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Marpe: Police, Fire Pension Contracts Now Up For Ratification
Following this morning’s post on the Westport police union’s stance on pension contract negotiations, 1st Selectman Jim Marpe issued this statement:
Both the police and firefighter union executive boards have reached agreement with the town on their pension contracts, and are presenting them to their membership for ratification.
We value all Westport employees including those in our public safety departments and are pleased that these agreements have been reached.
Ratification or rejection of those pension contracts is the next step. “06880” will report on those votes, when they are taken.
Joseph Oyebog Serves Tennis
Joseph Oyebog — former Davis Cup tennis player and Cameroon national champion — is a beloved local tennis coach.
The youngest of 6 children, he learned the sport using a racquet made of discarded wood, using tennis balls found in the tall grass outside a club in his home country.
Since 1999, while teaching tennis in the US, he has forged relationships between the Cameroon government, club owners and American supporters. His Oyebog Tennis Academy in Africa has taught tennis to thousands of youngsters. Twenty have earned college scholarships, or obtained coaching positions in the US and Europe.
Now a US citizen, Oyebog continues to help. For nearly 2 decades he has traveled between his homeland and his adopted nation. Nearly every penny he earns goes into his foundation.
His dream is to build a school around the tennis academy. He wants to hire teachers, and bring hope and jobs to children who grow up with very little.
Right now, the garages of 6 Westport families are filled with tennis gear and donations for children in Cameroon. But Oyebog’s OTA non-profit has run out of funds to ship the goods overseas.
Oyebog’s Westport friends hope to keep his dream alive. They’ve started a GoFundMe campaign.
They know there are many worthy causes that “06880” readers donate to.
But they also know that plenty of readers play tennis, and understand the power of sport to improve lives.
Game on!
(Click here for more information on the GoFundMe campaign, or to contribute.)
Posted in Local business, Organizations, People, Sports
Tagged Joseph Oyebog, Oyebog Tennis Academy
Police Union Sends SOS To Town
The Westport Police are always there for us.
But now, many officers fear, the town may not be there for them.
A member of the police union board tells “06880” that the department is in the midst of pension negotiations. He says they’re not going well.
The union member explains that when current officers joined the force, their contract called for them to pay 10% of their base salary into a pension fund. That’s among the highest in Connecticut.
In return, they were guaranteed retirement at half of their final salary with 20 years’ service — while being responsible for their own medical costs.
Pension benefits are calculated using only base salaries — no overtime.
A patrolman’s maximum salary is about $84,900. Police officers don’t receive Social Security; they stopped paying into it after a contract change many years ago.
Half of the base salary works out to roughly $42,000. But after paying 40% of medical benefits and taxes, he says, that’s hardly enough to live on here.
The current pension contract expired July 1, 2016. (A separate work contract has already been ratified.)
A number of the 64 officers on the force chafe at the town’s offer. “We work midnight shifts, weekends and holidays,” the officer says.
“We give up a lot of family time. Any traffic stop or emergency call could be our last. We can be sued civilly. Our life expectancy is less than people who are not police officers.”
They’ve made some concessions in negotiations — including raising the retirement age from 49 to 52.
But talks stalled. The union’s final offer was rejected by the town.
Now they’re in arbitration. Three people — one selected by the town, one by the police union, the third neutral — will rule on one offer or the other.
The union board member says that if citizens contact their RTM members and first selectman, the town has the option to pull out of arbitration.
He notes that Westport is in “great shape” financially. The grand list has increased 15.4% since 2010.
“The great school system, parks, beaches and attractions make Westport a desirable place to live,” he says. “But they come at a price. That price is your employees. Without dedicated and hard-working employees, none of the things that make Westport unique would hold true.
“People think there’s a golden parachute. The reality is very different. We just want what we were promised.”
The union board member believes that “the fair and most logical thing the town should do is leave the current employees’ benefit alone.”
The town will change new hires’ pensions. The half-pension, half-401k hybrid “will be in Westport’s pocket going forward,” he notes.
“We took this job with the expectation we’d have certain pension benefits at retirement,” he adds. “We see this as a slap in the face to people who provide tremendous service to the town.”
He concludes, “Whenever someone in Westport needs help, they call the police. Now the Westport police need your help. Contact your RTM member, or speak directly to the first selectmen. Let them know you care.”
Posted in Economy, Local politics, Police
Tagged police pension benefits, Westport Police Department, Westport police union
Jacob Meisel, Hurricane Irma And Bloomberg News
When Bloomberg wants accurate information they go to the best.
For the latest info on Hurricane Irma, that means Jacob Meisel.
The 2013 Staples High School grad — now chief meteorologist at Bespoke Investment Group — combined technical talk with layman’s terms, for this morning’s national audience.
He says Irma has “the perfect conditions to maintain incredible intensity.”
For the full video, click here.
(Hat tip: Jim Goodrich)
Posted in Media, People, Staples HS, Weather
Tagged Bespoke Investment Group, Bloomberg News, Hurricane Irma, Jacob Meisel
Unsung Hero #14
As a new school year begins, it’s appropriate that this week’s Unsung Hero is a former teacher.
Generations of Staples High School students revered Gerry Kuroghlian. For nearly 40 years, “Dr. K” — his doctorate was from the University of Illinois, with an undergrad degree from the University of Virginia — taught Westport teenagers how to write, how to think, and how to act.
His challenging classes like “Myth and Bible” were as demanding as college-level courses. But he never forgot that he was working with still-unformed boys and girls. His greatest delight came from helping mold them into active, concerned citizens of the world.
Kuroghlian was totally invested in the life of Staples. If there was a play, concert or athletic event, he was there.
He never missed an Eagle Scout ceremony, celebratory dinner or parent’s funeral either.
When Kuroghlian retired in 2008, some people wondered how he’d fill his days.
They needn’t have worried.
Kuroghlian quickly became one of Mercy Learning Center‘s most active volunteers.
He taught ESL at the heralded Bridgeport women’s literacy and life-skills center. His new students — women from Mexico, Bangladesh and all points in between — loved him.
He returned the admiration.
“These are heroic people,” Kuroghlian says admiringly. “They’re moms, housekeepers, breadwinners — they do it all. They’ve got multi-tasking down to a science.
Kuroghlian calls these women “the best students I’ve ever had. They get up, get their kids ready for school, catch a city bus, and arrive promptly by 9 a.m.
“No one is ever late. No one ever has not done the homework,” he says admiringly. “They’re motivated to learn, and they’re completely unafraid to ask questions if they don’t understand something. They’re amazing.”
After class, the women work on computers. They also go on field trips. When Kuroghlian took them to a library, they learned how to get library cards for their kids.
Kuroghlian is equally involved at Kolbe Cathedral High School. He spends most afternoons at the Bridgeport private school, as a tutor, SAT and ACT advisor, and college application essay guide. Thanks in part to his help, virtually every graduate for nearly a decade has gone on to college.
At Kolbe, Kuroghlian organizes cultural field trips to Fairfield University and New York City. Just as he did at Staples, he attends sports events, chaperones the prom, and continually shares his philosophy that it is the responsibility of each individual to make a difference.
He also arranged for over 1,000 books to be donated to the library.
In his spare time (!), Kuroghlian works with national education organizations, cancer and diabetes groups, the Westport Library and United Church of Christ.
Nearly 10 years after “retiring,” Dr. K. shows no signs of slowing down.
Why should he? He’s continuing the work he loves: Showing teenagers how to make their mark on the world, by doing it himself.
(To nominate an unsung hero, email dwoog@optonline.net. Hat tip: Lynn U. Miller)
Hurricane Harvey: Updated Most-Needed List
“06880” readers have reacted quickly to Adam Goldberg’s request for Hurricane Harvey help.
The Westporter is organizing a truckload of relief efforts for victims. He’s also donating the 30-foot truck itself, once it arrives in Texas.
Workers in Houston say that right now, the most needed items are:
- Backpacks filled with school supplies
- Toiletries (soap, toothpaste, shampoo, etc.)
- New underwear and socks (for all ages)
- Non-perishable foods
- Cleaning supplies and scrub brushes.
People who have already told Goldberg (adam.goldberg@aquafence.com) that they’ll bring clothing to the collection point (Imperial Avenue parking lot this Saturday, September 9, 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.) should still do so.
But, Goldberg says, the items above are desperately needed too.
He’s gratified by the response so far.
Including the lemonade stand he saw last weekend. Children used his flyer to solicit donations.
He has no idea who they were. But — like Goldberg, and many other Westporters — they were doing whatever they can to help.
Paul Newman’s $10 Million Watch
Paul Newman’s legacy lives on in many ways.
Locally, our longtime neighbor’s dedication to theater can be seen in the handsome Westport Country Playhouse, which he and his wife Joanne Woodward lovingly helped restore.
The 39-acre Newman-Poses Nature Preserve — accessible off Bayberry Lane, near his Coleytown Road property — is one of our town’s hidden gems.
Nationally, his Hole in the Wall Gang Camp offers joy to youngsters with life-threatening illnesses, and their families.
And the Newman’s Own Foundation — based right here in town — has given half a billion dollars to charitable organizations around the globe.
But now you can have a very personal piece of Paul Newman’s legacy.
His watch.
A Rolex Daytona owned by the actor/race car driver/philanthropist/popcorn and salad dressing king is “the Mona Lisa, perhaps the most famous timepiece in the world.”
At least, that’s what the New York Times says. And that’s not fake news.
The reason it’s so valuable, the paper says, is that “for decades, no one outside the Newman family seemed to know where it was.”
Now they do.
Next month, the “lost masterpiece” is “the centerpiece of a watch auction at Phillips in New York.”
It could fetch $10 million.
According to the Times, Newman’s first watches were as low-key as his “quiet life … in leafy Westport, Conn. (He drove) a Volkswagen Beetle (albeit with a Porsche engine), and (wore) a three-piece patchwork denim ensemble when circumstances forced him to dress up.”
In 1968, Woodward gave him a 6239 model. It was “distinctive and relatively rare, featuring an exotic dial containing a number of stylish design tweaks including, most notably, the Art Deco-style numerals on the subdials that any true watch connoisseur can spot from 10 paces.”
Apparently, Newman thought little of the gift. He “casually handed over the watch to James Cox, (his daughter) Nell’s college boyfriend at the time, one muggy summer afternoon in 1984.”
Cox was helping repair a treehouse on Newman’s property. The actor asked the time; Cox had no watch. Newman handed his over.
Cox wore it for nearly a decade, without thinking. In 1993, a Japanese man spotted it on his wrist. “Paul Newman watch!” the man said. He’d seen it on Newman’s wrist, in European fashion magazines.
The Times explains that “Newman, with his rugged good looks, no-nonsense air and, yes, really cool watch, (had become) a staple of style blogs and Pinterest boards, where the actor was hailed an all-American king of cool to rival Steve McQueen.”
But no one knew that for years the watch belonged to Newman’s daughter’s ex-boyfriend. In fact, 3 years ago, the watch site Hodinkee listed it as one of the 12 “Greatest Missing Watches” (alongside Pablo Picasso’s Jaeger-LeCoultre Triple Calendar, John Lennon’s Patek Philippe 2499 and Fidel Castro’s Rolex GMT-Master.)
Much later, Cox learned that his — that is, Newman’s — watch had its own Wikipedia page.
Now he’s decided to auction off the watch. He’ll give “a big portion” of the proceeds to the Nell Newman Foundation, which focuses on environmental issues.
Absentee bids have already come in.
Watch this space.
(To read the entire New York Times story, click here.)
Pic Of The Day #141
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Posted in Environment, Pic of the Day, Teenagers
Tagged Wakeman Town Farm













