Tag Archives: Foti Koskinas

More Winners Ahead In Railroad Parking Game

Last week, the Board of Selectmen unanimously approved a change to the railroad parking permit process. From now on, anyone added to the wait list will pay a $35 fee (one time — not annually, as reported in the Westport News).

Of that fee, $15 is kept by the town. The other $20 goes to the company managing the online system.

Alert “06880” reader Bart Shuldman wondered why the vendor gets more than we do.

Foti Koskinas — the deputy police chief who also serves as director of railroad operations — was happy to explain.

The town’s portion will go toward capital repairs needed at Westport’s 2 stations. Each is projected at more than $1 million — for infrastructure, drainage and the like.

The $20 collected by the online provider goes to programming, maintaining and updating the database.

train station parkingKoskinas stressed that the fee will be assessed only to newcomers joining the wait list. The 1650 folks already on it — now maintained on an Excel spreadsheet — will not be charged. They’ll be processed at no cost.

Koskinas says Westport will be the only town in the area where residents can access the list, see exactly where they stand, and add or remove names. Those on the wait list will also receive 2 or 3 email notifications each year, showing how far they’ve moved up.

Yes, “each year.” The current wait is close to half a decade.

But the process will be much smoother now, Koskinas says — and quicker. Now, when notices are sent out that a permit is ready, the response rate is low.

That will end soon. It’s your — or someone’s — $35 at work.

 

Staples Students Dodge Cops; Everyone Happy

Cops and kids battled it out for a couple of hours last night at Staples.

They threw stuff at each other, across a line no one dared cross.

Then they all fist-bumped, had pizza, and drove home safely.

The event was “Dodge-a-Cop” — a massive dodgeball tournament — sponsored by the Westport Police/Youth Collaborative and Youth Commission.

Over a dozen high school teams participated, with at least one Westport Police officer on each team.

Students paid to participate. All funds raised go to Homes With Hope.

That’s a big 10-4.

Officer Ned Batlin, Deputy Chief Foti Koskinas and Captain Sam Arciola are all smiles -- before the dodgeballs start flying.

Officer Ned Batlin, Deputy Chief Foti Koskinas and Captain Sam Arciola are all smiles — before the dodgeballs start flying.

Staples track stars (from left) Patrick Lindwall, Will McDonald, James Lewis, Peter Elkind and Jake Berman are fast enough to run from the cops. At the dodgeball tournament, they didn't have to.

Staples track stars (from left) Patrick Lindwall, Will McDonald, James Lewis, Peter Elkind and Jake Berman are fast enough to run from the cops. At the dodgeball tournament, they didn’t have to.

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A Police DARE

Last week’s “06880” post on the Westport Police Department’s new H2 Hummer noted that its primary use is as a DARE vehicle.

Predictably, some of our readers got their knickers in a knot.

They knocked DARE — the national Drug Abuse Resistance Education program — for failing to keep kids off drugs and alcohol.

Others defended it as providing a great opportunity to initiate introspection and conversations about an important topic.

Sensing a great chance to get out of my next speeding ticket learn more about the program, I called Westport’s 2 DARE point people:  captain Foti Koskinas and officer Ned Batlin.

When Koskinas joined the force 14 years ago, DARE was already underway.  He knows from experience it’s not perfect — but he considers the alternative.

“It’s frustrating that educated people think a program like this — or any one — can eliminate drug use,” Koskinas says.

“We look at DARE as a way to reach out to 5th graders.  We help them know there are consequences — health, legal, you name it — to their actions.

 

Capt. Foti Koskinas

 

Koskinas admits, “We don’t have the resources to deter everyone from using drugs.  This is just part of a team effort between police, teachers, families and kids.”

Koskinas adds, “We know kids experiment.  That’s reality.  It’s unrealistic to expect every kid to not succumb to peer pressure.  But if we get our message across to some kids — or even one — then that’s a success.”

DARE is funded by the Police Department.  Costs include Batlin’s time, as well as t-shirts, booklets and training materials.

Koskinas says, “We think it’s important to build relationships with kids.  We want them to see the police as more than flashing lights and emergencies.”

Batlin’s job as DARE officer is to develop 1-on-1 relationships with students.  As a Westport native and former student here — Koskinas is toow — Batlin understands the 5th-grade mind.

As a football and wrestling coach, Batlin also serves as an important role model.

 

Officer Ned Batlin at a DARE graduation. (Photo courtesy of Westport Patch)

 

“I’ve gotten great feedback,” he says.  “We have a conversation in class.  A student goes home, and starts a dinner table conversation that never would have started otherwise.  DARE can be a great ice-breaker.”

Those conversations take interesting turns.  One student told his mother, “Mom, we can’t have marinara.  It’s bad for you.”

But another 5th grader asked Batlin, “When do we talk about cocaine and heroin?”

“I’d rather have them ask me that question, than another 5th grader,” Batlin says.

When he included roofies in his drug kit, he avoided the other term:  “date rape.”  But a youngster knew.  He’d heard about it on “CSI.”

“These kids are being exposed to this stuff,” Batlin notes.  “You can’t hide from it.”

He approaches his task with a combination of urgency, earnestness, realism — and humor.

“I tell them the ‘A’ in DARE stands for ‘abuse,'” Batlin says.  “It’s not about them thinking their parents can’t have a beer at a cookout, or wine with dinner.”

Batlin asks the 5th graders if they like dessert.  Of course! they say.

Well, he counters, would it be good to have a whole pie, instead of one piece?

No! they respond.  And then they start thinking.

Sometimes, Batlin picks the biggest 5th grader in the room.  He tells the kid he’ll give him $100 if he can beat Batlin in arm wrestling.  Then he says, “Do you want to do it now, or when you’re 25?”

25! the youngster invariably says.

Why? Ned asks.

“‘Cause I’ll be bigger and stronger,” he replies.

Bingo! “You’ll be bigger and stronger mentally and emotionally too,” Batlin says.

Still, DARE has its critics.  Koskinas addresses them, saying:  “It’s hard for me to read comments on the blog about not getting through.  Kids have told me — unsolicited — how great it is.  And when I go to the graduation ceremony, I see genuine excitement among the 5th graders.

“I’m passionate about public service, and getting rid of the ‘blue wall’ — the perception that all the police do is arrest people.

“I realize there are 26,000 people in Westport, and not all of them are happy with us.  We just do the best we can, and hope some of it sticks.  I think DARE is a good, important part of that.”

Batlin agrees.

“As important as DARE is for drug education, the relationship a child builds with a policeman through it is something they’ll keep for the rest of their lives.

“My phone rings all the time from parents with questions.  Just the fact that they met me at a DARE graduation may make them feel comfortable enough to call.

“You know, it can be intimidating even for an adult to call the Police Department.”

Even on a DARE.

Westport Cops Get A Hummer

You may have seen the Westport Police Department’s latest vehicle:  a Hummer H2.

You may also have wondered why the !@#$%^&* our cops spent $50,000 or so on a vehicle whose incredible overuse of metal and plastic is surpassed in environmental grossness only by its spectacularly inefficient gas mileage.

Chill.

They didn’t pay a penny for it.  It’s a gift — sort of — from a Westport white-collar criminal.

Two years ago, our neighbor was charged with big-time embezzlement.  His 2006 Hummer — with less than 2,000 miles — was part of his seized assets.

It sat for 18 months at a Secret Service facility in New Jersey.  Captain Foti Koskinas and detective Phil Restieri worked relentlessly to receive the vehicle, as partial restitution for the time the Westport Police spent on the case.

A few weeks ago, the car was released to the cops.  It looked pretty cool, but to make it a real police vehicle it needed work.

Whelen — a Connecticut-based company that outfits cop cars — donated all the lighting equipment.  (The Town of Westport was one of the firm’s 1st accounts, back when it began.)

Fleet Auto donated the labor to install lighting and sirens.

The Hummer is used as a DARE vehicle.  Fifth graders ogle the vehicle; it breaks the ice as officer Ned Batlin builds relationships with kids — and they learn (as the embezzler did) that crime doesn’t pay.

The Police Department is well aware that although the Hummer did not cost taxpayers a dime, gas does.  It will be used primarily for DARE events; you won’t see it cruising up and down the Post Road, or chasing bad guys along the back streets of town.

So why don’t we just sell the gas guzzler, and pocket the profits?

The government’s asset forfeiture rules mandate the vehicle be kept for at least 2 years.

Perhaps by then our cops will have seized a Hummer H3 — you know, the hybrid that gets 100 miles per gallon.