Monthly Archives: February 2014

“Old Man Sues Citi Bike, NYC For $15M After Crash”

That’s not my headline. It’s — in its own inimitable style — the New York Post‘s.

The Daily News is a bit gentler: “Conn. man files $15 million lawsuit against NYC, Citi Bike, claiming nerve damage from bike crash.”

The gist of the stories — the Daily News’ is (surprise!) a bit longer — is that a 73-year-old man flipped over at a Citi Bike docking station last fall. He claims that nerve damage in his brain has robbed him of his senses of taste and smell.

He is believed to be the first rider in New York City’s bike-sharing program to file a personal injury suit.

The “old man” is Ronald Corwin — former Westport Planning and Zoning Commission chairman.

Ron Corwin

Ron Corwin

PS: The New York Times has not yet picked up the story.

K2BK: A Special “Kind” Of Impact

Kevin Watt seems to have it all. He’s a football player and wrestler. He’s intelligent, articulate, popular and respected.

But in elementary school in Westport, he says, he was bullied.

Kevin Watt

Kevin Watt

“It was the classic ‘give me your lunch money’ from kids a year older,” he recalls. He tried to fight back, but that made matters worse.

Finally, he told his mother. “The school handled it poorly,” Kevin says. “They treated me like an equal partner in it. But I was the victim. I hadn’t had lunch in 2 months!”

Last year, as a sophomore, Kevin saw someone at Staples High School in a “Kool 2B Kind” t-shirt. He asked a couple of questions, and after an interview was accepted into the club.

K2BK is a partnership between Staples students and 3rd grade classes. Together, they work to prevent “unkind behavior” (the preferred term to “bullying,” which implies hostility that can’t change). Small groups of teenagers go into 1 classroom 5 times a year. Using skits and guided discussions, the Stapleites provide ideas and strategies to help youngsters deal with difficult situations.

“I do this because I don’t want other kids to go through what I did,” Kevin explains.

Part of K2BK’s appeal to Kevin — and one reason it is so successful — is that it draws students from many different Staples groups. “There are sports girls and Players — all walks of life,” he says. “So the 3rd graders hear lots of different personalities and points of view.”

Some of the Staples K2BK members, in their "kool" shirts.

Some of the Staples K2BK members, in their “kool” shirts.

Jane Levy is a sophomore volleyball and softball athlete. She plays guitar, sings, writes for Inklings and is a teen trainer for the Anti-Defamation League.

She joined K2BK at the end of freshman year. Now she returns to her old elementary school — Green’s Farms — and loves her work. “It’s so worth it,” Jane says. “They just wrote the sweetest letters about being kind. We wrote back. And whenever we walk in the room, they’re so excited to see us.”

Middle school was “not the most kind experience,” Jane says. She appreciates the opportunity to show 3rd graders how much impact a simple smile or wave can have on others.

Jane Levy

Jane Levy

A recent discussion involved a child who was excluded at recess. One girl suggested telling the child, “Don’t worry, I’m still your friend.” Jane says, “They really are thinking about things. And now they’ve got strategies to help them cope.”

The skits are very realistic. K2BK senior Sebo Hood pretended to walk in late to a 3rd grade session. Jane — following her training — said, “I’m sorry, Sebo, you have to leave. We’ve already started.”

The children reacted immediately. “No, it’s okay!” they said. “You can sit here!”

That led to another great discussion, Jane said.

The 3rd graders are not the only ones who have learned to think about “unkind behavior.”

“A lot of us are not too kind ourselves,” Kevin says about his high school friends. “And that includes me. I did a lot of self-reflecting during our training sessions.”

At Staples, he now tries to stand up when he sees exclusionary behavior. He’s tried to involve outsiders in lunch conversations.

“Everyone’s been there,” Kevin says. “When someone notices you, and tries to include you, that can make your day.”

A "be kind" pledge, signed by 3rd graders and their Staples counterparts.

A “be kind” pledge, signed by 3rd graders and their Staples counterparts.

Cru Through?

Cru — the restaurant in the lower level of the Gap building, which drew a loyal following with its eclectic menu, and despite its less-than-visible entrance — appears to have closed less than a year after opening.

The phone has been “not in service” since yesterday. The website goes directly to a Google page. And at 3 p.m. this afternoon, the door was locked and there were no signs of life.

Westport restaurants sometimes arrive with great fanfare, then flame out quickly. Cru seems to be the latest addition to that unfortunate list.

Cru, in its livelier days. (Photo courtesy of Yelp)

Cru, in its livelier days. (Photo courtesy of Yelp)

Downtown Mural Finds A Home

Once again, “06880” readers have come through for Westport.

Five days ago, I posted a plea. The “First Night Mural” — 28 feet long, 8 feet tall, created by Kassie Foss and the children of Westport, then hung in the pedestrian walkway between Main Street and Parker Harding Plaza to celebrate our 1st-ever First Night — needed a home.

There will soon be light at the end of the dark downtown pedestrian tunnel.

There will soon be light at the end of the dark downtown pedestrian tunnel.

The 8 panels will eventually be displayed in the new Bedford Square. But Miggs Burroughs and the Westport Downtown Merchants Association are collaborating on an exciting new “Tunnel Vision” project, giving the grim passageway new life.

In the meantime: What to do with the mural? (Which, by the way, needs some serious refurbishing.)

Up stepped lovely, generous Westport resident and clinical psychologist Dr. Ingi Soliman. Today she and Miggs loaded every panel into her just-big-enough Suburban.

Thanks, Ingi, for giving the “First Night Mural” a new home. We look forward to its unveiling in Bedford Square, a couple of years from now.

And — before that — we hope to see you on May 22, when “Tunnel Vision” opens to the public.

Dr. Ingi Soliman, her Suburban and her new "First Night" mural.

Dr. Ingi Soliman, her Suburban and her new “First Night” mural.

Dewey Does Downtown

Bedford Square. The library. Westport Arts Center. The Levitt. The new movie theater. National Hall. Save the Children.

Those projects — costing $200 million or so — are all in the pipeline. Some are more advanced than others. But even if just some come to fruition, the look and feel of downtown is about to change dramatically.

Hard to believe that Westport has never accepted a detailed, operational plan for downtown development.

Or even commissioned its own traffic study.

After being sworn in as 1st selectman in November, Jim Marpe formed a Downtown Steering Committee. Adding members from various sectors — architects, elected officials, members of the Planning and Zoning Department, the Public Works director, representatives of the Historic District Commission and Downtown Merchants Association, plus a downtown resident — he gave them the charge: Pick up where the Downtown 2020 group ended.

Downtown Westport comprises a very small section of town. But its impact -- economic, aesthetic and psychic -- is huge.

Downtown Westport comprises a very small section of town. But its impact — economic, aesthetic and psychic — is huge.

“We have diverse views and opinions,” says the committee’s new chairman, Dewey Loselle. “We’re not stacked in any one particular way. I think that gives us legitimacy in everyone’s eyes, and a means to move ahead.”

The committee has already contracted with the RBA consulting group. As they analyze their traffic and parking study — all previous ones have been conducted by developers — they’ll examine all sides of the issue. Does downtown Westport have enough parking? Too much? Is it in the right places? Should we charge for spots?

That analysis will lead to design questions. If we move parking away from the river, for example — opening up green space — does that mean we should deck the Baldwin lot?

The committee will then look at how downtown can become “more vital,  functional, aesthetically pleasing and pedestrian-friendly,” Loselle says.

They’ll also study streetscape issues: sidewalks, lights, public spaces. And, of course, traffic patterns and flooding.

Mitigating frequent flooding is an important concern for the Downtown Steering Committee.

Mitigating frequent flooding is an important concern for the Downtown Steering Committee.

The goal is to have a draft plan ready in 6 to 8 months. Then comes the real debate: how to get everything done. What are the priorities? Who will take charge? Where will the funds come from?

All meetings will be open to the public. Important design workshops are also planned, where Westporters can look at different lighting fixtures, facades and sidewalk motifs, and provide input.

And there will be charrettes — open sessions where participants brainstorm collaboratively in small groups. (Parks & Rec sponsored a very successful charrette in November, as part of its Compo Beach study.)

Dewey Loselle

Dewey Loselle

“We want everyone to participate — not just the same people you see all the time,” Loselle says.

“They’re great citizens and volunteers. But we’re interested in people who are not always engaged in the town, because they have young kids or are very busy. They’re the ones who will be here for many more years. They’ll really be impacted by this. We need to hear their voices too.”

With “high citizen participation and acceptance,” Loselle says — including collaboration with 2 other entities, the Downtown Planning Subcommittee of the P&Z, and the Historic District Commission’s Village District Steering Committee — “I’m very excited that we can make this succeed.”

In fact, this may be downtown Westport’s last chance at success.

“We have a real opportunity here,” the chairman notes. “If we can’t get a master plan done now, we probably won’t for a long time to come.”

He pauses.

“We can guide what’s going on. Or we can let it happen to us.”

The iconic view of downtown Westport. All Westporters are invited to enhance the area, for years to come.

The iconic view of downtown Westport. All Westporters are invited to enhance the area, for years to come.

Psssst … Anyone Want A Dock?

Alert “06880” reader Rick Benson spotted this 20′ x 4′ section of dock last weekend, washed up on Old Mill Beach:

Dock

As of this morning, Rick says, it was still there. Be sure to check your waterfront, to see if you are missing a dock.

Trains Suck, But Transit District Ridership Soars

It’s one bit of good news on the commuter front: Though Westporters suffer daily woes on Metro-North trains, many more folks ride Westport Transit District buses to board them.

Combined with after-school increases, the WTD projects a near 11% rise in riders this year. After a decade of dwindling numbers — both a cause and effect of funding and service cuts — that’s impressive news indeed.

From July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013, the WTD carried 63,000 riders. This year, it’s on track for 70,000. And that includes 3 weeks when Metro-North’s worst woes kept nearly everyone off the rails.

The ridership increases work out to 8.5% for fixed-route commuter buses, and 40% in after-school riders. One of the key after-school routes is to Earthplace, where several dozen students have internships.

A Westport transit bus makes a pickup at Saugatuck station.

A Westport transit bus makes a pickup at Saugatuck station.

Jim Ross — chair of the Westport Citizens Transit Committee — ties much of the increase to the “huge efforts” of unpaid transit directors Jennifer Johnson and Gene Cedarbaum.

“They’ve single-handedly upped the WTD’s game by tirelessly working with state, town and business communities to raise awareness and support,” Ross says.

He also cites a “smart, cost-effective marketing effort” that includes internet and social media efforts, new route and schedule brochures, train station signage, and community outreach programs.

Today, for example, the WTD is handing out brochures — and free coffee — at Westport’s train stations.

The Westport bus shuttle map.

The Westport bus shuttle map.

Early next month, they’ll unveil a “transit info kiosk” at the Senior Center. It will contain brochures and information about all Westport transportation options, from WTD buses to shared-ride services and taxis.

“We haven’t reinvented the wheel,” Ross says. (It’s unclear whether his pun was intentional or not.)

“But this is a bit of proof that if we get information out to people, they realize there’s a need. This isn’t the Friends of the Library. It’s not a charity. It’s public transportation, which is as un-sexy as it gets. But it is a service. Citizens are showing that they want it.

“If town officials really commit to this — if they move from a discussion of ‘Should we have it?’ to ‘This is a town gem’ — we can really move forward.”

As budget season begins, the wheels on Westport’s bus service are clearly on a roll.

Looking Down On Westport

When a tree falls in Westport, who hears it?

Everyone.

Some of us lament the loss of every tree, whether felled by a developer, an arborist, wind or old age.

Others applaud the removal of dead, dangerous trees, or say it’s simply smart design to remove trees from near new, large homes.

Most of us, though, agree on one thing: Westport has “always” been a woodsy, New England town.

Most of us are wrong.

A look through photos in the University of Connecticut’s fascinating 1934 aerial survey shows that — well within the memory of some of our older citizens — much of this town was open fields or active farmland. South of the Post Road, in fact, there were virtually no woods.

Here is a shot from just 80 years ago. The railroad is the dark line near the top, running from west to east. South Compo is the white road, cutting southeast across the middle of the photo. Longshore is at the left; Sherwood Mill Pond is on the right in the middle, with Soundview Drive at the bottom right:

Westport south of Post Road - 1934 UConn aerial survey

Contrast that view with today. We’ve got much more development — and many more trees:

Westport 2013 south of South Compo Road

Further north, here’s the Saugatuck River (center), with Main Street/Easton Road shown from south to north on the right. Those squiggles just west of Main Street are Willowbrook Cemetery:

Westport - Easton Road 1934 UConn aerial survey

Today, it looks like this:

Westport 2013 - aerial view Saugatuck River

Much has changed — including the addition of the Merritt Parkway, at top.

We can see more trees in the1934 scene below. It shows Long Lots Road, heading northeast near the bottom of the photo (that’s the Post Road at the far bottom). There are substantial woods between the main north/south roads (from left: North Avenue, Bayberry Lane, Sturges Highway), but also plenty of open fields and farmland:

Westport aerial view 1934 - Roseville Road, North Avenue, Bayberry Lane

So what does all this mean?

Westport looks different, at different times in our history. Farms didn’t just happen; our ancestors had to clear the land. Gradually, though, that open space was built over. Trees were planted. Now some of them are coming down.

So when we talk about “preserving Westport,” we aren’t always 100% accurate.

Perhaps we should say, “preserving the current look — which may look substantially different, not many years from now.”

(Aerial video bonus: Check out this YouTube video of Compo Beach and Longshore, taken by a drone on November 9, 2013. If your browser does not take you directly there, click here.)
 
 

The Remains Live

Chip Damiani’s death yesterday — from a massive cerebral hemorrhage, at age 69 — was the final drum roll for the Remains.

For a generation that loved them in the 1960s — and for new listeners, born long after the half-Westport band toured with the Beatles and broke up — Chip’s death was devastating.

But — thanks to 1969 Staples grad Ray Flanigan, who shot these videos last June, when the Remains rocked Brooklyn’s Bell House — one of America’s greatest rock ‘n’ bands will never die.

They opened the set with “Hang On Sloopy.” It starts slowly, then takes off like a runaway train:

Here’s part of the Yardbirds’ classic,”I’m a Man.”

And, for good measure, “All Day and All of the Night.”

Bonus feature: Click here for Fran Fried’s very long, but tremendously insightful, piece on the Remains and their place in rock history.

All’s Well That Ends, Mel

For Westport Pizzeria, one door — the one at 107 Main Street — closed yesterday.

But another one opened today, at 143 Post Road East.

Here — without missing a beat — was the noontime scene:

Westport Pizzeria 1

Westport Pizzeria 3

Westport Pizzeria 2

It was Day 1, of the next 45 years.