With local elections underway, and school back in session, Bike Westport is reaching out to candidates and voters.
This is, the non-profit says, “a unique moment to make a real impact for Westport residents.”
Bike Westport has met with the 3 candidates for 1st selectman — Kevin Christie, Don O’Day and David Rosenwaks. All have signed the organization’s “Pledge for a Walkable & Bikeable Westport.”
The pledge says:
WHEREAS, a walkable and bikeable Westport is essential to our community’s health, safety, economy, and quality of life, and makes our town an even more vibrant and desirable place to grow up, raise a family, work, or live as a senior, supporting residents of all ages and abilities.
I hereby pledge my support for a vision of Westport that:
CONNECTS NEIGHBORHOODS AND DESTINATIONS, including schools, parks, beaches, the Westport Library, the Farmers’ Market, Levitt Pavilion, Westport Weston Family YMCA, Westport Senior Center, Longshore Club Park, downtown, and the train station, making it safe and easy for people to walk or bike throughout our community;
ADVANCES SAFETY FOR ALL, by supporting safer street design, connected pedestrian and bicycle networks, and promoting a culture of safe biking;
HELPS REDUCE TRAFFIC CONGESTION, by offering safe, practical alternatives to car travel for everyday trips to schools, the train station, Compo Beach, and downtown;
EMPOWERS INDEPENDENCE, enabling children, seniors, and everyday walkers and bike riders to move around town freely, confidently, and safely;
PROMOTES PUBLIC HEALTH AND FITNESS, by encouraging active transportation and outdoor lifestyles for residents of all ages and abilities;
Bike Westport co-founder Markus Marty rides with his kids.
SUPPORTS A THRIVING LOCAL ECONOMY, by making it easier for people to visit local shops, restaurants, events, and markets without needing to drive or park;
STRENGTHENS COMMUNITY PRIDE AND CONNECTION, by creating public spaces and roads that bring people together and celebrate Westport as a vibrant, welcoming, forward-looking town;
FOSTERS A CULTURE OF WALKING AND BIKING, through community events, education, and partnerships that encourage residents to embrace active transportation as part of daily life.
Bike Westport wants to make Westport more walkable too. (Photo/Tom Cook)
Bike Westport says that as residents assess candidates this fall, the pledge offers “a clear, community-driven framework for what Westport needs: safer, connected walking and biking routes that benefit families, seniors and the environment.”
They call this “a non-partisan issue that speaks to street safety, congestion, public health and civic pride — right when candidate platforms are being shaped.”
Bike Westport’s Jenna Petok and Markus Marty were at Saturday’s Slice of Saugatuck, with their kids. They spoke with hundreds of people, strolling throughout the neighborhood.
Bike Westport hopes that candidates for all local offices — including the Representative Town Meeting — will sign the pledge too.
One of those RTM candidates is Jenna Petok — Bike Westport’s director of strategy and community engagement.
She said that her involvement with that organization — along with her work on the Downtown Plan Implementation Committee, and her neighborhood engagement background — inspired her to run.
Conventional wisdom is: No one pays attention to political campaigns until after Labor Day.
Well, Labor Day has come and gone. And as Election Day nears, Westport’s League of Women Voters offers a number of opportunities for residents to hear — and question — candidates for a variety of local offices.
Democracy requires informed voters. Mark your calendars for:
“A Conversation with 1st & 2nd Selectperson Candidates”: September 26, 2 p.m., Senior Center.
“Fall Brunch & Design a Sign: Meet Your RTM Candidates”: October 4, 10 a.m. to noon Westport Library. The event includes coffee, donuts, snacks, and art activities to keep kids occupied. Co-sponsored by “06880.”
“A Conversation with Board of Finance Candidates”: October 15, 2 p.m., Senior Center.
“Candidates Debates: Board of Education, Zoning Board of Appeals, Board of Assessment Appeals, Board of Finance”: October 27, 6:30 p.m., Westport Library.
Peter Greenberg — one of America’s most popular trave journalists — is journeying to Westport.
The CBS News travel editor and author of “The Travel Detective” will speak at the Westport Library on September 25 (7 p.m.). The event is presented by the Y’s Men’s Travel Group.
Greenberg — whosoe website offers a wide array of resources for travelers and industry insiders — will be in conversation with longtime friend, colleague, worldwide traveler and Y’s Men member Allen Swerdlowe.
Lifelong Westport resident Josephine D’Amico died Thursday at home, surrounded by her family. She was 93.
Josie was born in Saugatuck. She graduated from Staples High School, then attended secretarial school. She became an executive secretary, and opened Darien Secretarial Service.
Josie was known as a great cook and baker.
She is survived by her brothers, Anthony D’Amico and Peter D’Amico; sisters: Eterina D’Amico and Geraldine Stauss, and 13 nieces and nephews. She was pre- deceased by her brothers Edward D’Amico, Rudolph D’Amico and Anthony D’Amico, and sisters Adeline Coviello, Margaret Incerto and Mary Aldrich.
A funeral service is set for September 16 (10 a.m., Assumption Church for a Mass of Christian burial. Interment will follow in Assumption Cemetery in Westport. Condolences may be left online. In lieu of flowers, ontributions in memory of Josie may be made to a charity of choice.
Today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature photo includes one of our favorite things (a monarch butterfly), and one of Westport’s best places (Sherwood Island State Park):
In the 5-plus years of curating this online art gallery, I don’t think we’ve ever featured a weaving.
This week, we’ve got 2.
That’s the magic of this feature. Like Forrest Gump’s box of chocolates, you never know what you’ll get when you open it up.
It is, after all, your gallery. We rely entirely on “06880” readers’ submissions.
So no matter how young (or old) you are; what style or subject you choose — and whether you’re a first-timer or old-timer — we welcome your submissions. Watercolors, oils, charcoal, pen-and-ink, acrylics, mixed media, digital, lithographs, collages, macramé, jewelry, sculpture, decoupage, needlepoint — we want whatever you’ve got.
Please email a JPG to 06880blog@gmail.com. And please include the medium you’re working in — art lovers want to know.
“The Life and Death struggle with Mr. Lizard, Chew Toy” — watercolor (Kathleen Burke — Available for purchase; click here)
“Summer Flowers from Trader Joe’s” — acrylic painting (Prill Boyle)
“Psychic Urge” — digital print (Tom Doran — Available for purchase; click here)
Untitled — painting on a woven grass cloth with a golden weave (Dorothy Robertshaw)
Untitled — weaving (Julia Wray; Available for purchase; click here)
Posted onSeptember 13, 2025|Comments Off on Staples Dance Team: All That Jazz (And More)
Staples High School has something for everyone.
Forty varsity sports. A professional-caliber drama program, and music and art departments to match. Journalism, broadcast media, environment, the “We the People” Constitution competition — if you’ve got a passion, it’s been pursued by like-minded students, with avid mentors, on the North Avenue campus.
Unless you’re a dancer.
For years, teenagers who dance have found their community elsewhere — in private academies outside of school.
Now, that niche has been filled.
The Staples dance team launched last spring. Next week they’ll have a spot at the annual Involvement Fair, reaching out to students eager to make dance a part of their school lives.
The mission: to bring Staples dancers together, and provide the same sense of connection and recognition that so many other teams, clubs and organizations enjoy.
The Staples dance team is for serious dancers, who often spend so much time in the studio that they miss out on school spirit.
It’s also for those who used to dance, but stepped away.
And for anyone else who loves dance, and wants to learn new styles.
The vision took shape last school year, when Alina Knapp — then a Bedford Middle School 8th grader — talked with interested classmates, in a variety of forms: tap, ballet, jazz, contemporary, lyrical and hip hop. Staples, she learned, had 3 dance clubs.
But no dance team.
She teamed up with fellow Bedford dancer Mirabelle Choe.
Soon, then-freshmen Katie Brill, Sutton Bulkeley and Caitlin Hand led an effort to become an official Staples club.
Staples dance team coach Mikela Pirri
Mikela Pirri — a Sacred Heart University alumnus with competitive dance experience — joined as coach.
The Staples dance team will blend performance (at games and pep rallies) and competition, with both jazz and hip hop squads. The Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) — which governs all public school sports in the state — also sanctions competitive dance.
Staples was one of the few schools in the area without a dance team. Fairfield Ludlowe and Warde, Norwalk and Stamford Highs all have teams. Ridgefield is the reigning state hip hop champion.
Like Staples sports, Players, Orphenians, Inklings, WWPT and so much more, the dance team emphasizes camaraderie, school spirit and inclusiveness.
“Dance is about working together, supporting each other, and connecting through movement,” says junior co-captain Nina Ghahremani. “Now we get to do that through Staples.”
Staples dance team. Back row (from left): Caitlin Hand, Sutton Bulkeley, Katie Brill, Mirabelle Choe, Alina Knapp. Front: Chloe Jordan, Nina Ghahremani. Boys are welcome too!
“Senior co-captain Chloe Jordan adds, “We look forward not only to dancing together as a team, but also setting a standard of passion and kindness within our community.”
And they’ll do it — finally — on their own high school campus.
(For more information, follow the team on Instagram: @StaplesDance.)
(“06880” covers all areas of Staples High School life. If you enjoy discovering all that our town’s teens are up to, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)
Comments Off on Staples Dance Team: All That Jazz (And More)
Today’s Board of Education hearing involving a Staples High School boys soccer coach’s contract took less time than the previous 5-1 vote, in May: 8 hours, not 14.
But the result was the same. This time by 4-2, the Board affirmed superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice’s decision to not rehire longtime freshman coach Chris O’Dell.
Members Lee Goldstein, Dorie Hordon, Neil Phillips and Abby Tolan voted to support Scarice’s decision. Robert Harrington and Jill Dillon voted against it. Kevin Christie recused himself, and was not at the day-long session in Town Hall.
Christie told “06880” that he and his family have personal connections to the Westport and Staples soccer programs.
Noting that the Board of Education “effectively serves as judge and jury,” he said, “in a traditional courtroom setting, my connections to the soccer programs would not allow me to serve as a juror.
“Due process does not allow parties to select their own jurors. I will not capitulate to external pressure impacting due process, my integrity, my family, and my decisions as a BOE member. Recusal was, and is, the right decision.”
Board of Education mediator Fred Dorsey, flanked by (from left) Dorie Hordon, chair Lee Goldstein, Neil Phillips, Jill Dillon, Abby Tolan and Robert Harrington.
O’Dell represented himself, against 2 charges: that he did not report a verbal argument between another assistant coach at a pre-season retreat over Labor Day weekend 2024, and that he was insubordinate by attending the post-season banquet the following December.
The freshman coach attempted to make a number of arguments, to prove that Scarice’s decision was “arbitrary and capricious.”
As happened in May — when the BOE heard an appeal by former head coach Russell Oost-Lievense, regarding the same 2 incidents — the Board’s mediator, Fred Dorsey, sustained nearly every objection from Thomas Mooney, the attorney for Scarice, Staples principal Stafford Thomas, and director of athletics VJ Sarullo.
From time to time Dorsey showed O’Dell — who owns a residential design-build firm, and is not a lawyer — a bit of leeway, helping him frame questions and allowing him to ask procedural questions.
Chris O’Dell (center), with his daughter Addison, and former Staples boys soccer head coach Russell Oost-Lievense.
Nearly 30 attendees — soccer parents and others interested in the board’s handling of coaches — moved into the lobby twice, while the BOE deliberated in executive session for 45 minutes each time.
O’Dell objected to those sessions, urging the board not to rehash testimony that had already been given in May.
“Arbitrary and capricious is the only thing that matters,” he said. He also defended himself against what he called attacks on his character.
One point of contention was a voicemail from Sarullo to O’Dell, regarding his attendance at the banquet. Sarullo told the coach to call him on the office line he was calling from, or text him.
O’Dell said that Sarullo never responded to his own voicemail in reply. Sarullo replied that O’Dell’s failure to text him showed negligence on his part.
From left: Board of Education attorney Tom Mooney, superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice, Staples principal Stafford Thomas, Staples athletic director VJ Sarullo. (All photos/Dan Woog)
Scarice testified that O’Dell’s “level of hostility” — along with the recommendation of Sarullo and Thomas — played a role in his non-renewal decision.
The superintendent knew his decision might be divisive. He acknowledged that employment issues are never easy. But he reiterated his belief that he made the right decision in this case.
O’Dell questioned Scarice about his offer in May to bring the coach back, with conditions. The superintendent countered that he had been urged to talk with the coach by community and school members, but that no mediation was offered.
There was discussion too about a phone conversation in which Scarice taped O’Dell, without his knowledge — something Scarice said he had never done with another employee. O’Dell claimed this was evidence of arbitrary and capricious behavior, but Mooney’s objection was sustained.
O’Dell asked Scarice why he had not responded during a BOE meeting in January, when a student alleged that the incident at the retreat included physical abuse. O’Dell said that Scarice already knew that charge was false.
Board policy is to not reply to public comment, Scarice said. However, O’Dell responded, chair Lee Goldstein thanked the student for his testimony, adding “good job.”
O’Dell brought up other situations that he said showed Scarice, Thomas and Sarullo acting arbitrarily and capriciously.
They included a meeting in another town between Sarullo and boys tennis coach Kris Hrisovulos, after his own non-renewal was dismissed on procedural grounds. Sarullo denied O’Dell’s charge that at that meeting, the athletic director apologized to Hrisovulos for the way that situation was handled.
Chris O’Dell
O’Dell also brought up situations — one involving a serious head injury to an opposing player, and another in which a Staples player was bullied by an opponent — in an attempt to show that his actions there were consistent with his handling of the incident at the retreat. Sarullo denied they were similar.
In the end, 7 hours of sometimes heated testimony — and an hour of deliberation by the Board of Education — came down to a final vote.
Like Oost-Lievense in May, the majority affirmed the non-renewal decision.
O’Dell was not there to hear the verdict. He had a practice at Fairfield Warde High School.
This past summer, he and Oost-Lievense were hired to coach soccer in the neighboring town.
Early in the proceedings, Scarice had been asked if was concerned about the safety of players at Warde, under O’Dell and Oost-Lievense.
“I’m not the superintendent of Fairfield,” he replied.
Today, Riverside Avenue is home to a mix of buildings: business and medical offices, an auto body shop, condos, a school, and private homes.
Back in the day though, it was a hub of manufacturing. With easy water access for shipping, factories filled the river side.
This one belonged to the Meek Oven Company.
(Courtesy of Christopher Maroc)
Remnants of some of those buildings remain today.
If only the traffic was the same now, too.
(Friday Flashback is one of “06880”‘s many regular features. If you enjoy this — or anything else on our website — please consider a tax-deductible contribution. Just click here. Thank you!)
Plans are moving forward for the new Long Lots Elementary School and Stepping Stones Preschool.
1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker reports that the end of this month, or early October, will see “groundbreaking for the geothermal wells and site mobilization.” It’s the first major step in the construction process.
For updates, documents and more details, click here.
He was 33 years old. Today, he would be a grandfather.
Jonathan’s wife, Julie Whamond, is a Westport resident, and Representative Town Meeting member. She also volunteers as a docent, at the 9/11 Memorial & Museum in New York.
Yesterday she and fellow RTM member Andrew Colabella visited the museum. They paused in front of a mural of blue tiles. Each represents one of the 2,977 people killed that tragic day, 24 years ago.
Andrew Colabella and Julie Whamond, at the 9/11 Museum.
Behind that wall is where the chief medical examiner office’s. Nearly a quarter century later, they store and test remains every day. Over 1,000 have yet to be discovered.
Part of Jonathan’s remains are kept on site. It is the final resting place for many victims.
As a docent, Andrew says, Julie tells the story of 9/11, and her personal connection to it. It, and she, serve as “a primary source of evidence of the impacts of terrorism that day,” he says.
================================================
Tomorrow’s Slice of Saugatuck is on!
Delayed one week by rain, the annual Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce event will fill Riverside Avenue, Railroad Place and Bridge Square with 7 bands, tons of kids’ activities, retail offerings — and more 2 dozen restaurants and food purveyors, handing out tasty samples.
The Norwalk Art Space’s Arts Bash will have a very distinct Westport flavor.
The October 9 event (6 p.m., 455 West Avenue, Norwalk) — featuring exhibits, music, cocktails and gourmet bites, raising funds to provide free art education and exhibition opportunities to under-represented students and artists — will honor Melissa Newman, for her many contributions to arts and arts education.
The longtime Westport resident is a noted artist, writer, teacher, sculptor, painter — and jazz singer.
A Norwalk Art Space board member, Newman is also a dedicated mentor. “Her multifaceted artistic career and deep-rooted passion for the next generation of creatives make her an ideal honoree for this year’s celebration,” the Art Space says.
Another Westport connection: The Arts Bash co-chair is local resident Dale Najarian.
During the Gilded Age, America’s favorite sage, sociologist, philosopher and
news analyst was Mr. Dooley — a bartender invented by Chicago newspaper editor Finley Peter Dunne.
Though hardly remembered today, Dunne’s humorous newpaper columns were read all over the world. Mr. Dooley’s opinions were read at White House cabinet meetings; robber barons and politicians lived in fear of the bartender’s sarcasm.
Starting tonight, Mr. Dooley comes to life at the Westport Community Theatre in “Dooley at the Bar,” a one-man show created and performed by Alexander Kulcsar.
The play — which opens WCT’s 68th season — runs for 10 performances, on Fridays and Saturdays (7:30 p.m.) and Sundays (2 p.m.), through September 28.
The Connecticut League of Conservation Voters and State Representative Jonathan Steinberg discuss “climate wins from the 2025 legislative session, and plans for the future” on September 17 (9:30 a.m., Westport Library). The public is invited.
The American Parkinson Disease Association Connecticut Chapter holds its annual “Optimism Walk” at Sherwood Island State Park on September 20 (11 a.m.). The event raises awareness and funds. Click here for more information.
School has begun. The temperature is slowly dropping.
But the Levitt Pavilion continues to offer great entertainment.
DNR — the nearly-all-physician classic rock band — played to an enthusiastic crowd last night.
They’ll be back again just a few yards away on November 1. That show is indoors, at the Westport Library. It’s a benefit for Norwalk Hospital’s Whittingham Cancer Center.
Jo Fuchs Luscombe — a force of nature who, in a lifetime of work and volunteer efforts, accomplished everything from 5 terms in the Connecticut House of Representatives (including minority whip) and Westport’s 3rd selectwoman, to leadership (and boots-on-the-ground) service in nearly every major organization in town — died last weekend. She was 94.
An official obituary has not yet been released. But in 2017, “06880” hailed her as one of our first Unsung Heroes. I wrote:
If you’ve been in Westport for any length of time, you’ve probably heard — and met — Jo Fuchs Luscombe.
She’s been involved in every aspect of life here — politics, education, community service. If it needs doing, Jo has done it.
But how many people know her back story?
A Dallas native, she was just a year old when her father — an oilman — moved the family to Venezuela. Jo grew up speaking Spanish — and gaining an important, real-world view of life.
She went to boarding school and college in Texas, headed to Katherine Gibbs secretarial school, got married at 19 and had a child at 20.
Jo Fuchs Luscombe
Her husband was in oil too, so they headed to Libya. Jo learned Italian there, and was once more immersed in a very different culture.
In her mid-30s, after moving back to the US, Jo and her husband divorced. Encouraged by Rev. Dana Forrest Kennedy, she threw herself into every aspect Christ & Holy Trinity Church. She became president of the Women’s Guild, served on the vestry, and ran fundraisers.
She got interested too in the Westport Historical Society. Jo was a driving force behind the acquisition and restoration of Wheeler House — owned at the time by her church — as the organization’s headquarters.
In 1980, Jo was asked to fill out an unexpired term on the Zoning Board of Appeals. Public speaking did not come easily. But — as with everything else in her life — she worked to master it.
She won a full term on her own, then was appointed to the vacant post of 3rd selectman.
In 1986, Jo managed her friend and fellow Westporter Julie Belaga’s campaign for governor.
Jo’s next step was the state House of Representatives. She served 5 terms — from 1987 to ’97 — and rose to assistant minority leader and Republican minority whip.
At the same time, she was involved in the League of Women Voters (1989-2011). She was a member of Westport Sunrise Rotary from the 1988 beginning, and was the first female president (1991-92).
Retirement from state politics did not slow her down. As a 10-year member of Westport’s School Building Committee (and chair) she helped oversee 5 major construction and renovation projects (including the new Staples High School).
Jo Fuchs Luscombe (Photo courtesy of Westport Woman’s Club)
Remarriage did not slow her down either. Jo was president of the Westport Woman’s Club from 2003-05 (where she helped run major events like the art show), and was active in the Greens Farms Garden club, and countless others.
As a Westport Weston Family YMCA board trustee from 1998 to 2015, she helped shepherd the new building on its long, torturous journey from downtown to Mahackeno. She earned a “Faces o Achievement” Award from the Y in 1999.
She was even a justice of the peace.
Her husband John says there is one reason she accomplishes so much: “She doesn’t sleep.”
There’s one more thing: Jo Fuchs Luscombe is one of the nicest, most always-smiling people you’ll ever meet.
Congratulations, Jo. And thanks from all of us, for all you’ve done in so many ways.
(Hat tip: Bobbie Herman)
Cards can be sent to Jo’s son, Edward Fuchs: 52 St. James Drive, Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33418. A full obituary will be published when available.
Click here to help support “06880” via credit card or PayPal. Any amount is welcome, appreciated — and tax-deductible! Reader contributions keep this blog going. (Alternate methods: Please send a check to “06880”: PO Box 744, Westport, CT 06881. Or use Venmo: @blog06880. Or Zelle: dwoog@optonline.net. Thanks!)
GET THE “06880” APP
The “06880” app (search for it on the Apple or Android store) is the easiest way to get “06880.” Choose notifications: whenever a new post is published, or once or twice a day. Click here for details.