Roundup: Girls Soccer, Pumpkins, ALS …

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Congratulations to the Staples High School girls soccer team!

The #4 Wreckers battled #1 St. Joseph to a 0-0 draw in the FCIAC semifinals last night — then prevailed on penalty kicks, to advance to the league championship. It’s tomorrow night (Wednesday, 7 p.m.) Thursday (November 4, 7 p.m.)  at Fairfield Warde High School.

Coco Crombie, Gaby Gonzalez and Gabriela de Brito each made their tension-filled, game-ending shots. McKenzie Didio saved 3 shots in goal, to propel the Westporters to the title match.

Coach Barry Beattie’s team hopes to make it 2 championships in a row. They beat St. Joseph in 2019. There was no match last year, due to COVID.

Good luck too to the Staples field hockey team. Seeded #3, they face #2 Darien tonight at 7:30., at Brien McMahon High School.

The Staples High School girls soccer team, at last month’s the Push Against Cancer …

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Halloween’s over. You’re rationing your kid’s candy, and cleaning the cobwebs (literally) from your yard. But what to do about that rotting pumpkin?

Bring it to the Westport Farmers’ Market on November 11 (10 a.m. to 2 p.m.). Their 3rd annual Great Pumpkin Toss is a free, fun composting event.

Action Waste Solutions will accept all pumpkins (and gourds!) in their natural state at the market. Squishy, rotted pumpkins are welcome. If they’re decorated or painted, they unfortunately can’t be composted.

In addition to creating compost, pumpkins provide food for livestock. Ox Hollow Farm will fill their truck with pumpkins for their cows.

PS: You can also sign up for Action Waste Solution’s residential recycling collection service, and get your first month of service free.

Last year’s event diverted one ton of pumpkins from landfill. Let’s beat that this year!

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One of Westport’s most important holiday events — the annual Giving Program — is underway.

Aimed at friends and neighbors facing financial hardship, it’s funded entirely by community donations. Each year, over 100 Westport families with school-aged children benefit.

COVID — with unemployment, underemployment, food insecurity and stress — has increased the need.

During the pandemic, Westport’s Department of Human Services has pivoted from accepting toys and clothes. The emphasis now is on gift cards, checks and cash. Safety is one factor; so is the chance for parents to personalize their children’s gifts, while participating in the holiday season.

Individuals and organizations can click here to help; choose “Family to Family,” then “Holiday Giving Program.” Checks can be mailed to Westport Department of Human Services c/o Town Hall, 110 Myrtle Avenue, Westport, CT 06880.  Donations may also be dropped off at Town Hall by appointment.

Westport residents facing financial difficulties can call Human Services at 203-341-1050 or email humansrv@westportct.gov for confidential assistance.

Click here for more information. Questions about the program? Email adaugelli@westportct.gov or call 203-341-1183. 

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As he battled ALS, Jonathan Greenfield was thinking of others. The well-known Westporter created Breathe4ALS, The goal was to improve the lives of people living with ALS by educating them about the Wim Hof breathing technique, and its ability to provide more energy, less stress and a heightened immune response — and to fundraise for ALS research.

Jonathan died in June, but his work continues. This Sunday (November 7,  11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.) the non-profit he founded with his wife Iris holds its first Jonathan Greenfield Memorial Wim Hof fundamentals workshops. It’s called “Breathe Westport. Breathe!” Jonathan created Breathe 4 ALS with a dual mission:  to improve the lives of people living with ALS and to raise money for ALS research.

The event will be held at the Greenfields’ home, and livestreamed. Tickets are $200 and $45, respective. All proceeds benefit Breathe4ALS. Click here to register, and for more information. Click here for a video on the Wim Hof technique.

Not long after his diagnoses, Jonathan Greenfield hiked in Spain with Wim Hof (left).

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Political season means political signs. You see them everywhere: traffic islands. Front lawns. Today, of course, at polling places.

They tout candidates for local offices. Except this one, spotted earlier today on South Compo.

The Tiger King is not on the ballot. Besides, the 2020 presidential election is over. Joe Biden won.*

(Photo/Matt Murray)

*Really.

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The Mercedes station wagon parked since summer front of Town Hall still remains there.

It’s not the only perhaps abandoned vehicle.

Chris Grimm says a Holiday Rambler travel trailer has sat in the Sherwood Island Connector I-95 commuter lot for at least a couple of weeks. 

The door is wide open. He describes it as “ever so slightly furnished crack den chic. The only decoration is a Junie B. Jones bumper sticker on the inside of the front window. Looks like a metaphor for lost youth if there ever was one!”

Holiday Rambler in the I-95 lot. (Photo/Chris Grimm)

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MoCA Westport’s auction is online, and open. More than 50 items — including original art, unique experiences, and products from small Westport businesses — are available for bid.

Click here to participate. The auction closes November 15.

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Thoreau never gets old

To prove it, Westporter Andrew Blauner has compiled essays from 27 leading writers. Their original pieces explore how the 19th century philosopher/poet/ environmentalist/abolitionist influenced them.

Next Monday (November 8, 7 p.m.), he (Blauner, not Thoreau, Zoom) will talk about his new book, what he’s learned, and why we still need Thoreau in our lives. Click here to register, and purchase the book.

Henry David Thoreau

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The Westport Astronomical Society’s lecture series is one of our town’s unheralded gems. (The WAS calls itself, after all, “The Best Space in Connecticut.”)

Next up: the Hubble Telescope, and “A Brief Moment in Time.” It’s November 16 (8 p.m.). Click here to view.

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There are plenty of places to admire fall foliage. One of my favorites is at the entrance to Staples High School, just off North Avenue.

Dayle Brownstein loves it too. Here’s her photo — a perfect “Westport … Naturally” image, on this Election Day when there’s no school.

(Photo/Dayle Brownstein)

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And finally … today is Election Day. Leonard Cohen nails it. Sure, he was Canadian, but you get the idea.

 

https://vimeo.com/leescharf/review/640045615/d2acaa8cda

Polls Open Now — VOTE!

Turnout was light at 6:30 this morning, when I voted at the Westport Library.

But Representative Town Meeting candidates were out in force, in the pre-dawn chill:

Inside, poll watchers checked in the slow stream of voters:

(Photos/Dan Woog)

This election is strictly local. The major contest — for first selectman — involves Republican Second Selectwoman Jennifer Tooker, Democratic State Representative Jonathan Steinberg, and Libertarian T.J. Elgin.

Click here for sample ballots.

Need to check where to vote? Use the State Voter Registration Lookup Tool.

Election voting districts can be viewed here.

Now They Know How Many Drummers It Takes To Fill The Albert Hall

It was Westport Night at Royal Albert Hall.

Last week, the historic London venue — currently celebrating its 150th anniversary, and host to (among others) Albert Einstein, Winston Churchill, the Dalai Lama, Frank Sinatra, Jimi Hendrix, Adele, Eric Clapton (200 times) and the only Beatles/Rolling Stones shared billing ever — was the setting for a Michael Bolton concert.

The Westport-based artist has played there more than two dozen times. His longtime drummer — Staples High School Class of 2000 graduate Drew McKeon — made his 5th appearance on the hallowed stage.

Drew McKeon, before the Royal Albert Hall Show.

It never gets old. Drew is awed every time he steps onto it.

This time, before the show, he hung out backstage with Nile Rogers.

The singer/songwriter/producer/former Chic front man splits his time between Westport and his other homes in Miami, London, and Turks & Caicos.

But, he told Drew, “Westport will always be home.”

Michael Bolton still tours incessantly — a couple of hundred shows a year. Drew has played most of those gigs with him, for nearly a decade.

Michael Bolton, Drew McKeon and the band.

But the Royal Albert Hall never gets old.

Drew McKeon at work, on London. (Photos/Gregg Kozak

BONUS TRACK: Click here for a great Peter Blake mural of some of the performers from Royal Albert Hall’s long past.

 

Pics Of The Day #1658

Dawn on Main Street … (Photo/Lori Lustig)

… and Church Lane at dusk (Photo/Patricia McMahon)

Roundup: Election Day, Christmas Trees, Gallery Opening …

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Election Day is tomorrow (Tuesday, November 2). Here is what you need to know, courtesy of Westport’s official town website:

Are you registered to vote? Click here to check your current status.  If your are voting by Absentee Ballot, this tool will also tell you if we’ve received your Absentee Ballot.

Do you still need to register to vote? Click here to register.

Missed registration deadlines? You can register on Election Day at Town Hall.  Here’s how.

November 2nd Election Sample ballots

Need to check where to vote? Use the State Voter Registration Lookup Tool.

Election voting districts can be viewed here.

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Election Day is — as noted above — tomorrow. Yesterday was Halloween.

But it’s not too early for Christmas.

Anthropologie wins the race for earliest trees.

A welcome sight? Or absurdly early? Click “Comments” below.

(Photo/JC Martin)

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George Billis Gallery’s next show — a group event with 5 artists, working in watercolor, acrylic and glass — runs from November 13 to December 5.

Featured artists include Russ Havard, Margery Gosnell-Qua, Abby Modell, Angela Rustici and Susan Stillman.

An opening reception is Saturday, November 13 (4 to 7 p.m.). For more information, click here.

“White Trees Spring” (Susan Stillman)

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Daniel Vener snapped today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo on Saturday.

He says: “This gull was trick-or-treating a bit early.”

(Photo/Daniel Vener)

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And finally … on this day in 1894 Buffalo Bill Cody, 15 Native American members of his traveling show, and Annie Oakley were filmed by Thomas Edison in his New Jersey studio.

 

Julie Cook’s Next Sweet Adventure

When Savannah Bee opened in Westport several years ago, people rolled their eyes.

So did I.

A honey store? Is that what Westport really needed?

It did.

Savannah Bee was much more than honey. By selling all kinds of bee products — and educating Westporters about the vitally important role bees play in our world — the Bedford Square shop filled a niche we didn’t even know we needed.

But for a variety of reasons, the local outpost of the 15-location, largely Southern chain is closing at the end of the year. Loyal customers are sad.

They’re especially sorry to see Julie Cook — the manager from the start — leaving early.

She moves soon to Brunswick for her dream job. She’s the new general manager of Mae’s Bakery & Cafe — and has a small stake in the business. It’s been an institution for over 40 years in nearby Bath.

It’s a homecoming of sorts. Julie went to Bowdoin College in the late 1970s and early ’80s. She’s hoped o get back ever since.

“Businesses are booming in Maine,” she says. “The food scene has always been very strong and extraordinary. They got the concept of farm to table way before we did down here. It was a way of life for a community of hard-working organic farmers and fishermen.”

Julie has been helping train the new beekeepers and bee educators at Savannah. Her last day is Thursday.

Julie Cook, with honey.

“I have enjoyed my 4-plus years with Savannah Bee more than I can say,” she notes. She’s lived in Westport and Weston for nearly 35 years.

“And although out store is closing this New Year’s, I truly believe we have made a lasting impact on everyone who visited us. By sharing our founder’s mission of helping people become better stewards of the planet, we did a very ‘good thing,’ as my former boss Martha Stewart would say.

“By raising awareness about bees and how to make meaningful changes to help save our Mother Earth, our kids and so many families have become pollinator protectors and changed the way they treat their lawns, gardens and each other.”

Julie established a bee yard at Wakeman Town Farm. She taught bee education classes to campers, got a year-round digital teaching hive donated by SBC and The Bee Cause, and WTF is up for a $1,500 grant to further build the program. She left the Farm and town in a better place than she found it.

She hopes her many area friends will visit her at Mae’s Bakery. Meanwhile, she says, “I’m over the moon. And ready for my next sweet adventure,” Julie says.

Savannah Bee manager Julie Cook talked about her company’s mission — and the importance of bees on our planet — at Wakeman Town Farm.

Pics Of The Day #1657

Mini-pumpkin in jail; baby Yoda — both carved by 13-year-old Luke Bernier (Photo/Anne Bernier)

Just another Halloween at Compo Beach

(Photos/Ed Simek)

Meeker Road, this afternoon (Photo/Dan Woog)

Photo Challenge #357

Lynn Untermeyer Miller nailed it: Coffee An’ has “the best donuts and nicest people around.”

They’ve also got the coffee cup clock that was the subject of last week’s Photo Challenge.

It hangs — unobtrusively, but funkily — on the wall of the beloved just-beyond-downtown shop. Kim Reichert, Andrew Colabella and Bobbie Herman also knew exactly where to find it. (Click here for photo.)

Today’s Photo Challenge is perfect. If you know where you’d find this Halloween scene, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Ed Simek)

Roundup: Kelli O’Hara, Cary Pierce, Steven Parton …

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Congratulations to Staples’ October Students of the Month!

Catherine Cunningham, Gianna Amatuzzi, Lucas Baer, Sydney Griffiths, Olivia McCaffery, Kaylin Manning and William Holleman are “students who help make Staples a welcoming place for peers and teachers alike. They are the ‘glue’ of the Staples community: the type of kind, cheerful, hard-working, trustworthy students that keep the high school together, making it the special place that it is.”

Teachers nominate students who are friendly to staff and fellow students, and make positive contributions in class as well as the Staples community.

From left: Catherine Cunningham, Gianna Amatuzzi, Lucas Baer, Sydney Griffiths, Olivia McCaffery, Kaylin Manning, William Holleman.

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A link is live for the virtual version of the Westport Library’s 2021 Malloy Lecture in the Arts. Broadway (and Westport’s) own Kelli O’Hara will be joined in conversation on Thursday, November 11 (7 p.m.) by renowned theater director Bartlett Sher.

O’Hara won a Tony Award for her portrayal of Anna in “The King and I,” among many honors. Click here to register for the event.

Kelli O’Hara

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Speaking of songs: Cary Pierce – the 1987 Staples High School graduate who is the longtime half of the popular musical duo Jackopierce — sends word that his new single, “Outta My Head” (from the EP “The Dalhattan Project”) has just dropped. Click here for its many platforms.

You can see Jackopierce live, too. They play City Winery in New York this Tuesday (November 7; doors open at 6 p.m., the band is on at 8). Click here for more information.

Cary Pierce

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Amy Simon — the Post Road East art gallery — hosts an artists’ reception for Donald Martiny and Amy Genser this Friday (November 5, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.). The show is called “Pushing the Boundaries.”

“Callisto” — polymer and pigment on aluminum (Donald Martiny)

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Speaking of art: Westporter Steven Parton earned a Salmagundi Award for Oils & Acrylics at the Audubon Artists’ 79th Annual Exhibition in New York. The honor came for his work “SAFE.”

Congratulations, Steve!

“SAFE” (Steven Parton)

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Is today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo a Halloween witch?

Nah. But it could be.

(Photo/Nancy Axthelm)

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And finally … trick or treat!

 

The Wheels On The Bus (Don’t Always Go ‘Round)

Laura Silverman and her husband moved to Westport from Brooklyn 4 years ago.

Like so many other residents — new and old — she’s had it with Dattco.

That’s the Westport Public Schools’ bus contractor that has been the focus of many complaints this fall. Laura says that school administrators “are busting their tails for our kids this year.” But bus problems continue.

Some routes are being combined with others. Parents have been late for work when buses are late — or never come at all.

At the end of the school day, some children arrive home well after 4 p.m. They’ve spent a long time in school, a long time waiting for the bus, a long time on it — and then they’re late for after-school sports practices, lessons, appointments and more.

School buses: a major Westport issue. (Photo/Amy Schneider)

Laura notes another issue: COVID. She says:

A few weeks ago, an outbreak at Saugatuck resulted in 25 positive cases and dozens of kids in quarantine (my son was one of them). I have high praise for the professionalism of our principal, Beth Messler. She and her staff have made serious efforts to implement social distancing in school, mask wearing, and lunch outdoors so the kids are not crowded in the cafeteria.

Contact tracing showed that many cases were across grade levels, making it unlikely the virus was contracted in school.

The conclusion: The children were all on the same buses.

Laura asked Messler what was being done to insure social distancing on buses. She said her buses were at capacity and cannot socially distance students. To accomplish socially distancing, schools would need more buses, which of course has budget implications.

End of a school day, at Kings Highway Elementary (Photo/Nicola Sharian)

So — like many parent — Laura drives her child to school. In the afternoon she waits in a line reaching down Riverside to Sunny Daes. She spends more than 5 hours each work week doing that.

Laura is frustrated with the lack of communication from Dattco about a resolution.

She praises the Westport schools’ efforts during the pandemic. But, she says, all that work is undermined when the buses don’t run on time.

Or at all.

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Great minds think alike. Superintendent of schools Thomas Scarice is well aware of the problem. On Friday he sent this message to all Westport families:

Transportation continues to be a significant issue in the district. What began with initial concerns regarding dropoff times, particularly for our elementary students, gradually worsened into a lack of reliability and consistency for families at all levels.  As a result, the daily challenges in transportation have evolved and now impact the actual school day in a variety of ways.

The bus driver shortage (Dattco lost 9 drivers since the start of the year in addition to the loss of a dispatcher and the operations supervisor), increased town traffic, and adjusted start times have conspired to significantly impact our ability to provide reliable transportation. There have been delayed bus runs, buses lacking drivers, and last minute condensing of routes leading to confusion, disruption and further delays.

In response, the district has confronted our transportation provider, Dattco, in order to determine what solutions can be implemented to provide reliable transportation. Dattco has reallocated staff from other locations and worked to fast-track new office hires to fully staff the team dedicated to Westport.

(Photo/Lauri Weiser)

In a recent meeting, the Board of Education offered to assist in providing support for any solutions. However, even with that support, there are contractual obligations that are expected to be upheld by our provider, Dattco.

There are a number of short-term measures that are being put in place to mitigate the impact of the driver shortage. However, each of these solutions, while providing increased reliability and consistency, will result in unintended, but inevitable, consequences.

Dattco has assured the district that there are currently 13 individuals in training for CDL licensure and scheduled to join Westport this school year. Six of these candidates are only awaiting the comprehensive background check and clearance. These additional drivers will help mitigate the driver shortage, but additional measures will need to be taken in the interim as the process of licensing can take an extended period of time.

In addition, the district reached out to local first responders to determine if perhaps there are some that could assist in driving buses. Unfortunately, the inconsistency of their schedules do not resolve the need for daily reliability and consistency.

Given the critical shortage of drivers, bus routes will be combined. Although this practice has occurred on an “as needed” basis over the past month, last week, our Transportation Coordinator, Buffy Barry, began the process of permanently condensing routes so that the district’s 57 routes would be reduced to 51.  This would require 6 fewer drivers and significantly improve Dattco’s ability to reliably staff our buses on a daily basis, while also minimizing the inevitable absences when they occur. Once a full roster of drivers is stabilized, there will be consideration for returning to the original routes. However, that is not anticipated until months after the system has stabilized with new drivers.

The unintended, but inevitable, consequence of condensing these routes is that there will be more students on individual buses and the routes will be longer.  This is not desirable, particularly given our successful mitigation efforts with COVID on our buses and in our classrooms.  Providing reliable and consistent service is our priority at the present time.  We will provide updated information to parents about adjusted pick up and drop off times.

While securing new drivers is critically important, retaining our current stable of drivers is equally necessary for the district to provide reliability and consistency.  Dattco is working to implement efforts to maintain drivers and the Board of Education has also committed to supporting driver retention efforts. The district will look to partner with other groups, such as our PTAs, to ensure we maintain current levels while welcoming new drivers in the future.

If condensing routes does not provide the necessary reliability and consistency, it will be necessary to consider other interventions. Cluster/community bus stops create efficiencies by combining a series of proximal stops into one. Fewer stops with the same total number of students on a bus allows for increased drive time and quicker arrivals. Of course there would be safety considerations to be taken into account before such decisions could be made.

Finally, creating more time between bus tiers might be necessary to accommodate the newly condensed bus routes. Currently, the district provides for 30 minutes between each of our three tiers. This is an extreme intervention and would only be considered if all other interventions fail to provide the necessary reliability and consistency in pick up and drop off times for families.  These interventions will be considered after four weeks of the newly condensed routes being implemented.

There is obvious frustration when waiting for your child’s bus, particularly when there is pressure to get to work in the morning, or to bring your child to an activity after school. Calling or emailing Dattco or our transportation coordinator, Buffy Barry, is the appropriate action.

However, given the crisis, if you do not receive a reply, please understand that this is entirely related to these members of the transportation team performing their essential functions in resolving issues and working to ensure that each student is driven back and forth to school safely.

Our standard is to reply to inquiries, yet during this time, it is a challenge to provide the same communication service that parents expect when transportation is fully staffed, on our buses and in our offices.