“Where We Stand”: Selectman Candidates Offer Final Messages To Voters

An informed electorate is the greatest bulwark of democracy.

Westporters understand this is a very important election. “06880” is doing our part, to help Westporters understand candidates’ perspectives on a variety of issues.

Once a week, between now and Election Day, we’ve asked the men and women running for 3 important boards — Selectmen/women, Planning & Zoning, and Education — one specific question.

We’ve printed their responses verbatim.

This week’s question — the final one in this series — for the Board of Selectmen/women is:

This is your chance to send your message to Westport voters – to seal the deal. What do you want them to know about you, your plans, and yourselves? Go for it!

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Democratic Party-endorsed candidates Kevin Christie and Amy Wistreich say:

Over the past few months we’ve knocked on doors, talked with voters, and met neighbors at community events and coffee chats. What we’ve heard from Westporters is clear. People want three things from their next leaders:

  1. A clear vision for Westport,
  2. A thoughtful plan that reflects the needs and priorities of the community, and
  3. The proven ability to execute and get things done the right way.

That is exactly what Amy and I bring to Westport.

 

Kevin Christie and Amy Wistreich.

Vision

We will be leaders and advocates for all Westporters, listening carefully, communicating clearly, and representing the entire community.

Our vision is a Westport that continues to lead in fiscal discipline, education, quality of life, and environmental sustainability. Imagine a Westport where local businesses thrive and downtown parking is finally resolved, where there are more opportunities for seniors, teachers, and first responders to live in the town they love, where Saugatuck has development that works for Westporters, and where kids can safely walk or bike to school.

We see a town that protects its shoreline, open spaces, and trees, not just for today but for generations to come. We see a government that is open, transparent, and inclusive, where every Westporter feels heard and respected.

That is our vision, because leadership means more than managing what is in front of us. It is about shaping what comes next.

Planning

Vision only matters if it is matched with disciplined, collaborative planning. We will manage with fiscal responsibility and transparency, ensuring that Westport’s half-billion-dollar capital forecast reflects community priorities, not wish lists.

We will break the cycle of “study and shelve” spending by setting clear priorities, relying on experts, and remaining accountable. We will protect Westport’s AAA bond rating through long-term planning, not short-term fixes.

We will work with state and federal partners, including the Department of Transportation and our Westport delegation in Hartford, to secure funding and move long-delayed projects forward. Westport deserves leaders who pick up the phone (unlike the DOT maintenance facility project), build relationships, and turn partnerships into results.

We will plan responsibly by supporting smart development that protects our environment and expands housing options for the people who make our town work. We will strengthen local businesses, simplify the permitting process, and ensure downtown and Saugatuck remain thriving economic and cultural centers.

That is what thoughtful, community-driven planning looks like.

Execution

Great plans only matter if you can deliver. Nothing gets done without teamwork.

With more than 15 years of professional experience in finance, investment banking and strategy at IBM, Merrill Lynch, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, and the Madison Square Garden Company, I have successfully led teams and executed complex transactions amounting to more than 80 times the value of the town’s current $500 million list of capital projects.

Amy’s public service on the Zoning Board of Appeals and the Planning & Zoning Commission, along with professional experience in land use, architecture and construction, means she knows how to ask the right questions, evaluate details, and move projects forward.

Our combination of experience is unmatched.

We will prioritize finishing Long Lots/Stepping Stones on time and on budget, completing a practical downtown redesign that improves safety and parking, addressing flooding and climate resilience, and creating a town-wide plan for maintaining athletic fields, sidewalks, and public spaces.

We will turn plans into action through collaboration, transparency and accountability.

Westport is special because of the people in our community. Amy and I are proud Democrats and proud Westporters. We have the vision, the plan, and the proven experience to execute, and with you we can get things done together.

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Republican Party-endorsed candidates Don O’Day and Andrea Moore say:

Westport is about to hire its next leadership team, and experience matters, particularly on day one.

Since July, Andrea Moore and I have had the privilege of meeting thousands of you, listening to your hopes for Westport, and sharing a simple truth: Leadership is about more than hearing your concerns. It is about having the proven ability to act on them. It is about standing tall and taking a stand for the greater good of our town.

The O’Day Moore team does just that.

Andrea Moore and Don O’Day.

Let me tell you about Andrea Moore.

Andrea is Westport’s current second selectwoman, and has been my superpower in this race. A lifelong Westporter, she has served at every level of community leadership, from senior PTA roles to vice chair of the Board of Finance and as a trustee of the Westport Weston Family YMCA.

In her more than 20-year financial services career, she led complex teams and made tough decisions. In her current role, she has appointed nearly 100 residents to boards and commissions, ensuring Westport’s government is filled with talented, civic-minded volunteers. She knows our people. She knows our process. She knows how to get things done.

No one knows Westport more than Andrea Moore, and no one is more ready to keep leading it forward.

My story in Westport began 31 years ago, when my wife Toni and I stretched to buy a home here and raise our 3 sons. Professionally I spent 35 years in financial management at Citi, including as a chief financial officer in our residential lending business. I have led organizations larger than Westport’s municipal workforce. Managing complex teams and budgets is not new to me. It is what I do.

Westport has regularly placed its trust in me. I was twice elected to the Board of Education, and was chair for 4 years.

I led our schools through the 2008 to 2010 financial crisis. When districts nationwide were slashing budgets, I led with clarity, transparency and precision — cutting where we could and protecting what mattered most.

Later, when Coleytown Middle School was shuttered, I was asked to lead the rebuilding effort. I communicated clearly at every step, earning broad praise for transparency and results.

Today, as a member of the Representative Town Meeting (RTM) and Long Lots School Building Committee, I led a plan for a new school that earned unanimous approval across every board, including Planning & Zoning.

Andrea and I have been tested, and we have delivered.

So why O’Day/Moore?

Because Westport is choosing between those who have already led this town through crisis, budgets, rebuilding and complex governance, and those who have not.

Listening is essential. But leadership means deciding, especially when 2 groups want opposite things. If you avoid criticism by avoiding decisions, you are not leading — you are taking a poll.

We will always listen and we will lead, anchored in facts, transparency.

Our Immediate Priorities:

  1. Fix infrastructure now, including a solution for Coleytown Elementary, downtown improvements, and upgrades at Longshore.
  2. Protect Saugatuck with responsible development, supporting scaled, reasonable projects instead of a massive housing plan without full Planning & Zoning oversight.
  3. Make Westport safer and easier to get around, with more sidewalks, marked bike lanes, better enforcement including cameras, and smart traffic light timing.

Andrea and I are ready to serve. Westport deserves leadership with a proven record of solving problems, managing teams, rebuilding schools, balancing budgets, and earning town-wide trust.

Experience matters, especially on day one.

We ask for your support, your confidence, and your vote.

Thank you for your kindness throughout this journey. We look forward to leading Westport forward.

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Independent Party-endorsed candidate David Rosenwaks says:

The inspiration behind my decision to enter the first selectman race comes from a simple belief: Westport deserves a different kind of leadership. Leadership that’s independent, inclusive, and grounded in collaboration.

What truly sets me apart are the values I live by every day — outreach, listening, empathy and inclusion. My goal is to unite our shared vision for Westport and work together to respect the heritage that got us to this point, while also enhancing the assets of our beautiful town. These values will guide every decision I make from day one.

 

David Rosenwaks and family.

As a member of the Representative Town Meeting (RTM), I’ve seen firsthand the need for something our town has never truly had: a long-term, strategic plan that defines our vision, aligns our goals, and ensures that every decision we make supports our future, not just the moment. With collaboration and transparency, we can focus on initiatives with the greatest impact and return on investment. I am committed to delivering Westport’s first comprehensive strategic plan by April 1, 2026.

With a clear plan and strong leadership values, we can transform how Westport governs and budgets. Imagine a budget process guided by purpose from the very start where priorities, projects, and expenditures align naturally because we’ve already done the hard work of planning together in a holistic fashion.

My approach is simple: engage every department, listen to every voice, and lead through collaboration. It’s not the easiest path, but it’s the right one; and it’s the one I’m uniquely prepared to take as your next first selectman.

Running as the first-ever Independent Party-endorsed candidate in Westport’s history allows me to lead free from partisanship, to put people and progress first.

My candidacy also creates a unique opportunity to bring everyone together. Per the Town Charter, both the Republican and Democratic candidates could serve on the Board of Selectmen alongside me in the case I am elected as first selectman.

We can build a leadership team that includes all voices and all ideas, and I argue such a Board of Selectmen represents a more perfect union. Every member goes into every conversation with an open mind ready to listen, deliberate and be decisive based on all our constituents’ voices. That’s what collaboration looks like in action, and the kind of government Westport deserves.

My promises to you as your First Selectman:

  • I will prioritize the voices of our community making sure everyone is heard, not just the loudest or most powerful.
  • I will lead with full transparency and accountability.
  • I will protect the heritage of our town and the quality of life we all cherish, always standing for Westport at both the state and local level.
  • I will keep our housing market strong by balancing smart spending with responsible taxation, working closely with the Board of Finance.
  • I will support our schools and lead a full infrastructure review, always planning and budgeting in partnership with the Board of Education.
  • I will strengthen our most important relationships with the Connecticut Department of Transportation, state leaders, and local housing developers to advance our interests and keep Westport moving forward.
  • And I will act, collaboratively and decisively, on our most critical issues: affordable housing, Saugatuck development, downtown parking, Cribari Bridge, community gardens, and traffic congestion.

At a time when civic discourse feels fractured and challenges seem bigger than ever, Westport deserves leadership that brings people together: inclusive, strategic, fiscally responsible, transparent and accountable.

I believe in value-driven leadership that pairs long-term vision with short-term action. I believe in collaboration over partisanship. I believe in urgency, accountability, and progress that you can see and feel.

Your voice. Your town. Your government.

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For last week’s “Where We Stand” responses, click here.

For the third “Where We Stand” responses, click here.

For the second  “Where we Stand” question, click here.

For our first “Where We Stand” question, click here.

22 responses to ““Where We Stand”: Selectman Candidates Offer Final Messages To Voters

  1. Srikanth Puttagunta

    Let’s Remember What Makes Westport Great
    As we head into another local election season, it feels like our town could use a deep breath and a reminder of who we are. Westport is not perfect, but it is a truly special place. It is a town filled with people who care, who volunteer, who show up, and who take pride in our schools, our beaches, our neighborhoods, and our shared history.

    Everywhere you look, you can find someone making a quiet difference. Parents cheering at youth games and rec leagues. Volunteers helping our seniors. Students performing on stage or cleaning up the shore. Committees filled with residents who give their time to keep Westport running and thriving. That is the heart of this town, and it deserves our appreciation.

    Lately, it seems we have focused more on what divides us than what brings us together. Online comments and public debates can sometimes sound more like battles than conversations. It is easy to get caught up in the noise and forget that behind every opinion is a neighbor who also cares deeply about this community. We can disagree without tearing each other down.

    Our strength as a town has always come from our sense of community. We listen. We help. We come together when it matters most. Whether it is rallying around a neighbor in need, supporting our schools, or coming out for local events, Westport always finds a way to pull together. That is something worth celebrating.

    Let’s take a moment to be grateful. Grateful for the teachers who shape our children. For the local businesses that give back. For the beauty of the Saugatuck River, Compo Beach, Levitt Pavilion, Longshore, and our other local amenities that remind us how lucky we are to live here.

    This election season, let’s try to remember that we are all on the same team. The goal is not to win an argument—it is to keep Westport the wonderful, welcoming town it has always been. We can do that by lifting each other up, by assuming good intentions, and by focusing on what connects us.

    Westport is great because of its people. Let’s not lose sight of that.

    • Richard Fogel

      I endorse you. wow 🤩

    • Toni Simonetti

      So nice and demur. If only …

      Bulldozing seems to be a theme you forgot. Tearing down parts of the community that are inconvenient to your way of life is not working together. Dismissing the ideas of your fellow citizens because you think you know better is not “pulling together.”

      You talk a good game but your actions speak louder than your fluff-and-stuff words. As Gavin Newsom said this week: “I know we have to be polite… calm and demure. But I am not calm, and I will not submit to niceties. Not while this guy wrecks our … country.”

      I feel the same about Westport and those who are wrecking it. I am not calm and I will not submit to niceties while those who are wrecking our town talk niceties to get elected.

      Do not vote for anyone who sat on the LLSBC Committee (ie o’Day and SRI) or who endorsed a secret process to increase our taxes by 4%. Do not vote for someone who worked to destroy open public space. Do not vote for this guy.

      Here’s a kinder way of saying it: Vote for someone else. RTM District 2 has one good candidate in Ross Burkhardt. I suggest you vote for him, and write in your own name and those of your friends for the other seats.

      • Ross Burkhardt is District 3.

      • Srikanth Puttagunta

        We will agree to disagree.

        As a reminder, all candidates for first and second selectperson voted to approve the LLS project (whether on RTM, Board of Ed, or P&Z).

        • Toni Simonetti

          Sri, I DO NOT AGREE with you at all.

        • Toni Simonetti

          Not all candidates agree with the process, and neither did the vote behind closed doors on the 4% tax increase.

        • Well we know we have 25 useless self serving RTM. Nobody argues that. We just wish they would retire.
          Board of Ed I have no comment on and I regret Kevin didn’t stand up and vote against but that blot in his copy book doesn’t compare with O’Day.. and PZ were bullied by Tooker !
          We all know this !

    • Agree to disagree?
      I guess you agree with me then that at the last minute you showed no garden on the plan after all the promises. You, Jay, Don, and Liz made.
      So it is so nice as you are running for office all seems so well with you. Things are not well in this town.
      Are you concerned at all for those seniors that had no passive exercise outside with their community this year and maybe next. Are you concerned with the people who can’t afford tax increases? Are you concerned for the merchants who invest their life savings into a local business yet their employees and clients struggle with parking. Are concerned for all the citizens faced with traffic nightmares daily?

    • Stephanie Frankel

      Thank you! Thank you for mentioning what makes this town so great and special! Thank you for giving attention to the hardworking teachers!
      People who hate this town and schools who want to divide baffle me. I do not understand why anyone wants to stay in a place that they truly hate and can not stand. I love this town. I hate the hate that some want to spew against this town and schools labeling us communist, Marxist or whatever label they want to use to create discord.

      Let’s celebrate this town rather than drag it down.

      • teachers are among the best and most valuable people in our country. Your comments are spot on. thank you Steph

      • Toni Simonetti

        No disagreement about how great our town is. I fell in love with Westport in January 2000 when I made my first trip here. I decided to buy a house. I had to make offers on four different properties before my bid landed on top.

        Our kids went to other schools. There are a lot of us who moved here for reasons other than schools. The reasons are many: location, “walkable” character, natural resources, proximity to NYC, safety, wonderful people, the Saugatuck River and Long Island Sound, preservation of the environment and more

        For the next 20 years I split my time between working in NYC weekdays and relaxing in Westport on weekends.

        Here’s where it gets sticky: We chose to retire here. Hopefully we can age in place, but it sometimes seems doubtful the way things are going.

        To your point, teachers are great and often underserved by our town. They can’t always afford to live here— same for police, fire, ems and other town employees. The lack of affordable housing for people of more limited means (ie a town salary) is inexcusable. I grew up in towns where employees had to be residents in order to get hired. Ha! Not Westport.

        Having passion for this town does not mean you turn a blind eye to mismanagement, poor governance and other ills. Speaking up does not mean you spew hate. It means you care. For that, as ProPublica declares, “we will not shut up.”

  2. Janine Scotti

    I did assume the good intentions of everyone when they told me everything that was on the school property would be back on the school property. I watched the garden fall off the plan, just disappear even though it was on the 8-24 and the garden plans had to be presented to the P and Z. When it wasn’t on thar latest rendition of the school plan at that crowded meeting Ira Bloom advised the building committee that the first selectwoman could just re-enter a new 8-24 and P and Z just accepted that. so fool me once shame on me fool me twice shame on you. Now the only two people I trust to have the backbone and the political commitment to get that garden built is Kevin and Amy.
    Don O’day had three years to move the garden project forward and if it wasn’t for this fantastical master plan coming from the parks and rec the garden would be not be on anyone’s radar. Let’s see how many trees have been taken down from the lLong Lots Preserve, outrageous! I’m sure all the companies and citizens that donated money to make that preserve really feel like they were fools. Now let’s see how many people comment about building the school and conflate the two issues of fields garden and School once again I’m sure a couple of people will try to be divisive and keep us separated as citizens, but we are watching and our eyes are fully opened.

  3. John D McCarthy

    I will be voting for Kevin Christie and Amy Wistreich. From my conversations and correspondence with all 3 candidates for 1st Selectman, I believe that Kevin’s views on transparency and openness in our town government most closely aligns with my views. This is foundational for all other issues and how our town moves into the future.

  4. Dan the Town awaits your endorsement ‼️👀

  5. Toni Simonetti

    I will be voting for Kevin Christie and Amy Wistreich. They have earned our trust through their actions and track records. They have a plan for Westport that is clear, transparent, inclusive and representative of their constituents. We may not always agree, but they have listened to all with interest and respect, and their decision-making has been informed by input from their constituents.

    Mostly, I believe them. I believe what they say and what they do. They have given us reason, through their actions, to believe in their representation and leadership.

  6. But you agree with me right, you at the last minute dropped the garden after all of the platitudes from you Don and Jay and Liz! and just changed the 8-24, how convenient.