Posted onApril 22, 2025|Comments Off on Parks & Rec Update: Master Plan Meeting On Thursday; Goosinator Arrives In May
It’s been just 2 months since Erik Barbieri took the reins as Parks & Recreation Department director.
He’s met the stakeholders. He’s toured the town’s many facilities, and learned about programs, policies and procedures.
Now he’s ready to act.
But Barbieri also knows that residents’ input is important.
He looks forward to this Thursday’s Parks Master Plan workshop. At 6:30 p.m. on April 24, in the Town Hall auditorium, Westporters can weigh in on the future of our beaches, parks, athletic fields and other facilities.
The Parks & Recreation Department Master Plan includes ideas for Wakeman Fields, along with other athletic facilities and town parks. (Drone photo/David Pogue)
Residents can meet the architectural engineering firm working on the plan, learn more about the process, and offer feedback. There will be opportunities for small group discussions too.
The presentation will be available within a week, on the Parks & Recreation Department website. Additional workshops will be held in the summer and fall.
(Longshore is not part of this event. The 180-acre park has its own separate Master Plan.)
Parks & Recreation director Erik Barbieri. (Photo/Dan Woog)
Meanwhile, Barbieri is working with 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and the Parks & Recreation Commission to prioritize all department projects.
One of his first moves may prove to be one of his most popular.
Except among Canada geese.
His department recently bought a Goosinator. It is a highly effective way of forcing the obnoxious (but federally protected) species to move on.
With big eyes, a tail and the coloring of a fox, the remote-controlled device emulates a goose predator in the wild. When employees get a report of a goose gathering, they employ the Goosinator.
Planning their next poop (Photo/Marcia Falk)
“Geese do not like it!” Barbieri says.
He adds that in New Britain, where he previously served as Parks & Rec director, merely taking the Goosinator out of a vehicle caused some geese to flee.
“They’re out of control,” Barbieri says of the Canada geese. “They poop all over the beach and fields. But it’s not just unsightly. Their poop is bad.” It contains bacteria like E. coli and salmonella, along with parasites.
The Goosinator will be delivered in May.
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Comments Off on Parks & Rec Update: Master Plan Meeting On Thursday; Goosinator Arrives In May
I am in tears for our loss of Judge Alan Nevas. I did not know him well, and yet Alan has been a constant positive presence in my life for most of my 67 years, ever since my parents moved to Westport in 1959 when I was 2 years old.
My father, Jerry Davidoff (1926-2009), was 2 years older than Alan. From the moment my dad set up a law office on Church Lane in downtown Westport in 1959 he had a deep respect, admiration and collegial attitude about Alan Nevas.
Back during the 1960s there were only about 30 attorneys in Westport. They all knew each other. Dad talked about his colleagues often at the dinner table, so we learned about people like Ned Dimes, Steve Tate, Ed Capasse, Larry Weisman and Alan Nevas.
I think Alan and my father had a similar approach to the practice of law in Westport. They were also politically competitive. Alan was a Republican at a time when Republicans ran things in Westport, and Dad was a Democrat working to win elections whenever possible. They liked each other a lot, and I think they stayed out of each other‘s way in politics.
Alan Nevas
Dad ran for the Connecticut House of Representatives and lost. He later served on the Westport Board of Education and Representative Town Meeting. Alan won local elections. He served on the Board of Finance, and represented Westport in the Connecticut House of Representatives.
Since Dad has been dead for 16 years, I don’t think there’s any harm in reporting for posterity that he tried a couple of times to secure a state judgeship during the years that Democrats ran things at the State Capitol. Dad did not succeed in this dream — a disappointment.
But Alan succeeded in the same pursuit. He served his state and his nation as the US attorney for Connecticut, and then as a federal judge. Every single one of us is better off for Alan‘s contribution to jurisprudence in Connecticut and the nation.
That’s not me talking. That’s my father Jerry talking through me, to remember his friend.
Jerry Davidoff and his wife Denny. (Photo/copyright Nancy Pierce)
For me, one episode stands out. About 7 years ago, when I began researching my family history on Ancestry.com, I found a news clipping from the Westport correspondent for the Bridgeport Post-Telegram providing a report on the spring 1969 Vietnam War protest in Westport. This was a day of events, when people gathered together to protest our government’s war in Southeast Asia.
I was a student at Long Lots Junior High School. Students at Staples High School secured permission from the principal and superintendent to march from Staples to the afternoon protest in downtown Westport, at the corner of State Street (Post Road East) and Main Street.
No such permission was granted to junior high school students. But there were hundreds of like-minded junior high school students, so just before the event the principals and the superintendent acquiesced and sanctioned marches to downtown by students from Long Lots, Coleytown and Bedford Junior Highs.
In splendid weather we converged on downtown, where many hundreds of adults also gathered. From the steps of the old YMCA (now Anthropologie), there were speakers arrayed against the war. A keynote address was given by a member of Congress, recruited to come to Westport to speak against the war.
A view from the steps of the YMCA (now Anthropologie) of the Vietnam protest downtown. Photo/Adrian Hlynka)
That night, in what became one of my strongest memories growing up in Westport, about 500 townspeople crowded into the sanctuary at The Unitarian Church in Westport for a candlelight vigil. The names of 500 Connecticut military war dead were read aloud.
After each small batch of names was read aloud in the darkened sanctuary, another row of townspeople in the pews was invited to light their candles. Slowly, the sanctuary became illuminated by candlelight. Paul Newman spoke, and we all know how rare it was for Paul Newman to speak publicly in Westport.
What I learned only recently from that newspaper clipping is that this day of townwide protest and prayer was the deep planning work of Alan Nevas and my father, along with a strong group of lawyers, physicians and clergy in the town.
They organized the program for the protest downtown. They organized the vigil that night. They were from the tight-knit group of local professional leaders in Westport — people like Drs. Jack Schiller and Paul Beres; clergy like the Revs. Ed Lane of the Unitarian Church, Ted Hoskins of the Saugatuck Congregational Church and Rabbi Byron T. Rubenstein of Temple Israel — and attorneys like Alan Nevas and my dad.
When I came across these names in the Bridgeport paper, none meant more to me than to see that Alan Nevas had collaborated with my dad on this effort.
Alan Nevas (Photo courtesy of WestportNow)
If he were alive today at age 99, my dad would be weeping for the loss of his friend, his admired colleague for 4 decades in the practice of law and service to clients and to justice in Westport and Connecticut, a man aligned with the opposite party but so closely aligned with my dad in core values and mutual respect for the law, and for the town and its citizens whom they both loved with so much heart.
Alan Nevas was a pillar of our community. As I said much earlier, I did not know him well but he was such a treasured friend and colleague for my dad that it is hard to describe what a strong presence Alan was nonetheless for me.
My prayers today and during services tomorrow are for the Nevas family, and for the cause of justice in Westport, in Connecticut, and in the federal courts of the United States, now and forever more.
Posted onApril 21, 2025|Comments Off on Student Power: Youth Commission Seeks Members
Danya Herman writes: “Margaret Mead said, ‘Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.’
“As a sophomore at Greens Farms Academy who had recently moved from New York City to Westport, I never imaged I could have a voice in the governing of our town. That is, until I heard about the Westport Youth Commission.
“After attending my first general meeting and then, through getting involved in projects and sharing my voice, moving up the ranks to now be on the executive committee my junior year, I’ve seen how this quote defines the work we do.
“We are not just a group of students and adults; we are a rising tide, shaping the shores of our community bit by bit with every idea, conversation, and event.
“Whether through Dodge-A-Cop, where laughter and friendly competition fill the Staples fieldhouse and relationships are built one dodgeball throw at a time, or the iMentor Internet Safety Program, where we become guiding stars for elementary and middle school students navigating the vast digital and social sky, our work proves that youth are not just the future; we are the present.
Police and Staples students, before a Dodge-a-Cop dodgeball event.
“I love being part of the Westport Youth Commission because together, we are not just waiting for a better town. We are helping create it.”
Westport Youth Commission applications for the 2025-26 school year are available now. They’re looking for 9th-12th graders interested in discussing youth issues each month, while making a difference in the community.
The WYC includes 15 high school students and 15 adults), all recommended by the Board Development Committee and appointed by the First Selectwoman.
The application deadline is May 2. Click here for an application form, and more information.
A student discount program is another Youth Commission initiative.
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Eric Freeman is a partner in a real estate investment firm. He and his wife are raising young sons. A former viola player, he sits on the board of the Norwalk Symphony Orchestra.
That’s the organization that, for over 20 years, has provided educational opportunities — and much more — to young men of color, from communities less advantaged than Westport. It’s one of our town’s crown (and underpublicized) jewels.
A few days before ABC’s big fundraiser, the Dream Event — it’s Saturday, April 26 — Eric and I chatted for the “06880” podcast. Click below to learn more.
Just a few days after Passover, the Israeli flag that hung outside Mark Scheck’s house was torn down .
All that remains of the flag.
Mark says 2 new flags will go back up. Along with a security camera.
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Another day, another rescue by Peter Reid.
Julie Loparo sends this latest story, about Westport’s animal control officer:
“At a time when local wildlife are dealing with the effect of habitat destruction due to rampant and unchecked clear cutting of trees and demolition of green space, it is not surprising that our wildlife mothers need to think outside of the box for safe lodging.
“Last week Peter (who wears another hat as intake director for Wildlife in Crisis) received a call from a resident. She calmly said there was an opossum residing in her home.
“Officer Reid responded quickly. He found the opossum — a mother with a full pouch of babies — taking a respite in the home owner’s cat tree.
“Officer Reid safely and humanely moved entire cat tree outside, and placed water and opossum nutrition near it.
“By the next morning, the mother opossum had found a new — hopefully safe — spot for shelter.
“We thank the local resident for not panicking, and instead of calling a ‘pest control’ service, contacting Animal Control Officer Reid. We also thank him too, for once again providing another wildlife rescue.
“Of course, we would be remiss not to thank our friend the opossum, who single-handedly (or single-pawedly) can devour 5,000 ticks a year, while acting as a natural pest controller in our yarda.
“Like mother opossum, we humans have to think outside the box sometimes, to live peacefully and humanely with our wildlife friends.”
Two follow-ups to yesterday’s Roundup item on the striking art print recently posted on the Compo Beach lifeguard shack.
Stacy Bass reports that the artist is Julie Headland.
It’s part of the Westporter’s “I’m Fine” project. Julie explains on her website:
“In early 2020 the world was succumbing to a pandemic, and my husband was diagnosed with a terminal illness. Friends and neighbors continually checked in and kindly asked: ‘How are you?’
“I was numb, and typically answered: ‘I’m fine.”
“One day as the words left my mouth, I had an epiphany. My world was collapsing, but the brave little girl inside knew she must overcome and survive.
“Thus, the I’M FINE Project was born. The little girl in each piece inspires us to take heart and overcome the world.
“In time these playful parodies gave rise to both public and private comments by strangers expressing their own personal struggles. That is when I realized the I’M FINE Project was also a way to amuse and encourage others who were suffering.
“I am deeply aware of the pain and struggle in the world, and I do not wish to make light of suffering. But I have an optimistic aesthetic, which I am keen to convey with as much wit and whimsy as I can muster.”
Meanwhile, evidence that Headland’s work is truly Westport-based comes from a close-up photo, of the larger work.
Matt Murray’s image shows clearly something many viewers may have missed:
(Photo/Matt Murray)
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Speaking of Compo Beach: A new memorial there honors Max Harper. The Staples High School senior died in September.
Visitors to the stone — located near the cannons, not far from where a memorial service drew hundreds of classmates and friends last fall — have left rocks, flowers, a baseball hat and more, as tributes.
(Photo/Pam Docters)
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Speaking still of Compo: There are plenty of less permanent sights on and offshore, too.
You might see a proposal or wedding. A pop-up water polo practice. Rupert Murdoch’s old yacht.
And, this past weekend, a guy shucking oysters for 2 women, at a working bar.
Lynda Bluestein’s legendary life has been captured in a documentary.
“Other Side” tells the story of the last months of her life. The longtime Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport member won a landmark legal case allowing her, as an out-of-state resident to take advantage of Vermont’s medical aid in dying law.
The film will be shown at the Westport Library on June 29 (1:30 p.m.). Seating is limited. Click here to register.
Pam Docters offers today’s “Westport … Naturally” image from Compo Road South, near Longshore, and writes: “While big bursts of color from the cherry trees, dogwoods and forsythias grab all the attention, I love the smaller flowers in all their glory.”
And finally … I had never heard of Mac Gayden before yesterday.
But the musician — who died on Wednesday in Nashville at 83, from complications of Parkinson’s — had an intriguing resume.
He co-wrote “Everlasting Love” — a Top 40 hit in 4 straight decades — and played guitar on Bob Dylan’s “Absolutely Sweet Marie.” Click here for his obituary.
(Please click here to support “06880” with a tax-deductible contribution. You’ll absolutely have our everlasting love. Thank you!)
A few years earlier she started a memory garden on her property, in honor of loved ones lost.
Daffodils were among the first to bloom, each spring. The yellow bulbs are beautiful — and a welcome sign that new life everywhere is about to explode.
Debra already had hundreds of the flowers. She knew and loved Willowbrook Cemetery’s display on Main Street too.
But she wanted to see thousands more, all over town. And fall was the right time to plant them.
She started a campaign, called “Paint the Town Yellow.” With support from “06880,” she asked residents, business owners and town officials to participate.
They did — in spades.
Every spring since, Westport has been awash in daffodils. Seeing them on roadsides, in front of businesses, and nearly everywhere else, we can’t help but smile.
Debra does too. And she thinks of her memory garden.
Last September, when Staples High School senior Max Harper died, Debra suggested that daffodils be planted in his memory.
Half a year later, we see the fruits of their labors. New daffodils are joining older perennials, to the joy of us all.
Near the Longshore golf course 1st tee.
In front of the Parks & Recreation office, also at Longshore.
Grace Salmon Park …
… and nearby, on Compo Road South.
North Avenue, across from Staples. (Photo/Jennifer Kobetitsch)
One view of Willowbrook Cemetery, off Main Street … (Photo/Claudia Sherwood Servidio)
(As Debra Kandrak and many others paint the town yellow, please click here to send some green to “06880.” Your donation helps us spring ahead, in our daily coverage of Westport. Thank you!)
Judge Alan Nevas — member of a prominent Westport family, a towering presence in Connecticut legal circles for over half a century, and a 3-term member of the state House of Representatives — died yesterday at his home here surrounded by his family, after a brief struggle with lymphoma. He was 97.
Nevas was born in Norwalk. He was a 1945 graduate of Stamford High School, and was later inducted into its Hall of Fame.
He received a BA from Syracuse University in 1949, and a Bachelor of Laws from New York University School 2 years later.
He was in private practice in Westport from 1951 to 1981, except for 3 years in the Army as a sergeant first class (1952 to ’54).
Judge Alan Nevas
Inspired by a visit to Westport by Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. in the summer of 1964, Nevas traveled to Mississippi to represent, pro bono, civil rights activists who had been arrested.
He was elected to the Westport Board of Finance, serving one term as chair. He was elected 3 times to the Connecticut House of Representatives. He served from 1971 to 1977, including 2 terms as a deputy leader.
Nevas was also a justice of the peace in Westport from 1976 to 1981. He served on the boards of numerous organizations that were important to him, including Norwalk Hospital and the Jewish Home for the Elderly in Fairfield.
In 1981, President Reagan appointed Nevas as US Attorney for the District of Connecticut. He served until 1985, when Reagan named him to the US District Court for the District of Connecticut.
After confirmation by the US Senate he served until his retirement in 2009, having assumed senior status in 1997. During his tenure, his colleagues elected him as president of the Federal Judges Association.
Following retirement from the federal bench, Judge Nevas once again entered private practice, primarily as a highly sought after arbitrator and mediator.
Connecticut Governor Jodi Rell selected him to chair the state’s investigation into causes of the deadly 2010 explosion at the Kleen Energy power plant in Middletown, and to chair the committee that allocated $7.7 million in funds to families impacted by the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown.
Judge Nevas was a lifelong fan of the New York Giants, through good and mostly bad times. He and his wife Janet were world travelers, visiting all 7 continents. They enjoyed socializing with their many friends, trips to Manhattan for dining and culture, and summers on Martha’s Vineyard with their extended family.
In 2021, at 93, he was the oldest runner among nearly 1,200 in the traditional Chilmark Road Race on Martha’s Vineyard. He completed the hilly 3.1-mile course, in hot weather, in 1:08.37.6.
Judge Alan Nevas (Photo courtesy of WestportNow)
Nevas was married to Janet for nearly 66 years. They met in 1958 when he saw her across the room at a resort in New Hampshire, and asked her to dance.
She survives him, as do their children, Andrew (Jodie) Nevas of Westport, Debra Nevas (Jonathan Abrams) of Short Hills, New Jersey, and Nathaniel (Leslie Radel) of Wilton. He is also survived by grandchildren Zachary, Chloe, Maxwell and Adam Nevas, and Alexa and Seth Abrams; sister Dorothy Freedman of Westport, sister-in-law Judith Broudy; nieces and nephews Janet Freedman, Susan Filan, Ellen Wilner, Joshua Broudy and Matthew Broudy, and numerous cousins. He was predeceased by his brothers-in-law Charles Broudy and Frederick Freedman.
Funeral services will take place at Temple Israel on Tuesday (April 22, 10 a.m. (livestreamed at tiwestport.org), followed by burial at the Independent Hebrew Cemetery in Norwalk. For more information and to share a condolence message, click here.
Not all of them fly from nautical-looking masts, though.
One that does is at Sconset Square. I guess the “sea” theme comes from its Nantucket-sounding name, a replacement for the original Sherwood Square (which honored one of Westport’s more notable seafaring families, who may or may not have once sailed to Sconset).
Morley Boyd, Andrew Colabella, Tom Feeley and Sal Liccione were the readers who got last week’s Photo Challenge — a shot of that flag — correct. (Click here to see.)
Morley and Sal live nearby. They see it every day.
Andrew is everywhere in Westport. He sees it every day too, I’m sure.
Tom Feeley lives in Florida. But he knows his onions. And his Sherwoods, and Sconsets.
Congratulations to all.
Here is today’s Photo Challenge. If you know where in Westport you’d see this, click “Comments” below.
(Photo/Ed Simek)
(Every Sunday, “06880” hosts this Photo Challenge. We challenge you too to support your hyper-local blog. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)
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