Tag Archives: 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker

Roundup: Town Meeting, Taste Of Westport, Tel Aviv …

More than 70 years ago, Westport scrapped its annual town meeting.

The New England tradition — dating back to colonial days — had gotten unwieldy, as our community grew in the post-war years.

But town meetings still live on in Vermont.

When the AP went looking for a place to illustrate how in these polarized times local government can still work, they found Elmore.

The town of 886 cherishes its March town meeting. And part of the reason is the moderator: Jon Gailmor.

Townspeople there have called him a neighbor for over 40 years. But Westporters still remember him as a member of Staples High School’s Class of 1966.

He sang with Orphenians. After graduation, he and classmate Rob Carlson formed a duo that earned a cult following up and down the East Coast.

After time in Europe, Gailmor settled in Elmore. He’s become a Vermont state treasure — an actual title — as a singer. In addition to performing, he runs songwriting workshops for kids.

(Last fall, he returned to Westport. He headlined Suzanne Sheridan’s First Folk Sunday at the VFW)

The AP story says that after moving north, Gailmor “found the town meeting tradition nothing short of miraculous. It wasn’t some politician spouting off, but real people taking part …. You feel important. You feel like you are being listened to.”

Click here to read the full article. (Hat tip: Tom Allen)

Jon Gailmor, at the Elmore Town Hall. (Photo courtesy of AP/David Goldman)

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Tickets went on sale today for one of Westport’s best — and most fulfilling — fundraisers: CLASP Homes’ “Taste of Westport.”

The 18th annual event is set for May 22 (6 p.m., Inn at Longshore). As always, the Taste brings together the area’s best food and drink providers. There’s a wide array of dishes, and spirits from more than 2 dozen local establishments.

New this year: a vodka and caviar bar, and tequila tasting.

Plus music by the always-popular. Bar Car Band, and a very extensive silent auction.

It all benefits CLASP. The nonprofit provides homes, support and services to adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

Tickets are $150 per person until April 12, then $175 after. Click here to purchase. PS: It always sells out.

Participants include:

  • Artisan
  • Aspetuck Brew Lab
  • Baldanza at the Schoolhouse
  • Black Bear Wines & Spirits
  • The Boathouse
  • Bridgewater Chocolate
  • Cold Fusion Gelato
  • Don Memo
  • Dunville’s
  • Ferrer Miranda Wines
  • Freixenet
  • Gabriele’s of Westport
  • Greer Southern Table
  • Gruel Britannia
  • Grumpy Dumpling
  • Il Pastaficio
  • La Plage
  • Little Pub
  • Magic 5 Pie Co.
  • Mrs. London’s
  • Nomade
  • Nordic Fish
  • Rive Bistro
  • Rizzuto’s
  • Romanacci
  • SoNo 1420
  • Tarantino
  • Walrus Alley
  • Zucca Gastrobar

A small slice of the Taste of Westport.

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Nancy Diamond writes: “Greetings from Tel Aviv!

“Eighteen Fairfield County residents are visiting Israel this week on a mission to learn how the country is coping with the war, and to help where there are labor shortages.

“More than 200,000 Israelis have been forced to flee from their homes since the war began: about 100,000 from Gaza and 100,000 from northern Israel where, a few miles from the Lebanese border, Hezbollah regularly launches low-flying, hard-to-intercept missiles. Most families are housed in hotels and private homes around the country.

“The Connecticut delegation, organized by the Jewish Federation of Fairfield County, packed food boxes for these displaced families. They are volunteering with Pantry Packers, the oldest continuously operating network of social services in Israel

“They also met with hostage families.

“It’s been an amazing trip. Next we head to one of the destroyed kibbutzim, and the Nova Music Festival site. It will be an incredibly emotional day.”

Westporters on the Israel mission trip include (from left): Jeffrey Mayer, Lynn Rabinovici, Lisa Hayes, Stephanie Gordon, Sonia Ben Yehuda and Nancy Diamond.

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Carl Addison Swanson has lived in Westport since 1952.

He cares about the town — and wants it “safe and fun.”

Several years ago, he pushed for the installation of solar speed monitors near his home off North Avenue. He lives near Bedford Middle School, at the bottom of the hill from Staples where — unless there is school traffic — drivers routinely zoom by.

Are they working?

He went out Monday (10 a.m.), Tuesday (2 p.m.) and Wednesday (5 p.m.), and checked the speed of 50 southbound cars.

The average speeds:

  • Monday: 48 mph
  • Tuesday: 32 mph (school buses were slowing traffic)
  • Wednesday: 52 mph.

“It seems the speed monitors are not really slowing cars and trucks down that much,” Carl says.  

“Funny, as I stood there taking notes, cars/trucks did slow. But that said, a 2015 study found that these types of monitors are not meant to slow cars down more than 10 mph.”

Carl believes that North Avenue — home to 4 of Westport’s 8 schools — needs traffic lights.

“Space them from Coleytown to past Staples,” he says, and traffic will quickly find alternative routes.

Solar-powered speed monitor on North Avenue. (Photo/Carl Addison Swanson)

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Civic Learning Week is an annual non-partisan effort, highlighting civic education in local communities.

The Westport Public Schools were active participants.

The week included middle school classroom activities about civic engagement. At Staples High School, 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker answered questions from students regarding her career path, job responsibilities, and more.

She also congratulated the students who will represent Staples at “We The People,” a national competition involving simulated congressional hearings in Washington next month.

The Staples team recently qualified by tying for first place at the state competition with Trumbull High.

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker, with Staples High School’s “We the People” team, during Civic Learning Week. 

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Noted artist and Staples High School graduate Michael Gish died earlier this month in Providence. He was 98.

Mike joined the Reserve Officer Training Corps in 1943, at Dartmouth College. In 1944, after learning his older brother, USMC PFC Jim Gish, had been killed in action on Saipan, Mike left school to complete his aviation training with the Marine Corps.

Too young to see combat in WWII, Mike retired from the Marines as a naval pilot in 1946 to complete his education. He received an bachelor’s degree in fine art from Dartmouth in 1949.

Indelibly affected by the death of his brother, Mike decided to pursue art and the military as a career. He continued his education at the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France, in 1951 as a visiting student. Mike  received a master’s in fine art from Yale University in 1964.

Mike then returned to active duty with the Marine Corps as a helicopter pilot, advancing to lieutenant colonel. In 1967 he was sent to Vietnam as a “combat artist.”

Mike received the Air Medal, for flying 24 combat missions. One of his paintings, “Studies of Helmets in the Sand,” was chosen to be the poster for the National Vietnam Memorial.

In 1991, at the age of 65, Mike became a full colonel in the Marines when he deployed to Iraq. As a combat artist for Operation Provide Comfort, he documented Kurdish refugees from the First Gulf War.

In 1993 Mike went to Somalia, where he continued his documentation of refugees and displaced people during Operation Restore Hope. Mike’s paintings have been displayed at the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Washington, as well as the Smithsonian Museum.

A large part of Mike’s work reflects his love of still life and landscapes, particularly New England and his beloved Block Island. A prolific painter who worked well into his 90s, Mike was also a full professor of art at Fairfield University.

He was predeceased by his wife Marguerite (Drouin). He is survived by his children Charlotte Wall (Steve) of Southport, North Carolina; Peter (Robin Kaiser) of Hanover, New Hampshire, and Carl (Elizabeth) of Palo Alto; grandchildren Carla and Stephanie Wall; Sophia, Miranda and Olivia Gish, and Peter and Henry Gish, as well as his partner of many years, Marilyn Bogdanffy.

A memorial service will be held at the Hotel Coolidge in White River Junction, Vermont (May 18, 4 p.m.. Another ceremony will be held on Block Island this fall. In lieu of flowers, a donation may be made One to the U.S. Marine Corps Heritage Foundation.

Mike Gish

One of Mike’s many fans told “06880”:

“We, along with many other admirers of him as a painter and a person, were saddened to note the death of Mike Gish. We acquired a number of his pieces –oils and watercolors that reflect the luminosity of his palette and the range of his interests, from Block Island to the cliffs of Normandy to a barn in Fairfield.

“We were introduced to him in the mid-1980s when, quite by happenstance, we visited his studio with a real estate agent who was showing the house. We were struck in particular by a small study of a couple of Adirondack chairs.

“Wondering if we might acquire it, we learned he was about to have a show at a local gallery. That led to an invitation to the preview. We went, expecting only to browse more of his work, but then — in a familiar story — we were so struck by this wonderful rendering of a familiar Westport landmark that we amazed ourselves by buying it.

“It has held a place of honor in our house ever since.”

“Compo Beach Pavilion” (Mike Gish)

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Hook’d is not yet open.

So this guy found its own breakfast at the beach.

And then posed, for our daily “Westport … Naturally” feature.

(Photo/Matt Murray)

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And finally … I’ve posted this song by Jon Gailmor before.

But because:

  • It’s one of my favorite songs of all time, about one of my favorite states, and …
  • I mentioned it in the very interesting item about Jon (above), and …
  • This is my blog …

I’m posting it again. Enjoy!

(Today — like every day — our Roundup is jam-packed with a wide variety of info. If you enjoy this daily feature, please support our work. Click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Roundup: Selectwoman’s Statement, Presidential Primary, No News? …

First Selectwoman Jen Tooker reacted yesterday to charges of racial incidents in Westport schools, leveled at Thursday’s Board of Education meeting.

She said: “Every time I speak publicly, even as recently as last week at the State of the Town address, I state that one of my top priorities is to ensure Westport is a place where everyone feels like they belong – where people feel safe and seen and heard. I regularly acknowledge that we have more work to do as a community.

“It is with shock and disappointment that I listen to the devastating comments made by parents at the Board of Education meeting this week. I want the residents and business owners to know there is no place for any form of hate in Westport. There is no place for racism in Westport. Our community strongly rejects hate in all forms.

“We must all stand together and speak clearly and unequivocally on this issue. We should demand accountability. Westport has my unwavering commitment to continue to work with local leaders, including TEAM Westport and the school administration, to create a supportive environment where we, as Superintendent Tom Scarice said, treat each other with dignity and respect. We all want to feel like we belong. Every one of us deserves to feel valued. When one of us is harmed, we are all harmed.”

Click below for a video of her speech:

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Connecticut’s presidential primary begins this month.

Early voting is set for Tuesday through Thursday, March 26-28 (Town Hall Room 201) and Saturday, March 30 (Town Hall auditorium); polls are open fro 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on those days.

Election Day is Tuesday, April 2 (6 a.m. to 8 p.m., Town Hall auditorium).

Republican candidates are Donald Trump, Ryan Binkley, Nikki Haley and “Uncommitted.” Ron DeSantis  is listed, but may not be on the final ballot.

Democratic candidates are Joseph Biden, Dean Phillips and “Uncommitted.” Cenk Uyuger and Marianne Williamson are listed, but may not be on the final ballot.

Workers are needed at the polls (for pay). Contact registrars Maria Signore (Republican) or Deborah Greenberg (Democrat) at 203-341-1117 for more information.

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A fed-up reader wants help or advice from “06880” readers. She writes:

“Can anyone tell me how to stop Westport News home delivery, which we never asked for and never pay for?

“When we are away, it is impossible to stop delivery. There is no phone number to  call, no email to send to, and lots of newspapers cluttering up our driveway indicating we are away. Since we live on a major thoroughfare, this is particularly concerning.

“Does anyone have any suggestions on how to fix this problem – who to call or write to so we can stop delivery forever?

“My husband is apoplectic. I am mad. Your suggestions and any info are most welcome.”

Please like “Comments” below for suggestions.

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If you get voicemail from someone claiming to be Captain David Wolf from the Westport Police Department, requesting a call back — and then hear there’s a bench warrant for your arrest, or a $5,000 fine — don’t worry.

It’s a scam.

The WPD will never request that a fine be paid over the phone — or solicit payment of any kind.

And of course, do not ever give personal banking information like an account number to someone who calls, unless you are absolutely sure who you are speaking with.

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“Gloria” has had a tough time since Alan Sterling died.

His oyster boat survived in Gray’s Creek for several years. A recent storm pushed it ashore, where it is slowly falling apart.

It looks like the end is near. This was the view yesterday.

(Photo/Matt Murray)

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Weston author Lisa Grunwald’s 7th novel, “The Evolution of Annabel Craig,” will be published this spring.

It is set in 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee during the infamous Scopes “monkey trial.” In the midst of a town and marriage divided by issues of faith and science, Annabel Craig must learn to question her own beliefs.

Mingling fictional characters with famous figures and events, the novel is both a portrait of a marriage and a harbinger of many of today’s deepest controversies.

Much of it was written in her Weston house (and discussed with her husband, a journalism professor and former head of Reuters) during walks on Compo Beach.

Click here for more information, and to pre-order.

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the East Coast Contemporary Ballet celebrates its 5th anniversary with a gala at MoCA Westport (March 2, 7 p.m.).

The evening includes a dance performance, open bar, auction and live music.

Many of the dancers teach in the area. Every summer, they offer a dozen free outdoor performances at the Fairfield County Dance Festival.

For more information on East Coast Contemporary Ballet, click here. For tickets to the gala, click here.

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” image highlights Winslow Park, in serene winter stillness:

(Photo/Patricia McMahon)

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And finally … in honor of the imminent end of Gloria, Westport’s favorite oyster boat (story above):

(Please help “06880” survive. Click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Roundup: Cribari Bridge, Parks & Rec, Dave Brubeck …

After nearly 5 years, there’s finally some action on the William F. Cribari Bridge.

The state Department of Transportation is preparing a long-overdue environmental document. It will examine many issues pertaining to the 133-year-old swing span over the Saugatuck River.

It will include a “preferred alternative” — probably, a replacement.

When the document is published, there will be public hearings and comments. DOT will then forge ahead.

Yesterday, the South Western Region Metropolitan Planning Organization moved ahead with an endorsement for a $4.1 million addition to the DOT’s Transportation Improvement Plan for the design phase for the bridge.

William F. Cribari Bridge (Photo/Sam Levenson)

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Hot off the mic!

Rabbi Jeremy Wiederhorn of TCS recently returned from a trip to Israel, with Rabbi Michael Friedman of Temple Israel, and congregants from the 2 synagogues.

Soon after he returned, Rabbi Wiederhorn sat with 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker, for the Y’s Men’s “Westport … What’s Happening” podcast.

Click below to listen to their informative, emotional conversation.

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Spring and summer Westport Parks & Recreation Department program offerings are now viewable online.

There will be 2 online registration dates.

Registration begins at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, March 5   for Camp Compo and RECing Crew only.

Registration begins at 9 a.m. on Wednesday, March 6 for all other spring and summer programs.

Officials urge residents to login in to their online account to verify family information.

In the profile, choose “Manage Family Member” on the bottom right. Then, on the “My Family Members” page, click on the first name in the column. Verify date of birth, and the correct grade (as of December 31, 2024). Then hit “save.”

Unable to log in? Email recreation@westportct.gov or call 203-341-5152. Office hours are weekdays, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

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The Westport Fire Department responded with 4 fire engines, 1 ladder truck and the shift commander to a fire last night on Burr Farms Road.

First arriving companies found heavy smoke coming from the garage. Entry was made, and firefighters quickly extinguished the blaze.

All occupants safely evacuated the house. There were no injuries.

The WFD reminds everyone to have smoke and carbon monoxide detectors in their homes. Homeowners were alerted to this fire by a smoke detector.

Westport EMS and Police assisted on scene. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Aftermath of the Burr Farms Road fire.

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Dave Brubeck — a longtime area resident who earned a Kennedy Center Honor, a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, before his death in 2012 a day before his 92nd birthday — lives on.

The Brubeck Brothers Quartet is set for a special fundraising event March 9, (Westport Library). Proceeds support the Library’s vast array of free programs and offerings.

The Brubeck Brothers Quartet is led by Chris (bass and trombone) and Dan Brubeck (drums), sons of the jazz legend. They recorded their first record in 1966. Rounding out the group is guitarist Mike DeMicco and pianist Chuck Lamb.

They have performed across North America and Europe, including Newport, Detroit, Montreal, The Hollywood Bowl, and Monterey Jazz festivals.

General admission tickets are $75. VIP tickets ($125) include a pre-event reception with the Brubeck family and gifts, including a vinyl LP exclusive pressing of “Time OutTakes,” featuring previously unreleased takes from the original Brubeck masterpiece “Time Out” — the first jazz album to sell 1 million copies.

 Click here for tickets, and more information.

Brubeck Brothers Quartet

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Next up in the Westport Country Playhouse Script in Hand series: “The Trip To Bountiful” (March 11, 7 p.m.).

Carrie Watts dreams to escape the city, and return to simpler times in her beloved Bountiful, Texas. On her risky journey she encounters kindness and compassion — and makes a remarkable discovery about the true meaning of home.

Click here for tickets ($30), and more information.

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Also at the Playhouse: Rodgers & Hammerstein’s classic musical “Cinderella” — originally seen on Broadway in 2013 — is set for a limited run this weekend and next. Dates are February 17-25.

Click here for more information, including the all-star cast and tickets.

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MoCA Westport’s current “60s Mod” exhibition showcases iconic works by established artists, and submissions from high school artists who interpret the era.

One influential featured artist — and quite appropriate for Black History Month — is the late Richard Hunt. He pioneered using industrial machine imagery as a staple of modern art.

Inspired by modernism and abstract expressionism, the sculptor took to junkyard metals to recreate organic figures. His monuments to civil rights heroes include Martin Luther King Jr., Mary McLeod Bethune, Jesse Owens and Ida B. Wells.

At 35, he was the first African American to have a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, and the first to serve on the National Endowment for the Arts governing body. The MoMA has presented 12 exhibitions of his work.

MoCA Westport’s exhibition features a Hunt lithograph and serigraph. The Westport Arts Collection curated this exhibition, and has 21 other prints related to his 3-dimensional sculptures. 

Click here for more information on the exhibit.

Richard Hunt, in his studio.

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In the 1940s, whist parties were all the rage in Weston. James and Cleora Coley — the last owners of the history Coley house — won many tournaments.

They return March 27 (6:30 p.m.), when the Weston History & Culture Center hosts its own event. That’s the site of the same Coley house where James and Cleora lived (and played).

The evening includes its card playing, and retro-inspired snacks and cocktails. Experienced players will be at each table of 4 to teach whist, and assist.

Tickets are $15 each; click here to purchase.

Whist!

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Snowmen linger all over Westport, after Tuesday’s storm.

This one — a bit the worse for wear (and warmer weather) entertains beachgoers at Old Mill:

(Photo/Jill McGrath)

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Meanwhile, today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature stars Anne Bernier’s tunnels and perches, made by her son and daughter (ages 15 and 10) for Toby (the dog). They stood yesterday, despite the melting snow.

Today will be mostly sunny, with a high of about 42. Saturday may bring snow showers.

(Photo/Anne Bernier)

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And finally … today is the 101st anniversary of Howard Carter’s unsealing of the burial chamber of Pharaoh Tutankhamun, as well as the birthdays of Sonny Bono (he would have been 89 years old) and Ice-T (66).

I’m pretty sure this is the first time in history that King Tut, Sonny Bono and Ice-T have appeared in the same sentence.

(“06880” is indeed “Where Westport Meets the World.” But we can’t do it without your support. Please click here, to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Full Text: Tooker’s State Of The Town Speech

Here is the full text of 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker’s “State of the Town” speech yesterday, at the Westport Library. The event was sponsored by the Westport Rotary Club and Westport Sunrise Rotary.

Welcome ,everyone! I’m honored to share the stage with Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein, and I’m so happy to be here, with all of you, in the beautiful and award-winning Westport Library – the only 5-star library in the state and a true treasure! We are so fortunate to have this incredible asset – and its fabulous staff — in our community.

And speaking of treasures, I want to extend a warm thank you to the Rotary Clubs for hosting our annual State of the Town address- – and for your many valuable contributions to our community. I think I can speak for everyone – and as a fellow Rotarian – -when I say we are grateful for everything you do. You truly make Westport a better place for us all.

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker discusses the State of the Town. (Photo/Dan Woog)

Westport is a special place, with a vibrant and engaged community — just look around at all the people that are here with us today. We’re making great progress on the top 5 priorities I laid out when Andrea and I took office 2 years ago, as well as on many other exciting initiatives.

There’s a lot to talk about.

First and foremost, my guiding principle, and that of my administration, is to ensure that Westport continues to be the best place to live, work, play and learn in the region – a place where everyone is welcome and feels like they belong.

Many of you have heard me say this before and I think it’s incredibly important that we begin there today. As first selectwoman, it’s my north star and the driving force behind everything my administration does.

In a year dominated by issues, whether they be local, national or international, that have put members of our community on edge, it is our job to make sure people feel safe, and seen, and heard. We all want to feel valued. We all want to feel like we belong. This is at the heart of who we are as a community, and it will always be a priority.

We’ve taken steps large and small to accomplish this that I will share with you:

First, we have come together many times as a community – and will continue to do so — to support each other and to show we care about the safety and well-being of our entire community — following the horrific terrorist attack on October 7.

Westporters continue to raise money for vital equipment for our sister city Lyman, thanks to Dan Woog and his efforts. Foti and I visited Lyman to meet their elected officials and residents in person, to show our support and solidarity, and to see firsthand how our contributions were making a difference under the leadership of the non-profit and our partners Ukraine Aid International. Foti and I are in regular contact with our counterparts as they continue to endure a long and devastating war.

Last spring, 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker traveled to Westport’s sister city of Lyman, Ukraine. She met her counterpart, Mayor Aleksander Zhuravlov.

We now have 4 full-time school security officers at our schools solely focused on keeping our kids, parents and school staff safe. After a frightening carjacking incident in town, we held a town hall to keep residents informed on what we’re doing – proactively, every day — to protect Westport.

We installed a rainbow crosswalk downtown to celebrate our LGBTQ community.

We invited Jennifer Wallace, author of Never Enough: When Achievement Culture Becomes Toxic – And What We Can Do About It to speak to our parents about the high-achieving, and intense, culture our kids face and to help determine what we, as parents, can do to provide a better environment for our kids.

While this is not an exhaustive list, I thought it was important to just name a few steps we’ve taken so you know that we don’t just talk, but we also take action.

As elected officials, we are here to serve you. We’re listening and we’re doing everything possible to ensure that every member of our community feels safe, heard, and valued. Priority #1.

Before I share the progress we’ve made on many other initiatives first, I want to thank our dedicated and talented town staff and my leadership team, the department heads. While we regularly highlight our unparalleled police, fire and EMS departments, I thought it would be fun to show pictures of some of the other departments who work every day to serve you and help ensure Westport remains the best place to live, work, play and learn in the region.

I could stand here for hours recounting all the things that we have accomplished this past year. Don’t worry, I won’t! But I will share some of the highlights, as well as the things we’re working on for the future. I’ll start by commenting on the other 4 stated priorities which Andrea, and I ran on 2 years ago and of course I will address some other important initiatives.

Traffic: The number one quality of life issue continues to be traffic – and we continue to make progress. We receive regular feedback from residents through email, the website form and phone calls, in addition to the 2 in-person public meetings we have committed to hosting, one in the fall and one in the spring.

Discussing traffic, 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker showed a photo of a new sidewalk by Willowbrook Cemetery.

The Traffic and Pedestrian Safely Task force works through these issues prioritizing them in the most informed and organized fashion to date, which allows us to take decisive action.

We’ve accomplished quite a bit, from installing new stop signs to building new sidewalks and everything in between. Also, currently we’re tackling one of the most difficult corridors – Cross Highway, between Bayberry and North Avenue. And at a public meeting this Thursday, 2/8 we will share redesign plans for both intersections and for the corridor in between, which will include both short-term and long-term plans.

Running concurrently, Tighe and Bond has been hired to formulate a comprehensive and strategic “safe streets for all” action plan which we are launching now, with the $450,000 federal grant we were awarded. Beginning this month and likely running for the next 6 months, we will be seeking public feedback through multiple platforms. Please make your voice heard.

Thank you to our Police, Fire, Public Works Departments and the operations director for the never-ending work you are doing on this important issue.

The Longshore Capital Improvement Plan: After engaging the public and receiving feedback from residents during months of public meetings and information sessions and numerous on-line surveys, 10- year capital improvement plan was finalized and includes everything from installing pickleball courts to upgrading the pool.

We will also see a multimillion-dollar upgrade to the Inn at Longshore. As part of the amended lease agreement my team and I negotiated with Longshore Hospitality, the tenant at the Inn, they will be funding the upgrades. We are delighted to have such a highly regarded and well-known operator with deep expertise in the leisure business, due to their operational ties to the Delamar in Southport. Plans are being finalized now, and will be presented before multiple boards and commissions over the following months. I want to thank our Parks and Recreation Department and Commission, including chair Dave Floyd, for their tireless work on one of Westport’s most important assets.

Renovations are coming soon to Longshore Club Park, and the Inn at Longshore. (Drone photo/John Videler for Videler Photography)

Let’s talk about Downtown: Downtown Westport is a vibrant destination for families, shoppers and diners. We are near full occupancy. After engaging the public and receiving feedback from residents and business owners during months of public meetings, information sessions and surveys, the plan to improve Parker Harding Plaza will be back in front of Planning & Zoning shortly.

We will be implementing and enforcing 3-hour parking this spring, and electric vehicle chargers in public lots will soon be paid spots. So, the spaces that were previously 1 and 2 hours will become 3 hours. The remainder of the spaces will be all-day parking. In addition, we will be beginning the design process for Taylor Lot, Jesup Green and the Imperial Lot – which is this side of the Post Road. We welcome and want public feedback, and will go through a similar process to ensure that residents and business owners have ample opportunity to share their thoughts. I want to thank the Downtown Plan Implementation Committee — including Chair Randy Herbertson and virtually every department,as this is a complicated project, for their work to ensure our downtown is and will continue to be destination.

Flood Mitigation and Stream Management: This is a high priority, given that the Saugatuck River runs through our community, along with 7 streams, and changing – more intense — weather patterns. The Flood and Erosion Control Board has studied the 7 streams that run through Westport, and hosted multiple public meetings as they’ve worked through this complicated and long-term project.

They have prioritized Muddy Brook and Pussy Willow Brook. Stream channel improvements along with culvert and bridge improvements will be part of the work within these drainage corridors. This work has been decades in the making, and will be decades in the making. So, it’s critical to have a board – along with support from town experts – that’s prioritizing a systematic and strategic method of tackling these issues. I want to thank PW, Conservation and P&Z departments for their leadership, along with the Flood and Erosion Control Board.

We’ll continue to update you on all of these initiatives. You can go to our town website to stay informed and, as I’ve mentioned, please attend the public meetings where these initiatives are discussed. In the meantime, the list of priorities continues to evolve. As new ideas, new issues, new concerns arise, the priority list grows.

Which brings us to Long Lots Elementary School. We have a positive 8-24 report on a schematic plan for the Long Lots campus, which represents a compromise.  It includes a brand new school, multi- purpose fields, and a community garden. I want to thank the Long Lots School Building Committee, Public Works and Parks & Recreation for taking on  this multi-year project with the Board of Education and the school administration, as well as everyone who has contributed to the conversation and helped us to get where we are today.

The next phase will be to secure the funding to hire the architect, engineers and other specialists to design the school. The Board of Finance will vote on the appropriation on Wednesday, 2/7 and the RTM will vote on the appropriation on Tuesday, 2/13. The goal continues to be to start construction before the end of 2024.

Diverse Housing: We are overseeing a complete overhaul of the Gillespie Center, a town-owned property that’s run by Homes with Hope which is located across Jesup Green right in the middle of downtown.  It is an emergency shelter for single men and women, a community kitchen which serves 3 meals a day, and a food pantry. We plan to renovate the entire building, which will allow for more privacy and dignity for the clients. Thank you to building official Steve Smith, director of Human Services Elaine Daignault, Homes with Hope director Helen McAlinden and her team and board, and the Connecticut Department of Housing for your incredible work on this unique project – the only one of its type in Fairfield County. We are also actively looking at other town-owned land and physical assets that we can add to our diverse housing stock by converting to affordable housing.

Startup Westport: Last year at this time, Startup Westport was just an idea. It came from 2 Westport residents, Cliff Sirlin and Stefano Pacifico, who reached out to me separately — they didn’t even know each other — but both had a similar idea: How do we leverage the amount of local talent right here — specifically in Westport – the large number of founders, funders and leaders in the tech and innovation space? One year later, 5 events later, hundreds of event attendees later and over 800 subscribers to our regular newsletter later, we now have a public private partnership and organization which aims to activate and engage Westport’s growing tech and innovation community.

From left: Police Chief Foti Koskinas, Cliff Sirlin, Jay Norris, Connecticut chief innovation officer Dan O’Keefe, 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker, Stefano Pacifico, Peter Propp. All except O’Keefe are Startup Westport team leaders.

I have a quick story to share about the impact of StartUp Westport. I just received news yesterday from a CEO of a Westport-based cybersecurity firm that they were awarded a large contract with the Air Force as a result of connections made at our  StartUp Westport events. Unbelievable.

Going forward, we have 3 events scheduled in the next 3 months. We are also launching a mentorship program aimed at high school and college students. Please sign up at www.startupwestport.org for more information.  This is our team, and we want to make Westport the tech and innovation start up hub of CT.

Skip the Stuff Campaign: This is a townwide initiative launching now, in partnership with Sustainable Westport, the Westport Farmers’ Market, the Chamber of Commerce and the Westport Downtown Association, to encourage our restaurants and eating establishments to change the way they distribute accessories like utensils, napkins, condiment packs that go unused and are just thrown away in take-out and delivery orders.

In addition to the obvious environmental impact, restaurants spend $19 billion on disposable items, and local governments spend $1 billion annually on managing the waste and litter, based on pre-pandemic data. This will be an education campaign by meeting with our local eating establishments and communicating to the general public through various platforms.  Thank you to the leadership of Sustainable Westport, the Westport Farmers’ Market, the Chamber, the WDA and our town Conservation Department director and operations director for leading the way on this important and impactful sustainability initiative.

I have people from other parts of the state and the region regularly tell me how much they love Westport. We have such a beautiful town, in every season, with absolutely gorgeous natural assets and what I refer to as a great vibe.  My response is always the same … yes I feel so lucky to be the leader of this beautiful town,

But what makes it really special is the people, our residents, our business owners, our non-profit leaders – many of whom I have thanked today. We’re so fortunate to have such an engaged community that cares deeply about our collective future.

Homes with Hope’s dedicated staff and many volunteers was one of many organizations praised by 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker.

It seems very appropriate at this time to recognize Bill Vornkahl, who just passed last week. He was a great example of an engaged, caring resident. For over 50 years, he was Mr. Parade – planning our beloved Memorial Day parade and our Veteran’s Day service. He will be deeply missed but his legacy lives on in both of those events.  And his love for his country and our democracy lives on here in Westport.     

Let’s talk for a minute about democracy.  Have we had very robust debates recently? Yes — and putting aside the acrimonious tone of some of it — that’s democracy in action. A strong, functioning democracy requires all of us to be part of the solution.

It requires compromise – sometimes compromise is the only way for us to keep moving forward – to keep making progress. Is it messy sometimes? And frustrating at times? Sure. But at the end of the day, time and again, our democratic process, as stipulated specifically by our charter here in Westport, yields the best decisions for the future of our community.

And that is the responsibility of your elected leaders, to follow the democratic process and sometimes make compromises to ensure progress. Thank you to my fellow elected and appointed board and commission members – and specifically to Selectwoman Andrea Moore and Selectwoman Candice Savin – for helping me move Westport forward.

It takes all of us working together to ensure that Westport continues to be the best place to live, work, play and learn in the region – a place where everyone is welcome and feels like they belong.

And really, when you get right down to it, that’s what it’s all about. I’m honored to be your leader.

Thank you for your time today. I’m looking forward to answering your questions.

Westport Is “Amazing, Vibrant.” But Democracy Is “Messy, Frustrating.”

Several expensive capital projects loom. We are a wet town, which floods regularly. Democracy is messy.

But overall, Jen Tooker and Lee Goldstein say, Westport is an “amazing” place, doing visionary things in areas like education, technology and the environment.

Our schools, businesses and restaurants are “vibrant.” There is a strong commitment to our young people. Westporters make our town “a great place to live, work, play and learn.”

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein returned to those points often, at yesterday’s State of the Town meeting.

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein, at yesterday’s State of the Town session.

The 7th annual event — sponsored by the Westport Rotary Club and Westport Sunrise Rotary, at the Westport Library — drew a large crowd.

The 2 leaders offered prepared remarks, then answered questions submitted on note cards by audience members to meeting (and RTM) moderator Jeff Wieser.

Speaking first, Goldstein spoke with pride about individual and group accomplishments, student leadership initiatives, and improved transportation.

She said that educators strive to turn down the “arms race feel” of the college admissions process; noted that insurance costs rising nearly 40% drive much of next year’s budget increase; announced the imminent launch of a Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging web page, and reiterated the goal of a September 2026 opening for the new Long Lots Elementary School.

The library’s big screen showed Westport schools, during Board of Ed chair Lee Goldstein’s remarks.

Tooker talked about her desire for Westport to be a town where everyone — residents, those who work here, and visitors — feels “safe, seen, heard and valued.”

Her 4 other priorities include traffic (the “number one quality of life issue”), on which a task force continues to make progress; upgrades and renovations to Longshore; downtown; and flood mitigation/stream management.

Tooker cited Startup Westport as an important public/private partnership to make this town the tech entrepreneurial hub of Connecticut.

She previewed “Skip the Stuff,” a collaborative effort of Sustainable Westport, the Westport Downtown Association, Westport Farmers’ Market and Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce to change the way restaurants offer disposable items.

Alluding to recent controversies, the 1st Selectwoman noted, “A strong, functioning democracy demands involvement and compromise. That can be messy and frustrating. But at the end of the day, the democratic process — through our Town Charter — yields the best decisions for our community.”

One of the first questions from the audience was, “How will we pay for everything?”

Tooker said that after nearly a decade without a mill rate increase, there was a hike of just under 1.5 percent last year.

“Long-term capital projects are scrutinized by multiple boards,” she said. “We have robust community conversations around these issues. Our mill rate is the third lowest in Fairfield County. My job is to keep it stable, and make sure you get great value for your tax dollars.”

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker illustrated her comments about traffic and safety with a photo of the new sidewalk near Willowbrook Cemetery.

Asked about potential affordable housing sites, she mentioned Linxweiler House on Post Road (between McDonald’s and Fresh Market) for cluster housing, and Baron’s South for the conversion of 5 buildings.

The state Department of Transportation property between Walgreens and West Parish Road has “gone quiet,” she said.

Only one question concerned the Long Lots project. Goldstein explained that the Community Gardens “terrace” must be used for staging, and geothermal wells. She said it will be “built back” near its present location, and added, “We appreciate the time, energy and intergenerational work” that has gone into building it.

In response to a query about how Westport will become a net zero community by 2050, Goldstein listed the future electrification of the school bus fleet, composting that has already begun, and the sustainability of the new Long Lots building.

Tooker said that the town is electrifying the police, fire and Emergency Medical Service fleets, and pointed to flood resiliency work.

However, she stressed, “Net zero is a community commitment. It involves residents and business owners, not just government. It’s about lifestyle choices. Everyone must contribute.”

Some things are out of Tooker’s hands. She said there is “no update” on the state Department of Transportation’s Cribari Bridge project.

The Saugatuck River will not be dredged until the Army Corps of Engineers solves the problem of where to dispose of the silt, Tooker said. “This is a federal project. We’re at their mercy.”

Goldstein fielded a question about bicycle infrastructure. “We’d love students to ride to school,” she said. “But we don’t build bike lanes.”

The town does. Tooker said that officials are looking at expanding bike lanes. Advocates like Bike Westport will have “a seat at the table,” she promised.

Describing the value of volunteers, 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker showed a photo taken by Thane Grauel of her with Bill Vornkahl. The organizer of  53 Memorial Day parades died last week, at 93. (All photos/Dan Woog)

The final question asked, “What’s the biggest problem that can be solved — or avoided — to contribute to our happiness?”

Goldstein disagreed with the premise.

“I’m sitting here in this beautiful library, looking at our beautiful river,” she began.

“I’m not unhappy. This is a happy place. I’m thinking back to Jen’s commitment to a sense of belonging. We need to sand the edges.

“As she said, democracy is messy. We need to find a way to talk about issues, while providing each other with dignity. We can have disagreements, while still remaining human.”

Tooker agreed.

“This is an amazing community — a great place.

“Are we perfect? No. But history tells us: We figure stuff together well. And the decisions we make, make Westport a little better tomorrow than yesterday. We will continue to do that.”

Westport Rotary Club and Westport Sunrise Rotary sponsored yesterday’s State of the Town event.

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TEAM Westport Teen Essay Contest Prompt: Hate Speech

TEAM Westport’s Teen Diversity Essay Contest is always timely.

This year’s topic is particularly so.

It’s about hate speech.

All students attending public or private high school — and those who live in Westport, and attend high school elsewhere — are invited to participate.

The prompt says:

The regulation of hate speech must balance limiting speech that may be considered offensive, threatening, or hurtful with the constitutional right of free expression.

In 1,000 words or less, with respect to speech that targets specific people or groups based on race, religion, ethnicity, and/or LGBTQIA+ identification, consider the guidelines one should set for themselves within Westport’s schools and in our community.

Explain how a diversity of opinions can be safely and respectfully shared. Are the rules different in a school community than on social media? 

The entry deadline is March 4. Click here for rules, and information on submissions.

Subject to the volume and caliber of entries received, at the discretion of the judges up to 3 cash prizes will be awarded. The first prize is $1,000, second prize is $750, and third prize is $500.

The Westport Library co-sponsors the event. A ceremony for the winners will be held there May 6.

“In our current environment, hate speech seems to rend the fabric of our society further on a daily basis.” says TEAM Westport chair Harold Bailey Jr. “We look forward to this input from our young citizens to help us inextricably mend that fabric well into the future.”

First Selectwoman Jennifer Tooker adds, “This community encourages constructive, respectful dialogue. As representatives of our talented and thoughtful population, the youth of Westport can be instrumental in sharing diverse ideas that ensure that everyone who lives, works, plays, and learns here feels welcomed and valued.”

The essay contest is in its 11th year. Prior challenges have tackled topics from white privilege and Black Lives Matter to micro-aggressions and dialogue. Essays have drawn widespread attention and engagement, in Westport and beyond.

“As a library, our goals are to foster inclusivity, understanding, awareness, and the free and open exchange of ideas so that we all can grow and thrive — as individuals and as a community,” notes Westport Library executive director Bill Harmer.

“The annual TEAM Westport Teen Diversity Essay contest uniquely illustrates that commitment, all while engaging young people throughout Westport to consider and work through the important and complex issues of the day.

“Combating hate speech should be a commitment for everyone, in Westport and beyond. I look forward to reading the essays put forth by our town’s talented and thoughtful teens. The Westport Library is once again proud to support the essay contest and honored to host the 2024 honorees.”

Roundup: State Of The Town, CAVA, Kelli O’Hara …

A reminder: This Sunday is the “State of the Town” forum.

The annual event — featuring 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein — is February 4 (2 to 3:30 p.m., Westport Library; click here for livestream).

They’ll discuss the past year for the town and Board of Ed, respectively, and look to the future. They’ll take questions from the audience too.

As always, it’s a co-production of Westport Sunrise Rotary, and the Rotary Club of Westport.

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein.

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Cava opens Friday next to Westport Hardware, across from Fresh Market.

The national fast food chain has over 300 outlets. The menu includes pitas (crispy falafel, spicy chicken and avocado, spicy lamb meatball and Greek chicken), and salad bowls (spicy chicken, zesty falafel, lemon chicken, harissa avocado, lentil avocado, tahini Caesar and more).

CAVA is known for its community involvement. Even before its official opening, they’re showing Westport why.

During their training period, they’ve been donating fresh bowls and pitas to Food Rescue US – Fairfield County.

On Thursday (February 1),  guests are invited for a free lunch (10:45 a.m. to 2 p.m.) or dinner (5 to 8 p.m.). Donations to Food Rescue US are encouraged — and CAVA will match them, up to $1,000. Advance registrations are required; click here.

Since 2019, CAVA’s nationwide Community Day program has donated more than $350,000 to over 60 non-profit organizations. Much of the funding is aimed at improving food security.

A few of CAVA’s dishes.

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Westporter Kelli O’Hara’s performance as Kirsten Arnesen in “Days of Wine and Roses” earned a stellar review in Sunday’s New York Times.

Laura Collins-Hughes wrote:

O’Hara, who starred in Lucas and Guettel’s “The Light in the Piazza” on Broadway in 2005, is particularly sublime. Her nuanced and variable performance is as technically impressive and fully human in its acting as in its singing — and the singing is considerable.

Of the show’s 18 numbers, she has 14, seven of them solos. In her crystalline tone are secrets of Kirsten’s soul that aren’t explicit in Guettel’s lyrics; when she sings “Sammen I Himmelen,” a kind of prayer as lullaby, to baby Lila, we can hear Kirsten missing her own dead mother.

Click here for the full review.

The same edition of the Times also included an in-depth story of the play’s route from movie to Broadway. O’Hara gets much of the credit.

The piece begins:

As origin stories go, the transformation of “Days of Wine and Roses” from a movie into a musical is a straight shot, with a twist. Kelli O’Hara and Adam Guettel had the inkling more than 20 years ago, when she was a Broadway ingénue, working on what became her breakthrough Tony-nominated role in “Light in the Piazza.”

Guettel had written the music and lyrics for that musical, which went on to earn him a Tony Award for best score. They talked through their coordinating vision for evolving “Wine and Roses,” the midcentury classic of a romance ruined by addiction. “I think I used the words ‘a weird dark opera,’” O’Hara recalled.

Later, Melena Ryzik writes:

In her New York Times review of its premiere last year, at Off Broadway’s Atlantic Theater Company, Laura Collins-Hughes called it “a jazzy, aching musical” with an “awfully glamorous” central pair. And O’Hara, who then as now sings 14 of the 18 numbers in the show, was, she wrote, “in exquisite voice.”

During that run and in previews on Broadway, O’Hara said she quickly understood how viscerally the narrative connected with audiences. One theatergoer came up to her after a show, “with a full drink in her hand,” she said, “crying and hugging me and saying, ‘you know, I’m a mother and I worry about my drinking.’ And she was quite past sobriety at that point.”

Another woman walked by and thanked her, quietly adding, “‘23 years’ — meaning 23 years sober,” O’Hara said.

Few people’s lives, she noted, have not been touched by addiction. “I lost a couple of friends to this over the pandemic, and I think many people got sober over the pandemic,” she said. Even though there’s more understanding of its pervasiveness than “in the time of Kirsten and Joe, it’s not changing, it’s not ending, and it won’t.”

Click here for the full story.

The very same Times Arts & Leisure section included a review of Sarah Jarosz’s new album, “Polaroid Lovers.” It was produced by — and includes several songs written by — Daniel Tashian.

The Nashville-based singer/songwriter/producer is the son of country artists Barry and Holly Tashian. Both are Staples High School graduates; Barry was the founder and front man of The Remains, the band that camethisclose to national stardom, and opened for the Beatles on their final American tour.

Click here for the story on Sarah Jarosz and Daniel Tashian. (Hat tip: Tom Kretsch)

A woman wearing blue pajamas and a man wearing a white T-shirt and khaki pants are kneeling on a bed while facing each other. They are singing and drinking from cups in a scene from “Days of Wine and Roses.”

Kelli O’Hara and Brian D’Arcy James in “Days of Wine and Roses” at Studio 54. (Photo/Sara Krulwich for The New York Times)

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From art exhibits and speakers to drag shows, MoCA Westport offers plenty of interesting programs.

Always among the most popular: concerts by Michelle Pauker February 8 (7 p.m.) for a special pre-Valentine’s Day “Songs for Lovers” show. From Broadway and jazz to folk and pop, she’ll cover just about every “love-ly” genre.

She has performed around the country. But MoCA remains one of her favorite venues.

Like Michelle’s 2 previous performances, this will sell out. Click here for tickets, and more information.

Michelle Pauker

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Cathy Malkin — a  “humane educator” who teaches responsible pet care and safety around dogs, as well as an animal reiki teacher/practitioner — is offering 2 in-person classes for area animals (and their people).

​”Learning to Communicate Telepathically with Animals (Especially Your Pet!) is February 3 (2 to 3:30 p.m., The Transformation Center, Westport).

The class includes a Q-and-A session where Cathy will answer one question about your pet, whether living or departed, so attendees can hear their wisdom and guidance. Bring a photo of the pet on your phone.

In addition, dogs are invited to an ​”Animal Reiki and Sound Healing Bath Meditation”​ (February 8, 6:30 to 8 p.m., Hummingbird Healing Center, Westport).

The event combines the healing power of a guided animal reiki meditation with a soothing multi-instrumental sound bath, designed to help guests and their dogs relax on “a journey into a shared space of inner peace and heart connection with dogs.” (Dogs are optional.) 

Click here for details, and registration.

Cathy Malkin’s Yogi Bear.

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The County Assembly formal dance, for high school students, was held this past weekend. Among the attendees (below, from left): Samantha Henske, Megan Healy and Ava Chun.

Meanwhile, Village Pediatrics showed up in force. Doctors and office staff showed up in force, to ensure a smooth check-in for their patients — and everyone else.

Genna Grushkin, Evelyn Anderson, Crystal Perez and Dr. Nikki Gorman join parents at the County Assembly dance.

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Coq au vin is a winter favorite.

But how to cook it?

Chef Raquel Rivera teaches braising techniques that can be used for many Dutch oven meals, at a “Cozy Winter Meals” class on March 7 (7 p.m.) at Wakeman Town Farm.

Click here for tickets, and more information. (PS: It’s BYOB.)

Coq au vin

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Pianist Sarah Jane Cion returns to Jazz at the Post this Thursday (February 1, shows at 7:30 and 8:45 p.m.; dinner from 7 p.m.; VFW Joseph J. Clinton Post 399l music charge $20, $15 for students and veterans).

Her songs “Cat in the Hat” and “Golden Song” were featured in “The Mule” and “Thor: The Dark World.”

She’s joined by Mike Camacho (drums), Sameer Shankar (bass), and Greg “The Jazz Rabbi” Wall (saxophone).

Reservations are highly recommended: JazzatthePost@gmail.com.

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Darcy Miller Boyd Austin died Friday peacefully at her home in Damariscotta, Maine, surrounded by family and friends. She was 81.

After moving from Manhattan to Westport in 1948, she attended Saugatuck Elementary, Long Lots Junior High and Staples High School. She graduated from Connecticut College, then earned a master’s in special education from Columbia University.

She married Warwick Boyd and moved to New Mexico with VISTA, and had a son, Jesse Boyd, in 1970. She divorced, and moved to Maine. She lived at the Pemaquid Lighthouse in keepers’ cottage from 1984 to 2004.

Darcy taught school  in Bristol, then worked at the daycare in the YMCA, and got her CNA certification in 2004. She married Jim Austin in 1993.

After retiring, she volunteered for many organizations.

Darcy is survived by her husband, Jim Austin; Jim’s son Christopher Austin; his granddaughters Guinevere and Penelope Austin; her son Jesse Boyd (Sheila) and and her grandson Elliott Boyd; her sister Holly Watts (Michael); her brother John Miller; nieces Sara Miller, Kate Watts Gregory, Tory Watts Donohue, Ali Watts Sise, their spouses, and 8 grandnieces and grandnephews.

A celebration of her life will be held in Maine this June.

Darcy Miller Boyd Austin

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The buck stops where?

For this one: Cedargate Lane, off Whitney Street. Richard Fogel spotted him, for our “Westport … Naturally” feature.

(Photo/Richard Fogel)

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And finally … on this date in 1969, the Beatles gave their last public performance. Their impromptu concert on the roof of Apple Records in London was broken up by police.

(Don’t let me down! Please click here to help support “06880” — your hyper-local blog. Thank you all.)

 

Roundup: Scams, Patrick Church, Super Bowl …

As scams of various kinds rise, 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Westport Police Lieutenant Jillian Cabana discuss email, telephone and other forms of theft.

They join Y’s Men of Westport and Weston member John Brandt, on this week’s “Westport … What’s Happening” podcast.

Listen below, to learn how to protect yourself and your family from them.

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The tree that took down Compo Road South utility poles earlier this month started a fire at Patrick Church’s home near Park Lane. A pet was killed in the blaze.

His washer, dryer, TV, stove and other appliances must be replaced. He has had to purchase 2 generators, and hire an electrician.

Jeff Shikowitz and his family want to help. Patrick works for a refuse company, and has serviced the Shikowitzes since 2015.

“We have never encountered a more caring and thoughtful person,” Jeff says. “He always has a treat for our dogs, and a kind word for us. We look forward to seeing him during his bi-weekly pickups.”

Jeff has started a GoFundMe page for Patrick. The money will pay for replacement appliances, the electrician, and fuel to run the generators until full power can be restored. Click here for more details, and to contribute.

Patrick Church

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Who will win the Super Bowl?

Hopefully, you.

If, that is, you enter the Sunrise Rotary Club’s raffle.

Tickets are $50 each. Each ticket is assigned a randomly selected pair of numbers — one for each team. If the numbers correspond to the final score — or the end of any quarter, that person wins.

Payouts are $1,000 for the final score, and $500 for scores at the end of each quarter.

You don’t have to watch the Super Bowl — or even care about football — to participate.

PS: One winner is already determined: the many charities that Sunrise Rotary supports. 50% of all ticket sales go there. The other 50% goes to raffle winners.

Click here to buy tickets. Click here for more details on the raffle.

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Westport Lifestyle’s new editor is Sara Gaynes Levy.

Her previous positions include Glamour, Self, The Boston Herald and People StyleWatch. Her work has been featured by the Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, New York Magazine, Vogue, Cosmopolitan, Real Simple, O the Oprah Magazine and others.

Sara lives in Westport with her husband and 3 children. She can be reached at sara.gayneslevy@citylifestyle.com.

Sara Gaynes Levy

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NCAA lacrosse action comes to Staples High School on February 6. #18 Boston University takes on St. Joseph, at Paul Lane Field.

Among the Staples lacrosse alums who have gone on to play for the Terriers: Charlie Howard (current player) and Matt Garber, who earned a master’s degree last year.

 

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Mark Mathias was at Compo Beach last night, and met a few people with dogs. A car pulled up, and projected an image onto the haze over the water.

Here’s what it looked like (with light reflected from dogs’ collars):

(Photo/Mark Mathias)

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Yesterday’s fog also provided a fine photographic background for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature. This is the view from Grace Salmon Park:

(Photo/Patricia McMahon)

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And finally … Paul Newman —  actor, director, race car driver, philanthropist, civic volunteer, neighbor and friend — was born on this date in 1925: 99 years ago.

Happy birthday, Paul. We miss you!

(You don’t have to give away as much money as Paul Newman did. “06880” is grateful for whatever support you can provide. Please click here to help your hyper-local blog. Thank you!)

Cribari Bridge Update: No News Is …?

Between Long Lots Elementary School and Parker Harding Plaza, there hasn’t been much discussion lately on the future of the William F. Cribari Bridge.

But the 135-year-old swing span — historic, beloved, quirky, narrow — is not getting any younger.

William F. Cribari Bridge (Drone photo/John Videler for Videler Photography)

The state Department of Transportation has spent several years studying the bridge, and planning its replacement. Any new one — if built with state and/or federal funds, that is — would have to meet current standards.

That would probably mean a bigger, wider structure. Meaning: One large enough to accommodate trucks coming off I-95.

Sources say that an environmental assessment is being prepared, though by a different company than originally hired.

The belief is that DOT will recommend replacing — rather than renovating — the existing bridge (which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places).

A long-ago trolley travels over the Cribari Bridge.

There is no new information on the state DOT website. The latest “news” was posted in 2019.

“06880” asked State Representative Jonathan Steinberg, who sits on the Transportation Committee, for a status update. He says:

It goes without saying, with each passing day, it deteriorates further. I don’t know the current status of the supporting piers, but I’d hope that DOT is monitoring and would let us know if it was approaching dangerous condition. And it’s fair to wonder why Westporters tolerate a structure so decrepit looking. Hardly a Westport icon!

In my last casual conversation with my contact at DOT, some months ago, she more or less confirmed their strategy of waiting for the town to respond to the options they put on the table now years ago. DOT sees little benefit in pushing hard for resolution without any partner in town government — at least as long as the bridge remains safe.

Cribari Bridge, looking west. (Photo/Fred Cantor)

In my opinion, our de facto plan to ignore the problem and avoid controversy is yielding to a vocal minority and risking a genuine traffic crisis should that bridge go out of commission for an extended period. Isn’t crossing the river in Westport challenging enough without losing a crossing point?

I believe we can talk through our concerns — such as keeping 18-wheelers from using the bridge — and come up with a satisfactory plan which preserves the bridge’s character while making it safe — actually safer (wider) — for the long hall. Remember: even if we had a plan today, it will take years to implement the fixes, perhaps including a temporary bridge.

So I can’t illuminate current status for you. Ultimately, the first selectwoman bears responsibility for communicating with DOT the town’s preferences and seeking resolution.

I just hope we don’t see a headline to your column reading: “Cribari Bridge closed indefinitely; Westport traffic grinds to a halt.”

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker says: “The issue still sits with the state. I’m asking for an update from them. I’ll with you when I hear from them.”

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Roundup: State Of The Town, Playground Renovation, Joe Tacopina …

If it’s mid-winter, it must be time for the “State of the Town” forum.

The annual event — featuring 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein — is Sunday, February 4 (2 to 3:30 p.m., Westport Library; click here for livestream).

As always, it’s a co-production of Westport Sunrise Rotary, and the Rotary Club of Westport.

1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker and Board of Education chair Lee Goldstein.

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Leaders of the 1989 and 2006 Compo Beach playground committees joined leaders of the 2024 committee yesterday at Bedford Middle School, to show their support for  the proposed design improvements to Westport’s most popular playground.

Among the attendees: former 1st Selectman Jim Marpe, Parks & Recreation Commission chair David Floyd, Parks & Recreation Department director Jen Fava, Representative Town Meeting member Julie Whamond, architect Lisa Deshano of Play by Design, and members of the public, from young parents to grandparents.

Westport Rotary Club’s centennial gift to the own is serving as lead sponsor for renovations of the playground. Fifty members of the public participated yesterday, offering suggestions to make the playground more accessible, more open, more code compliant and more suitable for the next generation of Westport youngsters.

This renovation marks the third time Westport Rotary has partnered with the Westport Young Woman’s League to build and enhance the playground.

Participants in yesterday’s Compo Beach playground renovation meeting (from left): Alison Reilly, Suzanne Dodge, Rick Benson, Totney Benson, Bridget Flynn, RB Benson, Samantha Owades, Josh Sterling (and son), Alex Cohen. RB and Samantha were 4 and 3 years old, respectively, when their parents worked together on the 1989 playground. 

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Tickets are on sale for the 4th annual Fashionably Westport runway show. Presented by the Westport Downtown Association, it features styles from dozens of Westport merchants and salons. Models — local friends and celebrities — walk a raised runway in the Trefz Forum. The night includes music, cocktails and light bites.

A portion of the proceeds benefit Homes with Hope, the local non-profit dedicated to ending homelessness in Fairfield County. Enjoy a social night of fashion, music, cocktails and light bites.

Click here for tickets, and more information.

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Why did Joe Tacopina leave Donald Trump’s legal team?

In what he said was his only interview on the subject, the Westport attorney told MSNBC’s Rev. Al Sharpton yesterday: “It was just my time. I had to follow my compass. My compass told me it was my time there was done. There are a lot of personal reasons that went into that. Things that I can’t and won’t discuss.”

Click below for a longer clip.

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Medieval music through a sacred lens comes to Christ & Holy Trinity Episcopal Church on February 3 (5 p.m.).

Eya — lauded as “remarkable” and “gorgeous” by The Washington Post —has been featured on Voice of America and NPR.

Their concert by candlelight will reflect the themes of flame and light that characterize St. Brigid’s feast day on February 1 and Candlemas on February 2.

Eya will be accompanied on clársach (wire-stringed harp), with additional support from Brigid’s Circle, a volunteer women’s treble singer ensemble formed for this performance.

A workshop for the Brigid’s Circle singers will be held for experienced choral singers the evening before, and be part of the performance if desired. For more information, email vshields@chtwestport.org.

For tickets and more information, click here.

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Three Westport Suzuki Music School students have earned honors.

Rohan Gowthaman finished first at the 11th Festival Audition, sponsored by Connecticut State Music Teachers Association’s Fairfield Chapter.

Zachary Feuer auditioned for and won a place at the Connecticut Music Educators Association’s Regional Festival on violin.

Kirthana Gowthaman took second at inthe Crescendo Music Competition, earning a chance to play at Carnegie Hall.

Rohan and Kirthana Gowthaman.

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The Weston History & Culture Center celebrates Black History Month and Women’s History Month with historian/storyteller Tammy Denease.

She’ll portray Bessie Coleman, America’s first African-American female aviator, during an educational and entertaining performance March 2 (3 p.m.).

Click here for tickets ($5 adults, $3 children).

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It took a while, but Jay Babina finally got the “Westport … Naturally” photo he wanted yesterday, near the Library:

(Photo/Jay Babina)

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And finally … speaking of Fashionably Westport (above): Hey, it’s not just the women who are models!

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