Roundup: Closures & Delays, Ukraine, We The People …

Among today’s closures: Town Hall.

1st Selectman Kevin Christie says: “Safety is our top priority. We are asking residents to stay home if they are able, avoid unnecessary travel, and keep roads clear so our public safety and public works teams can do their jobs. Please avoid parking on streets if possible, and take a moment to check in on any neighbors who may need assistance.”

Public safety operations, including Police, Fire, and Public Works, will continue under established storm and emergency response protocols.

Residents should sign up for emergency alerts by texting 06880 to 888777, to receive Westport notifications via Nixle.

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Also closed: the Westport Library.

All programs planned for today will be rescheduled.

The Westport Weston Family YMCA plans a noon opening today.

The view from the YMCA is beautiful on days like today. But you won’t be able to see it until noon. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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Speaking of snow: There must be some back stories to these photos, both taken by Harris Falk:

But whatever they are, he didn’t say.

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As Westport’s sister city of Lyman remains under siege, and Russia’s war against Ukraine drags on into a 4th year, Ukraine Aid International continues to help.

The non-profit — created by Westporters Brian and Marshall Mayer, and credited with delivering tons of food, vehicles, supplies, communications equipment, clothing and more, to the most war-torn regions of the nation, while developing partnerships between towns in Ukraine and the US — is hosting a March 5 fundraiser at the Westport Country Playhouse.

The entertainment at “Keys for Resilience” is spot-on: 2 superb Ukrainian artists whose work speaks to resilience, identity and hope.

Pianist, composer and educator Ruslan Ramazanov was forced to rebuild his life and career in the US, following Russia’s invasion in 2022.

Since arriving here, his music has taken on an added layer of meaning, reflecting his personal journey of adaptation and rediscovery through art. He works at the Boston Conservatory at Berklee.

He’s joined by Ukrainian-American soprano Teryn Kuzma. A versatile performer passionate about both contemporary works and rarely heard Eastern European opera and art song, she plays

In addition to her acclaimed vocal career, she is an accomplished performer on the bandura, Ukraine’s 55-string harp-zither instrument.

“Keys for Resilience” weaves classical and traditional music with stories from Connecticut’s sister cities in Ukraine.

All proceeds will support sister cities in Ukraine — including Westport’s own, Lyman — and the sister-state relationship between Connecticut and Donetsk. Click here for tickets, and more information.

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Staples High School’s musicians, actors and athletes get plenty of props.

Today, we applaud the equally accomplished “We the People” team.

For 12 years, students in Suzanne Kammerman’s Advanced Placement Politics & Government class have participated in the state event. Often, they qualify there for national competition.

On Saturday, they did again.

The all-junior team placed 2nd in the state competition, at Hartford’s historic Old State House. That earns them a trip to the national event, this spring in Washington.

“We the People” has both a classroom and extracurricular component. Students prepare and present oral arguments on specific sections of the Constitution in simulated congressional hearings. Then comes an intense questi9n-and-answer session, with a panel of judges.

It is not for the faint of heart. The students grapple with difficult constitutional questions. The judges demand clear, compelling answers.

Several seniors — veterans of last year’s best-ever 8th place national finish — helped coach the squad: Lila Boroujerdi, Olivia Cohn, Gunnar Eklund, Jay Hari, Miles Kahn, Souleye Kebe and Jake Shufro.

Congrats to all. Now go rock DC!

PS: It was a full day for the competitors. Many raced back to Westport from Hartford, to get ready for the County Assembly formal dance that night.

Staples’ “We the People” team in Hartford on Saturday. They were in the same room where the Connecticut House of Representatives convened in the 18th and 19th centuries.

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The Sweet Remains — Westporter Greg Naughton’s band, perennial Levitt Pavilion favorites (and international stars, with over 65 million Spotify streams) — wowed a large Westport Country Playhouse crowd Saturday night.

There was a hometown feel too, as Greg’s wife Kelli O’Hara, daughter Charlotte and father Jim Naughton joined the folk-pop, 3-part harmony group onstage.

Click here for more about the band, and their music.

The Sweet Remains’ Rich Price. (Photo/Jerry Kuyper)

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“06880” is where Westport meets the world.

And Westport meets the World Cup.

Rebecca Lowe will have a memorable year. The former Westport resident will be one of Fox Sports’ primary hosts for the soccer spectacle that comes to the US, Canada and Mexico this spring.

She’ll be on loan from NBC Sports, where next month she’ll host daytime coverage of the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics.

Oh, yeah: She’ll also cover the Kentucky Derby.

When Lowe began hosting NBC Sports’ Premier League soccer coverage — from its studios in Stamford — she and her husband, former English player and coach Paul Buckle, lived on Main Street.

At NBC she works with Robbie Mustoe, who also lives in Westport. A former NBC colleague, Kyle Martino, lives here too.

Click here for a full story from Sports Business Journal, on Lowe’s route from “imposter syndrome” to the highest level of broadcasting.

Rebecca Lowe (Photo/NBC Sports)

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World Cup story #2: The other day, Joe Pierce — a long-time area resident, former Staples High School assistant soccer coach, and producer of a film about legendary English star Sir Stanley Matthews — was at Dandelion, the new Delamar Westport restaurant. He writes:

“My friend Hicham, the corporate restaurant director for the Delamar group, was eager to show me around. It’s a stunning space: refined, intentional, full of life.

“But as can happen when 2 football obsessives meet, the talk of interior design lasted exactly 30 seconds.

“We settled onto bar stools, and the conversation shifted to our shared obsession: The Beautiful Game.

“Hicham is a devoted Arsenal supporter. But when he speaks of his beloved Morocco, you feel a different kind of energy.

“He’s a witness to a national metamorphosis. Morocco didn’t become the darlings of the last World Cup by luck; it was a masterclass in strategic infrastructure. They’ve funneled millions into the Mohammed VI Academy, scouting the global diaspora and building a “Golden Generation” that won the U-20 World Cup in October.

“As a Scottish expat living in Connecticut, I couldn’t help but see the parallels to the grit and discipline of the 1970s squads I grew up with. But on June 19, when our nations meet at in Foxboro, Massachusetts, Hicham and I will be on opposite sides of the park.

“He’ll be in the red and green of a rising power. I’ll be in the blue of a Tartan Army. seeking redemption for 1998.

“That is what football is all about. It turns a casual drink in Westport into a geopolitical debate. It takes the “home soil” we walk on every day, and connects it to the “away soul” we never truly left behind.

“If you find yourself at the Dandelion on a Saturday night, stop by and have a chat with Hicham about football. Feel the passion like I did.”

Joe Pierce

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With all the whiteness today, a bit of color really stands out.

Jamie Walsh captured this scene, for today’s very appropriate “Westport … Naturally” feature.

(Photo/Jamie Walsh)

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And finally … on this date in 1863, Massachusetts Governor John Albion Andrews received permission from Secretary of War Edwin Stanton to raise a militia of men of African descent.

Recruitment for the 54th Massachusetts Infantry was helped by Frederick Douglass, whose 2 sons were among the first to enlist.

The writer of this song about the unit is unknown. Richie Havens delivered a stirring version.

(Tired of shoveling? Take a break! Let your fingers do the work: Just click here, and support “06880” — your equally hard-working hyper-local blog — with a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Futures And Options: Bridgewater And Nyala Farms

Ever since Edward T. Bedford bought a farm in 1910, and his son Frederick raised award-winning Guernsey milk cows there, “Nyala” — named after antelopes he saw in Africa — has been one of Westport’s most cherished sites.

There was concern in the late 1960s, when Stauffer Chemical Company bought the 53-acre property between Greens Farms Road and the Sherwood Island Connector.

They planned a large office park on the site — the first of its kind in Westport. After long negotiations with the town and the Greens Farms Association, an agreement was reached.

Stauffer’s worldwide headquarters — just a few yards from I-95 Exit 18 — would be unobtrusive. The rolling hills and meadows — including an iconic well — would remain largely undisturbed.

Nyala Farms office complex. I-95 is at the right; the Sherwood Island Connector is at the bottom.

Similar fears arose nearly 20 years later, when Stauffer — facing financial difficulties over pollution issues, and an audit by the government — sold Nyala Farms to Bridgewater Associates. for $130 million.

It was one of 2 Westport properties owned by the world’s largest hedge fund. The other was Glendinning Place, off Weston Road.

Much to neighbors’ relief at both sites, Bridgewater has been a largely responsible steward of both sites.

Nyala Farms, last week. (Photo/JD Dworkow)

The Glendinning land was sold to David Waldman in 2023, for $10.6 million, and Bridgewater moved out. Last month, the family office of Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio and his wife Barbara bought it back, for $20.4 million. No announcement has been made as to its future, but 15 units of housing proposed by Waldman will not be built.

Last week, a few miles south, neighbors of Nyala Farms were surprised to receive notices about a meeting to be held in the Bridgewater office park 4 days later. The letter said Bridgewater would “share some exciting updates about the future of the Nyala campus and, importantly, to hear your perspective.”

At that session, one attendee tells “06880,” they and others — listening in person and online — were told that the hedge fund is considering selling the property.

Five buildings (brown), set amid hills and meadows. 

The potential buyer is Hartford HealthCare. The network — with 500 locations in 185 towns, including 3 on Post Road East and Post Road West, plus St. Vincent’s Behavioral Health on Long Lots Road (the former Hall-Brooke) — would consolidate those locations at Nyala Farms, meeting attendees say.

Bridgewater currently uses 3 of the 5 buildings there. The remaining 2 would continue to be rented to other tenants. The total area is 372,000 square feet.

One neighbor tells “06880” that while Bridgewater has “largely” kept to its agreement regarding care and upkeep of the open space — as evidenced by the abundance of wildlife on the property — there are concerns about additional traffic Hartford HealthCare might bring.

Nyala Farms well, with an office building far in the background. (Photo/Mary Beth Murray)

According to someone familiar with the situation, there has been no sale. For many years, Bridgewater has evaluated a range of long-term options for Nyala Farms.

This includes a sale in which the firm would remain, but as a tenant — not an owner.

The hedge fund continues to assess a wide range of options.

Over time, Bridgewater has expanded its footprint globally. With offices now in New York, Singapore and Shanghai, it looks to increase proximity to clients, expanding its talent pool, and better serving its employee base.

Buildings (right), and the original Nyala Farms structure (left).

The person familiar with the situation says that Bridgewater and Hartford HeatlhCare have met with town officials, as well as neighbors, to discuss HHC’s preliminary vision if they were to purchase the property.

The discussions included Bridgewater as a tenant — with preservation of the external footprint, and the natural integrity of the grounds.

The only change proposed by Hartford Healthcare would be to use one of the 5 buildings for medical use, during normal business hours.

Other parties have also expressed interest in the property. Discussions will continue, with no timeline urgency.

In the meantime, Bridgewater continues to be Westport’s second highest taxpayer.

60 Nyala Farms LLC — the company that officially owns the complex — had an assessed value of $83,331,700 on the 2024 Grand List. That trailed only Connecticut Light & Power ($144,150,180). In third place: Bedford Square Associates LLC, at $51,520,000. (Hat tip: Andrew Colabella)

(“06880” covers Westport businesses, real estate, the environment and local history. Sometimes they all intersect. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #3203

Two cardinals in snow, near Coleytown. Can you see them both? (Photo/Kathie Motes Bennewitz)

Let It Snow … Even More

More scenes, from a snowy Sunday:

Bridge Square (Photo/Ferdinand Jahnel)

Riverside and Saugatuck Avenues (Photo/Ferdinand Jahnel)

Longshore (Photo/Rob Feakins)

Nash Pond dam. (Photo/Dan Nash)

Almost enough to bury the measuring stick. (Photo/Susan Garment)

Yogi wants you to come out and play. (Photo/Cat Malkin)

Snow is higher than the dogs’ path. (Photo/Amy Schneider)

High Point Road (Photo/Amy Saperstein)

Whitney Street (Photo/Molly Alger)

No barbecue tonight. (Photo/Marcia Falk)

First big snow for the new clock at Main and Elm Streets. 

One view of a downtown pile … 

… and another. (Downtown photos/Erika DiGiovanni)

 

Westport Schools Announce Snow Day — 2026 Style

Back in the day, my generation learned about snow days by listening to the radio.

Westport’s WMMM and Bridgeport’s WICC would go through the list.

It was alphabetical — and agonizing.

Ansonia Public Schools. Bridgeport public schools. Darien public schools. Even Our Lady of Fatima, wherever that was.

Who cared? What about Westport?!

Sometimes they’d be closed. Sometimes they wouldn’t. It was a crapshoot.

Then came a more high-tech method: emails and voicemails.

Still, it was a crapshoot. Longtime superintendent of schools Elliot Landon made it a point of pride to keep Westport schools open.

“Today is Monday, January 26. The Westport Public Schools will be open!” he cackled.

It didn’t matter that schools from here to Buffalo were closed. Suck it up!

Former superintendent of schools Elliot Landon. He is probably smiling because he just announced that schools would be open.

But this is 2026. Social media is everywhere. High school students make full-length documentaries; 8-year-olds create Instagram reels.

So, to announce tomorrow’s snow day — which there was little doubt about, from Friday’s predictions on — Westport Public Schools officials got creative.

Assistant superintendent John Bayers headed to Long Lots Elementary School. He consulted with Leo the Lion — the mascot. They punted.

The decision was left to Long Lots’ staff: teachers, cafeteria workers, custodians, and the school resource officer.

Click here to see their announcement. 

So kids: Sleep in!

You don’t have to wake up at 6 a.m., to listen to the radio.

Or the superintendent’s voice.

Screenshot, from the Westport Public Schools video.

Photo Challenge #578

Yikes!

In the excitement of today’s “snowpocalypse” — aka “a pretty good snowfall” — I forgot to post this week’s Photo Challenge.

It’s the first screw-up since I started the Sunday feature, more than 10 years ago. My bad.

Last week’s showed dozens of bottles, behind what looked like a restaurant bar. (Click here to see.)

It’s a testament to Westport’s diverse dining scene that readers guessed 6 different spots.

But Seth Braunstein’s shot showed the one at the Bridge at Saugatuck.

Pam Kopack, Peggy O’Halloran, Elaine Marino, Dave Eason, Rachel Sara Halperin and Polly Sykes all knew the right answer.

On today’s snowy, stay-inside day: I’ll drink to that!

And I’ll also — belatedly — post this week’s challenge. Complete with (of course) snow.

If you know where in Westport you’d see this, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Diane Lowman)

(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!)

Let It Snow …

Most Westporters — make that, most Americans — are hunkered down inside today.

Streaming movies, cooking, reading, whatever — it’s a Sunday snow day.

Of course, some folks ventured outside. Here’s what they found:

9 am.: Post Road East. (Photo/Colin Livingston)

9 a.m.: Fire headquarters (Photo/Colin Livingston)

Off Whitney Street. (Photo/Richard Fogel)

Off Wilton Road: Not a snowman — but it could be! (Photo/Chuck Greenlee)

I-95 southbound, between Exits 18 and 17: the view from an ambulance. Thankfully, photographer Jonathan Alloy says, “people are staying off the roads.”

Another view of I-95. Photographer Susan Garment reminds drivers to have both headlights and taillights on during snow and rain. Running lights are only on the front.

Dart, on Guyer Road (Photo/Bill Downey)

Railroad bridge: Maple Lane, near Greens Farms train station. (Photo/Seth Schachter)

Burying Hill Beach (Photo/Seth Schachter)

Robin and Griffin at Burying Hill Beach (Photo/Nico Eisenberger)

Frozen Compo Beach … (Photo/Tammy Barry)

… with a bit of recreation there … (Photo/Tammy Barry)

… while bundled up against the cold. (Photo/Tammy Barry)

Sherwood Island State Park: Don’t believe everything you read. (Photo/Bruce Geller)

 

Roundup: Snow Edition … Plus Long Lots $$, Chabad Heroes And More …

In 2018, a Westport woman — a realtor, marathon runner and member of the Zoning Board of Appeals — was paralyzed when she stepped outside her house during a storm. A tree branch fell, breaking her neck.

Be safe in treacherous weather, a reader says.

Which reminds us: If any resident needs help of any kind today, please click “Comments” — and/or email 06880blog.org.

Our readers — and “06880” — will do our best to help. No promises, but this is what our community is all about.

Online, and in real life.

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It goes without saying, but the Westport Library and Westport Weston Family YMCA are both closed today. (Along with probably everything else.)

In addition, all Library programs have been canceled through Monday. Among those impacted:

The following programs will be rescheduled, for dates not yet determined:

These Children’s programs will be canceled for Monday, returning as scheduled February 2: Rhythm & Rhyme, Tummy Time Midday, Near Peer Homework Help, and Crafternoon at the Library.

As of now, Near Peer Homework Help is still on for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

This 2016 scene may look familiar today. (Photo/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)

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Meanwhile, this was the scene yesterday.

The temperature did not reach 20. But that did not stop intrepid dogs — or their owners — from heading to Compo Beach for some quality, pre-snow time.

(Photo/Cat Malkin)

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Six major school construction projects across Connecticut are on the state’s building priority list for 2026.

And one of the 6 is Long Lots.

The New Haven Register reports that after districts apply for grants, the state Department of Administrative Services reviews applications, compiles a priority list, and presents it to the governor’s office and legislature’s School Construction Project Priority List Review Committee.

The committee unanimously approved the 2026 list earlier this month. It now goes to the state legislature for funding.

The amount depends on the reimbursement rate, calculated by the Department of Administrative Services based on each town’s wealth. (Hat tip: Bill Dedman)

Rendering of the new Long Lots Elementary School.

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Arthur Hayes spotted this scene yesterday:

(Photo/Arthur Hayes)

“Was a nervous parent sitting alongside in the front seat?” he wonders.

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The Chamber of Mothers is a national, nonpartisan coalition working to advance maternal health, paid leave, and economic equity for families. Our Connecticut Chapter is focused on building awareness and advocacy right here in our state.

Westporter Jessica Hill co-facilitates the Connecticut chapter. On January 28, they’re sponsoring a social media day of action, to shine a light on Connecticut’s paid leave programs, help educate employees about their rights, and encourage businesses to celebrate and promote their own family-friendly policies.

Participants can share one or more images on their feeds or stories, along with tags (@ctpaidleave and @chamberofmothers), hashtags (#CTPaidLeave) and the link ctpaidleave.org.

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Chabad of Westport’s “Night for Our Heroes” honors Major Sagi Dovev (Res.), and wounded Israeli Defense Forces soldiers for their courage, strength and sacrifice. The event is February 25 (7 p.m.).

Since October 7, 2023, Major Dovev has volunteered full-time at Sheba Medical Center. He works with wounded soldiers and freed hostages as they rebuild strength, confidence, and hope. He has spent the past decade developing innovative training methods to build physical and mental resilience. .

Also featured: Daniel Kopylov, a fighter in the Kfir Brigade who was critically wounded in Gaza. During his rehabilitation, Daniel trained with Major Dovev, demonstrating incredible determination and resilience, becoming a living example of the strength of Israel’s soldiers.

For more information and to RSVP, click here.

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We’ll be inundated with snow photos today.

So before it all hits, here’s a “Westport … Naturally” image from Grove Point, of a couple of creatures who manage to stay above it all.

(Photo/RB Benson)

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And finally … why are we randomly offering up this song?

Well — as Bob says, “you don’t need to be a weatherman to know which way the wind blows…”

(You also don’t need to donate to “06880” to read our 24/7/365 coverage of Westport. But we sure do appreciate it if you do. Please lick here — and thank you. PS: It’s a lot more fun than shoveling.)

Sustainable Westport Urges Westporters: “UnPlastic!”

In the 1967 film “The Graduate,” Mr. McGuire gives Benjamin Braddock one word of advice: “Plastics.” There’s a great future there, he adds.

Nearly 60 years later, “plastics” symbolizes something very different: prioritizing short-term convenience and profit over the long-term well-being of both humans and our entire planet.

Westport can’t change the world.

But we can sure take some steps right here in our town.

Sustainable Westport can help us try.

The non-profit has spent 2 decades educating residents about the importance of the environment.

Now they offer action steps. Among the first: “UnPlastic Westport.”

The initiative aims to reduce single-use plastics, and expand water-filling stations around town. The goal is to “turn shared intention into measurable, community-wide change.”

What’s wrong with convenient, ubiquitous plastic? Sustainable Westport says it:

  • Enters human bodies and may carry serious health risks for ourselves and our children.
  • Is produced in massive quantities, using fossil fuels.
  • Persists virtually forever, breaking down into microplastics.
  • Is often labeled “recyclable,” despite being rarely recycled in practice.
  • Contaminates ecosystems and food chains globally.

Plastic water bottles are everywhere — especially athletic fields. Sustainable Westport is pushing for more water filling stations around town.

Each month — right here on “06880” — they’ll highlight an area of daily life where single-use plastic is most common, along with practical ideas to use.

From kitchens and laundry rooms to sports teams and more, small shifts add up to big changes.

Today, Sustainable Westport’s “UnPlastic” tips focus on pantries. For example:

  • Move dry goods into glass jars or metal tins.
  • Buy in bulk or larger sizes, to reduce packaging
  • Avoid individually wrapped snacks where possible
  • Make your own DIY snacks, like trail mix
  • Trade out plastic tupperware for glass.

Sustainable Westport invites residents to “Pledge to UnPlastic.” Signing here — and sharing an idea or tip — reinforces commitment.

Each month too, the organization will highlight a “Sustainable Superstar.”

The first is the Staples cheer team’s Pyramid Club.

By rethinking how water was served at their weekly pasta dinners for the football team, they eliminated the need for single-use water bottles.

All it took was purchasing 12 restaurant-style pitchers, and asking a custodian to open the school cafeteria kitchen so they could fill them with tap water (and use ice from the machine).

Using compostable paper cups, this fall they kept nearly 1,000 bottles out of the waste stream. Click here to learn more.

Staples cheer team’s Pyramid Club.

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But that’s not all from Sustainable Westport. They also recommend these upcoming events:

Winter Seed Sowing with Alice Ely” (Monday, January 26, 7 p.m., Wakeman Town Farm): Learn to make your own “mini-greenhouse” in a bottle to start seedlings. Leave it outside till spring, when you’ll reap a dozen or more native plants that pollinators love, to start in your garden. Click here to register.

First Monday” (February 2, 7 p.m., Emmy Squared): Catch up on local, national and global sustainability topics. All are welcome; just drop in.

WestportREADS: The Real Impact of Climate Change on Connecticut Shores“: (February 12, 7 p.m., Westport Library): In this year’s WestportREADS selection, “All the Water In the World,” much of Manhattan is under water due to melting glaciers. Executive director of the Connecticut Institute for Resilience and Climate Adaptation James O’Donnell will discuss the effects of climate change on our shoreline and Long Island Sound. Click here for more information.

(“06880” regularly covers Westport’s environmental scene — along with so much else. If you appreciate our work on important subjects, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Pic Of The Day #3202

Cross Highway (Photo/Claudia Sherwood Servidio)