Tag Archives: Hadley Rose

Hadley Rose’s Road: From Pastrami To RTM

Some people come to Westport for the schools. Others like the beach.

For Hadley Rose, it was a good pastrami sandwich.

pastramiIn 1992, the industrial packaging and hazardous-material shipping executive and his wife had spent 8 years in Wilton. With a young child, they found they were going to Westport for movies, shopping, restaurants serving alcohol — things Wilton did not have.

Westport was also more of a “mixed” community, Rose says.

Plus, Gold’s had that pastrami sandwich.

The Roses bought a “semi-fixer-upper,” and moved in.

A few years later, Westport was enveloped in controversy. (Surprise!)

The issue was school start times. Rose presented reams of documents to the Board of Education, supporting a later opening bell for high school students.

The proposed changes did not pass. But that was Rose’s introduction to local politics.

He attended First Selectwoman Diane Farrell’s “brown bag lunches.” She and 2nd selectman Carl Leaman encouraged him to run for the RTM.

Rose knew more about the legislative body than many Westporters did — and still do. “Most people think it’s the “Republican Town Meeting,” he says. (The “R” stands for “Representative.”)

He was first elected in 2003. Four years later, he ran for the top spot.

Now — after a decade on the RTM, and 3 terms as moderator — Rose has resigned. He and his wife are moving to Simsbury, to be closer to their 2 children who live in Boston.

Rose first ran because he wanted to change some of the ways the RTM worked.

Committees now receive information in a more timely fashion. He rotated committee chairs. He changed meeting start times from 8 p.m. to 7:30. And he “nudged speakers along.”

Meetings are much shorter now. But everything still gets done.

RTMRose praises RTM colleagues like Velma Heller, Jack Klinge and the late John Booth for their “respected, moderate voices.” He says the first selectmen he’s worked with — Farrell and Gordon Joseloff — have done “wonderful jobs.”

But Rose reserves his highest praise for Westport’s department heads.

“They’re very underrated. But they make this an incredible town,” he says.

“You can’t run a Public Works Department better than Steve Edwards does. Stuart McCarthy is doing great things at Parks and Rec. Those kinds of people are the glue — the institutional memory. They’ve served the town really well.”

Rose believes the RTM plays a vital role in town. “We’re the final say on most important issues,” he notes.

“The Board of Finance is definitely more politically driven than we are. So we act as a great check-and-balance. There are so many different points of view on the RTM, when we coalesce around an issue, you know it’s really been vetted.”

Rose says that the RTM has helped keep taxes down. “I don’t think people appreciate how low are taxes really are,” he says. “Look at Weston or Scarsdale.” He laughs. “Or what I’ll pay in Simsbury.”

Rose says that the RTM’s relationship with the Board of Education is now better than in the past. “We help them think a bit more about things, a bit earlier on. We’ve helped them cut waste, yet keep programs.”

Hadley Rose with Eileen Flug, deputy moderator. She succeeds him as RTM moderator. (Photo by Paul Schott for Westport News)

Hadley Rose with Eileen Flug, deputy moderator. She succeeds him as RTM moderator. (Photo by Paul Schott for Westport News)

One of Rose’s only regrets is that, as moderator, at times he had to hold his tongue. “Sometimes I really wanted to respond, and I couldn’t,” he says. “I had to be neutral, so no one could say the reason I ruled in a certain way was to favor something.”

As he leaves the RTM, Rose is buoyed by its future. “We’ve got lots of new people, with great perspectives,”he says. “There’s a lot of financial folks, but with different points of view. Some are conservative, some are relatively liberal. I’m very impressed with them.”

He will miss “working with the people on the RTM, and for the town. I’ve met a lot of extraordinary people. They’ve added a lot to Westport, and to my life.”

He will not miss “some of the baldly political decisions made by some bodies in town,” he says.

He is proud that the RTM is non-partisan. “I couldn’t tell you the political party of 8 or 9 members. And I don’t want to know.”

Rose will miss much about Westport, beyond the RTM. “There’s a good mix of people who put in tons of time to make this a better town,” he says. “They want it to be a great place, and they work to make it so.”

Oh, yeah. Rose will miss one more thing.

“Gold’s still makes a great pastrami sandwich.”

Hadley Rose will miss Gold's Delicatessen.

Hadley Rose will miss Gold’s Delicatessen.

Run For Westport’s Life

“06880” readers know Westport inside and out.  Downtown, zoning, the budget, education — you name it, you’ve got opinions.

Now Hadley Rose, Eileen Flug and Patty Strauss want you to run.

Run for the RTM, that is.

Hadley is RTM moderator.  Eileen is deputy moderator.  Patty Strauss is town clerk.

That’s all you need to know.  Really.

Serve on the RTM with Eileen Flug -- and many other talented, creative, concerned Westporters.

Okay, it helps to know that the RTM is the Representative Town Meeting — Westport’s 36-member legislative body.

You should also know that of the 9 districts, there are several uncontested races — in fact, some do not even have enough candidates to fill every spot.

It’s easy to say “I don’t have the time.”  Well, no one does.  But plenty of folks make time — monthly evening meetings — to serve their town.  And to have a direct impact on everything from human beings to dogs and deer.

It’s easy to say “I’m not a politician.”  Great!  The RTM is non-partisan.

It’s easy to say “I don’t know enough about Westport.”  What better way to learn about the town?

It’s easy to say “It’s okay.  Someone else will run.”

But if you decide to throw your hat into the (pretty small) ring, here’s how:

First, pick up a petition at the Town Clerk’s office.  After gathering 25 signatures of registered voters in your district, return the petition to the Town Clerk by Tuesday, September 13.  Once the returned petition is certified by the Town Clerk, your name will be placed on the ballot as a candidate to represent your district.

How easy is that?!

Happy 60th!

Hadley Rose’s re-election this week as RTM moderator shined a light on 1 of the town’s most important — and often overlooked — bodies.

The Representative Town Meeting — 1 of the few such governmental organizations left in the state — is 60 years old this year.  In 1949 it replaced the even older and quainter New England “Town Meeting” concept.  Westport was growing quickly, and needed a nimbler, smoother means of governing itself.

In the 6 decades since, several RTM votes have impacted Westport phenomenally. 

In 1960 the body authorized $1.9 million to buy the 191-acre Longshore Beach and Country Club.

Nine years later the RTM approved $220,000 to buy Cockenoe Island from the United Illuminating Company — preventing it becoming a nuclear power plant.  (A referendum bid to overturn the decision failed.)

In the years since, the RTM has debated land purchases including Allen’s Clam House on Hillspoint Road; the Baron’s property (now Winslow Park), and more of his land on South Compo; Gorham Island, and Hall-Brooke on Long Lots Road.

Some of those purchases were approved; others were not.  All generated controversy — and greater attendance than usual at RTM meetings.

The RTM is in the news each year when it debates — sometimes routinely, often raucously — the education budget.

In 1972 the RTM made the New York Times, with a 17-15 vote demanding an immediate withdrawal of US troops from Vietnam.  In 1982, the RTM voted 24-2 (with 7 abstentions) in favor of a nuclear arms freeze.

But most meetings are taken up with mundane matters:  health and human services, information technology, the library, parks and recreation, public protection and transit issues.

And, oh yeah, a townwide ban on plastic bags.

From its start, the RTM has been non-partisan.  A host of party activists have served, on both sides of the aisle.  Their names — Aasen, Arcudi, Belaga, Ezzes — read like a who’s who of Westport politicians.  But all ultimately had the best interest of their town at heart.

Hadley Rose is the latest in a long list of distinguished moderators.  Giants who preceded him included Allen Raymond, Herb Baldwin, Ralph Sheffer and Gordon Joseloff.

The 60th anniversary gift is diamonds.  But the 36 RTM members don’t want anything like that.  They’d be glad if you knew the names of your 4 district representatives.

That’s easy.  Just click here.