Bike Westport Survey: We Want To Ride. We Fear For Our Lives.

Westporters want to ride bikes.

But they fear for their safety.

Those are 2 major takeaways from Bike Westport‘s first survey.

It’s an important snapshot. The non-profit — formed last year by Markus Marty and Peter Gold, with help from Adam Ganser — got responses from 1,596 residents last fall.

They expected to hear from families with young children. But the biggest group — 34% — have lived in Westport for over 2 decades. 46% do no have any children under 18 at home.

No matter their age, bike safety is a huge concern.

Marty — a filmmaker and photographer who grew up in Switzerland (where from age 4 on he biked everywhere), and spent 15 years in New York (where he rode somewhere every day of the year) — got the idea for the survey after moving here in 2020.

He knew exactly what was missing here — opportunities for safe biking — but, as a newcomer, was unsure if others shared his concerns.

With such a high response rate, Marty now knows he’s not alone.

Markus Marty bikes around town, with his children in a trailer.

Over half the respondents ride a bike. Of those who do, 40% ride more than once a week.

Among survey-takers’ biggest issues: distracted/aggressive drivers, Westport’s lack of bike lanes, and poor road conditions.

Marty thought the beach would be a major destination for bike riders. But people want to ride everywhere: downtown, to schools, the train station and many other spots.

While cyclists and drivers disagree on many things, Marty says, they do agree on one: the need for bike lanes. They make driving as well as biking safer.

Though he hears often that “roads are too narrow” for bike lanes, Marty notes that a recent study shows that narrower roadways actually save lives. They also come with environmental and economic benefits.

Asked for specific comments, survey-takers noted a wide range of complaints — some of them involving bikers themselves. For example:

  • “Lack of contiguous bike lanes (they suddenly stop, or you have to switch to the other side of the street).”
  • “Overly aggressive bike riders that ignore stop signs and lights, and seem to hunt in packs.”
  • “Drivers who feel it is acceptable to cross the yellow line to pass cyclists when they face oncoming traffic.”
  • “Kids who do not wear helmets.”
  • “Bikers that ride directly in front of cars for extended periods, or do not respect the boundaries of bike lanes.”
  • “No one signals anymore!”
  • “Westport does not need more bicycling infrastructure. Having more than is already here will only increase congestion, especially as most cyclists do not follow the rules of the road. “
  • “Just like in Europe, we need to make cycling a safe, fun alternative transport/leisure option. We have a small enough community to do this, and create an identity like a little Amsterdam.”
  • “Why are there no bike racks in Westport?”

There was a consensus that Westport should invest more in bicycle safety and infrastructure.

“We need representation that specifically supports the interests of all members of traffic,” Marty says.

“It feels as though most of the focus goes into making the town a safer place to drive. Riders and pedestrians are left out of the conversation.”

Beckett Lohs rides to school.

80% of survey takers were unaware of Westport’s federal grant of $450,000 to study safer streets.

Marty calls this “an incredible opportunity for this town to conduct a thorough audit of its road system, find ways to improve it, and have the potential of many more funds to do actual work).”

He wants Bike Westport to provide input. He is waiting for a status update on the grant from 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Public Works director Pete Ratkiewich.

In the meantime, Marty says, “we continue to imagine what a safe, walkable and rideable Westport would look like.”

Studies and plans have been made in the past. Most have been shelved.

“We want to get an overview of the best elements, what’s been done, and why those plans were not implemented, as well as study best practices in similar communities.”

(To view complete survey results, click here. To learn more about Bike Westport — including how to join and donate — click here.)

(“06880” regularly covers transportation issues — and everything else that goes round in Westport. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Grace Salmon Park (Photo/Patricia McMahon)

Pic Of The Day #2470

Compo Beach basketball courts (Photo/Andrew Colabella)

Westport Baseball: Move Ahead With Long Lots Now; Address Field Use Later

Westport Baseball & Softball has added its voice to the Long Lots Elementary School renovation debate. Chair Jeff White and president Jeff Brill say:

As expressed in our joint submission with Staples Baseball to the Long Lots Elementary School Building Committee on September 20, which was not then shared with Planning & Zoning, Westport Baseball & Softball — a volunteer-led non-profit organization — from the outset of the discussions regarding the future of LLES has sought only to maintain the status quo for the availability of a multipurpose field at Long Lots in any go-forward planning.

The land contiguous to LLS should continue to be blessed with athletic fields for youth use, much like the other Westport elementary schools.

We strongly encourage you to read this joint submission, and Westport Baseball’s more recent submission on January 17. They explain the need to retain a baseball field based on available resources and participation in Westport baseball programs. and our preference not to displace the Community Gardens.

Our request and recommendation had been very narrow and reasonable. We had previously asked that the LLESBC simply prepare plans in a revised 8-24 application that preserve the flexibility of including a full-size baseball field on the multipurpose field that would be shared with other sports, including girls’ sports.

There is no need to prescribe any specific usage (beyond youth athletics) of the field(s) years in advance of availability and further delay school construction.

Leaders of the various Westport sports programs can make their respective cases to the appropriate town constituencies to utilize the multiuse field down the road. P&Z does not require such specificity at this time, and the Long Lots students, teachers, administrators and community should not have to endure further delay.

Westport Baseball has never requested a full-size baseball field dedicated to baseball, much less a so-called “Babe Ruth” field. There is no such concept of a “Babe Ruth field,” unless one is referring to Yankee Stadium or Fenway Park where Ruth played. This became a cute phrase used pejoratively by opposition groups throughout the December 17th P&Z meeting and in subsequent propaganda.

Our desired multipurpose field includes a 60/90 foot infield that is easily designed to fit within 2-3 acres that would permit up to 8 Westport town youth teams (not special interest or for-profit travel organizations), including the Staples freshman team, to play thereon.

Baseball field experts remain available to discuss with the LLESBC how to configure the space to accommodate a full-size baseball field within the multipurpose field. We want to work collaboratively with the LLESBC and P&Z to develop a solution that serves multiple youth sports. We continue to respectfully request an opportunity to exchange ideas and share expertise.

The current 8-24 proposal calls for a “multipurpose” field south of a new Long Lots Elementary School.

There is not one full-size field in Westport that is dedicated exclusively to baseball for players ages 13 and older, unlike in other towns. Wakeman and even the Staples baseball field are mixed use fields.

We echo the real concerns raised by Parks & Rec, the Westport Soccer Association and PAL regarding field stress of Westport’s heavily used grass fields.

It is already very challenging for Parks and Recreation to schedule practices and home games across programs. Reducing field space for baseball has a domino effect, reducing availability of fields for other sports given the shared fields. P&Z has repeatedly referenced concern regarding “intensification of use” of land. Eliminating this baseball field exacerbates this issue.

Opponents of a baseball field referenced outdated enrollment figures for older players and field utilization by such players. Those players unfortunately will never have the opportunity to play on a new field at LLES. It is the wrong data set.

Current numbers of players on a particular team does not augur future seasons’ participation numbers; the numbers fluctuate for a variety of reasons, including the recent rise in student population.

Young Westport baseball players greet their Staples High School heroes.

Westport Baseball has been asked why it has not been more vocal and active in the ongoing debate regarding the use of the LLES field space. Our only formal action prior to a call last week with chair Paul Lebowitz and submission of our request was to send the joint submission and commenting via our leaders at public meetings.

We have remained quiet and cordial in our limited interactions, and have neither lobbied nor partnered with other organizations, as we sought neither to delay the commencement of school construction nor to further polarize and inflame the discourse.

We have only recently learned that we have apparently been penalized for being good sports and remaining on the sidelines. Westport Baseball and our baseball community is the only organization/populace that has been deprived of any accommodation as a result of bifurcation and the modified 8-24 application.

The informed Westport Baseball community was incredulous to learn that in the letter accompanying the 8-24 application, baseball (and no other activity) has been inexplicably singled out and expressly excluded.

Prohibitions on use of or access to a public field via restrictive covenant are seldomly imposed except when serving to protect the public.

We are not aware of any similar express restriction on a field in Westport. No sport should be identified as a prohibited utilization of the field(s) at this time.

It is our understanding that P&Z has required an express prohibition on baseball in order to approve the then forthcoming 8-24 application. The decision was not ripe and evidences a lack of due process, fair consideration and foresight.

We respectfully request that P&Z acknowledge at the meeting on January 22 that baseball is not a prohibited use of the field(s) at LLS or the deletion of this arbitrary prohibition from the letter. That is our only request at this time.

As explained in our January 18 statement, there is no need to prescribe any specific athletic use or purpose for the field(s). That is what “multipurpose” has been intended to contemplate and represents a compromise.

Westport Baseball and other youth sports organizations can advocate for Long Lots field use at the planning phase without causing any further delay in the construction of the school.

Roundup: “06880” Comments, La Plage …

Good news!

Our “please be civil” Comments policy has been followed decently (though not perfectly) so far.

Moving forward, the maximum number of comments allowed for each reader on a thread will be raised from 3 to 5.

Thanks for commenting. And, as always: Please use your full, real name. Deleting anonymous comments is really, really annoying.

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Starting last night, and running every Sunday this winter, La Plage offers a Locals Night Menu.

The prix fixe offering includes a family-style chef’s selection appetizer, entrée (a pinsa. Scottish salmon, fish and chips, homemade squid ink fettuccine, fried chicken or burger) and drink for $39.

The Sunday night kids’ menu has also been upgraded. For details, click here

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Westport resident David Meth’s play, “To the Death of My Own Family,” has won another grant from Artists Respond from the Connecticut Office of the Arts for Equity and Racial Justice.

Meth calls it “an intensely dramatic nonlinear play about an Afghan-American woman who returns to Afghanistan to help her father escape, only to witness the carnage of her entire family. Upon her return to the US she is detained, interrogated, and forced to justify her journey in order to reclaim her citizenship.

“We then learn about a deeper, darker secret that has shadowed the family for many years, but which they do not want to confront until they are forced to confront each other in the face of death.

With the grant, Meth will seek an opportunity to create a playwriting workshop for high school and college students. Click here for more information.

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These icicles are a “Westport … Naturally” reminder of the fragile beauty that surrounds us, in even the most ordinary places.

(Photo/Judith Marks-White)

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And finally …

Mary Weiss, the leader of the “Leader of the Pack” bad-girl group The Shangri-Las, died last week. She was 75.

Her Los Angeles Times obituary says: “They were poor white teens from New York City, occasionally singing with pronounced Queens accents and always performing with a stylish swagger….

“Though their time in the spotlight lasted a little under two years, the Shangri-Las created an enduring rock ‘n’ roll archetype: Girls who were every bit as strong and sexy as their doomed boyfriends, boys who were ‘good bad’ but ‘not evil,’ as Weiss said on ‘Give Him a Great Big Kiss.’

“This attitude and the group’s heightened music — equal parts operatic pop and exuberant R&B — proved influential, particularly on the punks of New York City in the 1970s.

“Blondie covered their ‘Out in the Streets’; the New York Dolls swiped the spoken intro from ‘Give Him a Great Big Kiss’ for their ‘Looking for a Kiss,’ then hired Morton as the producer for their second album, setting the stage for Aerosmith covering ‘Remember (Walking in the Sand) during the height of punk.”

In 2019, “Leader of the Pack” was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

LOCAL ANGLEIn the mid-’60s, the Shangri-Las performed downstairs at the Terpsichore — the Ice Cream Parlor’s (very) short-lived discotheque. I was about 13 years old, but somehow I managed to see them there.

(Click here for the full obituary. Hat tip: Michael Taylor)

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RTM’s Long Range Committee Plans Ahead

Climate change is real.

What will Westport do about it?

The Parks & Recreation Department is thinking about beach erosion, resulting from sea level rise.

Public Works looks at infrastructure.

The Planning & Zoning Commission considers new land use regulations, perhaps regarding tree coverage and flood mitigation.

Flooding is on the rise in Westport. This was the scene earlier this month, at Parker Harding Plaza.

But is there a comprehensive, proactive approach?

Peter Gold thinks there could be.

He chairs the Representative Town Meeting’s Long Range Planning Committee.  Their job, he says, is to look at where Westport will be in 10 or 20 years. They examine potential scenarios, address concerns, and come up with plans to mitigate or prepare for the risks.

Theirs is a broader approach than just one department or organization, like Sustainable Westport, Earthplace or Harbor Watch, says Gold.

This month, former Conservation Department director Alicia Mozian spoke to the RTM committee. Her discussion ranged from FEMA requirements and flood insurance, to tax incentives for energy efficiency and town acquisition of land that may become prone to flooding.

The RTM’s Long Range Planning Committee looks at a variety of regulations — from national FEMA-level to local ordinances — to address climate change. Many homes near Compo Beach have already been raised.

On February 1 (7:30 p.m., Town Hall), land use consultant Gloria Gouveia will meet with the Long Range members.

In another role — head of the Westport Transit District — Gold has learned that changing people’s behavior is hard. He works every day to get residents to embrace transportation alternatives.

But, he notes, Westport’s goal to be net-zero by 2050 is just 26 years away.

“Unless we take steps now, we won’t get there,” Gold says. “This is not about thinking ‘down the road.’ Things must be done now, if we’re going to get there.”

And — as part of the town’s legislative branch — he wants his committee to help move Westport’s long range planning forward.

Pic Of The Day #2469

Compo Beach South Beach sunset (Photo/Patricia McMahon)

Photo Challenge #473

Here’s how tough last week’s Photo Challenge was: Even Andrew Colabella was wrong.

The RTM member and native Westporter — who is almost always the first reader to respond to even the most obscure weekly image — was one of the 11 folks who very quickly and quite assuredly said that the flag flying high above a building with concrete molding was the site (until a couple of weeks ago) of Patagonia.

Many of those 11 also referred to it by its original business: Westport Bank & Trust.

Close — geographically — but nope.

Ed Simek’s photo showed the flag atop the original Westport Library, on the corner of the Post Road and Main Street (now part vacant, part Bond Vet, part Starbucks). Click here to see.

Those first readers were so sure of themselves, I had to call Ed to confirm that it really was the old Library, and not the (now old) Patagonia.

Eventually, Mary Ann Batsell and Seth Braunstein checked in with the right answer.

Phew!

Today, we’ll give you a break. This week’s Photo Challenge should be much easier. If you know where in Westport you’d see this, click “Comments” below.

And if you don’t know, just ask Andrew Colabella.

(Photo/Seth Schachter)

(Thanks for playing our weekly game. If you enjoy this feature — or anything else on this hyper-local blog — please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: State Of The Town, Playground Renovation, Joe Tacopina …

If it’s mid-winter, it must be time for the “State of the Town” forum.

The annual event — featuring 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein — is Sunday, February 4 (2 to 3:30 p.m., Westport Library; click here for livestream).

As always, it’s a co-production of Westport Sunrise Rotary, and the Rotary Club of Westport.

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein.

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Leaders of the 1989 and 2006 Compo Beach playground committees joined leaders of the 2024 committee yesterday at Bedford Middle School, to show their support for  the proposed design improvements to Westport’s most popular playground.

Among the attendees: former 1st Selectman Jim Marpe, Parks & Recreation Commission chair David Floyd, Parks & Recreation Department director Jen Fava, Representative Town Meeting member Julie Whamond, architect Lisa Deshano of Play by Design, and members of the public, from young parents to grandparents.

Westport Rotary Club’s centennial gift to the own is serving as lead sponsor for renovations of the playground. Fifty members of the public participated yesterday, offering suggestions to make the playground more accessible, more open, more code compliant and more suitable for the next generation of Westport youngsters.

This renovation marks the third time Westport Rotary has partnered with the Westport Young Woman’s League to build and enhance the playground.

Participants in yesterday’s Compo Beach playground renovation meeting (from left): Alison Reilly, Suzanne Dodge, Rick Benson, Totney Benson, Bridget Flynn, RB Benson, Samantha Owades, Josh Sterling (and son), Alex Cohen. RB and Samantha were 4 and 3 years old, respectively, when their parents worked together on the 1989 playground. 

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Tickets are on sale for the 4th annual Fashionably Westport runway show. Presented by the Westport Downtown Association, it features styles from dozens of Westport merchants and salons. Models — local friends and celebrities — walk a raised runway in the Trefz Forum. The night includes music, cocktails and light bites.

A portion of the proceeds benefit Homes with Hope, the local non-profit dedicated to ending homelessness in Fairfield County. Enjoy a social night of fashion, music, cocktails and light bites.

Click here for tickets, and more information.

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Why did Joe Tacopina leave Donald Trump’s legal team?

In what he said was his only interview on the subject, the Westport attorney told MSNBC’s Rev. Al Sharpton yesterday: “It was just my time. I had to follow my compass. My compass told me it was my time there was done. There are a lot of personal reasons that went into that. Things that I can’t and won’t discuss.”

Click below for a longer clip.

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Medieval music through a sacred lens comes to Christ & Holy Trinity Episcopal Church on February 3 (5 p.m.).

Eya — lauded as “remarkable” and “gorgeous” by The Washington Post —has been featured on Voice of America and NPR.

Their concert by candlelight will reflect the themes of flame and light that characterize St. Brigid’s feast day on February 1 and Candlemas on February 2.

Eya will be accompanied on clársach (wire-stringed harp), with additional support from Brigid’s Circle, a volunteer women’s treble singer ensemble formed for this performance.

A workshop for the Brigid’s Circle singers will be held for experienced choral singers the evening before, and be part of the performance if desired. For more information, email vshields@chtwestport.org.

For tickets and more information, click here.

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Three Westport Suzuki Music School students have earned honors.

Rohan Gowthaman finished first at the 11th Festival Audition, sponsored by Connecticut State Music Teachers Association’s Fairfield Chapter.

Zachary Feuer auditioned for and won a place at the Connecticut Music Educators Association’s Regional Festival on violin.

Kirthana Gowthaman took second at inthe Crescendo Music Competition, earning a chance to play at Carnegie Hall.

Rohan and Kirthana Gowthaman.

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The Weston History & Culture Center celebrates Black History Month and Women’s History Month with historian/storyteller Tammy Denease.

She’ll portray Bessie Coleman, America’s first African-American female aviator, during an educational and entertaining performance March 2 (3 p.m.).

Click here for tickets ($5 adults, $3 children).

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It took a while, but Jay Babina finally got the “Westport … Naturally” photo he wanted yesterday, near the Library:

(Photo/Jay Babina)

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And finally … speaking of Fashionably Westport (above): Hey, it’s not just the women who are models!

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Inside Edgemarth Hill

Scott Smith has been fascinated by what he calls “the ramshackle architectural folly” on Edgemarth Hill Road for 20 years. He writes:

Today I drove by to see 2 guys hauling away all the wood and trash that had collected on the property for decades.

I asked if it was a complete teardown. One fellow said, “Yeah – wanna take a look inside?”

You bet I did.

I’m sure there are treasures inside among all the mess, but it will all go to landfill. I think the house sold a year ago or so, and as it’s 3 acres, no doubt a magnificent new home will rise in its place. Imagine the stories and the history in this old house.

(Photos/Scott Smith)

Pics Of The Day #2468

Gray’s Creek, from the Longshore exit road …

… and the nearby Revolutionary War cemetery (Photo/John Richers)