It’s A Grand List, For Sure

Town Assessor Paul Friia has signed the October 1, 2025 Grand List.

The Grand List is the sum of the net assessed value of all taxable property – real estate, motor vehicles, and personal property.  Motor vehicles and personal property are valued annually, while real estate is updated based on the market values determined as of the town’s October 1, 2025 revaluation.

The 2025 Grand List of $17,497,161,570 represents an increase of just over 50% from the 2024 Grand List of $11,616,471,195. The increase was due mainly to the 2025 revaluation of all real estate in Westport. Modest increases were also noted in personal property and motor vehicles.

Included in the overall increase is a 1.2% increase in real estate assessment due to continued residential and commercial new construction, as well as renovation activity that occurred within the last assessment year.

Within the real estate grand list, residential properties increased 60% and commercial properties increased 16%. These market-driven increases began in mid-2020 during COVID-19.

Personal property increased by just over 1%, representing continued reinvestment in new and existing local businesses.

Motor vehicles increased approximately 6%.

The current 2025 Grand List totals: 

Assessment 2025 % of List
Real Estate 16,633,912,370 95.06
Motor Vehicle 453,397,460 2.60
Personal Property 409,851,740 2.34
TOTAL 17,497,161,570 100%

60 Nyala Farms Road — the LLC controlled by Bridgewater Associates — remains the second highest taxpayer in Westport. 

The Grand List will be used for fiscal year 2026-2027 town budget calculations. (The figures above are subject to change based on Board of Assessment Appeals hearings in March.)

The Top 10 taxpayers in Westport:

Connecticut Light & Power Inc          Pers. Property                         143,778,100

60 Nyala Farms Road LLC                Real Estate                                95,954,500

Bedford Square Assoc LLC               Real Estate                                51,583,400

Aquarion                                             Real/Pers. Prop.                        43,204,450

Equity One Westport Vill. Center      Real Estate                                36,294,500

Compo Regency LLC                         Real Estate                                28,372,700

Heyman Ronnie F Trustee                  Real Estate                                26,880,700

Byelas LLC                                        Real Estate                                26,504,400

Westport Riverside Assoc. LLC         Real Estate                                25,763,900

Bridgewater Associates LP                Pers. Property                           25,503,850

Staples Players Rewind: “Guys & Dolls”

During his 3 decades teaching at Staples High School, Jim Honeycutt helped develop the Media Lab.

It grew from radio and television production into a full-fledged, versatile studio.

Jim and his students recorded TV shows, Candlelight Concerts, and many Staples Players productions.

For several months, Jim — now retired — has been creating “nutshells” from the archives. They’re brief (10 minutes or so) highlights of every show, beginning with director David Roth’s first one in 2000.

It was “Guys and Dolls.”

Jim is sending these nutshells to “06880.” He hopes readers enjoy the shows — whether they were there then or not. Click here or below, for “Luck Be a Lady,” “Sit Down, You’re Rockin’ the Boat,” and many more classics.

 

(“06880”  covers Staples High School, Westport’s entertainment scene, and so much more — and we do it 24/7/365. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Pete Ratkiewich, Board of Ed, Israeli Hostages …

Peter Ratkiewich — longtime director of Westport’s Public Works Department — will retire on August 31.

First Selectman Kevin Christie says, “It is with regret that I accept Pete’s retirement letter.

“The town of Westport has been extremely fortunate to benefit from his expertise and knowledge for more than 36 years.

“Under his leadership, and among many other accomplishments, the town has maintained and improved its infrastructure, roadways, engineering capabilities, and equipment; strengthened coordination with public utilities and the state of Connecticut; and successfully managed numerous emergency response efforts during major storms impacting our community.”

Ratkiewich began working with and for the town in 1989. Hired as deputy town engineer, he was promoted to town engineer in 2008.

In that capacity he supervised the Engineering Department, and oversaw the design and administration of municipal infrastructure projects, including sanitary sewers, storm drains, refuse and recycling facilities, highway maintenance, parking lots, and roadway and intersection improvements.

Christie said, “Pete has led the Public Works Department with exceptional care and precision. He approaches every challenge with consideration, humor, and a thoughtful awareness of budgetary constraints — always with the best interests of the town in mind.

“Public safety, along with the well-being of his employees, residents, business owners, and visitors, has always been his top priority.”

He graduated from Northeastern University, with a bachelor of science degree in civil engineering. The search for a successor will begin soon.

Pete Ratkiewich (Photo/Dan Woog)

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On the agenda for this Thursday’s Board of Education meeting (February 5, 7 p.m., Staples High School cafeteria; click here for livestream):

  • Screen time survey
  • Formation of a building committee for Coleytown Elementary School
  • Approval of proposed budget.

Coleytown Elementary School.

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Congressman Jim Himes reminds “06880” readers that Access Health has begun a special open enrollment period, for people who qualify for state financial support. This replaces the Affordable Care Act enhanced premium tax credits, which expired at the end of 2025.

Eligibility requirements can be found here. Questions? Call Himes’ office: 203- 333-6600.

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Liz Hirsh Naftali’s 3-year-old niece, Abigail Mor Edan, was abducted by Hamas on October 7, 2023 — after she watched them murder her parents.

Abigail spent 51 terrifying days in captivity. Liz was her tireless advocate, speaking with world leaders and sharing her family’s story.

On February 10 (7 p.m., The Community Synagogue), Naftali will talk about her memoir, “Saving Abigail” — a testament to resilience, courage and hope in the face of tragedy.

The event is free, but pre-registration is required (click here).

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Adam Kaplan did not go to Coleytown Middle School — he’s a Bedford grad.

But the 2008 Staples High alum was on stage yesterday at Coleytown. He brought along 3 castmates (and longtime friends) from the original “Newsies” on Broadway — plus a 3-man band.

The result was a high-energy, rousing benefit for Coleytown Company. Ben Frimmer’s middle school troupe presents “Newsies” of course next month.

Adam and his fellow performers gave many shout-outs to the importance of arts in the schools — and Westport’s support of it.

To show your own support, click here more information on “Newsies,” Coleytown-style. Tickets will be on sale soon at this link.

Adam Kaplan (far right) with (from left) Andrew Keenan Bolger, Liana Hunt and Ben Frankhauser, at Coleytown Middle School yesterday. (Photo courtesy of Ben Frimmer)

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Speaking of CMS and BMS: Congratulations to Westport’s Middle School Squash Club!

One of just a few of 59 clubs to field 3 strong teams at this past weekend’s US Middle School Team Squash Championships in Philadelphia, they had great success.

Team A finished 5th in the nation — the highest for any public school — while Team B won the Division III title.

Club members representing Westport were Theo Abrams, Luke Amitin, Xuanhao (Hardy) Chao, James D’Angelo, Alex Jiang, Liev Katz, Theo Keefe, Matthew Lyle, Oscar Quintner, Ilina Rangaraj, Zach Smith, Logan Warnke, Jonathan Whee, Olivia Whee, Len Xie, and Orson Xie. Parent managers were Amber Warnke, Aaron Amitin, Gali Katz and Tim Whee, with club advisor Ella Ye and advisor emeritus TJ Sheridan.

The Westport Club is coached by Mohsin Khan, of Intensity Fitness.

For more information, contact msinfo@westportsquash.org.

Team A (from left): Jonathan Whee, Zach Smith, Theo Keefe, Len Xie, Luke Amitin.

Team B (from left): Ilina Rangaraj, Liev Katz, Logan Warnke, Alex Jiang, Xuanhao (Hardy) Chao.

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Baby, it’s cold outside!.

But at VFW Post 399, Thursdays mean hot jazz.

This week (February 5; shows at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m.; dinner at 7) features Jen Allen. The pianist/composer has performed all over the world. She’s joined by 2 longtime associates: bassist Matt Dwonszyk and drummer Jonathan Barber. Click here for tickets, and more information.

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Longtime St. Luke Church organist Leon Bernard died January 29 at Hartford Hospital. He was 86.

The New Rochelle, New York native graduated from Staples High School. He then served proudly in the Army, stationed in Alaska and California.

A church organist for over 60 years at St. Luke in Westport, he had a strong interest in music, and all things trains, engines, locomotives and railroads. He also liked gardening, and visits for over 40 years to the Trapp Family Lodge and Resort in Vermont.

In his later years he enjoyed NFL football, the University of Connecticut men’s and women’s basketball, and broadcast mysteries. He was president of 2 condominium associations.

He his survived by his close friends Rev. Kumar, St. Luke pastor, and Richard Fitol, Mark Prisloe and Natasha Morant; many St. Luke parishioners, neighbors, and work-related associates, including real estate development at T&M Building, and piano and commercial sales.

Calling hours at the Harding Funeral Home are this Friday (February 6, 4 to 7 p.m.). A Mass of Christian burial will be held at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday (February 7, St. Luke Church). Interment will follow immediately at Assumption Cemetery, Greens Farms. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to St. Luke Church.

Leon Bernard

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Our “Westport … Naturally” photos are all about the features and creatures that make our town “naturally” beautiful, and interesting.

Occasionally, a human being or 2 add to the mix.

Andrew Colabella captured this frigid scene, at Gray’s Creek:

(Photo/Andrew Colabella)

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And finally … on this date in 1961, the US Air Force began Operation Looking Glass. For the next 30 years, a “Doomsday Plane” was always in the air. It could take direct control of American bombers and missiles, if Strategic Air Command headquarters was destroyed.

(Barry McGuire’s song is timeless — and “06880” is always timely. Please click here, to help support your hyper-local blog. Thank you!)

Famous Artists School: A Fond Look Back

Suzanne Wilson arrived in Westport in 1969, to work at Famous Artists School.

It was her first “real” job, after studying art at Boston University. She remained at the internationally known correspondence school, headquartered on Wilton Road (now the office building just north of Bartaco) until it went bankrupt in 1972 due to  over-expansion, financial mismanagement, and a sales tactics scandal, (There were also Famous Writers and Famous Photographers Schools.)

Famous Artists, Writers and Photographers Schools logos.

After a couple of years in England, she returned to Westport. From 1975-82 — going by the name Suzanne Lemieux — she painted in oils and pastels; worked in studios including The Mill on Richmondville Avenue, and exhibited regionally.

The recent “06880” series on Westport’s arts history piqued her interest — and jogged her memory. Suzanne writes:

The prevailing condescension among local artists about the Famous Artists School was such that I had to keep my enthusiasm under wraps.

To me, the job offered the opportunity to practice, practice, practice (with free art materials); develop techniques and disciplines; learn about teaching art; most especially, to be in the company of renowned, artists and have the chance to meet some who actually made a living at it — and a good one!

Suzanne Lemieux, in her Famous Artists School days.

I felt the Famous Artists teaching was thorough. I wished that my teachers at Boston University had spent as much time and attention on me.

At FAS we addressed each student’s art piece individually. We actually painted a small picture and added comments, samples of techniques, colors, and so forth that they could apply to their art. We included a letter to provide more detail.

I admired one that Claude Croney was doing. To my surprise and delight he painted another one just like it for me!

Claude Croney’s painting for Suzanne Wilson.

My supervisor was George Passantino. He gave me some notes on how to correct the student work:

Famous Artists Schools began in a mill in Westport, Connecticut. They built a new building on the Saugatuck River, with individual offices for the faculty.

Famous Artists School, on the Saugatuck River at Wilton Road.

If you lived across the river, it was easy to get to work:

Suzanne Wilson rows to work. 

It wasn’t always so idyllic. You could get caught in the current or stuck at low tide, as all the famous artists watched out the windows. I was not spared the humorous renditions of my plight!

A criticism of the school was that the “famous” artists (“Guiding Faculty”) did not really teach the students. But they did regularly appear to give lectures and seminars for the staff. (And to attend parties.)

To my naïve viewpoint, the drinking and tomfoolery appeared glamorous rather than the self-medication that it most likely was. In my first job out of art school I felt I had fortuitously landed in the bon vivant artistic lifestyle celebrated in Paris of the 1920s. To this day I have not found anything quite like it.

We were honored to have the famous illustrator Peter Helck give us a critique on our renditions of automobiles. I boldly submitted a 30 x 40 inch “painterly” abstract piece.

Suzanne Wilson’s artwork.

Although this rather large painting took up most of the wall, Mr. Helck graciously and judiciously critiqued each illustration surrounding it until he ran out of time. The happy ending was that all the participants were invited to lunch at The Red Barn.

Extra studio space in an old mill was provided by Famous Artists School for the staff. On the spacious top sky-lit floor, artists could paint private portrait commissions, give lessons, and get together for sketch classes.

In Famous Artists’ heyday, they rented studios at The Mill on Richmondville Avenue. Today, they’re condominiums.

But there was always time for gourmet lunches and parties.

Eating and drinking well.

Some of the Famous Artists continued to rent studio space after Famous Artists Schools stopped leasing it.

Artists Robert Baxter, Alfred Chadbourn Ed Reinhardt, Bert Dodson, Ann Toulmin-Rothe and Charles Reid.

After returning from London I worked in the same building, sharing space with Ward Brackett.

Ward didn’t care to save all of his rough sketches. I was the lucky recipient.

Ward Brackett sketch.

The local cartoonists, illustrators and writers were a sociable group. They met weekly at Westport Lanes, followed by hours of congeniality. There were many famous names. Proximity to New York was a must, and brought a truly creative group to the community.

Suzanne married cartoonist Rowland B. Wilson. They moved to California in 1982; moved again to Ireland, then returned to California. They worked at Disney; she then commuted to Phoenix to work at Fox Animation on “Anastasia” and other productions. Rowland died in 2005.

She now lives in Rancho La Costa, California, and has a “nice, big home studio.” 

(“06880” regularly covers Westport’s arts scene, its history — and, as in today’s feature, their intersection. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Suzanne Lemieux, after her return to Westport.

 

 

Pics Of The Day #3211

Frozen Saugatuck River, from the Westport Library … (Photo/Pam Docters)

… and Deadman Brook, from the Imperial Avenue footbridge (Photo/Tracy Porosoff)

Scarice Update: Weather, Strategic Plan, AI, Screen Time …

Superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice sends this update:

We have crossed the mid-point of the school year and our February Recess is just a couple of weeks away.

Winter Weather Decisions

It looks like we dodged a major blizzard this weekend. That said, our consulting meteorologist is predicting a series of storms and continued cold temperatures throughout February. Sorry to be the bearer of that news!

Since this is the time of year when weather decisions tend to come up a lot, I wanted to share a bit about how those calls are made. When conditions require a delay or closure, I do my best to make a final decision by 5:30 a.m. This typically follows an early morning regional call between 4 and 4:30 with area superintendents and our consulting meteorologist (the entire region uses the same service).

Whenever possible I make the decision the night before, though that’s relatively rare as weather has a habit of changing its mind overnight. Many factors go into these decisions, including temperature differences across town, conditions from the northern side of town to southern side, and coordination with the town on road clearing.

February break may spare us at least one winter weather decision, but early forecasts suggest we may still be looking at snow on the ground well into March. Seems like the groundhog and meteorologists are on the same page…and winter is in no hurry to leave.

As always, thank you for your patience and understanding as we navigate an old-fashioned New England winter together.

Snow day!

District Strategic Plan

Since the presentation of our AI Strategic Plan in November, several initiatives are now underway. All of this work is grounded in our commitment to being “AI-Powered and Human-Centered,” using technology thoughtfully while keeping students, learning, and well-being at the center.

Our guiding approach is simple: Go slow to go fast. Rather than rushing new tools or expectations into classrooms, we are intentionally establishing ethical guardrails, clear expectations, and thoughtful preparation first. This allows us to support students and faculty responsibly, protect privacy, and maintain high academic standards as technology continues to evolve.

Several important foundations are already in place:

Below are several key areas of work now underway.

AI Literacy for Students

Work has begun to develop a clear, developmentally appropriate K–12 approach to AI literacy for students, along with defined competencies for staff. Expectations and access will vary across elementary, middle and high school levels to ensure appropriate and responsible use at each stage of development.

The goal of this work is to ensure that students understand how AI systems actually work, as well as their benefits and limitations. By building this foundational knowledge, students will be better equipped to think critically about AI, recognize potential challenges, including overreliance or emotional dependence, and use emerging technologies thoughtfully, ethically, and responsibly as part of their learning.

Academic Integrity

As generative AI tools become more common, the district is revisiting its Academic Integrity Policy, particularly for our middle and high school level, to ensure expectations for original thinking, effort, and learning remain clear and meaningful. This work is focused on preserving strong academic standards while helping students navigate new tools responsibly.

Future-Proofing and AI Trends

The district has also begun work to monitor emerging AI trends and engage community expertise. This proactive effort is intended to help us anticipate where technology may be headed and prepare thoughtfully, rather than respond reactively. Our goal is to host our first school/community “AI Trends Group” meeting in late March.

Screen Time Audit

When we developed our Strategic Plan we used a number of “essential questions” to help frame our thinking. One such question was, “How do we maximize the power of AI and minimize screen time?”  That led to the development of an initiative that would audit screen time in our schools.

In support of our student strategic objective, “Preparing Students to Think, Adapt, and Lead with AI,” the district is conducting a screen time audit to better understand how technology use intersects with learning, well-being, and instructional design.

This audit is intentionally being conducted through multiple lenses to ensure a balanced and accurate picture:

  1. Surveys of students, teachers, and families to gather perceptions and  experiences related to screen time (the parent guardian survey will be administered after the February Recess.
  2. A review of curriculum and instructional practices to examine the amount of screen time required by our curriculum and instructional methods.
  3. An analysis of overall network usage patterns at the elementary and middle school levels to help quantify screen time in the aggregate. The district will use network tools, such as GoGuardian, to collect high-level, quantitative information about screen time. Because Staples High School operates under a Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) model, this analysis will not be conducted at the high school level.

Importantly, this work is not intended to monitor or evaluate individual students or staff. The purpose of the audit is to inform thoughtful decision-making about instructional balance, technology use, and student well-being.  In addition, this audit will help set a baseline for future studies on the topic of screen time.

Supporting Educators and Responsible Tool Use

Professional learning for educators continues to be aligned with the district’s AI vision and Code of Ethics. This ensures that any use of AI or digital tools in classrooms is intentional, ethical, and focused on supporting, not replacing, strong teaching and learning by our faculty.

Access to AI tools for staff remains controlled and supported, with broader access planned for next year alongside clear expectations, training, and ethical oversight.

I recognize that AI, technology use, and screen time raise important questions for families. My commitment is to continue moving deliberately, communicating transparently, and keeping students’ best interests at the center of every decision. I will continue to provide updates in manageable ways as this work progresses.

Thank you for your trust and partnership as we maneuver this evolving landscape together.

Roundup: Duck Rescue, Book Shop Anniversary, Ann Chernow Birthday …

On Saturday, Westport water pollution treatment plant supervisor Joe Tracy was making his rounds. It was cold; he was breaking up ice in one of the tanks.

He heard odd noises coming from the post-anoxic effluent basin. Stopping to investigate, Joe removed the heavy grating. Two mallard heads stared back up at him.

They were neck-deep in brown “foam” — trapped in one of the spillways.

Joe contacted on-duty Westport Animal Control Officer Peter Reid, across the street. He jogged over with a long net.

The ducks, a male and female — were transported back to Westport Animal Control, to warm up and be cleaned.

Officer Peter Reid, at Westport Animal Control.

Westport Animal Shelter Advocates volunteer Julie Loparo showed up with corn. She rocked the ducks like a baby in a warm towel.

WASA volunteer Sara Stockman arrived with frozen peas, and provided additional bathing.

Officer Reid happened to have a can of “gourmet” meal worms ready as well. He then took the mallards to Wildlife in Crisis. They were monitored, as they restored feather oil prior to release.

Thanks to all — starting with Joe Tracy — for going above and beyond, in weather that was cold even for ducks.

Ducks — before (left) and after rescue.

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The Westport Book Shop‘s 5th anniversary celebration continues this month.

Head to the Jesup Road store to see a special mosaic, by the legendary Miggs Burroughs. It celebrates the 60+ local artists who have exhibited there each month.

The Book Shop’s Short Story Club meets February 25 (6 p.m.). They’ll discuss 2
stories by Alice Munro: “What Is Remembered” and “The Bear Came Over the Mountain.”

Registration is required: Call 203-349-5141, or email RSVP@westportbooksaleventures.org.

And in honor of Valentine’s month, make a $10 donation to support the Book Shop — and its mission of providing training an employment for people with disabilities — and get a chocolate bar, courtesy of Wegman’s.

You can also honor a loved on on the “Heart of Heart” window display.

Westport Book Shop “Heart of Hearts” display.

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Ann Chernow — one of Westport’s great artistic treasures — turned 90 yesterday.

She celebrated with family and close friends. “06880” joins the rest of the town in saying congratulating an artist who has enriched us in so many ways — from her work and her volunteer efforts, to her always-smiling presence.

Happy birthday, Ann!

Ann Chernow (Hat tip and photo/Jamie Walsh)

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Perrin Delorey — a 4th grader at Greens Farms Elementary in 2018 who played baseball and hockey, and was a Cub Scout — died in a car accident shortly before summer break.

Those 4th graders are now Staples High School seniors. They have not forgotten him.

Perrin’s cousin and best friend, Philip Sullivan, have created n endowed scholarship in his name. The first “Do Your Best” Award will be presented by Staples Tuition Grants this spring.

More than $30,000 has already been raised, ensuring that the funds will be awarded in perpetuity.

A new fundraiser is planned, so that the grants will be the maximum allowed under STG bylaws.

A community skating event is set for February 10 (7:15 to 8:45 p.m.; Westport PAL Rink at Longshore).

Everyone is welcome — to skate, watch, and enjoy the DJ and food. A photographer will capture the community feel.

At 9 p.m., a Perrin Delorey Memorial Cup hockey game will add to the fun. Click here to purchase tickets, and learn more. 

Philip says, “one of the most special parts of this event is the range of community support behind it. There could be an entire story on the individuals, businesses and community groups that have donated precious time and money to help us raise the necessary funds to establish the award.”

He gives a special shout-out to Staples Tuition Grants, the Staples Class of 2026, Staples Service League of Boys,  Staples boys and girls hockey teams, Westport Parks & Recreation, Scout Troops 39 and 139; Videler Photography, the host committee of individual and family donors, “06880,” and “countless members of the community who have helped us get so far with our fundraising efforts.”

Perrin Delorey

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Wakeman Town Farm’s February calendar includes classes and activities for all ages. They include:

  • Storytime with Mosaic & Movement (ages 2-6; February 4)
  • Drop-in Knitting Circle (February 10)
  • Kids’ February break Needle Felting Workshop (ages 11-14; February 16)
  • Winter cooking for Minis and Kids (grades K-2; 2-4)
  • Mardi Gras Cooking (February 24)
  • Meet the MVPs of Garden Tools (February 25).

Click here; then scroll down for details.

“Cooking for Kids,” at Wakeman Town Farm.

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Neighbors and Newcomers of Westport — a great organization that welcomes new arrivals and longtime residents alike — has a busy February. Events include:

  • Galentine’s Day Luncheon (February 12, noon, Zucca Gastrobar
  • Dining-In Cooking Group (February 25)
  • Book Group (February 26)

To learn more click here, or email eventsnnwestport@gmail.com.

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It’s like one of those “back in the day …” photos: frozen Sherwood Mill Pond.

Matt Murray — who chronicles the ever-changing scene there — offers today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo.

But even he hasn’t seen it like this too often.

(Photo/Matt Murray)

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And finally … in honor of the great duck rescue (story above):

(If you click here, to make a tax-deductible contribution to “06880,” everything will be ducky. Thank you!)

Christie, Tolan Talk “State Of The Town”

“Westport thrives because of its people — the community. And local government exists to support that community.”

That was the heart of new 1st Selectman Kevin Christie’s first “State of the Town” address yesterday.

He and Board of Education member Abby Tolan spoke at the Westport Library, to a crowd of 150. Others watched on livestream. The 9th annual event was co-sponsored by the Westport Rotary Club and Westport Sunrise Rotary. Representative Town Meeting (RTM) moderator Jeff Wieser emceed.

Board of Education member Abby Tolan and 1st Selectman Kevin Christie respond to questions. (Library photos/Dan Woog)

The pair also answered nearly 2 dozen questions, from audience members on a wide range of topics. There were no surprises in Christie’s and Tolan’s answers.

For example, the 1st selectman said the town is “getting its arms around” new state legislation (HB 8002) on affordable housing. He is “optimistic” about Department of Transportation’s focus on local traffic issues. His administration is studying next steps for a combined Police/Fire/Emergency Medical Services facility.

He hopes for a new community gardens site “as soon as practical,” and is in conversation with gardeners and others.

Naming a new chair for the Downtown Plan Implementation Committee is a top priority. Christie will include a “seat at the table” for merchants. He acknowledged a need to improve Parker Harding Plaza, along with river access.

A new maintenance facility “has to go somewhere,” he said  “Anyplace it goes, there will be tradeoffs.”

The town is also examining the reason swimming in Long Island Sound was closed often last summer, and speeding up the process for re-opening.

Tolan spoke about ongoing efforts to address girls’ sports facilities inequalities; the need for Coleytown Elementary School renovations, and the next “deep dive” exploration of programs by the Board of Ed. It will focus on special education.

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In his prepared remarks Christie — in office just 76 days — said support shows up “in many ways.”

1st Selectman Kevin Christie, with a photo of a packed Compo Beach.

He gave shout-outs to specific departments.

Last year, for example, Police handled over 27,000 calls, including more than 5,500 traffic stops.

The Fire Department responded to over 4,000 incidents, with an average response time under 4 minutes.

The Building Department issued 3,045 permits, and generated more than $2.6 million in revenue.

Public Works, Christie continued, touches daily life in every neighborhood. In 2025 the department repaired or reconstructed 9 miles of road, completed 9 additional miles of pavement preservation, and repaved 2 parking lots. They also secured almost $11 million in grant funding. Just last week, they responded to a near-record snowfall, working long shifts for days at a time.

1st Selectman Christie praised Public Works for their response to the recent snowfall. He took a snowplow ride-along earlier, and learned a lot about department operations. (Photo/Rick Carpenter)

Parks and Recreation supported 10,895 program registrations, about 1.2 million beach visits, and 40,000 rounds of golf.

Through the Department of Human Services and the Senior Center, the town provides over 24,000 congregate and home-delivered meals annually, and administered $2.9 million in housing and community grants over the last 2 years.

In 2025, the Planning and Zoning office issued over 430 administrative zoning permits, while processing 42 applications to the Planning and Zoning Commission, and 75 to the Zoning Board of Appeals.

The Conservation Department issued nearly 200 permits, and currently oversee 49 violations going through the enforcement process.

The Historic District Commission processed over 150 applications across HDC, Architecture Review Board, and the Joint Committee. They now have a fully digital application process.

The Historic District Commission helps preserve and honor homes like this one, on Long Lots Road.

Westport recently completed a state-mandated property revaluation — the first since COVID. After notices were mailed, the Assessor’s Office met with over 1,000 property owners through informal hearings. 

The Tax Collector delivered over a 99% collection rate.

The Town Clerk’s office recorded 464 property transfers — well over one a day.

Christie also hailed the teams in information technology, finance, personnel, the town attorney’s office, and his own selectman’s office.

Collaboration is one key to successful governance, Christie said.

Cross-department collaborations are crucial to good governance.

For example, Human Services and the Police Department recently launched a Community Care Unit. It connects residents to behavioral health and social service support outside of traditional law enforcement paths, and “reflects a shared commitment to prevention, care, and appropriate response.”

Similarly, joint work between Human Services, the Police Department, Westport Public Schools, and community partners around underage drinking, social hosting and early intervention address challenges no single department or board can handle alone.

Returning to last week’s snow, Christie said that Fire and the Emergency Management director, Public Works, Police, Human Services and staff “worked together around the clock to keep roads passable, critical services running, and residents safe.

“We all rely on one another as a community — staff, boards, volunteers, residents and more. (But) this only works because people collaborate, share information, and take collective responsibility for serving the community well.”

1st Selectman Kevin Christie illustrated his talk about “community” with a photo of the Compo Beach playground.

Turning to finances, Christie noted the need for “discipline and planning.”

In the current budget season, “trade-offs become real and priorities have to be weighed carefully. The decisions we make over the coming months will shape not just the next fiscal year, but the town’s trajectory over the longer term.”

His focus is on “making sure those conversations are grounded in facts, transparent, and aligned with the long-term interests of our town.”

Board of Finance budget workshops begin tonight, and continue February 9 and 25 (6 p.m., Town Hall Room 307/309.

Looking ahead, Christie turned to sustainability. While Westport has set ambitious goals — including being net-zero by 2050 — “meaningful progress usually comes from steady, thoughtful steps, not going from zero to 60 all at once. The work ahead is about integrating long-term thinking into everyday decisions, and doing so in a way that is responsible, practical and transparent.”

Also ahead: the new Long Lots Elementary School and Stepping Stones Preschool. Bids for the next phase of construction are due this month.

On the horizon: a new Long Lots Elementary School.

“Westport is a special place not because of any single project or initiative, but because of the people who care deeply about this community and show up for it in ways large and small,” the 1st selectman concluded.

“Local government’s role is to support that community — to provide services, plan responsibly, and create space for thoughtful decision-making. I’m grateful for the trust placed in town leadership and staff, and I’m optimistic about the work ahead.”

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Tolan (filling in for Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein, in Washington for a conference) touted the school district’s new strategic plan; its AI pilot for Staples and Bedford Middle School 6th graders; Staples’ designation as a bell-to-bell phone-free school; an upcoming technology audit; Board of Finance approval for upgrades to the Staples auditorium and girls locker room, plus the BMS science labs — and of course, groundbreaking for Long Lots Elementary School.

Some Westport Public Schools’ achievements.

Tolan also listed a host of awards and honors for the Westport Public Schools.

There were group achievements (Science Olympiad, History Day, All-State Music Festival, We the People, WWPT-FM, team championships) and individual accomplishments, by students and staff members.

Click here for the full list of awards and honors 

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(“06880” regularly covers town politics, and education. If you appreciate stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Pics Of The Day #3210

One view of the frozen Saugatuck River … (Photo/Markus Marty)

,,, and another … (Photo/Whitmal Cooper)

… and a third (Photo/John Maloney)

 

Photo Challenge #579

Last Sunday’s Photo Challenge was appropriate.

We posted a classic rooster weathervane, atop a 4-sided wooden bell tower on a snow-covered roof. (Click here to see.)

Appropriate, because last Sunday we were in the middle of a classic New England snowstorm.

Surprisingly — because there was not much else to do that day, but curl up beside a fire with “06880” — only a few readers hazarded guesses.

A few were wrong. It was not the Westport Country Playhouse, or Wright Street.

Diane Lowman’s photo showed the roof of Bridge Square — the small plaza with popular destinations like Kawa Ni, Rainbow Thai and 99 Bottles.

Gabriela Hayes, Seth Schachter, Ben Meyer (whose office sits just underneath,  and whose brother-in-law helped repair it), Susan Lloyd and Elaine Marino all answered correctly.

Susan added some very intriguing history: She says it was the bell tower of the original Saugatuck firehouse. Today — with a different bell tower — it’s a few yards away, on Riverside Avenue.

But it’s very old. So this one, at Bridge Square, must be really old.

What’s new? Today’s Photo Challenge.

If you know where in Westport you’d see this, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/John Maloney)

(Every Sunday, “06880” hosts this Photo Challenge. We challenge you too to support your hyper-local blog. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)