“06880” Podcast: Tom Scarice

One of the “06880” podcast’s favorite guests is Tom Scarice.

Westport’s superintendent of schools is honest, direct, articulate and informative. He speaks in complete paragraphs, uses relatable analogies, understands this town — and clearly loves his job.

Midway through his third year at the helm, he dropped by the Westport Library’s Verso Studios recently.

We spoke about our schools’ climate and culture; COVID, and its after-effects; his goals, and how to measure them; the growing school population, and its impacts; redistricting, and the overwhelming pressures students feel today.

Click below for the latest “06880” podcast. You’ll learn a lot!

Compo Shopping Center: Behind The Reveal

Rick Hoag has always liked the “quirky, ’50s-’60s feel” of Compo Shopping Center.

So when his Frederick William Hoag Architects firm got the chance to redesign the façade of one of Westport’s first strip malls, he was eager to help.

The west (CVS, Planet Pizza) side was built in 1957. The east (Gold’s, Little Kitchen) portion followed shortly after.

Compo Shopping Center’s west (top) and east sides, before renovation.

It’s really, really long. It’s home to a diverse array of different-sized tenants. And regulatory challenges constricted the type of changes Hoag could do.

But he’s nothing if not resourceful.

“The existing architecture exudes a playful mid-century vibe with sweeping fascias and inclined façades, retro forms, and language to be celebrated within a contemporary architectural skin,” he says.

“The existing sloped cornice seems to put the whole building façade in motion, emulating the automobiles traveling the Post Road.”

That reminded him of “Norman Rockwell-like images of happy American families shopping. before whisking off in their Chris-Craft on Long Island Sound.”

Mid-20th century Chris-Craft.

That classic speedboat concept inspired his design.

The new west side …

By applying finishes as a rain screen, he and his firm maintained the existing weather tightness of the building.

… and the east.

LED lights are a 21st-century thing. But Hoag designed them in a way that, he says, embraces both the spirit of the retro façade, and the feel of today.

The result — with help from Bill Achilles, earlier in the process — is emerging now. A.V. Tuchy — the Norwalk builders doing the renovation — should be finished in March.

Then, the scaffolds will come down. The “new” Compo Shopping Center will sparkle by day, and shine by night.

Dusk view.

That may attract more shoppers and restaurant-goers than ever.

Drive safely!

(“06880” covers stories you never realized needed covering. Please click here to help us continue our work. Thank you!) 

Pic Of The Day #2093

Looking west, toward Burying Hill Beach (Photo/Wendy Levy)

Westport Library: 5 Stars, Top 2% In US

Westporters know that our library is great.

Now, the rest of the nation knows it too.

The Westport Library has just been honored with the highest score possible: a 5-star rating from Public Library Service’s 2022 Library Journal Index. 

It’s the only 5-star library in the Library Journal Index.

Of the 5,359 public libraries assessed last year, only 85 received 5 stars. That vaults the Westport Library into the top 1.6% of public libraries in the U.S.

“We are overjoyed to receive this distinction,” says Bill Harmer, executive director of The Westport Library.

“This recognition validates and celebrates the engagement of and high value that our community places on the services that this Library provides, and the hard work and dedication of our staff, board of trustees, and our donors and volunteers — those who enable us to imagine and execute our programs and realize our vision to make The Westport Library a community gathering space and a hub for innovation.”

The Westport Library is filled with offerings day …

Harmer also offers “a huge thank you to the hundreds of people who come to the library every day and provide the input we rely on to make sure we’re meeting the needs of Westporters, and all visitors throughout Fairfield County and beyond.”

In determining its ratings, the Journal — America’s oldest library service publication — compares institutions with similar annual expenditures. Scores and ratings are based on circulation of physical materials, circulation of electronic materials, library visits, library program attendance, public internet users, Wi-Fi sessions, library website visits, and usage of online content like databases.

The Westport Library performed particularly well in several categories, including library visits, program attendance and website visits.

“In so many ways, this confirms what we’ve long known: that the Westport Library is not only an invaluable community resource, but also one of the finest libraries in the nation,” says First Selectwoman Jen Tooker. “It is clearly one of the primary reasons Westport is the best place to live, work, and play in the region.”

… and night. (Photo/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)

The Westport Library began in 1886 as a reading room in downtown Westport, moved across the Post Road in 1908 after a donation from Morris Jesup, and moved to its current location along the Saugatuck River in 1986.

In 2019 the Library underwent a “transformation project” that reimagined the space to provide more accessibility, adaptability and flexibility.

After a drop in attendance during the height of COVID, the Library has returned to full programming. Daily attendance has surged, with more than 400,000 visitors expected in the current fiscal year.

“Westport … What’s Happening”: Jen Tooker, Foti Koskinas And Lyman

Today’s “Westport … What’s Happening” podcast is special.

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Police Chief Foti Koskinas talk passionately about Westport’s new sister city: Lyman, Ukraine.

They provide background information on the war-torn town; describe the logistics of our humanitarian aid; note the close ties our chief has developed with his security counterparts in Lyman, and emphasize the importance of our relationship — not just for delivering crucially needed goods and materials, but for morale too.

Tooker and Koskinas also note that our sister city partnership has only just begun. Students, and many other townspeople, will be involved in a variety of projects in the weeks and months ahead.

“Westport … What’s Happening” is produced by the Y’s Men of Westport and Weston. Click below to see:

 

Roundup: Town Clean-up, Malloy Arts Lecture …

Two years ago, several residents met at Longshore to pick up trash.

They started at the lower parking lot by the Saugatuck River, and worked all the way to the end of the exit at Compo Road South.

Since then, they met almost every weekend — weather permitting — heading into spring. There was always an area of town that needed cleaning.

Yesterday morning, they got together for the first time since late spring. Their target: the Greens Farms train station.

Thanks go to the group for their quiet, steady and very important work: Andrew Colabella, Skip and Kathleen Fazio, Brendan and Laura Mulcahy and their sons Declan and Finn, Ifeseyi Gayle, Matt Almansi and Lili Tucker. Other regulars include Deej and Deborah Webb.

Tons of trash at the train station.

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Reservations are open for next month’s Westport Library Malloy Lecture in the Arts guest speaker.

Richard Butler takes the stage on February 28 (7 p.m., Trefz Forum and Zoom). The British painter and musician is best known as the singer and founder of the Psychedelic Furs. He created the artwork for their early gigs, and had a strong influence on the album art and visual presentation of the band.

After the band took a hiatus in the early 90s, he returned to his first love. He’s since found a balance between art and music. Butler released a solo album in 2006, and in 2020 put out the first new Psychedelic Furs album in nearly 30 years.

Meanwhile, his paintings have been exhibited in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, London, Berlin and throughout the world.

Butler will be joined in conversation with Talking Heads and Tom Tom Club drummer Chris Frantz, an area resident and longtime Library supporter.  In 2020 he released a new book, “Remain In Love.”

Click here for reserved seating. There will also be a livestream of the show, and a recording will be available for viewing afterward.

Click here for more information. A second Malloy Lecture in the Arts will be announced later this year.

Richard Butler

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Jo Shields describes today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo:

“I think it’s only a wolf moon when it is full. This one is a waning gibbous so we are past full, but it is spectacular nonetheless.

“A few cars have come and gone at Compo Beach to catch pictures too, on this very chilly (Sunday) night. One car’s headlights illuminated the sand. I liked it, and click!”

(Photo/Jo Shields)

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And finally … in honor of the great clean-up job being done all around town, by concerned citizens (see story above):

Catering To The Post-Pandemic Crowd

Catered events — holiday parties, weddings, bar mitzvahs — are back.

As COVID infections (and fears) fade, Westporters again celebrate with family, friends and food.

As you reach for that crudité cup or drink, you think that nothing has changed.

If you’re a caterer though, you know your world will never be the same.

The supply chain. Staffing. Service. All that — and a thousand things — is vastly different today.

Add inflation — affecting the price of everything from steak and paper towels to gas — and it’s a wonder there are any events left.

But caterers are a flexible bunch. They solve problems. They do it resourcefully, creatively — and out of sight of guests.

You’ll snag your skewer or cheese, and continue your continue your party conversation just like before.

Time now for a conversation with Alison Milwe Grace.

Alison Milwe Grace

The award-winning, professionally trained chef’s AMG Catering — a 1988 Staples High School  graduate, now a Weston resident — serves clients and guests throughout Connecticut and Westchester County.

Her business in 2023 is nothing like when she began in 1996. Or even at the start of 2020.

Alison could begin anywhere. She starts with vessels.

That’s cater-speak for the little cups that contain chicken satay, shrimp cocktails, grapes — whatever you once picked up yourself from a tray. Now — sensitive that clients and guests are wary of the number of hands that touch their food — Alison serves nearly every passed appetizer in a cup.

Each one costs money. So does each single-use, wrapped utensil pack she offers. (She’s not wild about the environmental impact, either.)

More cups mean fewer hands reaching for food. But creating each one is labor intensive.

Inflation — some of it tied directly to the pandemic, some of it not — has also eaten into clients’ budgets, and caterers’ profits.

Alison pays more for nearly every item of food. Plus plates, cleaning products, propone for her kitchen, helium for balloons. You name it, the price has risen — often dramatically.

Guests pay more for other things too. Alison notes that tents are generally bigger than before the pandemic, to avoid the feeling of “everyone on top of each other.”

Staffing issues are a constant headache. Labor shortages and illnesses make finding good employees tougher than ever.

Alison Milwe Grace is smiling here. Behind the scenes, running a catering business is not all sunshine.

When bookings began again as the pandemic eased, Alison gave raises to her staff. They’d been through a lot. And, in a tight labor market, she wanted to keep her valued employees.

Still, the coronavirus (and more recently the flu) combined to make staffing difficult. Alison has a strict rule — “If you feel remotely bad, you’re not working” — which means she constantly readjusts schedules.

But cooks and servers are not the only ones in short supply. So are her vendors’ delivery drivers.

Many cut back on the number of days they provide her with meat, fish, produce and more. They’ve also added fuel surcharges, which she must either eat or pass along to clients.

Expenses like table and linen rental have risen. Providing them is not always easy.

Speaking of gas: When prices spiked last year, Alison paid travel expenses for her staff. It was the right thing to do — and a good way to ensure she’d have the help she needs.

Despite her busy schedule, all events are not back to pre-pandemic normal. In an abundance of caution, clients want smaller guest lists. But caterers have fixed costs. Alison has learned to be selective about which events she can book.

Yet as the prices she charges rise, so do clients’ expectations. They’re paying more, so they expect even higher quality than Alison’s usual high standards.

“I’ve always been a perfectionist,” she says. “Now I’m more of one. I want to be sure everyone gets what they pay for.”

That’s not always in her control. These days, a delivery may be missing 5 items she ordered — and counted on.

Vendors don’t tell her ahead of time. So she unpacks, finds what’s not there, then heads to the grocery store herself. Or she readjusts her menu.

Her presentations look great. But from one day to the next, Alison Milwe Grace is never sure she’ll get everything she ordered.

Also missing: rental companies’ 24/7 service. They no longer have the staff to fix a last-minute broken table, or send over extra linen.

“You get what you get, and you can’t get upset” is her new mantra. She hopes clients understand.

She hopes too that they understand the importance of numbers. Guests continue to test COVID-positive or get the flu, sending regrets a few days (or even the day of) a party.

That wreaks havoc on her planning — and budget. With vendors demanding she place orders further in advance than ever, Alison now insists on a guaranteed head count 2 weeks before an event. (The number can increase, but not decrease.)

There are exceptions. “If the bat mitzvah girl gets COVID, of course we’ll reschedule,” Alison says.

As for weddings: The caterer has already booked “a ton” for this year. She’s already working on 2024.

Happy guests never see what goes on behind the scenes.

Meanwhile, despite higher costs, uncertain deliveries and the like, the parties she catered during the recent holiday season helped her — and guests — put COVID behind them.

“People were celebrating who hadn’t seen each other in years,” Alison reports. “Everyone was so excited. Parties seemed really, really meaningful.”

Corporate events — non-existent for nearly 3 years — returned in 2022. Still, the caterer senses “an undercurrent of fear” among businesses about a recession in 2023. Even the perception of belt-tightening could cut bookings substantially.

When COVID crashed into our lives nearly 3 years ago, Alison pivoted quickly. She offered curbside pick-up meals for families, and fed frontline workers.

Her flexibility paid off. AMG Catering survived.

When you grab some bruschetta, a spring roll or drink at your next event, you may simply be happy to be back celebrating.

That’s fine. You don’t need to know the back story — all the moving parts that caterers like Alison Milwe Grace navigate so you can feel good, and well fed.

But now you do.

Pic Of The Day #2092

Saugatuck River at dusk (Photo/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)

Photo Challenge #419

Dozens of AEDs — automated external defibrillators — are posted throughout town. They’re in schools and public buildings, and at athletic fields and parks.

Several of the life-saving devices are at Compo Beach. Last week’s Photo Challenge showed the one on the side of the Westport Police Marine Unit office at Ned Dimes Marina. (Click here to see.)

It’s a good idea to notice them. You never know when someone will have a cardiac emergency. AEDs are simple to use; turn one on, and an automated voice provides easy, step-by-step instructions to shock a heart back to rhythm.

The marina device was in a locked case (though it was open). There were several “06880” comments about the wisdom of a lock — and others about the danger of keeping AEDs outside in the cold winter months.

(Interesting side note: The Westport Police Department manages and maintains the AEDs in public locations like the beach, Longshore and Town Hall — even though they were donated by individuals, and Norwalk Hospital. Westport Public Schools take care of those that are in their buildings.)

Michael Calise, Dan Vener, Matt Murray, Andrew Colabella and Beth Berkowitz all knew exactly where the AED in the Photo Challenge was located.

Now you do too. Here’s hoping you never need it.

On to this week’s Photo Challenge. If you know where in Westport you’d see this, click Comments below.

(Photo/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)

 

Roundup: Christmas Trees, Space Station, Christine Ohlman …

Yesterday was pickup day for Scout Troops 39 and 139.

They spent hours going all over town, hauling Christmas trees into trucks (in return for $20 donations — a bargain for sure).

The trees will be mulched into wood chips, and donated to the town.

First though, they were unloaded at the Imperial Avenue parking lot.

Here’s what it looked like:

(Photo/Amy Schneider)

But you really had to be there, to enjoy the scent!

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Did you know that the International Space Station was nearly lost, due to computer failures?

Dr. Bob Dempsey knows.

The former NASA flight director for the ISS visits — virtually — the Westport Astronomical Society on January 17 (8 p.m.).

As the guest on their free monthly webinar, he’ll describe the 2001 events that led to the loss of all command and control computers. It was the flight control team’s “Apollo 13” moment, as they identified problems and mounted a never-before-attempted recovery.

Click here for the Zoom link. Click here for the YouTube link.

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The Westport Library rocked last night.

Christine Ohlman — the platinum blonde “Beehive Queen,” and longtime “Saturday Night Live” — joined Rebel Montez in the Trefz Forum, for a Winter Dance Party.

A packed house enjoyed another typical night, at what is fast becoming Westport’s favorite musical venue.

Christine Ohlman, Rebel Montez and the band, last night at the Westport Library.

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Speaking of entertainment: Buffalo Rose brings their modern folk/Americana music to Voices Café at Westport’s Unitarian Church on January 21 (8 p.m.).

The Pittsburgh-based 6-piece group is known for powerful vocal harmonies, strong playing and an original vision. They drew raves from their Levitt Pavilion performance in 2021.

There’s café-style tables (reservations from groups of 4 or more) or individual seats. Guests are encouraged to bring their own beverages and snacks. 

General admission is $25 per person. The event is livestreamed too (free).

A portion of the proceeds benefit the battle against food insecurity, through the Bridgeport Center for Food Equity and Economic Development (FEED). 

Click here for tickets and more information.

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Longtime Westporter Shirley Appy — an actor and pioneer in the early days of live television — died peacefully on Friday, at 95.

Since 2009 she was a resident of Applewood, an independent living retirement community in Amherst, Massachusetts, where she welcomed countless visitors, family, and friends.

Appy was born Shirley Joy Krehbiel in Colfax, Washington in 1927. After graduating from Grant High School in Portland, Oregon she received a full scholarship from the School of Drama at the University of Washington, where she gave more than 600 performances. In 1949 she married Gerard Appy, also a drama major at Washington.

After a brief stint running a new radio station in Colby, Kansas, the couple moved to Atlanta, Georgia to open The Penthouse Theatre, located on the top floor of the Ansley Hotel. It was modeled on the Penthouse Theatre at the University of Washington — the first theatre-in-the-round in the United States.

The Atlanta theater flourished for 3 years. Appy, under the stage name Shirley Krayble, appeared in many plays, alongside well-known actors such as Joan Blondell, Mike Todd and Zero Mostel.

In 1951 Appy turned to television. For several years she hosted 2 daily live shows: “The Little People,” where she interacted with pre-schoolers, and “Shopping Atlanta,” a consumer advice show.

Appy ended her television career to be a full-time mother to her 2 children. In 1964 the family moved to Westport, where she turned her attention to a wide variety of creative pursuits.

A gifted artist, craftsperson and gardener, she produced award-winning works in stained glass, decoupage and watercolors.

In 1981 Appy and her husband moved back to the Northwest, where he became the director of Oregon Public Broadcasting. For Shirley, it was a return to her childhood hometown.

She is survived by her children, Karen (Stephen) Baumann and Christian (Katherine) Appy, 7 grandchildren and 9 great grandchildren.

Shirley Appy

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Today’s very serene “Westport … Naturally” Compo Beach scene was snapped by Sunil Hirani:

(Photo/Sunil Hirani)

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And finally … in honor of Dr. Bob Dempsey’s upcoming webinar with the Westport Astronomical Society:

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