Monthly Archives: April 2009

Talking About Taxes

Two days ago, Staples students Allison Manning and Susan Greenberg asked principal John Dodig if he would talk about the effects of budget cuts.

Today, he did.

The prinicipal — and his boss, schools superintendent Elliott Landon — gave presentations in the Staples library to 3 lunchtime groups.  All were standing room only.

The educators provided their perspectives on the budget process.  They corrected misinformation — explaining, for example, that much-publicized cuts to courses like “Collaborative” (English/social studies) and robotics were made earlier this year, based on demands for a 2% budget increase.

Dr. Elliott Landon, Westport schools superintendent, talks with Staples students Farrel Levenson and Suzanne Kleine about budget cuts.

Dr. Elliott Landon, Westport schools superintendent, talks with Staples students Farrel Levenson and Suzanne Kleine about budget cuts.

Landon described first selectman Gordon Joseloff’s decision to offer early retirement to all town employees.  That vote, he said, belied the claim that Westport’s pension fund is underfunded — a key factor driving demands to decrease the education budget even further.

Now, with the RTM considering further cuts — perhaps $1 million, beyond the $1.4 million already eliminated — Landon revealed what might be on the chopping block.

Athletes may have to pay to play sports — including equipment and transportation.  Students involved in extracurricular activities like Inklings could pick up the newspaper’s advisor stipend themselves.

At the elementary school level, band and Spanish may go.  “We live in a global economy,” Landon said.  “My personal belief is that the ability hear, comprehend, read, write and speak Spanish is vital to our national interest.”

Students asked pointed questions, on topics ranging from administrative salaries to why classrooms were 80 degrees.  “I know,” Landon said. “Specialists are looking at the heating system.  It doesn’t work the way it was designed to.”

Some Westporters, Landon said, “don’t see the correlation between the fiscal well-being of the community, the need to maintain property values, and the quality of our education.

Staples principal John Dodig (left) and Westport schools superintendent Elliott Landon address students.

Staples principal John Dodig (left) and Westport schools superintendent Elliott Landon address students.

“We have  excellent fire and police departments,” the superintendent said.  “But people don’t move to Westport for the fire and police departments.  They come here for our schools.

“Business Week and Connecticut Magazine understand the quality of our schools,” he continued.  “If you’re a very bright student, there are wonderful programs for you.  If you’re a struggling learner, there are extraordinary resources.  We help every student reach their potential, whatever their level.  Our performing arts are tremendous.

“We do it all — and we do it with the 4th lowest tax rate in the state of Connecticut.

“We are on the cusp of making significant changes,” Landon concluded.  “Cuts of the magnitude being talked about will alter this school system for years to come.”

Dodig asked questions of the students, making sure they understood the complexities of the budget process.

And, referring to next Tuesday’s crucial vote, the principal said:  “It’s important that RTM members hear from the public.  Talk about this with your parents.  Whatever their feelings — whether they think the budget proposals are good or bad — make sure they let their feelings be known to the RTM.”

Building Castles In The Sand

Go pound sand.

That’s the advice of the Interfaith Housing Association.  On Saturday, May 16, the IHA hopes hundreds of Westporters will come to Compo and do just that.

Well, they’d really like you to turn that sand into castles, kings, cabbages — whatever you, your friends and colleagues can create.

A previous year's Buddha (Photo by Larry Untermeyer)

A previous year's Buddha (Photo by Larry Untermeyer)

The cliche “fun for all ages!” really rings true.

This is the 8th annual “Castles in the Sand” event, and everyone who has participated before knows it’s a blast.  There’s a great spirit of spontaneity and improvisation, plus a dash of competition.

The sculptures don’t last long — thanks to nature, they soon turn back into piles of sand — but the doing-good part does.
Your purchase of a big lot (10′ x 10′ — ideal for individuals, small families and small groups; $100) or a really big one (20′ x 20′ — great for extended families and larger gangs; $300) helps fund IHA’s tremendous, under-the-radar work providing shelter, food and social services to homeless people in our community.
Helping the homeless, it turns out, really can be a day at the beach.

(To register, click here or call 203-226-3426, ext. 10)

 

Sizing up the competition (Photo by Larry Untermeyer)

Sizing up the competition (Photo by Larry Untermeyer)

Why America Faces An Obesity Crisis

What a glorious spring week!  Each afternoon, the roads of Westport are filled with walkers, joggers, bikers…

…and parents waiting in their cars, for the bus to disgorge their kids from school.

I’m not talking 1 or 2 moms (or dads).  I mean battalions, all sitting inside their (idling) cars as if the sun would give them swine flu.

Westport school busThese are not parents waiting at the end of a busy mile-long street, either.  Some live on those new little 1-house “roads” (actually driveways named for themselves).  They drive all of 6 yards to retrieve their precious cargo.  A few, I am sure, walk further to their garage than if they stroll to meet the bus.

People, please:  Walk to the bus stop.  Then walk “all the way home” with your kid.  Point out some birds and flowers.  Chat.  Amble.

Or — call me crazy — hang around the house, and let your kid walk home alone.  Maybe with a friend?

Nah.  This is Westport.  Who knows what dangers lurk between the bus stop and #2 (Insert Your Name Here) Lane?

Let There Be Lights?

A week from tomorrow, the Planning & Zoning Commission will review an amendment to allow lights on town athletic fields.

There will be provisions to limit the number of events held on the fields — which much be at least 20 acres, and include at least 200 parking spots — as well as permits for practices only until 9 p.m.

In years past, proposals like this have created Super Bowl-like interest.  Supporters praised lights as the greatest thing since Genesis; detractors warned that lighted athletic fields would mean Armageddon.

This time around, there’s been barely a peep.  Does that mean lights are an idea whose time has come?

Or, rather, an idea whose time has come in the midst of far darker concerns?

The Staples High School football field, without lights.

The Staples High School football field, without lights.

The Ol’ College Try

Usually at this time of year, high school seniors relax.  They’ve been accepted by colleges; even those on wait lists have at least one acceptance in the bag.

But this is not a usual year.

“Kids applied in the fall when the economy wasn’t as bad,” says Elaine Schwartz, Staples’ director of guidance.  “A number of parents thought they could afford more for college than they can today.”

Instead of sunning themselves and planning for the prom, Staples students — like their counterparts across the country — spend afternoons on the phone and online, calling financial aid offices and trolling for scholarships.

“The head of one university told me this is the worst in 30 years,” Schwartz says. “Kids are crying, asking what the school can do for them.”

Schwartz says the bulk of financial aid is given early in the application year.  Little is left now for students whose parents have lost jobs, or whose financial situation has deteriorated.

So although Staples students have done exceptionally well — receiving numerous “Congratulations!” letters from the Ivies, Stanford, Duke and many other top-tier schools around the country — this is an extremely stressful time.

Friday is the deadline for applicants to give many schools a definite answer:  Are they coming or not?  Those decisions will affect wait lists, opening spots for graduates who in previous years might not have gotten in.

The decisions will also cascade through public schools, whose ranks may swell with students who decide they can’t afford the private schools that have already accepted them.

A select few may find a silver lining.  “If you’re on a wait list, and you say you’ll definitely go and pay full fare, there’s a very good chance you’ll get in,” Schwartz says.  “Colleges really want those kids.”

Staples high School college acceptances

Very Special Indeed

Westport CT cherry blossoms

Beth Keane sent this photo along, with a simple note:  “We thought our cherry trees were pretty special this year.”

They are — both pretty and special.

All over town, spring seems lovelier — and more welcome — than ever.

Or maybe we’re just remembering to stop and smell the roses.  And everything else that blooms.

“News” News

For over 30 years the Westport News was the proud anchor of Brooks Corner, among downtown’s most prime real estate.

Current tenant Brooks Brothers has nothing to do with the corner’s name; it’s just a coincidence.  “Brooks” is B.V. Brooks, who founded the News.  It was, its motto clunkily declared, “A hometown newspaper in a town of homes.”

In the mid-1960s the News was a feisty tabloid upstart — David to the staid, gray Town Crier Goliath. 

The Westport News earned its chops early.  Fearless editor Jo Brosious led a spirited fight against United Illuminating — the public utility that hoped to buy Cockenoe Island for use as a  nuclear power plant.  Thanks to the paper, our shore today is pristine — and Westport is not Three Mile Island.

That crusade made the News indispensible.  For 3 decades it chronicled town life.  Its downtown location was geographically smart, and journalistically symbolic.  It pulsed with Westport’s beat, because it sat right there at its heart.

The move a few years ago to Sconset Square was symbolic too.  Brooks  Corner could command higher rents from 2nd-story office tenants (the paper had long since moved from its ground-floor space).  Though the News’ new newsroom was just a few steps away, the rickety staircase and shrinking staff lowered its profile, lessening its impact throughout town.

Last year the paper moved from Westport entirely.  No longer owned by B.V. Brooks — the “Brooks Community Newspaper” name is a final, vestigial nod to the local past — the News decamped to an antiseptic office building in Norwalk.  True, it was right over the Westport line — but the symbolism was again strong.  The “hometown newspaper” had left its “town of homes.”

Yesterday the News moved again.  Hopscotching Westport, it leaped over to Fairfield.  The paper now shares office space with the Fairfield Citizen, and is overseen by Citizen editor Frances Moore.  Two key staffers — editor Will Rowlands and lifestyle editor Carol King —  were among 44 Connecticut journalists whose positions were eliminated Friday by Hearst, the current owner.

Another 80 jobs are on the chopping block soon, according to reports.

A new chapter has begun in the Westport News’ long history.  For news lovers’ sakes — and the best, most informed interests of our town — let’s hope this story ends well.

Mug Shot Mania

Admit it:  Your favorite part of the Westport News is the Police Reports.

There are run-of-the-mill busts, for DUI and pot.  There are bar fights, road rage fights, fights over who’s a better fighter.  And there are truly cringe-inducing arrests, which we find so hard to read we read them several times.

It’s the same all over the country.  Perhaps the only way to save the sclerotic newspaper industry is to eliminate everything except police news.  Who needs Pulitzers when you’ve got schadenfreude?

But with a special website, Florida’s St. Petersburg Times has elevated police reports to an art form.

The site — admit it, you already clicked the link — shows actual mug shots of people arrested within the past 24 hours in a 3-county area.  Clicking a photo gives important information like height, weight and the actual crime — er, alleged crime.  A notice on the home page explains: “Those appearing here have not been convicted…and are presumed innocent. Do not rely on this site to determine any person’s actual criminal record.”

Of course not!  Putting their mugs on a site called Mugshots Tampa Bay is strictly — what, amusement?  For research purposes only?

Speaking of research, you can consult Mugshots Tampa Bay’s handy graph to determine criminal statistics — I mean, alleged criminal statistics — over the past 60 days.  For example, during the past 2 months 50 folks arrested weighed under 100 pounds — and 94 weighed over 300.  Who knew?

Despite its evident popularity in greater Tampa Bay — and here too, judging by all of you who already checked out the link (and clicked on auxiliary news stories, like “During Traffic Stop, 20-year-old Explains His Vices”) — I don’t think we could replicate that site in Westport.

Our mug shots would have much better lighting.

Months of Mystery, Part 2

On Saturday, “06880” called out the never-ending, seldom-seen Main Street construction project directly in front of Westport Pizzeria.

This morning it was over. The fence is gone; the safety cones, removed.

The power of “06880”?  Pure coincidence?

Who cares?  Mel Mioli’s parking spots are back.

Blogging Down The Highway

If John Steinbeck were writing Travels With Charley today — not 50 years ago — he’d have a Honda Acura, not a camper; 2 dogs, not 1. And instead of waiting a couple of years to publish his observations, he’d blog them daily.

The result would be “Fred and Hank Mark America,” an addictive daily chronicle of Jim and Joan Brady’s cross-country journey with their beagles (Fred and Hank). Jim is the former editor of Washingtonpost.com; Joan is a very talented photographer and foster care activist who serves as a perfect complement to her husband.

Joan BradyLocal angle alert:  She is also the former Joan Robins, of Coleytown Junior High and Staples (’82) fame.

The Bradys’ blog is required reading in the media world.  It’s even been mentioned by uber-blogger Andrew Sullivan of The Atlantic.

The tip about “Frank and Hank” came from Mark Potts — co-founder of Washingtonpost.com, a talented blogger himself (“Recovering Journalist” tracks the travails of the industry), and a former Westporter.

In the blogosphere — as the rest of life — Westporters are separated by far fewer than 6 degrees.  More like 2.