State Rolls Back To COVID Phase 2.1

First Selectman Jim Marpe says:

Due to increasing rates of COVID-19 in Connecticut, the state will roll back from Phase 3 to Phase 2.1 effective tomorrow (Friday, November 6).

Phase 2.1 is a slightly modified version of the previously enacted Phase 2 rules. Changes under Phase 2.1 include:

  • Restaurants will return to or remain at 50 percent capacity, with a maximum of 8 people per table
  • Restaurants and entertainment venues will be required to close by 9:30 p.m. except for food takeout and delivery services, which may continue after 9:30 p.m.
  • Personal services, such as hair salons and barber shops, will remain at 75 percent capacity
  • Event venues will be limited to 25 people indoor, 50 people outdoor
  • Performing arts venues and movie theaters will have a capacity of 100 people
  • Religious gatherings will be limited to 50 percent capacity or 100 people maximun
  • Residents are urged to remain indoors between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m., unless for essential activities.

Westport businesses will remain open. I encourage those who can to continue patronizing local restaurants and businesses.

Since the beginning of this pandemic, Westport has promoted local and small businesses. A great idea for eating out and staying safe — BYOB (“Bring Your Own Blanket”) comes from the Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce.

The Westport Weston Health District says that a significant portion of Westport’s COVID cases are related to youth travel sports. These programs are regional, span several states and fall outside of local authority. Updated state Department of Public Health guidance for youth and interscholastic sports is forthcoming.

Town officials are also aware that some very large gatherings of both young people and adults occurred over Halloween weekend. We continue to stress that everyone be sensitive to neighbors, and aware of the risks imposed on those with pre-existing conditions and the elderly.

Westport Wash & Wax Is Sold To Splash

Westport is blessed with many community-minded local businesses. Topping any list is Westport Wash & Wax.

For 21 years, the Post Road car wash near Long Lots Road has exemplified the importance of local roots. The walls are covered with letters of thanks from charities, organizations and individuals who benefited from owners Scott and Laila Tiefenthaler’s generosity. No request was too small — or too large — for them to oblige.

Their employees have been great too. Hard-working, efficient, and always willing to go beyond, they sparkled just like our cars.

But not the Tiefenthalers are moving on. They say:

To all of our friends and patrons in Westport, Weston, Fairfield and surrounding communities:

After more than 20 years — since opening in 1999, –the time has come to move on to other endeavors.

Our business has been sold to Splash Car Wash. Rest assured, the same professional staff will provide the same friendly service you have come to expect at Westport Wash & Wax.

Homes With Hope CEO and president Jeff Wieser (in jacket) with (front, from left) Laila, Scott and Craig Tiefenthaler, and some of their dedicated employees, at one of Westport Wash & Wax’s many “Neighbor” ceremonies.

To our many faithful customers: Thank you for your continued patronage over the years. We have come to know many of you as friends, and hope to see you around town in the future.

We especially want to thank the managers and staff of Westport Wash & Wax for their hard work and positive attitudes that they bring to the job every day. Many of you have been with the company for 15 or 20 years. You are our brothers and sisters. You are family.

To our friends in the police and fire departments, EMS, public works and all the folks who help to make our towns safe and orderly: Thank you for your efforts.  We are all fortunate to live in a beautiful part of the world.

Health and peace to everyone,
Scott and Laila Tiefenthaler

(In August 2019, Westport Wash & Wax was “06880”‘s Unsung Heroes. Click here for that story.)

Roundup: Pride And Prejudice, Night Music, Field Hockey, More


Who doesn’t want to escape 2020? The early 1800s sound great!

This Sunday (November 8, 6 p.m.), Staples Players’ radio play series continues with “Pride and Prejudice.” Jane Austen’s tale of romance and matchmaking gone awry is great family entertainment. Just like the old days! (Though there were no radio plays in the 1800s, of course.)

Sophie Rossman plays Elizabeth Bennet. She calls this “unlike anything we’ve done in the last 4 years.” Sophie admires Elizabeth’s “drive to make decisions and defy gender stereotypes to achieve her aspirations.”

Emily Desser adds that “audiences will love all of the characters in each of these shows. Each of them is entertaining in their own way, and cast members find such interesting ways to bring them to life.”

Gruel Brittania joins the fun. The Fairfield restaurant offers Pemberley’s Prime Rib Supper with Yorkshire pudding, cauliflower and broccoli cheese, roasted parsnips and carrots, pan gravy and horseradish sauce, and sticky toffee pudding with custard. To order, click here.

To enjoy the free livestream, click on www.wwptfm.org.

Seniors Sophie Rossman and David Corro rehearse “Pride and Prejudice.” (Photo/Kerry Long)


Temple Israel cantor Dan Sklar, local favorites The Sweet Remains, Staples High School senior Camille Foisie and Camp A Cappella highlight an evening of great music on Saturday, November 14 (7:30 p.m.).

It’s all for a great cause: the Norwalk/Nagarote Sister City Project. Email norwalksistercityproject@gmail.com.

Camille Foisie


The Staples field hockey team celebrated Senior Day in a big way in their last regular season game, scoring against Norwalk within the first minute. The rampage continued, all the way to 6-1.

The undefeated (8-0) Wreckers advance to the Central Division semifinal, Saturday at home.

(Photo/JC Martin)


And finally … as Election Week continues …

During COVID, A Westporter Connects

As the coronavirus swept across America, the news was filled with brutal stories. Among the worst: so many nursing home residents and hospital patients dying alone.

Deprived of personal visits, men and women — if they were lucky — drew their last breaths watching loved ones on iPads and cell phones. In the midst of so much chaos and death, doctors, nurses and support staff brought their own devices from home, so those they cared for could have slightly less lonely goodbyes.

Most of us shook our heads sorrowfully; this was one particularly awful horror, in a cascade of them.

Kara Ivy Goldberg wanted to do something about it.

Kara Ivy Goldberg

At Staples High School, the 2004 graduate had been a tennis star — and a volunteer at Norwalk Hospital. She studied economics and environmental sciences at the University of Virginia, where she spent 2 years as chapter president of Best Buddies.

After moving west for a job in tech marketing, Kara joined the board of Big Brothers, Big Sisters of the Bay Area.

Three years ago she returned to the East Coast. She continued her tech marketing career, and also worked in commercial real estate.

In mid-March, COVID crushed all of that. Kara and her fiancé had just arrived in Colorado, to see his sister’s new baby. Their planned 3-day stay turned into 6 weeks.

While there, Kara heard of a project started by a good college friend and her colleagues. COVID Tech Connect. The idea is simple: source, donate and ship devices to hospitals, senior care facilities and hospices, to facilitate video calls between pandemic patients and loved ones.

Google donated thousands of Pixel devices; Facebook contributed Portals. COVID Tech Connect ships 4 to 15 devices per facility. Funding came from Google, a GoFundMe page, and a large anonymous donor. Ellen DeGeneres gave a substantial grant too.

Kara is one of 2 full-time employees. She handles all hospital communications, and pretty much anything else that needs to be done.

There’s a lot. Hospitals need to be aware of the program; there’s shipping, security, setup and trouble-shooting too.

COVID Tech Connect has worked well. So far, 6,600 devices have been shipped, to 778 facilities. The goal is 20,000 devices.

But the videoconference platforms being used — Zoom, Google Meets, Microsoft Teams and more — were designed for consumers, not dying patients and healthcare facilities that must deal with things like HIPAA.

So Kara and her team are designing a free, universal platform to address those issues.

The focus so far has been on public and underserved hospitals. Feedback has been fantastic.


Margie Ulman — one of the first patients in Georgia to die from COVID-19 — was also the first to use a device provided by COVID Tech Connect to communicate with her family. (Photo courtesy of Dr. Joanne Kuntz)

As the coronavirus surges again, COVID Tech Connect plugs away. “As long as there’s a need, we’ll be available,” Kara says.

They continue to send devices — and to make sure that doctors, nurses, administrators and IT people know the program is available.

COVID Tech Connect provides a brilliant connection, at a time when we all need one.

Including Kara Ivy Goldberg.

One of her devices was sent to the healthcare facility where her grandmother lives.

(For more information on COVID Tech Connect, click here. If your facility would like to request devices, click here.) 

Pic Of The Day #1297

Stephen Kempson: how a British clothier dresses, and what he rides (Photo/J.C. Martin)

Unsung Heroes #164

This week’s Unsung Heroes selection is a no-brainer.

No matter what you thought of the election — and the months-that-seemed-like millennia run-up to it — you know one thing: We could not have voted without help.

I don’t mean help in choosing a candidate. If I never get another text saying “Daniel, this is Caroline from the xxxx campaign!” it will be too soon.

I mean the behind-the-scenes help. To the town clerk ‘s office; the League of Women Voters and other volunteers who compiled and disseminated information, and (of course!) the poll workers who braved COVID, closed-in indoor spaces and vague threats of disruption to ensure that democracy prevails: thank you. Many of those spending long hours are polling places were high school and college students. How great to get them involved — along with all the regulars, who have done it for decades. (Nice too how many people thanked them profusely.)

Staples High School senior Reed Caney volunteered as a poll worker yesterday, at Long Lots Elementary School.

And how about the registrars of voters? In a herculean effort this past Saturday, they opened approximately 8,000 returned absentee ballots. They rejected only 5 (!), because of issues like improper envelopes or missing signatures.

On Monday, they personally notified those 5 voters — and advised them to vote in person yesterday.

We’ve been through a lot this year. You helped bring a bit of normalcy into very uncertain times.

I know, I know. You don’t do it for the glory. (And certainly not for the pay.)

But that makes your work even more important, inspiring and incredible.

Roundup: Election Day, Cockenoe Poster, More


How did you spend election night?

I toggled back and forth between TV stations, Twitter and texts.

Some people headed to watch parties, at Wakeman Town Farm (Democrats) and Hudson Malone (Republicans).

A few folks gathered on the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Memorial Bridge, to show support for their candidate:

(Photo/Marcy Sansolo)

Donald Trump lost Westport by a 3-to-1 margin: 12,775 to 4,184.

Nationally, of course, we will know the result — perhaps — by Inauguration Day.


Looking for a vintage 1967 “Save Cockenoe Now” poster? You can bid online for it here.

No idea what “Save Cockenoe Now” was all about? The quick answer: Back in the day, a nuclear power plant camethisclose to being built a mile off Compo Beach.

Want to know more? Click here(Hat tip: William Strittmatter)


And finally …

 

 

Unofficial Results: Westport Goes Blue

Unofficial results — but including in-person voting, and absentee and early drop-off ballots — show Westporters favoring Democrats in every contest yesterday.

The Biden-Harris presidential ticket outpolled Trump=Pence, 12,775 to 4,184.

Congressman Jim Himes was re-elected to his 7th term in the 4th District, helped by 11,968 Westport votes to challenger Jonathan Riddle’s 4,881.

In Connecticut’s 26th Senatorial district, Will Haskell won a 2nd term, aided by 10,230 Westport votes to 4,721 for Republican Kim Healy.

Democrat Michelle McCabe outpolled Republican incumbent Tony Hwang 1,198 to 843 in Westport. But results in the rest of the State Senate District 28 came in slowly, and as of 5 a.m. today, McCabe’s lead in the entire district was less than 100 votes. That outcome is uncertain.

Six-term state Representative Jonathan Steinberg beat back a challenge from fellow Staples High School graduate Chip Stephens, with 10,446 Westport votes compared to 5,266 in the 136th District.

Democrat Stephanie Thomas led Patricia Zukaro , 753 to 480, in Westport. Final results from the entire District 143 are not yet in.

Overall, more than 85 percent of Westport’s registered voters participated in the 2020 election, either by mail, drop-off or in person.

 

 

Feliz Navidog!

Ari Halper is an advertising creative director.

very creative director. He developed the E*Trade Baby, made a short film with Ron Howard that shortlisted at the Oscars, and won an Emmy for his work on Canon. These days, the Westporter heads his own creative consultancy, Sauce.

Halper’s daughter Reya sure inherited his creative genes.

Last year at Christmas, the Saugatuck Elementary School student picked up their black goldendoodle’s paw. Reya began singing: “Feliz Navidog.”

Halper asked about her take on our Weston neighbor Jose Feliciano’s lovable holiday anthem. “That’s Santa’s dog,” Reya replied.

The creative director’s creative brain kicked in. Reya loves to read! What a great idea for a children’s book!

Ari and Reya Halper, and their goldendoodle.

Most people would leave it there. Halper — and his daughter — are not most people.

Over the next several weeks they wrote several drafts. It was fun. And, they realized, they had a salable product.

As they searched for a publisher — and Halper stresses this was a collaborative effort, with Reya providing plenty of input — they realized how big and unwieldy the children’s book world is.

They eventually discovered a children’s self-publishing group. The control and speed of that option appealed to them. Halper went to a writer’s workshop, educating himself on the ins and outs (aka the challenges and perils) of self-publishing.

There were many.

One was finding help. They found one through Reedsy, an online site matching authors with professionals.

“She was great,” Halper reports. “I wanted the book to be very Dr. Seuss-ish. Anapestic tetrameter is very regimented. She really held me to meter.”

The next task was finding an illustrator. Halper and Reyna settled on a woman who clearly understood the concept.

She lives in Mumbai. Fortunately, the internet shrinks the world. Unfortunately, the time difference made their collaboration less than instantaneous.

In July — just as the project neared its end — someone asked Halper if Rudolph was in the public domain. The world-famous reindeer was a central character in “Feliz Navidog.”

Turns out there are still 7 years left in Rudolph’s copyright. Turns out also though that Rudolph’s management is controlled by Character Arts. The company is based right next door in Wilton.

Aha! Halper thought. What an in!

He told them his tale. It was the middle of the pandemic; people were looking for a feel-good story. He added some personal details. How about licensing the rights to Rudolph?

Halper got “a categorial ‘no.'”

Christmas was coming (at least, in the book publishing world). What to do?

Fortunately, every other character in the book — Santa, Mrs. Claus, the 8 non-Rudolph reindeer — are all fair game.

Halper and Reya devised a new hook. They rewrote the book. The illustrator redid 10 of the book’s 40 pages. Just like Rudolph’s guided sleigh ride, everything worked out in the end.

Of course, it still was not easy. Normally a book like this would be printed overseas. But COVID complicated matters. Printing was done in the US — at a higher cost.

The hardcover version should be available any day. The paperback and e-book versions are live now, on Amazon.

Oh, yeah: The plot. It’s Christmas, and Pittsburgh is covered in a terrible fog. Even worse, the reindeer all get sick and can’t fly. When all hope seems lost, Feliz Navidog — Santa’s pet — raises his paw to help.

The book’s lesson is all about overcoming obstacles. The father-daughter author team sure did.

Here’s wishing them much success.

And, of course, Feliz Navidad.

(To order “Feliz Navidog: The Story of How Santa’s Pet Dog Saved Christmas — click here. To learn more, click here. Hat tip: Jerri Graham)

Pics Of The Day #1296

As Westporters — and all Americans — bite their nails, hold their breath and say a prayer that their candidate will win tonight, here’s a reminder that we are all in this together.

LandTech principal Pete Romano put this sign outside his Saugatuck office this morning. Amen!

(Photo/Jeff Seaver)

In a similar vein, Amanda Doyle sends along her 8-year-old daughter Niamh’s homework for today.