Monthly Archives: April 2010

A Taxpayer’s Lament

Here’s an open letter to the Board of Finance and RTM from a Westport taxpayer.  The writer does not wish to be identified, due to the personal information revealed.

To the Board of Finance and RTM:

I have followed with interest and dismay the decisions made by the Board of Finance on the town and Board of Education budgets.  As an employee of the Board of Education, as well as a Westport property owner, I am directly affected by their decisions.

I had planned on paying my property taxes this year (and next).  I know that times are tough and money is tight.  Now I will lose my full-time job with the Board of Ed, at worst, or have my take-home income reduced, at best.

But that’s okay; I’m industrious.  I am lucky enough to have a part-time job, in addition to my full-time job.  As long as I don’t actually lose my job, I may be able to make up my reduced take-home by taking extra hours at my part-time job.

Uh-oh.  The Board of Finance cut the Library budget.  My boss said that if the library is closed on Sundays, he will close because he will lose so much business.  So not only can I not get additional hours, I will make less money at my part-time job this year as well.

Gee.  I had planned on paying my taxes, I really had.  And if the Board of Finance hadn’t done such a good job of protecting me, I still might be able to.

Comments, as always, are welcome encouraged.

Morris Jesup might be lonelier on Sundays, if the Westport Public Library is forced to reduce hours due to budget cuts.


Vivian Perlis’s 40-Year Project On NPR

NPR’s “All Things Considered” considers all things for its afternoon stories.

Today it landed in our back yard.

Vivian Perlis (Photo courtesy of Yale University Oral History of American Music)

Vivian Perlis was the subject of a long story this afternoon.  “Saving the Voices of Composers” described the longtime Westporter’s serendipitous founding of Yale’s Oral History of American Music project.

F0rty years later, it’s still going strong.

And it’s still the only program of its kind in the world.

NPR’s Lara Pellegrinelli reported:

The collection of interviews that became the foundation for OHAM began as a kind of accident. In the 1960s, Vivian Perlis was just an underling. The mother of three worked part time in the Yale Music Library before women were even admitted to the college. A Charles Ives enthusiast, Perlis jumped at the chance to retrieve materials that the late composer’s business partner wanted to donate.

“Somebody said to me, you should really bring a tape recorder,” Perlis says, “because who knows when you’ll have a chance to talk to somebody who knew Ives that well?”

A tape recorder, by the way, was then the size of a suitcase.

“And so I did,” she says. “It was a disaster. I got nothing on there but ‘Yep,’ ‘Nope’ and ‘What did you say?’ ”

It turns out her first subject was hard of hearing. Perlis says she’s still no Barbara Walters, but that her interview skills got better with practice — a lot better. She tracked down Ives’ childhood friends, family members and co-workers, even his barber. It took years to find sound engineer Mary Howard. Howard recorded the few precious demos Ives dispatched to would-be performers of his music.

She concluded her report:

The tapes Perlis collected became the award-winning book Charles Ives Remembered. By presenting transcripts of first-person accounts, it introduced a new approach to the study of American concert music. It offered scholars, performers and listeners fresh insights — which is exactly the tradition that OHAM continues. That’s quite an accomplishment, considering that 40 years ago, oral history existed on the fringes of “serious scholarship.”

Perlis says her peers were reluctant to view oral accounts as legitimate sources of information.

“In fact, the university librarian at that time told me when I wanted to broaden the project and work with many composers that he really did not see that he would want anything but written material in his library,” Perlis says.

Luckily, Perlis had already figured out there are some stories you get only if you’re willing to listen.

Luckily too, stories about people we know end up — every once in a while — being heard by a national audience.

(Click here for a complete transcript of the NPR segment, including a link to listen.)

Creating A Local Foodshed

“Foodshed” sounds like a word from the Onion (ho ho).

“Decavore” could come from a New York Times crossword puzzle (probably a Saturday).

But they’re legit words, fresh from foodland (which I just made up).  They’ll be sliced and diced discussed and explained tomorrow night (Tuesday, 7 p.m., Westport Public Library) by a panel of experts, at a discussion called “Creating a Local Foodshed.”

Panelists include local food experts Sal Gilbertie, Amy Kalafa, Dina Brewster and Sherri Brooks-Vinton.  Dan Levinson, co-founder and chairman of the Green Village Initiative, will moderate.

Among the topics:

  • What is the local food movement?
  • Why is it important?  What are its goals?
  • Is there an “enemy” of it?  If so, who?
  • Are people doing this because they love it, or because they want to survive?
  • Is Westport ahead of or behind the rest of the country and world?
  • How did we get here?
  • What’s better:  local or organic?
  • Is there enough food?
  • How much food can be grown from a small garden?
  • What might this look like in 10 years?

The press release did not indicate whether food — organic, decavorous or from a foodshed — would be served.

Soccer Helps The Homeless

Green’s Farms Academy junior Andy Mondino is passionate about soccer.  He’s also an avid member of his school’s community service organization.  And he is an intelligent, energetic young man who likes making connections to get things done.

Andy Mondino

Last spring he organized a 3-v-3 soccer tournament that raised $1,500 for Darfur refugees.  This year he’s expanded the size of the event — it’s 5-against-5 — and narrowed the beneficiary to the US.

The 2nd annual tourney is set for this Sunday (April 18), from noon to 3 p.m. at GFA.  All funds go to Street Soccer USA, a national organization that uses sports to help end homelessness.

Teams pay $20 to enter.  Soccer players of any (and every) age are welcome to form their own squads; it’s a wide-open, fun (and competitive) event.  Pre-registration is strongly recommended; email MondinoA@gfacademy.org.

“My friend Joseph Filgueiras and I hope to raise money and awareness, inspiring others to help the homeless,” Andy says.  “I figure that with a little work and pursuing our passion, we can all make this a better world.”

Andy already has.

A New Westport Daily

What do you get when you cross Facebook with the New York Times?

The Daily Westport.

Starting this week, the local news scene gets a bit more crowded. And lively. And — its backers hope — profitable.

When it goes live in a few days, The Daily Westport will join its neighbor, The Daily Norwalk, as a website for local news, sports, and information about schools, entertainment, real estate and health. It will be heavy on “neighbors” and “local heroes.”

Westport will be among the 1st sites started by the parent company, Main Street Connect. Quick expansion is planned into the rest of Fairfield County, plus Westchester, Rockland and Dutchess Counties.

Within 3 years, the goal is to have “The Daily [insert community name here”] in 3,000 communities.

Jane Bryant Quinn and Carll Tucker (Photo courtesy of The New York Times)

The concept — and company — are the brainchild of Carll Tucker. He’s no stranger to news (the former editor and publisher of Saturday Review, he sold his Trader Publications firm to Gannett in 1999), or to writing (he’s married to Jane Bryant Quinn, the financial writer and longtime Newsweek columnist).

Convinced that newspapers are dying — “young people don’t read them, and they won’t start” — Tucker began researching community news sites. Some — like WestportNow.com — were very good; he said. Many were terrible.

None had the resources to cover news in the way newspapers traditionally did.

It sounds similar to the Patch — as in WestportPatch.com — model. Choosing his words carefully, Tucker says: “We don’t believe you can successfully create a site with a single paid reporter who is not from the area, and a few freelancers.”

His operation has 9 full-time Fairfield County staffers so far. All, he says, are very experienced, with “deep roots in the community.”

To be successful, Tucker says, a community news website must be “organic.” His model includes local advisory boards, filled with “neighbors.” He calls the Norwalk board “a fun, pizza-and-beer outfit.” Among its tasks: critiquing the site’s coverage, and suggesting other people who can help.

“We aspire to be the digital town green,” says Tucker. “What’s on the town green? Churches, public buildings, houses, shops. We want all of those groups to collaborate with us.”

Though gossip is also part of a town green, Tucker prefers an “upbeat” approach. “Newspapers have gotten into the business of community-bashing,” he says. “There will always be bad news. But do you splash a suspected rapist on the front page, or low-key it somewhere else?”

The business model includes offering affiliations (like franchises), in return for 17 percent of ad revenues.

But Main Street Connect doesn’t sell “ads.” They call them “visibility packages.” A business buying a “package” is guaranteed articles about the business, its customers and staff, as well as “salutes” to customers that run on a continuous loop.

The Daily Westport owes its existence, in a small way, to people like WestportNow.com founder Gordon Joseloff.

“He was a pioneer,” Tucker praises. “He created something with a true community feeling.

“But — and I think Gordon would agree — it’s not something you can live off. A website like that, with a small staff, depends on the continued interest of the founder. You don’t want that fragility, over time, as the beating pulse of your community.”

Tucker says he recruited Joseloff “very hard” to be part of his venture. “I certainly respect his desire to remain independent,” Tucker says.

Speaking of independence: How does Tucker’s vision of an “upbeat” site square with the reality that plenty of news is, well, downbeat?

What, for example, would happen if — theoretically speaking, of course — a large local “dairy store” bought a “visibility package,” but the founder of that dairy store was found guilty of tax fraud?

“Hard news is hard news,” Tucker says. “Nothing affects our coverage of it. If someone doesn’t like it, they’re free to cancel their visibility package.”

But Tucker returns to his upbeat mantra. And he uses an example everyone knows to make his point.

“Facebook is larger than all newspapers that have ever existed,” he says.

“Why is it so powerful? It’s a positive experience. When you’re on Facebook you see people you know, in a positive mood. You’re uplifted.”

The Daily Westport, he says, will be “something between Facebook and the New York Times. I want us to be your neighbor, bringing you the news.”

Live Poets Society

April is National Poetry Month.  And Jazz Appreciation Month.  As well as School Library Month.

Who knew?

Well, most students and staff at Staples High School.

At least, they knew it last Friday.  That’s when the library, and Liz Olbrych’s Reading and Writing Poetry class, hosted a day-long “Poetry Slam and Jazz Celebration.”

No one knew what to expect.  After 7 hours of music and poems by students and staff, what they got was joy, thanks to the impromptu, improvisational feel of the unstructured, honest and very cool event.

Harry Moritz

Harry Moritz epitomized the free-flowing spirit.  The senior wrote poems all day long, then stepped up to the mic and read them.  One described school as a jail, but lauded the library for allowing the slam/jam to happen — while chastising himself for oversleeping and missing one of the jazz groups.

“Harry was on fire,” a staff member said.  “His poems really evolved as the day went on.”

“Everyone was so into it,” Harry praised.  “Having thoughts, writing them down, getting up, presenting them in front of everybody — it’s very exciting.”

Marquell Washington

Marquell Washington stunned the crowd with a deeply personal, very compelling poem called “Epiphany of a Doubt.”  “Wow,” a fellow student said.  “I never knew he had that in him.”

Senior Adam Bangser recited a poem he wrote that, he said, “got me into college.”  A trio of juniors read Dr. Seuss.

One girl offered an ode to her Italian instructor — in Italian.  Another introduced a poem she had written in 4th grade — when her teacher, then as now, was Ms. Olbrych.

Adults read too.  English instructor Dan Geraghty’s poem answered a question teachers often hear:  “What do you make?”  His answer:  He makes students work, write and think.

Townwide coordinator of information and technology literacy Bill Derry gave a particularly animated rendering of Lewis Carroll’s “Jabberwocky.”

Ameen-Storm Abo-Hamzy

Ameen-Storm Abo-Hamzy was a guest.  With his do-rag, multiple piercings and vivid tattoos, he looks anything like a poet.  But his poem — about assumptions people make based on his name and his looks — had his audience hanging on every word.

Ameen, it turns out, is a Vietnam vet — and a 4th-generation Connecticut resident.

Friday’s poetry touched on all the usual topics:  School.  Nature.  Parents.  Friends.  The planet.  Pets.  Love.   Sex.

Happy Jazz Appreciation Month.  Happy School Library Month.

And especially, Happy National Poetry Month.

One Of Those Nights

It was a you-had-to-be-there evening.

Nearly 2 dozen of Staples’ best musicians spent tonight singing for Haiti.  Offering numbers by Etta James, Billy Joel, the Beatles, The Tallest Man on Earth, “Wicked” and “Wizard of Oz,” they treated an SRO crowd at Sugar & Olives to a great night of entertainment — and all the proceeds went to earthquake relief.

Whitney Andrews channels Etta James.

This was a totally student-run fundraiser.  They thought of the idea; they picked the songs; they rehearsed them; they booked the venue; they got the crowd; they got Channel 12 to cover it, and they exhorted everyone to contribute to an important cause.

I am always amazed at the number of demands placed on today’s teenagers.  Besides academics — and many of today’s performers are in plenty of AP and honors courses — there are after-school activities (for this group, year-round commitments to Players and Orphenians — plus many others).  They’ve got jobs; they volunteer; they prepare for SATs and ACTs; they take drivers ed; they have social lives.

No wonder they don’t have time to take out the garbage, or clean their rooms.

But they gave up a substantial part of today to raise money for people they’ve never met, in a country most have never been to.

And they did it with smiles on their faces, and songs in their hearts.

(Thanks and congratulations to tonight’s performers:  Whitney Andrews, Kathryn Durkin, Eva Hendricks, Tyler Jent, August Laska, Robert Mathis, Grace McDavid, Peter Molesworth, Chris Nicoletti, Alexandra Rappaport, Sofia Ribolla, Max Samuels, Tori Schachne, Dan Shure, Max Stampa-Brown, Matt van Gessel, Charlotte Weber, Jake Yarmoff and Jamie Yarmoff).

Arrividerci, Abbondanza

If you are among the many people who love Abbondanza and Bonda, you’ve got a few hours left.

Today is the last day of business for the popular Charles Street specialty food store; the restaurant’s last meal will be served tonight.

The building is on the market, said Jamie Cooper, who has owned the Saugatuck favorites since 2001.

The good news:  He hopes to sign a lease next week for Bonda in Fairfield.  The target date for reopening is June.

“People are sad to see us go,” he said this morning.  “I’m excited about moving on, and I’m deeply thankful to all our loyal customers.  Everyone here loves you.

“I know you adore my staff.  We all hope to see you in Fairfield soon.”

Sugar — And Olives

Sugar and olives don’t often mix.

Except on Lois Street in Norwalk.

There — in an industrial zone across from Al’s Auto Body, and just down the street from (of all things) McDonald’s — Jennifer Balin runs a green, healthy, unadvertised yet wildly popular organic, sustainable breakfast-lunch spot/private dining room/dessert place/lounge/cooking school.

Called “Sugar & Olives.”

The Westport resident came by her hybrid business serendipitously.  A tennis-playing stay-at-home mom with 4 kids, she found life “boring with a capital ‘B.'”  After her divorce, she had 2 choices:  “move, or do something fun.”

She stayed put, and had fun.

Jennifer started with cooking classes.  She soon wanted to expand, but couldn’t sell food from her home.

She found a 2000-square foot empty warehouse just over the town line in Norwalk — the only place she looked — and started classes for adults and kids.

She opened for breakfast and lunch Tuesday through Friday, plus Saturday brunch.  She added “private dining” at night, for groups ranging in size from 12 to 100.

Morning menu items include “the porridge of champions” and a breakfast trifle of fruit, lemon curd, yogurt and granola.

Midday, Jennifer serves the likes of lobster chop salad with rows of ratatouille, mache and asparagus; a crepe with veggies of the day and a rolled egg, and chocolate fajitas with flank steak.

From 9:30 p.m. to midnight every Saturday, Jennifer serves “Sweet Treats”:  plated desserts and drinks.

She did it all without a business plan.  Sugar & Olives grew, um, organically.  “I don’t know what I’m doing,” she says.  “But it’s working.”

The interior of Sugar & Olives. (Photo courtesy of CTBites.com)

All food is sourced locally.  She buys whatever she finds fresh at farmers markets:  vegetables, eggs, cheeses.  Lobster comes from Westport’s Jeff Northrop.

All materials are compostable.  Jennifer uses no plastic.

Except for the plastic in an iPad.  Last week she bought several.  Now each dinner table orders off an iPad menu.  (Diners also enjoy free WiFi.)

Jennifer still runs cooking classes, of course.  Adult topics include “Instant Dinner Party,” “Sensational Seasonal Vegetables,” and “Oy Vey, My In-Laws Are Coming!”

Kids classes cover “Marshmallows and Other Sticky Treats,” “Dinner in a Bag” and “Homemade Chinese Takeout.”

Sugar & Olives does not advertise.  Everyone who comes is referred by word-of-mouth.  The referral should include directions — there is no sign in front, just a distinct orange door.

“I’m having fun,” Jennifer says.  “This place is always full of people.”

So why “Sugar & Olives”?

“They’re 2 things everyone should have in their pantry,” Jennifer explains.  “It’s a little bit of sweet, a little bit of savory.  Besides, a lot of my recipes use olive oil.

“They don’t sound like they should go together,” she adds.  “But they work for me.”

Just as Sugar & Olives works for anyone who tracks it down.

(Tonight [Saturday, April 10, 7-9 p.m.] nearly 2 dozen Staples students will perform a benefit concert for Haiti at Sugar & Olives.  Admission is $10; all admission proceeds, and a portion of food proceeds, go to the American Red Cross Haiti Relief and Development Fund.)

Why Women Love The Library

I’m not real clear why this is a women-only issue, but the American Library Association and Woman’s Day magazine are teaming up on a national essay contest.

The topic, according to the Westport Public Library:  “Why is the Westport Library important to you?”

(I assume women can insert the name of their own library — I don’t think all women in America will write about Westport.)

From now through May 9, women ages 18 and up are invited to send in stories of 700 words or less.  (Why the age limit?  Beats me.)

Winners will be published in the March 2011 edition of Woman’s Day. Seems far in the future, but who am I to judge?

The fact that Westport Public Library director Maxine Bleiweis is a woman is probably not a winning topic.

This seems like a great topic.  Not that Westport women need help figuring out what to write, but the Westport library offers an incredible array of services: job seekers’ forums, Kindles to check out, intriguing events (examples:  a mother-daughter self-defense workshop, and a presentation on packing healthy school lunches), a superb children’s library, an enticing cafe and a well-stocked DVD section, to name just a few.

Still stumped?  How about the library’s yeowoman’s work during last month’s storm?  Entire families camped there for days.  It was the place to go to read, socialize, use the internet, charge cell phones, and of course dry your hair.

If you’ve got severe writer’s’ block, check out last year’s winners here.  Then get cranking, ladies.  Tell the rest of the country how wonderful our library is for all Westporters, regardless of age, race or economic status.

And gender.

(Send submissions to womansday@ala.orgClick here for more information, including official rulesTo share your entry with the Westport library staff, email mbleiweis@westportlibrary.org.)