Looking to adopt a pet — very, very soon?
Fetch Rescue — the local non-profit — is sponsoring a special event, with “adoptable dogs looking for their forever homes.”
It’s from 12 to 2 p.m. today (Sunday), at Choice Pet (Compo Acres Shopping Center).

2 dogs available now, on the Fetch Rescue website.
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Among the items on tomorrow’s Planning & Zoning Commission meeting (Monday, March 16, 6 p.m., Zoom): a pre-application submitted by Richard Redniss, to “discuss some of the ways for Westport to positively respond to the requirements of 8002 prior to 7/1/2026.”
“8022” is the legislation that — among other things — incentivizes towns to take steps to allow more housing, requires towns to create housing growth plans, and eliminates most off-street parking requirements for developments of less than 12 units.
Redniss — principal of Redniss & Mead land use consultants — tells “06880” that the new regulation gives towns .25 of a moratorium point (toward meeting the 10% threshold for affordable housing units) for any new multi-family housing of between 2 and 9 units.
“It’s a carrot by the state” to help solve the broader housing crisis, regardless of cost.
At the P&Z session, Redniss will describe 3 projects he’s working on now. One involves either 17 units (3 of them deemed “affordable,” by state formula), or 9 (with none affordable).
Another — in a “beautiful downtown location” — could have 15 units; by current regulations to earn moratorium points, 2 would have to be affordable. However, Redniss says, because of the cost of land on the river, and with floodplain and slope issues, the economics with 2 affordable units would be “very difficult.”
8002 is “a big learning curve for everyone” — developers and town officials alike, Redniss notes. “How do we deal with this in a practical way?”
The bill — whose initial provisions take effect July 1 — is “very complicated. It’s 100 pages long.”
He and the P&Z begin discussing the implications — for only those projects with between 2 and 9 units — on Monday.

Rick Redniss
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The Westport Fire Department is filled with heroes.
But 5 are official “Hero to Heroes.”
They’re graduates of “Hero to Hero,” a non-profit that help highly qualified military members transition to first responder careers. It’s a win-win-win — for the servicemembers, their employers, and the entire community.
On March 28 (5:30 p.m., Saugatuck Rowing Club), a special event will raise awareness of “Hero to Hero” — and raise funds for an independent film, which will raise even more funds for the organization.
The “Blue Bunny” film project is led by Rita Marcocci, a Westport resident and award-winning producer.
It’s a moving story of sacrifice and friendship, weaving between Operation Iraqi Freedom, and the present-day bond between a former commander and his soldier.
Tickets to the benefit include food, beer, wine, a specialty Hero cocktail, an auction and more. Click here for tickets, and more information.

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Speaking of heroes: Congratulations to Dave Farrell!
Westport’s police chief was inducted Thursday into Notre Dame Prep’s Alumni Hall of Fame.
The recognition highlights his leadership, dedication to service, and lasting impact within the Westport Police Department, and the broader community too.

Westport Police Chief Dave Farrell
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Brubeck comes to Mo\CT.
Not Dave — but close.
The Brubeck Brothers Quartet — led by brothers Chris and Dan — headline “A Speakeasy Jazz Night” April 12 (6 p.m.).
Concert-goers will be surrounded by the art of MoCA’s current exhibition, Art, Jazz + The Blues.”
VIP tickets ($150 per person; tables and lounges for 4 and 6) include a meet-and-greet with the musicians; a special edition t-shirt by Westport artist Miggs Burroughs; preferred seating; personal bar service. and signature cocktails and light bites by A&S Westport.
General admission ($50) includes drinks and light bites.
Click here to purchase, and for more information.

Brubeck Brothers Quartet
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As St. Patrick’s Day looms — with Passover and Easter not far behind — Dave Briggs spent yesterday taking down his Christmas lights.
But he has neighbors whose lights are still up. And every night, they’re on.
The TV journalist/social media master asks: “What’s the latest date you’ve taken your holiday decorations down? At some point, is it okay just to leave them up for next year?”
Click here or below to see his Instagram on these important questions — and to answer them.
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Much of March is usually pretty gross, weather-wise.
It’s windy. The skies are often gray. There are a couple of tantalizingly nice spring days, then we snap back to a reminder that it’s still a few weeks away.
But this March, things are even grosser.
Enormous piles of snow — calcified into a hard, brown mass by tons of sand that froze in January, and shows no signs of thawing any time soon — loom in parking lots and on roadsides all around town.
They’re ugly. They’re depressing. And — not for nothing — they take up valuable parking spots.
This is the scene at a medical office complex on Riverside:

(Photo/Dan Woog)
Others — at the YMCA and Staples, on Imperial Avenue and nearly everywhere else — are bigger, darker, even uglier.
So what’s ahead?
Today’s high will be 44. Tomorrow it will reach 58 — with a chance of thunderstorms.
The rest of the week, look for 30s and 40s.
With partly cloudy skies, every day.
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Speaking of which: Is this (below) just a pile of all sand?
Or sand covering snow?
Whatever. Today’s “Westport … Naturally” image is a reminder that — whatever is going on in the rest of town, and no matter what the season — this place is always there for us.

(Photo/Mary Lou Roels)
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And finally … in honor of Dave Brubeck, whose sons will be playing soon at MoCA\CT (story above):
(Time to take 5. And while you’re relaxing, please take 30 seconds to click here, and support “06880” with a tax-deductible contribution. We thank you … and all that jazz.)

About those frozen snow mountains. The largest of mine was at the foot of my driveway and if there was any melting going it was drop by drop. A week or so ago I had enough and took a mallet and began beating the frozen snow mountain in order to create some dents, holes and fissures to allow air and any sunlight into the mass. The sun came out the next day and that helped too. Using the mallet was ever so therapeutic….