Tag Archives: Habitat for Humanity

Roundup: Easter Sunrise, Real Estate, Rotary …

Happy Easter!

Nearly 100 worshipers greeted the sunrise with a beautiful service at Compo Beach.

Green’s Farms, Saugatuck and Norfield Congregational, and the United Methodist Church of Westport and Weston, joined in the celebration.

(Photo and hat tip/Dale Najarian)

(Photo//Saugatuck Church)

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A few real estate statistics from March:

  • Unit sales: 18 (down 47% from March 2022)
  • Median sales price: $2,011,000 (down 19%)
  • Median sales price per square foot: $509 (up 5%)
  • Inventory: 93 (down 5%)
  • Days on market: 105 (up 91%)

56% of the properties sold within 90 days of listing.

And 78% sold for at least 95% of the listing price. (Hat tip: Meredith Cohen)

The most expensive home on the market is this 11,000-square foot, 6-bedroom, 7 1/2-bath property on 3.45 acres on Charcoal Hill Road. It is listed for $12.5 million.

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Good Friday was a great one, for members of the Westport Rotary Club and Bridgeport families striving to become homeowners.

Rotarians participated in a service day with Habitat for Humanity. They hammered, sawed, and helped their neighbors realize dreams.

Westport Rotary Club, with Habitat for Humanity in Bridgeport.

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When it comes to road races, no one beats the Pequot Running Club.

Though based in Southport, they’ve got a strong Westport presence.

For 45 years, thousands of participants have whetted their appetites at the Thanksgiving Day 5-Milel Race. Half of the course winds through our town.

Pequot also initiated, and strongly supports, the Laddie Lawrence Scholarship Fund. Named for the longtime (and legendary) Staples High School coach, it has awarded hundreds of thousands of dollars to deserving athletes.

Pequot also assists with the Staples track and field program, and Westport Road Runners Summer Series.

The other day, Pequot Running Club stepped out of its lane. They presented a check for over $100,000 to First Serve Bridgeport. The organization provides tennis, educational and growth opportunities to underserved youngsters in Bridgeport.

Congratulations, Pequot — and may you run forever.

Pequot Running Club founder Packer Wilbur presents a check to Charley Briggs, First Serve Bridgeport board member.

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New York Times story this morning on former President Trump’s lawyers included the man at his immediate left in Tuesday’s historic arraignment, Westporter Joe Tacopina.

A photo caption said that Trump praised Tacopina for his television appearances.

The piece concluded: “(Trump’s) former attorney general, William P. Barr, shook his head at the sight of the defense table on Tuesday.

“Mr. Barr, who sat for an interview with the House select committee investigating Mr. Trump’s efforts to stay in office, explained that lawyers working for Mr. Trump tend to come to one conclusion.

“’Lawyers inevitably are sorry for taking on assignments with him,’ Mr. Barr said on Fox News. ‘They spend a lot of time before grand juries or depositions themselves.’”

Click here for the full Times story.

Attorney Joseph Tacopina sat at former President Trump’s left hand, at yesterday’s arraignment. (Photo/Curtis Means for EPA)

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Plants are “springing” back to life. Mark Mathias provides today’s “Westport … Naturally” image, from Deadman Brook just south of Evergreen Cemetery.

(Photo/Mark Mathias)

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And finally … Happy Easter!

(Happy Easter, Passover and Ramadan, to all who celebrate. Whatever your faith — or none at all — “06880” welcomes everyone. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Adam Mirkine’s Summer Of Service

It’s tough to knock community service.  But — despite its worth — too many teenagers do it for the wrong reasons.  They think it looks good for college.  Or because everyone else is doing it.

Or — and this is not their fault — they join a group that parachutes in to some needy spot, does a few days’ work, then packs up and leaves.

That’s not what Adam Mirkine wanted this summer.

The Staples junior spent a solid 6 weeks working on several important projects.  He got to know the families whose lives he was impacted.  He understood that both “community” and “service” are equally important terms.

Adam Mirkine and a Smoketown friend.

Through the American Jewish Society for Service, Adam worked with Youth Build in Smoketown — the Louisville neighborhood where a young Cassius Clay learned to box.

The organization helps high school dropouts earn GEDs.  Adam’s group of 16 teenagers and 4 counselors tutored, but also worked side by side with the participants on work projects like gardening and demolition.  The idea is that both education and job skills help transform lives.

During the 1st project — building a playhouse for a girl with mental and physical disabilities — Adam was peppered with questions.  He was the 1st Jew many of the participants had met.

Education is a 2-way street, of course, and Adam learned a lot too.  He met a former heroin addict who now works with drug abusers, and discovered ways of life unfathomable in Westport.

Another project — this one through Habitat for Humanity — involved renovating houses used by meth addicts.

After 3 weeks, the AJSS group went on the road.  They spent 5 days in Birmingham, working on tornado relief.  “Those people’s homes were totally demolished,” Adam says.  “They appreciated what we were doing to the point of tears.”

They visited other service projects in Nashville and Memphis, then returned to Louisville for more work.  The governor of Kentucky awarded them a special — and rare — citation for volunteerism.

There was another component to Adam’s summer:  religion.

Adam and his supervisor take a break.

“I got bar mitzvahed, but I really didn’t know much from a Jewish point of view,” he admits.  “This summer there was a lot of connections between our work, and Jewish values.”

An example:  While they worked at a water purification plant, they studied a Torah portion involving water.

The group observed Shabbat — no travel, electronics or excessive work — and kept kosher.

“From a social perspective, every place I worked in was definitely not Westport,” Adam says.

“There was lots of poverty — broken glass, overgrown lots, gang signs.  But also, people in Smoketown had never gone 5 miles away.”

A Youth Build counselor noted, “Everyone in this room will go to college.  That’s expected.  But for the kids we’re working with, it’s not probable.”  Adam said he’d never heard that difference explained so starkly.

Returning to Westport, Adam says he has a strong desire to keep his Jewish ideals.  He also has a renewed respect for his school, community, and the resources he enjoys.

At Staples, Adam is assistant director of Players’ fall production of “West Side Story.”  He plays water polo too.

But, he says, he’s looking for his next community service project.  This winter, he hopes to go to New Orleans.

He says, “This is the kind of thing that once you start, you never want to stop.”

Adam Mirkine and his crew.