Tag Archives: Ed Wooldridge

Roundup: Sunday Walk Postponed; $10,000 Grant; Pink Aid …

With uncertain weather forecast for tomorrow (Sunday), Bike Westport is postponing its Bridge-to-Bridge Walk. The new date is Sunday, October 19.

Organizers say, “While we don’t think weather should ever keep us from being outside, we want this to be a fun, safe, and memorable walk for everyone — families, neighbors and candidates alike.”

The event feature candidates for First Selectman, RTM and other local offices walking from Jesup Green along Riverside Avenue to Kneads, one of the town’s busiest and most important walking and biking routes.

The 45-minute walk highlights Westport’s opportunities to improve walkability, bikeability, and safety along this key connection between downtown and Saugatuck.

 

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Does your non-profit want $10,000?

The Westport Woman’s Club seeks applications from local organizations for their annual Ruegg Grants. Over $200,000 have been awarded since 1995.

Proposed initiatives should be projects that benefit the Westport community, focusing on areas like social services, health, safety, arts, or education.

Applications are due by October 30. Click here for the application form, and more information.

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Congratulations also to Pink Aid!

The non-profit providing emergency financial aid to breast cancer patients is celebrating 15 years of monetary and emotional support. Thousands of patients have not had to choose between treatment, or food and rent.

Founded in 2011 by area residents,  Amy Katz, Andrew Mitchell-Namdar, Renee Mandis and Amy Gross, its needs remain great. Breast cancer is the most expensive cancer to treat — and the burden extends far beyond medical bills.

In just a decade and a half, Pink Aid has distributed over $13.7 million to more than 60,000 people, throughout the nation.

The non-profit’s “Evening of Glitterati” Gala on October 16 at Mitchells of Westport is — as always — sold out.

But PinkAid always welcomes volunteers and donors. To learn more, click here.

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Congratulations also to Corporal Ed Wooldridge!

The very popular Staples High School resource officer has been named Westport Police Department’s Officer of the Year!

Wooldridge joined the WPD in 2017, following a 23-year career with the Connecticut State Police.

He was named the town’s first-ever school resource officer the next year.

The WPD says: “Through his hard work and solid relationships within the school community, what began as a trial position has grown into an integral part of the Westport Police Department.

“Today the Department’s School Security Unit includes officers in nearly every school in town, providing not only security, but mentorship, trust and accessibility to students and families. The success of this program can be traced directly to Corporal Wooldridge’s leadership. and the example he set as the first to wear that role.”

Corporal Ed Wooldridge

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Fall is here!

It’s a time of pumpkins. Apple cider. Crisp air. Beautiful leaves. Falling leaves.

And removing leaves.

It’s a longtime suburban ritual. Minus the when-I was-a-kid option of burning them. (If you don’t know that smell, you haven’t really experienced autumn.)

But is raking/blowing/bagging/hauling those leaves away the best solution?

Alert “06880” reader Jon Rosenoer sent an intriguing New York Times story.

Headlined “Why Leaving the Leaves is Better for Your Yard,” it begins:

Coming soon to a backyard near you: leaf drop. What’s your aftercare plan?

This fall, gardeners can turn to new research to inform their decisions on how to manage the cleanup — whether or not to “leave the leaves,” as the ecologically focused rallying cry has been in recent years.

That campaign has spread awareness that fallen leaves provide overwintering habitat for many ecologically critical organisms. But that’s not all they do. Now, we can look at theconsequences of leaf removal by the numbers, data that makes a more nuanced case for a gentler approach that supports plants and soil, and also offers insights into the most effective how-to practices to employ.

The effects of leaf removal were the subject of a two-year study published in March by Max Ferlauto, state entomologist for the Maryland Natural Heritage Program, and Karin T. Burghardt, an ecologist and associate professor at the University of Maryland.

Click here for the full article.

Familiar fall ritual. (Photo/Bob Weingarten)

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Speaking of fall: Upcoming this month at Earthplace …

“Kids’ Night Out: Spooky Creatures” (October 17, 6 to 9 p.m.; ages 4-13; members $50, non-members $60): Costumes encouraged!

“Murder Mystery Campfire” (October 18, 7 to 9 p.m.; ages 21+; members $45, non-members $50): Spooky tales and thrills under a starry night: a live-action “whodunnit” around the fire. Solve a murder before it happens again. Light refreshments.

“Owl-ween Campfire” (October 24, 6:30 to 8 p.m.; $25 members, $35 non-members): Meet an owl up close; hear a spooky tale at the campfire; roast marshmallows and make s’mores.

“Pumpkin Carving and Painting” (October 26, noon to 2 p.m.; $30 for 1 pumpkin, and 1 table for up to 5): Earthplace provides all the supplies (and takes care of clean-up). Leftover pumpkins are composted, or fed to the animals.

For registration and more information, click here. Questions? Email v.swain@earthplace.org.


Murder mystery by the Earthplace campfire!

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No, you’re not hearing things. And your car is fine.

Last night, the Public Works Highway Department was scheduled to install “safety rumble strips” on 3 road.

Rumble strips are the slightly raised portions of a road designed to alert inattentive or drowsy drivers that they’re about to do something seriously wrong. (You’ll notice them on Wilton Road, near the Westport Weston Family YMCA).

The 3 streets are Roseville Road (Colony Road to Post Road East), Kings Highway North (Edge Hill Road to Wilton Road), and Old Hill Road (Jennifer Lane to Partrick Road).

Rumble strips

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20 current and former Representative Town Meeting members, and Town Clerk office staff, enjoyed lunch recently at Tarantino,

The occasion was Restaurant Week. It’s become a tradition: This was the 4th year the legislative body has done this.

Restaurant Week (actually, 2 weeks) ends tomorrow. Click here for details.

(Photo courtesy of Matthew Mandell)

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Congratulations to Westport’s Department of Human Services!

The Southwestern Connecticut Agency on Aging has named them a “Community Focal Point.” The honor specifically recognizes Westport’s Center for Senior Activities — a Human Services program — as “a trusted hub where residents of all ages and abilities can find support, resources, and connection.”

The award highlights the dedication of Westport’s Human Services and Senior Center staff, who every day treat seniors and people with disabilities with kindness, respect and empathy. From daily programming to 1-on-1 support, the staff consistently go above and beyond to ensure every resident feels valued.

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There’s a great community of dog lovers at Winslowo Park.

On Thursday, some of them — and their 4-legged friends — took a field trip to Burying Hill Beach.

They called it a “Yappy Hour.” Yip-pee!

(Photo/Duane Cohen)

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Drew Angus — the talented, popular singer/songwriter (and 2007 Staples High School graduate) — is releasing “Wildflowers.”

He’s worked on it in Nashville. He honed it on the road. Now you can click here for pre-orders, and enjoy it yourself.

Drew Angus

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Yellow foxtail grass makes its first “Westport … Naturally” appearance today.

It glows in the sun, at Longshore’s ER Strait Marina.

(Photo/Pam Docters)

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And finally … John Lodge, who the New York Times says “brought supple bass lines, soaring falsetto harmonies and deft songwriting to the British rock group the Moody Blues as it moved from its R&B roots toward a lush, symphonic sound as pioneers of progressive rock,” died recently. He was 82.

Click here for a full obituary.

(Another day, another Roundup filled with shout-outs, upcoming events, news about rumble strips, and tons more stuff you never knew you needed to know. Please click here to support us. Thanks!)

 

Staples Community Honors Max Harper

Hundreds of Staples High School students gathered this morning at Compo Beach, for an emotional memorial to senior Max Harper.

The 18-year-old was killed yesterday on his dirt bike, in a collision with a truck near his Old Hill Road home.

The event — organized by students, and held an hour before a delayed school opening — included words from Max’s father, several friends of Max’s, and family friends; Ed Wooldridge, Staples’ school resource officer; and Pat Micinilio, assistant principal for the Class of 2025.

Many students brought flowers. Somberly, they placed them in the water, then watched them bob gently in the quiet tide.

Max Halper’s father embraces a memorial attendee. (All photos/Luca Caniato)

(Photo/Andrew Colabella)

 

School Safety Officers: First Year Draws Praise

When it was first proposed several years ago, there was some pushback to the idea of a School Resource Officer at Staples High School.

Why, some people wondered, should a uniformed police officer walk the halls?

Today, the SRO is an integral part of Staples. Staff and students admire and trust “Officer Ed” Wooldridge.

He helps keep the school safe — and has been an important first responder in a few situations.

Just as importantly, he’s another resource for students with concerns about everything from mental health and social media to drugs, alcohol and sexual assault.

Nearly every student knows him. Their banter is easy. He’s a daily reminder that the Westport Police Department’s job is to make everyone feel more — not less — secure.

Staples’ School Resource “Officer Ed” Wooldridge.

A year ago, when Superintendent of Schools Thomas Scarice and Police Chief Foti Koskinas proposed adding 4 School Safety Officers, some Westporters again balked.

Why, they wondered, was a police presence needed around our elementary schools? What kind of message would that send? Was the expense worth it?

Nearly a year after the SSOs began patrolling parking lots and school perimeters; interacting with staff, students and parents; dealing with occasional incidents in and around 8 schools, their value is clear.

Even opponents agree: SSOs work.

Sgt. Sean Kelley oversees Westport’s School Safety Officer program.

In the aftermath of the Sandy Hook massacre, Koskinas says, Westport schools and the police focused on safety measures like bollards, film on windows and numbers above outside doors. Then-superintendent Elliott Landon opposed a police presence inside schools.

His successor Colleen Palmer, and a different Board of Education, re-examined security issues, and proposed an SRO in every school. The Representative Town Meeting voted it down, by a very narrow margin.

In 2017 — as school shootings continued– an SRO for Staples was approved.

Then came Parkland and Uvalde. Scarice — the new superintendent — was familiar with the positive effects of a police presence in and around schools.

He, Koskinas and the Board of Education developed a plan to augment Wooldridge — Staples’ School Resource Officer — with 4 School Safety Officers.

Each would be responsible for 2 campuses: Staples/Bedford Middle School; Coleytown Middle/Elementary; Kings Highway/Saugatuck, and Long Lots/Greens Farms.

Their roles would include helping with student drop-offs and pick-ups; checking doors and perimeters; enforcing speed zones around schools; responding to emergencies, and being available for advice and guidance.

Part of the School Safety Officers’ job is managing traffic, like this that backs up on Post Road West at Kings Highway Elementary School. (Photo/Dick Lowenstein)

Choosing the 4 SSOs was a deliberate process. Koskinas did not want it to be a burdensome assignment; he wanted people who enjoyed being in a school environment.

The officers went through a lengthy interview process, and were vetted by the Board of Ed, and assistant superintendent for human resources John Bayers.

Sergeant Sean Kelley — who oversees the program — and Deputy Chief Ryan Paulsson met with parent groups, to explain what SSOs would and would not do.

The School Safety Officers are Shane Pucci, Ned Batlin, Rachel Hall and Dennis Broderick.

The first year of the program has been very successful, say Koskinas, Kelley and school personnel.

SSOs have identified traffic choke points, helping vehicles move more smoothly in and around schools, and worked with administrators on communicating changes.

On Easton Road near the Coleytown schools, the SSO has made over 150 traffic stops.

One SSO covers the 2 Coleytown schools.

They make sure buildings are secure, and look for vulnerabilities that can be addressed.

Kelley — who earlier in his career worked in the youth division — calls the first year “a really good experience. The SSOs are definitely involved with schools and staffs. They’ve been integrated even more than I expected. There are lots of fist bumps every day.

“They’ve gotten to know the kids. They go to their plays, and other events.”

The SSOs have gotten to know parents too. “We get a lot of thank-you, and ‘we’re happy you’re here.'”

Bedford Middle School principal Dr. Adam Rosen says his school has “benefited substantially from the School Safety Office program.

Staples High School SRO Ed Wooldridge and Staples/Bedford Middle SSO Shane Pucci wear orange ribbons, to raise awareness of teen dating violence.

“Our SSO, Officer Shane Pucci, has quickly become a welcome and contributing member of the Bedford community.

“While he assists our students, staff and parents with school functions and campus operations, it’s when students invite him to play basketball with them during recess that demonstrates the positive connection and trust he’s engendered within our school community.”

Officer Batlin — the SSO at Long Lots and Greens Farms Elementary School — calls this “a fantastic year. The school staffs, the parents, and most importantly the students have been amazing.

Ned Batlin — shown here at the 4th of July fireworks — is a popular School Safety Officer at 2 schools. 

“Initially they were very curious about me and my role on campus. Now, I’ve blended into being just another member.

“I love interacting with the kids. They have so many questions.

“Last weekend I was coaching my son’s Fairfield lacrosse team in a big tournament in New Canaan. A lot of Westport students came up and said hi. One of the dads I coach with said, ‘that’s so cool!'”

Officers Dennis Broderick (Coleytown Middle and Elementary School) and Rachel Hall (Saugatuck/Kings Highway).

“We threw a lot at them. They’ve really stepped up,” says Koskinas.

“We’ll never know what they deter,” he notes.

But what Koskinas, Kelley and the SSOs do know is this: They’ve found a place, in and around every school in town.

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