[OPINION] New Homes Should Be Sustainable, Biodiverse

Scott Smith is an alert “06880” reader, a longtime Westporter and an ardent environmentalist. He writes:

As the owner of a modest Westport home that will surely be torn down once I’m gone, I’ve long read with interest stories about the fate of similar properties around town.

It’s sad to see photos showing strips of yellow police tape and a demolition notice in front of the excavator doing its business – erasing a house that surely held generations of good memories.

Sadder still is to read of all the mature trees cut down and old growth obliterated, often with clear-cut efficiency, to make way for the new McMansion to come.

New construction, on Ferry Lane East.

That’s progress, I guess. Trees are a renewable resource, and I’m sure a new family will be making happy memories in their shiny new home, with its upsized square footage and tax roll valuation. Good for them – and for helping keep our Grand List mill rate enviably low.

But here’s what strikes me about these spanking new trophy homes: After spending 2 or 3 million dollars on the house itself, why are these new homeowners content with a cheapo landscape design that typically consists of a puny row of boxwood shrubs along a Belgian-brick pathway to the door, and a yard of wall-to-wall sod?

These cookie-cutter plots are not just aesthetic wastelands. They are also effectively sterile environments that do nothing to help preserve and perpetuate native plants and wildlife.

So, while I don’t wish to add to the town-wide rules about how to renovate a private property for future use, I suggest the town be more proactive in encouraging developers and new homeowners to have a landscaping plan that emphasizes planting more native shrubs, trees and perennial flowers, rather than a lawn of monoculture grass and a few foreign ornamentals.

A more thoughtful, sustainable approach to landscaping would protect threatened populations of local birds and pollinators, and more of the native plants and animals we like to see. It could also reduce the ruinous amount of toxic pesticides and synthetic fertilizers needed to keep these mow-and-blow yards manicured, but which poison the ground and pollute our waterways.

Fortunately, there are many resources to help enhance both property values and our shared natural habitat.

Westport’s Pollinator Pathways, a collaborative effort by Wakeman Town Farm, Earthplace, the Westport Garden Club and others, encourages public and private properties to restore or create pesticide-free plant habitats for pollinating insects and wildlife to rest, eat and breed.

Grown close enough together (native bees have a range of about 800 yards) and near larger parks and preserves, pollinator pathways aim to “defragment” the urban/suburban environment so it can support sustainable populations of wildlife.

Aspetuck Land Trust has its own Green Corridor initiative, which invites area gardeners to plant native, switch to organic or zero-emissions lawn care services, and stop using pesticides.

That seems to me a worthwhile goal that all homeowners, new and old, should rally behind.

The passions generated by the besieged community gardeners at Long Lots testify to a strong desire to preserve and protect our existing greenscape.

So too do the efforts of those who spread daffodils throughout the town. Those fetching blossoms each spring — even if native pollinators or even deer want nothing to do with them — are a further sign that Westporters value a collective effort to both beautify and enhance our natural landscape.

Let’s urge the area’s developers and landscapers to join in creating a more sustainable, biodiverse community, starting with the clean slate that comes with each new Westport home.

(“06880” welcomes opinion pieces — along with everything else we post. To support our hyperlocal work, please click here. Thank you!)

Pics Of The Day #2464

Winslow Park, in today’s snow … (Photo/Patricia McMahon)

… and an early morning Cross Highway view (Photo/Claudia Sherwood Servidio)

Most people just shoveled the snow. Jerry Kuyper made art out of it. (Photo/Jerry Kuyper)

Tonight’s South Beach sunset (Photo/JD Dworkow)

Compo Road South Closed

After all the wind and rain of the past 10 days, it took just a bit of snow to topple a large tree on Compo Road South, near the entrance to Baron’s South and Park Lane.

The road — a major route off the Post Road — is closed while crews remove the tree and restore power.

Tree down on Compo Road South. (Photo/Alex Sherman)

Roundup: Dr. Clarence Jones, Taylor Swift, Joe Tacopina …

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King famously said: “If you can’t fly, then run. If you can’t run, then walk. If you can’t walk, then crawl. But whatever you do, you have to keep moving forward.”

If you missed Sunday’s Martin Luther King Day celebration at the Westport Library, you should run, walk or crawl to this link:

 

Dr. Clarence Jones — King’s 93-year-old speechwriter, personal attorney and friend — delivered an emotional and inspirational master class in history, justice, and the power of one individual to change the world.

Many of those who were there Sunday will want to watch the video too.

And for all of us, Dr. Jones’ words will resonate for years to come.

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Calling all Swifties!

The Westport Country Playhouse hosts a special show, with songs from every Taylor Swift era.

Spoiler alert: The hottest entertainer on the planet won’t be there. But “powerhouse voices” will sing Swift’s songs.

The February 2 event (7 p.m.) is a benefit for the WCP’s Woodward Internship program. Tickets are $55, $65 and $75. Click here to purchase, and for more information.

She won’t appear at the Playhouse on February 2. But “powerhouse voices” singing her songs will be there.

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Donald Trump has lost another lawyer.

This one is our neighbor: Westporter Joe Tacopina.

The New York Times reported yesterday:

Joseph Tacopina, the trial lawyer on Donald J. Trump’s legal team with the most successes defending high-profile clients, will no longer represent the former president in his criminal trial in Manhattan, according to a notice sent to the court on Monday.

Mr. Tacopina also withdrew on Monday from another case in which he was still legally representing Mr. Trump: an appeal of the verdict in a lawsuit brought by the writer E. Jean Carroll. Mr. Trump was found liable for sexual abuse and defamation last year and was ordered to pay Ms. Carroll $5 million.

It was not clear why Mr. Tacopina decided to withdraw, and he declined to comment.

Click here for the full story. (Hat tip: Bill Dedman)

Attorney Joseph Tacopina sat at former President Trump’s left hand, at an arraignment in April. (Photo/Curtis Means for EPA)

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Judy Michaelis of Coldwell Banker sends this real estate report:

“Across the board, 2023 was flat compared with 2022.

“Days on market, 68, is same as the last 2 years.

“The median sales price – $2,000,000 — is the same as last year.

“The list to sales price is just over 1% of asking price, same as last year.

“The only thing that has changed is that our sales are down 24%, and that is because we had a lack of inventory.”


This 6-bedroom, 6 1/2-bathroom, 6,585-square foot house, on 4 acres at 69 Beachside Avenue, is listed for $7,950,000.

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Village Pediatrics has just finished a major renovation.

Their rooms have an outdoor theme (skiing, camping, water activities, biking, outer space). A fun rainbow goes the entire length of the office; it’s an “all are welcome here” shoutout for everyone to see.

To show off their new space, Village Pediatrics hosts an open house this Thursday (January 18, 5:30 to 6:30 p.m., 323 Riverside Avenue). Providers will be there to meet “new patients, and expecting patients.”

They’ll answer questions about their practice, which includes daily walk-in sick visits for acute issues, weekend availability for sick and well visits, late hours on Thursday evenings, Saturday check-ups, 24/7 on-call provider for emergencies, extended time at well visits, in-house lactation consults, ADHD and anxiety medication management, Accutane — and ear piercing.

Questions? Email office@villagepedi.com. Click below for a tour of their newly renovated space.

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Valentine’s Day is next month.

But the Westport Young Woman’s League Galentine’s Bingo is January 31 (7 p.m., Christ & Holy Trinity Church).

Tickets are $30, and include bingo (with prizes from local vendors), and light refreshments. Click here to purchase, and for more information. The event is BYOB.

Proceeds help fun WYWL’s Grants Program. Last year, the organization donated $90,000 to charities and nonprofits.

Questions? Email funddevelopment@wywl.com.

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We never tire of photos of clouds over Compo Beach. They constantly change; we never see the same scene twice.

Jim Hood took today’s “Westport … Naturally” shot a few days ago. It’s another winner.

(Photo/Jim Hood)

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A “Woog’s World” Farewell

From time to time, I hear longtime residents lament: “What a shame the Westport News went out of business.”

It didn’t.

Our “hometown newspaper” still publishes a print edition, every Friday.

It’s hard to find. I don’t think it’s sold anywhere in town. It gets delivered (often 4 days late) by mail, to some (but definitely not all) Westporters.

Westport News, complete with ad sticker on page 1.

It’s online too. It’s been rebranded as “CT Insider,” though it still says “Westport News” there as well.

Yet many older readers think the paper is defunct. And most new ones have never heard of it.

They don’t know that, beginning in 1986, I wrote a weekly column for the Westport News called “Woog’s World.”

And they — including many old-timers — don’t know that until last Friday, I kept writing it.

My second-to-last “Woog’s World.”

Once a week, for 36 years, I offered my thoughts on Westport. For the past 10 or so years, I wasn’t sure anyone read them.

Feedback was non-existent. More common was: “I miss ‘Woog’s World,'”

My final newspaper column ran this past Friday.

The timing is right. “06880” is demanding more and more of my time. I know my audience, and I know their eyeballs are here.

For those who had no idea I wrote a regular newspaper column — and those who either remember the old Westport News, or never heard of its heyday and are curious to know more — I’m posting that final “Woog’s World” below.

Enjoy. And — if you’re interested — here’s a link to the Westport News website.

I mean, “CT Insider.”

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The final “Woog’s World”:

My first Westport News byline came in 1969.

My last will be in 2024. It’s this one.

I’ve had a great run. From those first days as a Staples High School sophomore covering the baseball team, to today’s farewell “Woog’s World,” I’ve had the honor of reporting, recording and ruminating on more than 50 years of Westport life.

I’ve been the “Up at Staples” columnist, a two-year gig I inherited from a senior when Vietnam, drugs, student power and more rocked our town. I wrote about Staples soccer, football, basketball, wrestling and baseball too, for the sports pages. I’d type it all up, drop my “copy” in a box outside the Brooks Corner office, then head off to school.

As a Staples High School senior, I praised Players’ production of “The Time of Your Life” — and slammed the choice of the play.

As sports editor from 1976-79 – my first real job after college – I wrote, edited, laid out and filled up to six pages, twice a week, about everything from the Wreckers and Little League to Olympic and professional hopefuls.

It’s hard to imagine now, but for much of the second half of the 20th century, the Westport News was how Westporters got their news. From its downtown office, the News covered everything and anything that happened in town.

Reporters had specific beats. One handled Town Hall; another, education. Jeanne Davis was the flamboyant arts editor. Still, the most popular feature was the all-inclusive Police Reports. No matter who you were, if you got nabbed you could not keep your name out of the paper.

The perfect story presented itself when the furniture store across the street burned to the ground. It was right in front of us – and a Tuesday afternoon, perfect for our Wednesday edition deadline.

A Congressional race, Gorham Island, and school bus schedules were front-page news in 1978.

I kept writing after becoming a full-time freelancer. In 1986, editor Lise Connell offered me this “Woog’s World” space. Every Friday since – for 36 years, which is about 1,800 columns – I’ve contributed 800 words about whatever went on in Westport that week. Or had gone on in the past. Or was coming ‘round the bend.

Subjects ranged widely. I wrote about a Staples student who won both the Siemens Westinghouse and Intel science contests in the same year; teenagers who overdosed on angel dust, and a high school alcoholic.

I wrote about controversies, like the Compo Beach playground that was built only after a court injunction. (Spoiler alert: Now one of the most popular spots in Westport, it will soon be renovated as a townwide project.) I covered the Y’s long, torturous move from downtown; the closing, opening, remodeling and other ups and downs of our schools, and the everlasting debate about the future of Baron’s South. (If I wrote for another 36 years, until 2060, I’d still be reporting on that topic.)

Every Christmas, I offered a poem. Every January, I imagined headlines for the coming year. Once, decades ago, I came out as gay in my “Woog’s World” column.

A few headlines, out of 1,800.

Lise Connell – a demanding, decisive and thoroughly wonderful boss – was one of several memorable editors. Larry Fellows had been a foreign correspondent for the New York Times. Woody Klein was previously the editor of IBM’s “Think” magazine. The Westport News – the flagship of what became the Brooks Community Newspapers – punched far above its weight.

Those days are well known to anyone who lived in Westport between about 1965 and 2000. If you were a Westporter, you read the Westport News.

But the world of journalism has changed seismically since then. The Brooks family sold their chain of papers to Hearst Media. Print circulation declined, while online options surged. Readers could access the Westport News – and sister publications – any time, from anywhere. Stories were posted any time too. A new century ushered in a new era.

I’ve aged a bit, from the early days.

Through all the changes, I’ve enjoyed chronicling all things Westport. No, that’s not right; I’ve loved it. I appreciate beyond measure the chance to share my thoughts and insights, week after week (year after year) (decad after decade), about what is happening (and has happened, and may one day happen) in this historic, ever-changing, passionate, quarrelsome, weird and wonderful community.

I’ve been privileged, for 36 years, to have had my say. I’ll continue to say it on the “pages” of my “06880” blog (www.06880.org).

And now – 55 years after my byline first appeared in the Westport News – I’ll sign off the way I was taught, my first day on the job as a high school sophomore.

For decades – in a throwback to the days of telegraph transmission — “-30-“ meant the end of a story. The writer had done his job; now it went to the editor and (how’s this for a memory?) typesetter.

“Woog’s World” is done. I give hearty, loving thanks to decades’ worth of colleagues, friends, and most importantly, readers. It’s been a true honor, and a great privilege. -30-.

Pic Of The Day #2463

Compo Beach bathhouse (Photo/John Videler for Videler Photography)

[OPINION] Gardeners Support A New Long Lots School

Lou Weinberg is chair of the Westport Community Gardens, and director of the Long Lots Preserve. He is concerned about a perception that gardeners oppose renovation of Long Lots Elementary School. He writes:

Members of the Westport Community Gardens and the volunteers involved with the Long Lots Preserve support the construction of a new/improved Long Lots Elementary School.

If the development of a new/improved Long Lots Elementary School truly requires the use of the existing gardens space during construction, then our request is to rebuild the gardens, post-construction, in their current location.

Members of the Long Lots Community Gardens and friends, at an open house last fall.

This is our position. At no point in this process has the request for consideration and regard for the gardens and preserve delayed the process of constructing a new/improved school. Not by a second.

To imply otherwise is false. Furthermore, the current efforts by some community members to vilify the gardeners and blame them for delays in the process is misguided. The gardeners are not the problem. The gardeners are not the enemy.

If anybody tries to convince you that the Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve are responsible for getting in the way of a beautiful new school for the town of Westport, they are misstating facts. We all want the school.

The process is supposed to get us there. I very much hope the new 8-24 application will include the school, fields, and restoration of the community gardens and preserve. Let’s get this done together!

 

Roundup: Rock Photos, Everything Solar …

Michael Friedman’s pop-up photography gallery — featuring intimate images he took more than 50 years ago, of the Rolling Stones, Doors, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and more — was slated to close over the holidays.

But the Staples High school graduate is staying on for a while, at 31 Church Lane.

He’s open weekends from noon to 5, and other times “by chance.”

If you’d prefer more certainty than that ’60s-type vibe, call or text 203-247-6869.

It’s worth the, um, trip.’

Michael Friedman in his pop-up gallery. His photo shows Levon Helm, legendary drummer for The Band.

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‘The third — and final — session in Sustainable Westport’s Residential Energy Learning Series is “Everything Solar.”

Set for January 23 (6:30 p.m., Westport Library), it features Westport architect John Rountree and Aegis Solar consultant Nathan Hernandez.

They’ll offer ideas on how to transition your home or business to solar energy, including how solar panels work, how to choose a solar installation company, key design and installation considerations, the expected ROI from going solar, and financing options (with federal and state incentives).

Westporter Jim Wolf, who recently installed solar, will also speak.

Panelists will answer audience questions too. Click here to register.

John Rountree — who will speak on January 23 — added solar panels to his house, and a nearby garage.

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When Koda sits on the Soundview Avenue seawall, many passersby say hello by name.

And of course — this being “Westport … Naturally” — many fellow dogs know Koda too.

(Photo/Jim Hood)

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And finally … 56 years after its release, Dion’s song resonates strongly.

Considering all that our nation has been through since then — and all that we’ve lost — it may be even more poignant then ever.

 (“06880” depends on support from readers. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Dr. King’s Speechwriter Ties His Legacy To Today

Inklings writer and Staples High School senior Caitlin was on the scene yesterday, for the standing room only Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. celebration at the Westport Library. She writes:

Dr. Clarence Jones’ inspiring remarks offered an emotional, behind-the-scenes look at the civil rights movement. But they also highlighted events in today’s headlines.

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s speechwriter and personal attorney spoke  about interfaith groups, especially the Jewish community, and how King’s “I Have a Dream” speech has evolved.

Other notable speakers included Senator Richard Blumenthal and Congressman Ritchie Torres. The conversation was moderated by NBC host Craig Melvin.

Educated at both Columbia, Jones — now 93 years old — is widely known for writing the first 8 paragraphs of the “I Have a Dream Speech,” along with the metaphor about how America had given black people a “bad check.” Jones claims that this was the most meaningful speech, as it spoke to the time he was forcibly given a promissory note without any prior notice.

“When I was drafting the speech, there was nobody to come in and say ‘paid full.’” Jones said. “So I wanted to put Martin in the power of speaking to the nation.” 

Fr0m left: Congressman Ritchie Torres, Craig Melvin, Dr. Clarence Jones. (Photo/Caitlin Jacob)

Discussing injustice, Jones pointedly included the allyship between the Black and Jewish communities. 

He believes that moments such as the Israel-Palestine conflict have loosened the ties between the 2 groups. He says this relationship is important to him, given that many Jewish leaders had “wept” during the time of the “I Have a Dream Speech.”

“I have not once been worried that the relationship between [Jews and Blacks] has been more threatened than it is today,” Jones said.

Other highlights of the speech included Jones’s response to King’s legacy, claiming that his own legacy is due to the work of King. Jones also believes that without the work of King, much of the racial justice progress within the United States would not be possible.

“With the exception of Abraham Lincoln, and the Emancipation Proclamation, Martin Luther King, Jr. may have done more to achieve racial, economic and political justice than any other person in the past 400 years in the history of the United States,” Jones said.

Dr. Clarence Jones greets well-wishers after yesterday’s event. (Photo/Matthew Slossberg)

Beyond Jones’s words, Melvin — the NBC host and Westport resident — cited the importance of having someone such as Jones to speak to the way King’s speeches legacy has evolved. 

“My children only know the legacy of King and the monumental success it had,” Melvin said. “You, on the other hand, know what it was like to give such a speech at the time.”

Ritchie Torres, the Bronx congressman and a friend of Jones, explained the effect King’s speech had on people such as him, and discussed the value having a confidant such as Jones provides in a contemporary world.

“Dr. Jones said earlier that he’s here in person,” Torres said. “And that’s not something that we take for granted. This is a moment that each of us are going to cherish for the rest of our lives.”

The conversation with Jones comes at a time when Westport — and the nation — grapples with issues of diversity. Senator Blumenthal stressed the importance of hearing about diverse experiences. Jones, he said, has affected and inspired the entire state of Connecticut in various ways.

(The 18th annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. celebration was a partnership between the Library, TEAM Westport, and the Westport Country Playhouse, as well as the Westport/Weston Interfaith Clergy and Council — the 2 groups that hosted the inaugural celebration in 2006.)

MLK

This story has become a Martin Luther King Day tradition on “06880.” After the events of the past couple of years, today — more than ever — we should think about the history of our nation before Dr. King was born.

And where we are, more than half a century after his death.

Today is Martin Luther King Day. Westporters will celebrate with a day off from school or work. Some will sleep in; others will shop, or go for a walk. Few will give any thought to Martin Luther King.

Twice, though, his life intersected this town in important ways.

The first was Friday night, May 22, 1964. According to Woody Klein’s book Westport, Connecticut, King had been invited to speak at Temple Israel by synagogue member Jerry Kaiser.

King arrived in the afternoon. Kaiser and his wife Roslyn sat on their porch that afternoon, and talked with King and 2 of his aides. She was impressed with his “sincerity, warmth, intelligence and genuine concern for those about him — our children, for instance. He seemed very young to bear such a burden of leadership.”

Martin Luther King, with Sarah and Tema Kaiser at their home on Brooklawn Drive, before his Temple Israel appearance. Their brother Michael had a cold, and was not allowed near Dr. King.

King’s sermon — to a packed audience — was titled “Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution.” He analogized his America to the time of Rip Van Winkle — who also “slept through a revolution. The greatest liability of history is that people fail to see a revolution taking place in our world today.  We must support the social movement of the Negro.”

Westport artist Roe Halper presented King with 3 woodcarvings, representing the civil rights struggle. He hung them proudly in the front hallway of his Atlanta home.

(Another of Halper’s MLK carvings, which usually hangs in principal Stafford Thomas’ office at Staples, will be on view at MoCA Westport, from January 18 through March 3).

Artist Roe Halper (left) presents Coretta Scott King with civil rights-themed wood carvings.

Within a month Temple Israel’s rabbi, Byron Rubenstein, traveled south to take place in a nonviolent march. He was arrested — along with Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King.

In jail, the rabbi said, “I came to know the greatness of Dr. King. I never heard a word of hate or bitterness from that man, only worship of faith, joy and determination.”

King touched Westport again less than 4 years later. On April 5, 1968 — the day after the civil rights leader’s assassination in Memphis — 600 Staples students gathered for a lunchtime vigil in the courtyard. Nearby, the flag flew at half-staff.

A small portion of the large crowd listens intently to Fermino Spencer, in the Staples courtyard.

A small portion of the large crowd listens to Fermino Spencer.

Vice principal Fermino Spencer addressed the crowd. Movingly, he spoke about  his own experience as an African American. Hearing the words “my people” made a deep impression on the almost all-white audience. For many, it was the 1st time they had heard a black perspective on white America.

No one knew what lay ahead for their country. But student Jim Sadler spoke for many when he said: “I’m really frightened. Something is going to happen.”

Dr. Martin Luther King

Something did — and it was good. A few hundred students soon met in the cafeteria. Urged by a minister and several anti-poverty workers to help bridge the chasm between Westport and nearby cities, Staples teachers and students vowed to create a camp.

Within 2 months, it was a reality. That summer 120 elementary and junior high youngsters from Westport, Weston, Norwalk and Bridgeport participated in the Intercommunity Camp. Led by over 100 Staples students and many teachers, they enjoyed swimming, gymnastics, dance, sports, field trips, overnight camping, creative writing, filmmaking, photography, art and reading.

It wasn’t easy — some in Westport opposed bringing underprivileged children to their town — but for over a decade the Intercommunity Camp flourished.

Eventually, enthusiasm for and interest in the camp waned. Fewer Staples students and staff members wanted to devote their summer to such a project.  The number of Westporters willing to donate their pools dwindled. Today the Intercommunity Camp is a long-forgotten memory.

Sort of like the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King. Even on his birthday.

MLK speech

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Martin Luther King Day bonus feature: In the late 1950s, Westporter Tracy Sugarman took his son Dickie, and Dickie’s friend Miggs Burroughs, to a picnic in Stamford.

Rev. Martin Luther King was there, at the invitation of the host: Jackie Robinson.

Sugarman — a noted illustrator – was also a civil rights activist.

Miggs — a junior high student — took the Minox “spy” camera he’d bought earlier that summer.

He still has those photos. Here are the 2 pioneering Black Americans: Martin Luther King and Jackie Robinson.

(Photos/Miggs Burroughs)