Last Call For The ‘Port

The ‘Port — the casual family restaurant that opened in National Hall 13 months ago — serves its last meals and drinks this Saturday.

Owner Sal Augeri told his staff of the closing this afternoon.

Augeri told “06880””

It’s been an amazing year. I’ve had the privilege to meet and get to know so many wonderful people in our community.

We tried our best to bring something special to the community. We knew it was a challenging business in a competitive market, and it was difficult to maintain as an independent business.

The idea of opening The ‘Port was to create a comfortable space for families to gather and celebrate good times. I am thrilled we accomplished that. We loved hosting everyone from local teams for victory dinners, to Staples Players, to Catch a Lift, to giving local musicians a place to showcase their talents.

It was also wonderful to be able to give so many teenagers and young people an opportunity to work at The ‘Port.

So many people who have been a part of this have been so supportive, including all our local investors, and the friends and families who became our regulars. We appreciate everyone who filled this past year with great memories. We look forward to seeing these new friends around town.

The ‘Port occupied the site of the former Vespa. Before that, it was Cafe Zanghi,

It’s an excellent space, with views of the Saugatuck River and a nice patio. Nearby parking — shared with Bartaco and now OKO — is tight, though a multi-level garage sits across Wilton Road.

The ‘Port filled an important niche. But in today’s tough restaurant business, in the end it wasn’t enough.

There is no word on what may replace The ‘Port. An everything-must-go auction is set for Monday (July 2, 9 a.m.).

Meanwhile, we’ve still got 4 days to enjoy this true Westport restaurant.

Police Pension Draws National Attention

A pension dispute involving Westport’s Police Department has drawn national attention.

The Economic Policy Institute — a left-leaning think tank — is focusing on a dispute between the police union (AFSCME Local 2080) and the town.

Negotiations have gone to binding arbitration. A decision may come this fall.

“Why would Westport mess with a system that works?” asks economist Monique Morrissey on the EPI’s Working Economics Blog.

“The police department is tiny and the town can easily afford the benefits. In the 2015-2016 fiscal year, spending on police pensions amounted to just 1.2 percent of the town’s revenues, so even drastic benefit cuts wouldn’t noticeably affect anyone’s tax bill.

“Westport’s property tax rate is already among the lowest in the state, though taxes are high in dollar terms as would be expected for a wealthy town in a high cost of living area.”

Morrissey notes that Westport police officers do not receive Social Security, nor is overtime factored into their final pensions. She frames efforts to reduce Westport police pensions as part of “an ideological campaign” to get rid of pensions in favor of riskier 401(k)-style savings plans.

She says that kind of campaign could backfire as municipalities start to restore benefits in an effort to prevent losing experienced officers.

“The 64 members of the Westport police department, who signed on for what they thought was a career of public service that would be rewarded with a secure retirement, may still pay a price, unless the citizens of Westport realize that that the police force they have come to rely on may be torn apart by shortsighted pension ‘reforms,’” Morrissey writes.

Click here to read Morrissey’s full story.

Anne Ziff: “Your End Of Life Matters”

In 1978 — when they were in their 60s — Anne Ziff’s parents called. Out of the blue, they said they wanted to discuss where their important papers were. Then her mother asked, “When we die, what will you want?”

“I wanted a scotch!” Anne laughs. “My parents threw me such a curveball.”

But Anne — a marriage and family therapist, with a practice in New York City and (until earlier this month) Westport, where she’s lived since 1974 — grabbed a pen. She began writing.

For over an hour, her parents talked. They told her where they wanted to be buried, the name of their accountant, which bank held their safe deposit box.

Anne kept asking: “Are you sure no one’s sick?”

No one was. Her parents were just following the recommendation of friends, to have important discussions before it’s too late.

Anne Ziff

Ten years later, her mother had a hip replacement. Anne saw her before and after surgery. That evening, she told Anne to go home and get some rest.

At 11 p.m., her mother died.

“I got unglued. That wasn’t supposed to happen,” Anne recalls.

But as the doctor asked questions — where she wanted the body moved, did she prefer burial or cremation, etc. — Anne knew every answer.

“I understood exactly what my mother wanted. I knew which rabbi to call. I knew it all,” she says.

Her mother had thought of something else too.

At the hospital before surgery, she had changed “next of kin” on the notification form, from her husband to her daughter.

“That’s why I got the call that night, instead of my 80-year-old, hard-of-hearing father,” Anne says.

About six years ago, Anne heard Ellen Goodman on NPR. The Pulitzer Prize winning columnist said that when her mother was dying, no one talked about it. When she passed away, no one knew what to do.

“Suddenly, I realized how lucky I was,” Anne says. “That conversation with my parents was one of their best gifts to me.”

She also realized that not everyone received such a gift.

As a family therapist, she knew what to do.

Anne was already leading group workshops at the Senior Center. She wove “how to talk about taboos” into her sessions. The topic was well received.

A year later she presented an outline to faculty counselors in the department of psychiatry at Mt. Sinai Hospital, where she teaches. They listened raptly.

A colleague told her, “This is so important and valuable. We need the information out there. And you’re a writer!”

She sure is. Many years ago, she was a journalist with the Westport News and Fairfield Citizen. She also wrote “Marrying Well: The Clinician’s Guide to Premarital Counseling.”

So Anne has just published “Your End of Life Matters.”

The book offers guidance in figuring out what to talk about — and then how to do it.

“Ninety percent of Americans say it’s important to discuss end-of-life care,” Anne says. “But only 30% do it.”

“Your End of Life Matters” covers everything from a living will and burial arrangements to sharing computer passwords, and what happens if you’re a small business owner and get sick.

Anne’s title has double meaning, of course. It’s about what to do at the end of life — but it also emphasizes the importance of how to prepare.

The book is filled with stories of people who did all this right — and wrong. (“If you’re promised a piece of art, get it in writing!” the author warns.)

She also offers a way to begin the conversation. “Start by saying, ‘I’m healthy. I just want to have this conversation now — because I am healthy!'”

“Death is a part of everyone’s life,” Anne emphasizes. “So have the conversation. Then get on with the fun of living.”

And, she notes, “you live better if you communicate.”

The book is aimed at people 45 and older. But, she adds, “it’s really for everyone. Things happen unexpectedly. People can die right after they have a child.”

Everyone dies. But when they do, not everyone has already given the gift that Anne Ziff’s parents did.

Thanks to her book, many more will have the chance to do so.

And the words to talk about it.

 

Pic Of The Day #434

Greens Farms Congregational Church steeple (Drone photo/Jack Feuer)

Schools’ Innovation Fund Completes Successful 1st Year

Within days of announcing a new Innovation Fund last year, applications poured in to the Westport School District.

Students, staff, even community members were encouraged to submit ideas that foster new ways of thinking, and nurture creativity. The $50,000 fund covered equipment, time and resources that fell outside the normal education budget.

The school year is now over. The totals are in: More than 600 students and 2 dozen teachers, in every Westport school, have been impacted by the Innovation Fund.

Partnerships were established with the Westport Library, Westport Historical Society, world renowned artists and experts, and 2 Bridgeport high schools.

Students worked as scientists, anthropologists, historians, programmers, event planners, marketers, bloggers and live remote broadcasters. Teachers participated as researchers, data collectors and analysts.

Projects included:

Digital Portfolios. 2nd graders at Saugatuck Elementary School shared writing, art, music and more with each other using an app called Seesaw.

Composers Workshop. Sean O’Loughlin worked with middle school orchestra students to compose 3 pieces of music. They Skyped and met in person, then performed together in May. Students wrote about the process, and its impact on them.

Michele Anderson rehearses her Bedford students. Composer Sean O’Loughlin watches in the background, via Skype.

Google Expeditions. Students in various schools explored international museums, undersea caves and outer space using the fully outfitted Google Expedition Kit.

Hollywood Movie Music Production. Local recording artist/musician Andrew Smith worked with Kings Highway Elementary, Bedford Middle and Staples High Schools in movie music production, recording and editing. The final project is a queue written at a professional studio, performed, recorded and edited by students.

Saugatuck Story Festival. Coming this fall: 2 Staples teachers are working with the Westport Library on a 3-day literary festival and writing conference. It will show real-world applications of reading and writing, and involve well-known authors.

Think, Make, Innovate With Drones. Middle school students work after school and in summer programs, using coding software and drones to solve real-world challenges, and explore future uses of technology.

Grant applications are now open for the 2018-19 school year. Any Westport student, staff member or resident is eligible. The deadline is August 4. For more information and the application form, click here.

Happy Monday!

Residents of Violet Lane thought their part of the Myrtle Avenue water main renovation project was finished a couple of weeks ago.

This morning, workers once again tore up the road — and drivers scrambled to get their cars out while they could.

(Photo/Joyce Joiner)

Neighbors are not the only ones without much notice about what’s happening. Many Westporters have asked that better signage be placed on the Post Road and Main Street.

Beltas’ Plan: Keep Part Of Family Farm

Five years ago, I wrote about Belta’s Farm.

My story began:

Bayberry Lane is like many Westport streets. There’s a mix of homes: handsome converted barns; stately Colonials; 1950s split-levels; modern, multi-gabled McMansions.

Nothing — not a sign or a peek through the trees — indicates that the driveway at #128 leads to a 23–plus-acre farm.

It could be Westport’s best-kept secret: There’s a working farm a few yards from the intersection of Bayberry Lane and Cross Highway.

Four generations of Beltas — the farm’s founding family — live there. Dina is the widow of Jimmy Belta, who first farmed the land in 1946. Greg is her son. His children and grandchildren are there too.

How much longer, though, is uncertain.

An aerial view of Belta’s Farm from several years ago shows fields, greenhouses, a compost pile (near the top), and the family’s two homes (bottom).

Five years later, the farm — which has supplied Stew Leonard’s for decades, and since 2012 offers fresh produce and eggs through Community Supported Agriculture subscriptions — has edged closer to its next chapter.

The Belta family cares deeply for its farm, and the neighborhood. As Westport — and their lives — change, they’ve worked hard to come up with a plan they believe will enhance the area, while helping settle their patriarch’s estate.

On July 26, they’ll present a proposal for a text amendment to the Planning & Zoning Commission.

They hope to create an Agricultural Heritage Overlay District. It will enable them to build 9 single-family homes, on 1-acre lots — and retain 8 acres of the property for use as a working farm.

Four generations of Beltas would be able to stay on the land.

A site plan for the proposed Agricultural Heritage Overlay District.

Over the years — especially after the death of Jimmy Belta in 2012 at age 88 (a farmer to the end) — many developers have approached the family. Each time, they said no. The plans were not in keeping with the Beltas’ concept for the future of their farm and homestead.

The Agricultural Heritage Overlay District would, they say:

  • Allow the family to retain its 2 primary residences, both over 50 years old
  • Retain 8 acres of rich farm land in perpetuity, growing the same amount of produce as they currently sell at their farm stand
  • Develop 9 additional building lots that complement the farm property
  • Provide a buffer area with neighboring properties, and preserve the farm’s natural beauty.

Current zoning regulations permit 2-acre lot subdivisions. So they could sell the entire property, to be filled completely with homes.

The Beltas’ say their proposal is “a unique land use concept that will enhance the surrounding neighborhood.”

Belta’s Farm Stand provides great produce to Bayberry Lane and beyond.

For over 70 years, the Beltas have been good neighbors — and great providers of fresh fruit, vegetables and herbs to Bayberry Lane and beyond.

They no longer raise poultry and livestock there. The slaughterhouse is gone. Times change.

This time, they’re asking the town to help them move forward.

Without leaving their farm behind.

The greenhouse and outbuildings, today.

 

Pic Of The Day #433

Bay Street wisteria clematis (Photo/Patricia McMahon)

Senator Blumenthal In Westport: Separating Families Is Profoundly Depressing — And Un-American

Yesterday, Richard Blumenthal was in Texas. He toured a border processing center, and a detention center packed with 250 boys.

Today, Connecticut’s senior senator was in Westport. Standing on the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge, lined with the flags of dozens of nations, he pointed to America’s stars and stripes flying directly overhead.

Connecticut Senator Richard Blumenthal on the Post Road bridge this afternoon. He pointed to the American flag — flying with many others — and said its values are more important than ever.

This country’s values are very important, he said told a crowd of about 100. They gathered to protest President Trump’s immigration policies.

But those values are under attack, Blumenthal continued. And, he warned, darker days may lie ahead.

Before he spoke, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (far left) stood with the crowd on the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge. They listened as protest organizer Darcy Hicks described the important of speaking up against President Trump’s immigration policies.

The senator spoke of his own father — an immigrant fleeing Nazi Germany. The current president, he said, would have turned that 17-year-old away.

Blumenthal thanked Westporters for caring, and for speaking out and standing up. Those values, he said, are more important than ever.

One of the signs seen at today’s protest.

This message counters the one worn on a jacket his past week, by First Lady Melania Trump. It read: “I really don’t care, do u?” (All photos/Dan Woog)

Dog Day Afternoon

Every dog has its day.

Today, they all do.

Winslow Park is filled with hundreds of pooches. Fido and Spot are there. So are Oliver, Cranium, Sparkle Plenty and all their friends.

The Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce’s 3rd annual Dog Festival draws dalmatians, beagles, poodles, greyhounds, chihuahuas, schnauzers and mutts.

There are expensively bred dogs and rescue dogs. They’re all shapes, sizes and ages.

Just like their owners.

The Dog Festival runs until 4 p.m. today.

See you at Westport’s favorite dog run!

(All photos/Dan Woog)