Monthly Archives: August 2009

Mitchells Make Menswear Hall Of Fame

When a magazine like MR — a major publication in the men’s fashion industry — announces its Retailing Hall of Fame honorees, you expect the focus to be on the bottom line:  sales figures, market share, store growth.

The story on Bill and Jack Mitchell does just the opposite.

Jack and Bill Mitchell (Photo courtesy of MR Magazine)

Jack and Bill Mitchell (Photo courtesy of MR Magazine)

It emphasizes first the philanthropy that the co-owners of Mitchells of Westport inherited from their parents, Ed and Norma.  The Mitchells’ 3 stores (they also own Richards of Greenwich and Marshs of Huntington) “sell millions of dollars worth of Armani suits, Loro Piana knitwear and Hermès ties,” the magazine says, “so they can give away millions more to help many causes (AIDS awareness, breast cancer research, inner-city education programs, poverty prevention and more).”

The story notes the importance of relationships:  with customers, sales associates, suppliers, and of course within the Mitchell family (between them, Bill and Jack have 7 sons — whose own 12 children wait in the 4th-generation wings).

Although Jack and Bill continue to serve as chief executive and vice chairman respectively, last year they followed their father’s footsteps and gifted the equity in the entire business to their sons.  “One of the biggest legacies of my life is that we were able to do that,” Jack told MR with emotion.

The Retailing Hall of Fame piece eventually gets around to business.  It’s hard not to, given the magazine’s charge and the current state of the economy.  But even then, there’s the family business twist (and everyone in the business is treated as family):  Every month, all the associates receive a sales report.

“No secrets,” Jack says.  “We don’t tell them the cash flow and bottom line but we’re pretty open with every other number and tell them to keep it confidential.  We tell them that when things get better we’re all going to celebrate.”

It’s fashionable to joke about Mitchells prices.  But — and here’s the real bottom line — the store truly is less about prestige suits, shoes and jewelry than it is about the people who work, shop and, yes, socialize there.  And the ones who benefit from the generosity of all who do.

Along with thousands of Westporters, I count the Mitchell family as good friends.  I’m proud not only that MR Magazine has recognized them with a Menswear Retailing Hall of Fame award — but that it did so for all the right reasons.

Hey Champ — It’s Lollapalooza

Everyone knew Pete Dougherty would be successful.

After graduating as Staples’ 2002 salutatorian — he also ran cross country, swam, competed on the math team and played piano in the jazz band– Pete headed to Princeton.

Today he is zooming up the career ladder. But it’s not finance, business or law — traditional paths for decades of Princetonians.

Pete plays keyboard and synthesizer for Hey Champ, a fast-rising electro/indie-rock band.

Pete Dougherty

Pete Dougherty

They’ve toured all over the US.  This spring they played South by Southwest; last weekend was Jersey City’s All Points West festival.

Tomorrow afternoon they take the stage for their biggest gig ever:  Lollapalooza.  Also on the bill in Chicago’s Grant Park:  Lou Reed, Depeche Mode, The Killers, Jane’s Addiction, Ben Folds, Fleet Foxes, the Kaiser Chiefs and Snoop Dogg.

Pete did not set out to be a rock star.  He entered Princeton as an engineering major.  But after a year he realized that wasn’t him.  He switched to music.

His parents had a few misgivings.  But, Pete says, “They were English majors.  That’s not practical either — but you can use the degree for lots of things.”

Eventually, Pete’s parents came around.  And, he notes, “Princeton isn’t a conservatory.  It’s a liberal arts school.  Either in spite of or because of that, music was a great program.”

After graduation Pete traveled around Europe.  In the fall of 2007 drummer Jonathan Marks — a fellow Princeton musician — asked Pete to join his band.  It was folk/indie-rock, with dance elements.  Pete brought the synthesizer sound Jonathan wanted.

For a year, Hey Champ — a trio, with Saam Hagshenas — struggled for a foothold.

Pete Dougherty

Pete Dougherty

Suddenly, a year ago, a Chicago DJ started playing “Cold Dust Girl.”  Hey Champ attracted a following.  Hip hop artist Lupe Fiasco discovered them.

Within 2 or 3 weeks Hey Champ signed with a label.  They toured.  A Halloween show drew 4,000 fans.  They recorded an album, for release this fall.

“The game definitely changed,” Pete says.

Now they’re ready for Lollapalooza.

“We’re insanely excited,” Pete says.

But like the professional musician he is, Pete is already looking ahead.

After Lollapalooza, Hey Champ goes back on the road.  They hope to arrange winter tours of Australia and Brazil.

What about Westport?

“That would be great!” Pete says.  “My mom keeps asking us to play at her store — Doc’s Cafe.”

First Lollapalooza.  Then Doc’s Cafe.

Life doesn’t get any better than that.

(To hear Hey Champ, click here.)

Zaffronia Grill Goes Dark

Zaffronia Grill is Westport’s latest restaurant casualty.

I’m embarrassed to say I don’t know the type of cuisine it served.  I never heard anyone talk about it, never saw it advertised — perhaps that was part of its problem.  I don’t know when it arrived, or when it left.

Right now it’s one more dark space — across the street from the long-running but now long-gone Peppermill.  The 2 storefronts next to Zaffronia — Westport Delicatessen and Shanghai Gourmet — are still open, despite a dozen or so delis and Chinese places within a half mile or so.

Good luck to all those spots.  I would not want to own a restaurant — of any kind — in Westport today.

Zaffronia Grill, Westport CT

Speaking Ill Of The Dead

Charles Gwathmey — the Modernist architect who died Monday — developed what the New York Times called “sometimes controversial public buildings.”

Few Westporters would disagree.

In the early 1980s Gwathmey Siegel & Associates was selected to design a new library.  The site — just across the Post Road from the 1908 building on the corner of Main Street — was controversial from the start.  Critics thought the location — on landfill that was once the town dump — was dangerous.  Methane buildup, they warned, would result in health hazards, explosions or worse.

Those fears never materialized.  But when the building opened in 1986, it faced other withering criticism.

The modern design was not in keeping with Jesup Green, some said.  It looked big and blocky when seen from across the river, others complained.

Inside, the high ceiling magnified every voice.  The collection immediately filled every shelf, with no room for expansion.  And — perhaps most remarkably — there were no real river views, looking out.  The dramatic site was wasted.

In 1995 another firm — Herbert S. Newman and Partners — designed an addition, renovating much of the existing space.  Construction grew more challenging when it was discovered the building had settled unevenly.  The library was closed — with books sent to storage — while minipiles were driven to bedrock.

The renovation of the less-than-decade-old library resulted in a 2-story stack wing for books, a new AV center, a fresh children’s library, more flexible space throughout, and quiet reading rooms overlooking the Saugatuck.

The nearly full page New York Times obituary rightly celebrated Charles Gwathmey’s many architectural triumphs.

Unfortunately, the Westport Public Library was not one of them.

(Thanks to library assistant director George Wagner for background information.)

The Westport Public Library, after the renovation to upgrade Gwathmey Siegel's original design.

The Westport Public Library, after the renovation to upgrade Gwathmey Siegel's original design.

Karl Decker’s Magical Vermont

After 43 years as an English instructor, Karl Decker might have looked forward to a relaxing retirement.

Instead, the former Staples icon spent 6 years traveling around his beloved Vermont, photographing and writing stories on 35 small towns for Vermont Magazine.

Karl Decker

Karl Decker

Now a new project beckons.  Decker and his magazine collaborator Nancy Levine are writing a book.  The Tour Buses Don’t Stop Here Anymore will use 1st-person narrative, experienced commentary and engaging photos to describe — bluntly, honestly, lovingly — some of the social and economic problems confronting small towns in that special state.

Tour Buses will also show how each community recognized, faced and tried to solve its problems.

“Rural Vermont communities tend to have a strong sense of community, and a keen, beloved sense of place,” Levine says.

Yet, Decker adds, “infrastructure woes, rising property values and taxes, generational poverty, crime, substance abuse, school closings, job loss, aging populations, poor medical care, agricultural failures, socioeconomic disparities, environmental disasters and land use issues all conspire to undermine life in the Green Mountain State.”

Many Westporters know Vermont only through ski slopes and summer vacations.  Tour Buses‘s stories and photos are sure to open eyes to this diverse, lovely and often misunderstood state.

(One more local connection:  When Decker and Levine presented a talk and slide show about their work to a local club recently, Westporter Jon Gailmor — a 1966 Staples graduate who moved to Vermont in 1977 and is now a statewide treasure as a singer/songwriter/educator — provided the introduction and closing.)

West Pawlet, Vermont (Photograph by Karl Decker)

West Pawlet, Vermont (Photograph by Karl Decker)

O Canada Geese

This is soooooo cute:

Canada geese, Westport CT

This is not:

Canada geese droppings, Westport CT

Jill Ruggiero: Ace Detective

blog - Westport PoliceJill Ruggiero is a cop who loves kids.  With the Westport Police Department, she spent the last 3 years in her dream job:  youth detective.

“Whether they’re making good decisions or bad, I really like being around them,” the 8-year police force veteran says.  “I’m attracted to the kids’ work, not cops and robbers.”

Next week, Jill joins 7 fellow officers for a swearing-in ceremony.  She’ll be promoted to sergeant — in the patrol bureau.  Leaving the youth division was a tough decision for the bright young woman.

Jill has loved every aspect of her detective job.  She calls Westport young people “great kids, smart kids.”  She learns something from every encounter with them.

She also enjoys watching them grow.  In nearly a decade, she’s watched young troublemakers grow into successful adults.

“When it comes to kids, there’s not one I don’t like,” Jill says firmly.

As youth detective, she’s enjoyed great partnerships with the schools, Youth Commission and Human Services.  Predecessor Arnie DeCarolis worked hard to build those relationships, she notes.  “It’s super-important for me that the next youth detective keeps them going strong,” she says.

Jill praises her supervisors in the Westport Police Department for their solid support of the youth division.  “They understand it’s different than dealing with adults,” she says.

Any advice for her successor?  “Learn and understand youth — in general, and in this town,” Jill says.  “We’re law enforcers, and we have to do that piece.  But understand kids’ issues.”

Jill knows she’ll miss “all the groups, like TAG and Peer Advisors.”  She looks forward to seeing those “great kids” in her new role.

“But I’ll be on the midnight shift, so…”

She laughs.  She knows Westport teenagers.  She knows she’ll still see them.

Thank Jack Kiermaier For Channel 13

In 2009, Westporters click through hundreds of channels, looking for something decent.  As they’ve done for decades, they often land on Channel 13.

New York’s public station has been around forever, it seems.  The number of tote bags and umbrellas attests to its perennial local popularity.

John Kiermaier (photo courtesy of the New York Times)

Jack Kiermaier (photo courtesy of the New York Times)

But in the 1960s its existence was in peril.  Without Jack Kiermaier — a longtime Westporter who died last week at 87 — there might have been no Channel 13.

According to the New York Times, when Kiermaier became president of station WNDT in 1964 it faced severe budget problems.  Over the next 5 years he secured significant grants from organizations like the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations and the CBS network, where he had worked for 5 years.

The result:  improved morale and excitement among employees, which led to improved, innovative programming that helped save the station.  Kiermaier also increased increased Channel 13’s scheduling to 7 days a week, from 5.

After leaving the station in 1960, he became a vice chancellor of Long Island University, then president of the CBS Foundation.  He was active in Westport life, including several terms as an RTM representative.

Channel 13 often reminds us not to take it for granted.  Without Jack Kiermaier, it might not have survived long enough to ask us for its continued support.

A 21st Century Chamber

It’s not your father’s Westport-Weston Chamber of Commerce anymore.

Well, maybe it is.  But it won’t be for long.

Though a small organization, the Chamber has big goals.  Karlie Urbaniak — just named to the new position of marketing communications director — is eager to help achieve them.

The 22-year-old — a marketing major who graduated this spring from Fairfield University — is working on outreach.  This Tuesday the Chamber revives its Business Before Hours morning networking sessions at the Westport Arts Center (8 a.m.).

The Business After Hours program — like the morning one, but more liquid — continues August 13 at the Westport Historical Society (5:30 p.m.).

In good 2009 fashion, Karlie and consultant Andrew Scarella are maximizing the Chamber’s impact through Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and a blog.

But Karlie is really jazzed about revamping the Chamber’s website, logo, even tagline.  “We want to make sure we fit what Westport is,” she says.

So what’s the new tagline?

“I can’t tell you right now,” she says.  “But we’re going to have a really dramatic unveiling in October.”

This is Karlie’s 1st job.  But she talks marketing like she’s been working at it her entire life.

Karlie Urbaniak (Photo by Dave Matlow)

Karlie Urbaniak (Photo by Dave Matlow)

As Dumb As They Come

Trader Joe's paper bag

Westport’s plastic bag ban is over 3 months old.  That’s long enough for shoppers to figure out how to use paper bags.

Note to Trader Joe’s:  I kinda figured your bags are “reusable recyclable.”

And I know — without the arrows telling me — to “hold both handles.”

But I always forget which end is up.  Where are the instructions I really need?