traffic on our roads, or a neighbor who chops down most of his trees?

The answer is: Yes.

These things matter.

They matter because they are part of our lives here in Westport. Sure, the universe seems endless; we still can’t really conceive of the fourth dimension, and our universe itself may be part of another, “living” life form.

In other words, the Westport — and the world — we know may just be atoms in an infinitely more complex something-or-other.

But all that’s for another day (or time).

Meanwhile, we look for the answers to life out there. Right now though, it’s our own lives to lead, right here in “06880.”

Let’s lead them well.

And so … bringing us back to what we know best … here’s that beautiful blue marble, once more.

Pic Of The Day #3178

Happy New Year! Hillspoint Road (Photo/Andrew Colabella)

Unsung Heroes #415

In the aftermath of last weekend’s snowfall, Meghan Sullivan-Boustainy raises a grateful shovel to Tara Marie.

The Westport mom posted an offer on social media: Her children wanted to aid older people who needed help clearing after the storm.

Meghan’s elderly father was staying in Westport, at the home of a friend who is blind. With Meghan in New York, the two were stuck.

They were short on food, and needed to get out. But there was a steep staircase — and the car and driveway were covered with snow.

Tara responded quickly to Meghan, and her father. Her children — already working for others — would be there in a few hours.

It turns out that Meghan’s sister and her children drove from Stamford to shovel the pair out.

But, Meghan says, “I thank Tara and her family for reaching out to help a family they’ve never met” — along with many others.

“Such kindness is special,” Meghan says. “Happy New Year!”

Not Tara Marie’s child — but you get the idea.

(To nominate an Unsung Hero, email 06880blog@gmail.com. “06880” is proud to honor Unsung Heroes — and tell many other tales of town too. Please click here to support your hyper-local blog.)

Roundup: Script In Hand, Home Demolitions …

Two-time Tony Award winner Judith Ivey highlights the next Westport Country Playhouse Script in Hand play reading.

“The Pancake Club” — a new comedy directed by Playhouse artistic director Mark Shanahan — is set for January 12 (7 p.m.).

Ivey plays Brenda, a waitress at a small-town diner where a group of senior men regularly meet. As Brenda struggles with the sudden death of her oldest friend, members squabble over the eulogy, the widow refuses to grieve, a mysterious stranger threatens the town’s equilibrium, and Brenda’s only daughter teeters on the brink of a meltdown. Brenda wonders: Does anybody ever truly grow up?

Click here for tickets, and more information.

Judith Ivey

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The Historic District Commission meets January 13 (7 p.m., Zoom).

The agenda includes a vote on the partial demolition, renovation and addition to the main home, and demolition of a detached garage, with a new garage constructed, at 296 Main Street.

The HDC will also vote on whether to oppose demolition permits, and require the full 180-day delay, for these properties:

  • 19 Turkey Hill Road North
  • 11 Dogwood Lane
  • 10 Mary jane Lane
  • 10 Twin Falls Lane
  • 5 Over Rock Lane
  • 17 Adams Farm Road
  • 9 Berkeley Road.

They will vote too on whether to rescind adoption of the motion to oppose the issuance of a demolition permit for 11 Beachside Commons, which was adopted December 9.

11 Beachside Commons

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Up | Next Teens — the county-wide teen volunteer organization founded by Addison Moore, when the recently elected Representative Town Meeting member was a Staples High School student (just a few years ago) — partnered with Big Y to host a holiday food drive.

They collected a few hundred pounds of food, pantry staples, and essential items like diapers, laundry detergent, dish soap and personal care products, for Homes with Hope’s Gillespie Center. 

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Peter “PJ” Boehm Jr. died Saturday at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Bridgeport.

He graduated in May from the University of Miami Herbert Business School, with a double major in finance and economics. He was a 2021 graduate of Fairfield Ludlowe High School.

His obituary describes PJ as “fun-loving, generous, deeply kind and endlessly curious. With confidence and authenticity, he treated everyone with warmth and humility. His boundless energy infected his wide circle of friends.”

He loved boating with his father Peter, traveling with his mother Mary Kate, and his yellow lab Bella.

PJ is also survived by grandmother, Marilyn Klemish; uncles William Klemish Jr. (Lori), John Klemish (partner Dani Fernandez) and Michael Klemish (Sue), and aunts Christine Walker (John), JoAnnBoehm, and Jacquelyn Steedle. 

Friends may call Friday (January 2, 4 to 7 p.m., Harding Funeral Home). A funeral Mass will be held on Saturday (January 3, 11 a.m.).

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Connecticut Humane Society.

PJ Boehm

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” image shows Booler’s Point, in the fog.

I’ve lived in Westport my whole life, and never heard of “Booler’s Point.”

According to photographer Michael Tomashefsky — who found it on Google Maps — that’s the spit of land jutting into the Saugatuck River, between Grace Salmon Park and the Levitt Pavilion.

Here’s what it looks like, in Monday’s fog. And if anyone knows who Booler was, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Michael Tomashefsky)

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And finally … Diana Ross rings in 2026 tonight, at Times Square. Other performers include Ciara, LE SSERAFIM, Little Big Town and Maren Morris.

Beginning in 1929 though, and continuing for half a century, Guy Lombardo & His Royal Canadians’ “Auld Lang Syne” was the way millions of Americans — live, and first listening to radio, then watching on TV — celebrated New Year’s Eve.

The intro to Lombardo’s 1947 Decca Records version is still played in Times Square, immediately following the ball drop.

So — for auld lang syne’s (time gone by) sake — we present:

(Happy New Year! Whatever your plans, you’ve still got a few hours to donate to “06880” — and take a tax deduction for 2025 too. Please click here. And then celebrate!)

A P&Z Poem, On A New Westport Home

No, “06880” is not turning into The American Poetry Review.

And no, neither I nor Paul Lebowitz claim to be Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost or Rudyard Kipling.

Or even Ogden Nash.

But on the heels of my Monday attempt at rhyme — hey, readers had a good time — the Planning & Zoning Commission chair sent his response.

Planning & Zoning Commission chair Paul Lebowitz.

He speaks not for the entire board
But read it; perhaps it strikes a chord:

It was just before New Year’s,
And all through the land,
Developers whispered,
“Let’s build something grand.”

“We’ll max out the density,
Go up 6 more floors,
Throw on a big cupola—
Heck, add some more doors!

“Let’s fill in the wetlands,
And dig a big pool
Add some stone walls,
Maybe a patio or two

“No permits, no site plans,
We won’t bother asking,
Why slow down the fun
With all that red-tape tasking?

“Setbacks are suggestions,
The code’s just a guide,
If we squint at the map
It all fits inside.

“Let it be the next buyer’s
Problem, not really ours—
It was like this already,
We just added them towers.”

Then off to the P&Z
With a straight-faced appeal,
Claiming hardship and fairness
And “neighborhood feel.”

And the neighbors all sighed,
As they muttered, “Oh dear…”
For it’s always the same,
This time every year.

(“06880” is your hyper-local blog. All voices are welcome. But we rely on reader support. Today is the final day to gain a tax deduction for a 2025 contribution. Please click here. Thank you!)