Monthly Archives: July 2011

Nixing Nixle?

At 2:47 a.m. Friday night Saturday morning, my cell phone jangled.

Normally, this indicates a genuine emergency — someone calling for bail money, say, or at least a drunk text.

It was indeed a text.  Jolted awake, I read:

WESTPORT PD:  AVOID ** Greens Farms Rd. between Clapboard Hill Rd and Morningside Dr S due to a motor vehicle accidnet.  Road will reopen at approx 8 am

Damn!  The 1st thing on Saturday’s to-do list — once I got up 4 hours later — had been to drive over to Clapboard Hill Road.  Just because, well, yeah.

I was not the only Westporter awakened by this less-than-urgent news.  Several people told me they’d received the same message.

The early morning message is on the bottom. The top one -- concerning a different incident -- came almost exacty 12 hours earlier, at 2:49 p.m.

I know, I know.  I signed up for Nixle — the Westport Police Department’s public safety system that sends phone, text and email alerts to anyone who asks.

I understand the importance of knowing a tornado is bearing down on us — even at 2:47 a.m.

It might also be good early-morning information to learn, say, there’s a pack of mountain lions bearing down on us from South Dakota.

But am I being selfish in thinking that a 2:47 a.m. accident on Clapboard Hill Road is not wake-up-the-town news?

If we can put a man on the moon*, why can’t Nixle be programmed to not contact us at certain hours that we request, about certain categories we choose?

For example, I could say, “Please send all weather updates at all times.  Please do not contact me about motor vehicle accidents between the hours of 11 p.m. and 6 a.m.”

I’m not anti-Nixle.  I opted in to the service.

If I ever wander away from my house, I’d want people to search for me.

I’m just not sure how many strangers would want to be awakened at 2:47 a.m. to know I was gone.

*Obscure 1969 reference

Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes

A recent post highlighting one former Westporter’s disillusionment with what his former hometown lit a (predictable) fire in the “06880” comments section.

In response, someone who grew up here in the 1960s — then returned to Westport 10 years ago to live — offered these thoughts on positive changes in over the decades.

For example:

Staples.  “What a magnificent facility this is now,” the writer says.  “It reminds me of a modern college complex.  And while going to classes back in the ’60s via outdoor walkways was great on beautiful fall and spring days, it was a pain in the neck in the winter and during downpours.

The fieldhouse and pool, the returnee adds, represent much-improved athletic facilities.  They’re used often, by people of all ages.

The Staples High School of yesteryear looked nothing like this.

Levitt Pavilion.  “We had nothing like this growing up.  A true cultural and entertainment jewel.”

Toquet Hall.  “There was no teen center when we grew up,” the “06880” reader notes.

Senior Center.  “Was there anything like this back in the day?”  No way.

Library.  The writer says there is “absolutely no comparison between the old cramped Post Road building and the current location.  Besides the far greater offering of books and periodicals, the present-day library is much more of a community center in so many ways.  The hours are also much more extensive now.”

The Library looks a lot different from its previous, cramped quarters.

Speaking of hours, stores are open far longer than in the past.  This is a function of the repeal of Connecticut’s blue laws, but it’s a change for the better, the reader says.

Restaurants offer a “much greater choice today (and I’m sure most people would add, a great choice of high quality).”

Longshore, including the building housing the tennis pro shop, lockers and food concession, is “a beautifully designed gateway to that section of the club, far superior to the prior run-down building.”  Much of the rest of Longshore — the pool, inn, golf course and marina — is also vastly improved.

The person who responded served up this challenge:  “If you’ve got a Westport connection going back at least 20 years, what else is better now?”

I’ll start it off:  We never had local blogs 🙂

To add your own thoughts, click the “Comments” link.

Staples Players Save The Children

The audience at last night’s opening of Staples Players’ “Jesus Christ Superstar” received a special treat.

Gregg Bonti and Max Samuels present Save the Children representatives with a $3,000 check. (Photo/Kerry Long)

At the end of the show-stopping performance, Players presented Save the Children representatives with a check for $3,000.  The donation came from spring productions of “Ages and Stages.”

Staples Players’ “Jesus Christ Superstar” run continues tonight (Friday, July 30, 7:30 p.m.) and tomorrow (Saturday, July 31, 2 and 7:30 p.m.).  Tickets are available online (click here), or at the Staples auditorium 30 minutes before show time.

If you’re on the fence:  Go!  It’s a fantastic show, made special by Players’ usual panache and professionalism.

It’s Not Easy Being Green Village Initiative

GVI — the non-profit established in 2008 to “create environmental and community change through local action” — has had a tough row to hoe.

First, the organization had to establish itself.  What would it do, and how?  Where would it work?  Who would it represent and respond to?

GVI quickly plowed new ground — figuratively and literally.  A community- supported agriculture program took off.  An internship program harnessed the passion of Staples students, who walked over from the nearby high school and poured their hearts into the project.  Films and lectures carried the “environmental and community change” message to people of all ages around town.

The bucolic-looking Wakeman Town Farm was rocked by controversy this week.

But the heart of GVI was the farm and garden.  Under the direction of Staples AP Environmental Studies instructor Mike Aitkenhead — Westport’s 2009 Teacher of the Year — and his wife Carrie, the GVI-renovated farmhouse and adjacent land became the centerpiece of an ongoing, constantly evolving effort that combined a Vermont back-to-the-land sensibility with a Westport education-activism ethos.

Yet all along, GVI occupied a little-understood space in town.  Was it a municipal organization?  Quasi-civic?  Who ran it, and who was run by it?  For a community organization, it seemed to be led by a small group of people who — I often heard — had a “my way or the highway” management style.

(Wakeman Town Farm is, in fact, owned by the town — which leases it to GVI for $1 a year.)

Earlier this month — several weeks before the Aitkenheads’ contract came up for renewal — a faction on the GVI board scrutinized the couple’s stewardship of the farm.  Fault was found in many areas — including, I am told, that one of their young child’s toys was in a community area.

The Aitkenheads cannot speak publicly.  But, I have heard from others, it seems as if their entire lives at the farm had turned into a public event.  I liken it to living at Old Sturbridge Village, 24/7/365.

The Aitkenheads’ contract was not terminated.  It was simply not renewed.

Last October, 10-year-old Charlie Colasurdo cut an environmentally friendly plant ribbon at the Wakeman Town Farm's opening ceremony. (Photo by Annie Nelson/Inklings)

But the effect — on the farm’s many interns, the Staples and Westport communities, even GVI as an important town organization — is the same.

Few people are talking on the record.  At least 4 board members have resigned — quietly.

“06880” teems with comments.  But — at least so far — no one in a position of authority seems to be listening to the passionate pleas of the hundreds of men, women, teenagers and younger children the Aitkenheads inspired.

In fact, their concerns have not even been acknowledged.

The bond between WTF and the twin communities of Staples and Westport is crucial.  The Aitkenheads — and GVI — have developed more than a farm and a garden.  They’ve created an organic, living entity that — though still in its infancy — shows signs of growing into one of the most important elements of our community “family.”

Yet GVI seems willing to let it die.  Or — perhaps more harshly — seems eager to kill it off.

Several meetings have been held over the past few days, in an attempt to resolve the issue.  As with the Washington budget talks, progress seems impossible.

Much of the “06880” chatter has focused on the enormous good that Mike and his family have done for WTF, Staples, children, families, Westport — and GVI.

It’s time now to move the discussion in another direction.  We need to ask:

  • Is the non-renewal of the contract a done deal?
  • Where do leaders of the town — which owns the farm — stand?
  • Has GVI lost its legitimacy?  Can it survive?  Should it?
  • And where do we go from here?

Farmers don’t like to talk a lot.  They prefer actions to words.

Westporters do talk.  But eventually we act too.

Let’s start hearing some straight, action-oriented talk from everyone.

And then let’s do whatever we can to get the Aitkenheads back on the farm, and the farm back to work.

Same-Sex Marriage: New York Wins, Westport Loses

Patty Strauss was a bit miffed last Sunday — the day same-sex marriage became legal in New York.

No, she emphasizes, she’s not opposed to 2 men or 2 women having their love sanctioned and affirmed by the Empire State.

Patty’s reaction was more practical:  As Westport’s town clerk, she knows we’ll lose hundreds of dollars each year in license fees.

From 2009 — when Connecticut legalized same-sex marriage — through June 30, 2011, Westport issued 102 same-sex licenses:  52 to female couples, 50 to males.

In that same period, 340 opposite-sex couples received marriage licenses here.

Westport town clerk Patty Strauss takes a pause from issuing same-sex marriage licenses to pore over some records.

The same-sex couples came from all over Connecticut, and beyond:  New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Tennessee, Ohio, Indiana, Minnesota, Texas, New Mexico and California.

“It’s been our pleasure to serve couples from New York who were happy to come here to be married,” Patty says.

I’m as glad as Patty that gay men and lesbians traveled to Westport from across the country to be married here.

But I wondered about those New Yorkers, and Jersey boys (and girls).  Why didn’t they just bop over to Greenwich?

Many did.  But, Patty says proudly, “Westport has a reputation of accommodating everyone, and making them feel very comfortable in the town clerk’s office.”

Patty has witnessed many marriages herself.  One memorable couple was married in the Town Hall lobby, and shared a beautiful cake with Patty’s staff.

The town clerk’s office is filled with photos, and beautiful thank-you notes.  A particularly poignant one came from a couple that had been together for 40 years, before legally marrying.

Justice of the peace Martha Aasen has also wed “quite a few” same-sex couples.

“The word got out that Town Hall extremely welcoming,” she says.  “Lots of places don’t offer same-day service.  But Patty has things ready in 20 minutes.”

Martha notes that our neighbor’s new law will have a dual effect on Westport.  New Yorkers will now stay home to be married — “unless they want a nice country wedding,” she says.

But we’ll also lose couples from other parts of the US, who may opt for a wedding in exciting New York City, rather than one in Connecticut.

Maybe that’s a way to solve the budget crisis in Washington:  legalize same-sex marriages everywhere.

“Mayor Bloomberg was right,” Patty says, ruing the budget she prepared in February — not knowing the New York legislature would soon deprive her of several hundred dollars in fees.  (A Connecticut marriage license costs $30.)

“He said that same-sex marriage is great for New York for many reasons, including the economy.  There are licenses, cakes, caterers.  We’ve benefited the past few years from New York not being as advanced as Connecticut.”

Just When You Think You’ve Seen Everything…

On Tuesday, alert “06880” reader Linda and her husband were enjoying another spectacular Compo evening.

They were at the west (far) end of South Beach, just to the right of the jetty with 2 trees, having drinks and gazing out at Cockenoe Island.

Suddenly, a 20-something woman drove her Jeep onto the beach to the left of the trees — and parked almost on the jetty.  Linda, her husband and other beach-goers stared in amazement as the woman sat in her car, enjoying the view.

The wide-frame view.

Several minutes later, 2 female Parks and Rec employees arrived.  They told her she couldn’t be there.

No problem!

She backed up, turned around — and immediately turned left onto the one-way road, racing around to enjoy the harbor view across from Owenoke.

Parks and Rec were still on the case.  They told Very Important Jeep Woman that she could have hurt a driver, jogger, walker or biker on her wrong-way jaunt.

As if on cue, moments later 2 grandparents and their young granddaughter — in a stroller — strolled around the corner.

The driver reacted as only she could.  She screamed at the Parks and Rec employees.

Her argument?  She hadn’t done anything wrong.

Linda — and everyone else on the beach, except Herself — watched, flabbergasted.

But, Linda says, “I was delighted at how well the 2 Parks and Rec girls were on the job.”

If the first jetty doesn't work, drive the wrong way to another nice spot.

Stools

You can’t stop progress.

First the Y sells its downtown building.

Then Mario Batali and Danny Meyer bring New York-chic restaurants to our little village.

Now Coffee An’ has gone an’ reupholstered their stools.

Alert “06880” reader Larry Perlstein sent this photo along:

The owner — George — told Larry it’s the 1st time the seats have been redone since the place opened.

What’s next?  A level floor at the Duck?

A Humane Policy?

In his long career as a Coleytown Middle School phys ed. teacher, Ron Weir was well known for lavishing care and attention on every child.

Less well known is his interest in animals.  But that’s an important interest too.  Over the years, Ron has adopted 5 dogs from the Westport branch of the Connecticut Humane Society.

A couple of months ago, he picked up an 8-year-old dalmatian mix.

The man Ron hired to install an invisible fence on his property said the dog had “kennel cough.”  The next day, Ron took Precious to the vet.  The dog was diagnosed with heartworm.

The Humane Society has a 30-day policy for visiting a vet.  Ron called the Society, and described the potentially fatal parasitic disease.  The Humane Society said to bring the dog back.

His vet, however, said that — because of Precious’ age and illness — that meant it would be euthanized.

“I love this animal,” Ron says.  “That’s unacceptable.”

He took Precious to several veterinarians.  One — a heart specialist in Shelton — thinks he can save the dog.

Ron had spent $250 on a Humane Society insurance policy.  But it paid only $1,500.  So far, Ron has paid about $6,000 for the animal’s care.

He called the Humane Society in Westport — and the state office — to see if they could help with medical expenses.

“The dog came from North Carolina,” Ron says.  “My vet said there’s a lot of heartworm down there.  But the Humane  Society never checked for it.”

I called the Westport Humane Society, and asked about its policy if — after adoption — one of its animals is found to have a disease.

“We don’t provide care,” a spokeswoman said.  “All animals are spayed, neutered, and current in their shots.”

So, I continued, an owner has to pick up all medical expenses for a dog rescued from its facility?

“Of course,” she replied.

Ron thinks it’s unfair that the dog was not tested for an endemic disease like heartworm.

But, he says, he won’t let Precious be put down.

“I love her,” he says.  “I’m not going to lose her.”

(A reader asked if she could contribute funds to Precious’s care.  Ron Weir’s address is Box 488, Redding Ridge, CT 06876.)

WTF? At Wakeman Town Farm

The recent cool weather is good news for farmers and gardeners.  But the many friends of Wakeman Town Farm — and much of the rest of Westport — is blazing mad over the apparent termination of Mike Aitkenhead.

Mike — an AP Environmental Education teacher at Staples, and 2009 Westport Teacher of the Year — was the manager/resident farmer at Wakeman.  He, his wife Carrie and daughter lived in the farmhouse.  He coordinated a broad array of programs; managed interns — and made the Town Farm an integral part of the Westport and Staples communities.

A couple of weeks ago, sources tell “06880,” Mike’s contract was not renewed by Green Village Initiative.  The news stunned Mike — and many who heard it.

The Aitkenhead family, in happier times.

“Until then,” one person with knowledge of the situation said, “Mike had been left by manage the farm with minimal supervision and direction.  Quite suddenly, one board member found fault with how the farm was being maintained, and built a case against the Aitkenheads.

“The Aitkenheads were fully invested as stewards of the farm,” the source continues.  “They deserve to be supported, and guided properly in their endeavors.  Instead they were ambushed and have been pushed out of WTF.  Appalling, to say the least.”

The source adds, “not all GVI board members were allowed to weigh in on this issue.”  A GVI board meeting is being held today, in an attempt to resolve the issue.

Mike issued a terse statement: “The relationship between the parties ended as a result of a mutual agreement not to renew the contract.”

A letter that will be read at today’s meeting — from a parent who participates in the WTF gardening workshops, and whose son worked there as an intern — praises Mike for his “consistent mentoring, kindness and dynamic passion for sustainable farming.”

Part of the Wakeman Town Farm.

The son would come home inspired.  He’d share stories, then go into the family garden to prune tomatoes and trellis climbing vegetablese.

“What I appreciate most about Mike is that his experience as a teacher provides him with the ability to be a sound mentor for this program, while his youth allows him to be relatable to teens and younger children,” the letter continues.

“And what better way to embody ‘community’ than having an energetic family living on a homestead, sharing their knowledge and a part of their lives with us?”

The letter calls Mike and Carrie “generous loving people (who) fully embraced their role as stewards of WTF.  They made farming accessible.”  If, the writer said, “they were not meeting your expectations, I am sure that guidance and support along the way would have rectified any perceived shortcomings….

“The Aitkenheads and Wakeman Town Farm are synonymous in our minds, and I beleive you will be hard pressed to fined another family who resonates with the community as profoundly as they have.”

Another letter-writer said:

Wakeman Town Farm provides the opportunity to create community and conversation among Westport residents about sustainable farming.  Carrie and Mike Aitkenhead’s leadership at WTF reflected that commitment.  Their desire to raise their young family at the farm inspires us all to teach our children about growing food and friendships.

“Charismatic leadership is a rare gift,” one WTF family wrote to the GVI board.

In the minds of some members, however, that gift was not a seed worth growing and nurturing.

Jesus Christ Comes To Westport

“Jesus Christ Superstar” bursts upon the Westport stage this week.

The Broadway blockbuster is this season’s Staples Players Summer Theatre/Westport Continuing Education show.

Following in the tradition of “Rent” and “Les Mis” — previous show-stoppers — the production will be memorable.

And — in keeping with directors David Roth and Kerry Long’s tradition — it will take the familiar play in an unfamiliar direction.

This “Jesus Christ” is set in the late 1960s.  It was a time as tumultuous as Jesus’ own, with social and political tumult up the wazoo.

Clay Singer plays Judas -- reimagined in the 1960s. (Photo/Kerry Long)

“Religious themes aside,” Roth says, “the story remains relevant because of its social commentary on celebrity worship, ultimate betrayal, and the passion and power of the human spirit.”

“The story of Jesus parallels, to some extent, that of Martin Luther King:  preaching love and peace, not violence; loving your fellow man, ideas like that,” Long adds.  “Non-violence was the essence of the flower power movement.”

Costumes and staging reflect the time period.  The show begins with a violent protest that channels Kent State.

“The famous photo of the hippie sticking a flower in a gun barrel was the catalyst” for this production, Roth says.  That image is recreated with Jesus in the opening scene.

Both Roth and Long are too young to remember the ’60s.  Of course, their actors — nearly 50 very talented teenagers from Westport and beyond — are far younger.  They were born in the 1990s.

To prepare, the directors showed them a History Channel documentary about the era.  They also watched parts of “Hair.”

“It’s not exactly total immersion,” Long admits.  “But we’ve talked extensively about the time period, and the parallels between the story of Jesus and his followers, and the tribes of hippies.”

Jesus (Johnny Shea) and a soldier (Charlie Greenwald) share an important moment in "Jesus Christ Superstar." (Photo/Kerry Long)

The directors’ enthusiasm is palpable.  Roth grew up listening to the album.  Players performed the show the summer after Long’s senior year at Staples, fueling an “obsession” with it (and the music).

“It’s one of the few cast albums that David and I listen to even if we’re not working on the show,” Long said of her co-director (and husband).

“Jesus Christ Superstar” — which opens this Thursday night, continues Friday night and closes with 2 Saturday performances — is an ensemble piece.  The voices are strong — and they’re backed by Chris Coogan’s incredible band.

“A lot of the kids love the music,” Roth says.  “We’ve been hearing kids with different roles singing other people’s parts.  It’s fun music that sticks in your head.”

And it’s an important show, sure to stick in the heads of everyone who sees it.

(“Jesus Christ Superstar” will be performed at Staples this Thursday, Friday and Saturday — July 28, 29 and 30 — at 7:30 p.m., and Saturday, July 30 at 2 p.m.

(Tickets are available online — click here.  Any remaining tickets are sold at the door, 30 minutes before curtain.  For more information, call 203-341-1310.

(Click below to see Matt Van Gessel’s trailer.)