Tag Archives: Long Lots Preserve

Roundup: Politics & Volunteers, Education & Environment …

This Saturday’s “Meet Your RTM Candidates” event (October 4, 10 a.m. to noon, Westport Library) is a great chance to, well, meet the men and women competing in your district for a Representative Town Meeting seat.

The RTM is our town’s legislative body. They are the final officials to sign off on budgets, and — at times — controversial issues.

Bring the kids! The event includes coffee, donuts, snacks, and art activities for youngsters. It’s co-sponsored by the League of Women Voters Westport, and “06880.”

But that’s not the only event going on Saturday morning at the Library.

From 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., the Westport Volunteer Fair takes place in the Trefz Forum.

Dozens of local nonprofit organizations will have information tables, and members on hand to promote volunteerism.

It’s a fantastic way for adults — and teens — to find out how to put their talents and energy to great use. There is an organization for every interest.

Come for the RTM event. Stay for the Volunteer Fair. See you there!

The scene at last year’s Volunteer Fair. (Photo/Molly Alger)

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Also at the Library: The next 2 Common Ground Initiatives.

They’re both opportunities for positive, productive conversations on how we move forward as a civil society; encourage respectful, constructive dialogue, and tackle challenging and controversial issues.

This coming Monday (October 6, 7 p.m.), Michael Brownstein, Alex Madva and Daniel Kelly — authors of Somebody Should Do Something — will paint a picture of how social change happens, one choice at a time.

With moderator Sharon Suchotliff, the panel will delve into a novel and scientific approach to create transformative social change — and the surprising ways that each of us can help make a real difference. Click here for more information.

On October 14, “From Division to Unity: Lessons in Bridging Divides” (7 p.m.) features a panel of national experts in business, sports, and the military. They’ll share how they’ve navigated complex divisions, to lead diverse teams toward common goals.

The panel includes:

  • Bonnie Hammer, Retired vice chair, NBC Universal
  • Mel Raines, CEO, Indiana Pacers (NBA)
  • Steve Parrish, retired senior vice president, Altria Group
  • Tony La Russa, Hall of Fame Major League Baseball manager
  • Lindsay Czarniak, Emmy Award-winning sports broadcaster
  • General William Welch, US Air Force general (retired)

The conversation will be facilitated by Dr. Allen Hilton, executive director of the House United Movement and consulting theologian at Greens Farms Church. Click here for more information.

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Preliminary work has begun for the new Long Lots Elementary School.

The former Long Lots Preserve — developed a few years ago, adjacent to the Community Gardens — will be used as a staging area for construction equipment. When the school is completed, the land will be converted to an athletic field.

This was the scene yesterday:

(Photo/Robert Steven Williams)

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A new Japanese restaurant has opened quietly in Westport.

Omakase — in the small plaza next to Dunville’s, on Saugatuck Avenue. The name refers to a series of small dishes of the chef’s choosing.

Jessica Ryan reports in CTBites that 10 sit at an open counter, watching Chef Edwin work. “He slices, dices and molds while offering entertaining and informative explanations about the fish, the flavors and his techniques.”

There are seatings at 5, 7 and 9 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. A typical meal features 16 courses, and is $185 per person. Click here for the full CTBites story.  Click here for the Omakase website.

Chef Edwin at Omakase. (Photo courtesy of CTBites)

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Want to help shape the future of Westport’s parks?

As part of the Parks Master Plan process, the Parks & Recreation Department hosts a public workshop today (Tuesday, September 30, 6 p.m., Westport Library). All community members are invited. It will be run by the town’s consultants, BL Companies.

The Town’s consultant, BL Companies, will provide residents with the opportunity to engage directly with the consultants, share feedback, and learn more about the planning process.

Riverside Park (Photo/Pam Docters)

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Speaking of Parks & Rec: Less than 24 hours remain until Yogi Bear (below) and his friends can once again romp on the Compo Beach sand.

Dogs are permitted — in leashed and off-leash areas, marked by signs — from October 1 through March 31.

Arf!

(Photo/Cat Malkin)

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Tomorrow is also the day for “Coffee with a Cop.”

From 7:30 to 9 a.m. on Wednesday, Westport police officers will be hanging out at the downtown Starbucks.

There are no speeches; there is no agenda. Just a chance to sit and chat about Westport, ask questions, and discuss anything and everything, over coffee.

And maybe donuts?

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This is prime fundraising/gala season, for Westport non-profits.

Some are held indoors. Others are outside, under a tent.

Only one is almost completely outdoors. It’s also the only one we know of with both a fire pit and mechanical bull.

The event is Earthplace’s “Woodside Bash.” It’s this Saturday (October 4, 7 to 10 p.m.).

Also included: an open bar, harvest dinner, and live band.

A few tickets remain. Click here to purchase, and for more information.

The Earthplace Woodside Bash.

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Also this Saturday: classic jazz and funk from Vibe Cartel, featuring Scott Chamberland on sax. The band was formerly known as Southern Fried.

It’s at VFW Post 399. Doors open at 7 p.m.; the show begins at 8. The VFW has a light bar menu, and full bar. Beers are $8 for this event.

Tickets are $15 online; $20 at the door. Click here to purchase, and for more information.

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Green’s Farms Church’s 12th annual Service Sunday was, as always, devoted to hands-on projects with partners in Westport, Norwalk and Bridgeport.

After a send-off service, congregants put their faith into action on projects like landscaping, cemetery restoration, classroom makeovers, music at an assisted living community, and community-resource organization.

Among the efforts:

  • Bridgeport Rescue Mission: lawn/garden work, and cleaning service trucks.
  • Residence at Westport: music performance led by the church’s music team.
  • Domestic Violence Crisis Center: landscaping/planting, refinishing swing set.
  • Colonial Cemetery, Westport: headstone restoration and clean-up.
  • Mercy Learning Center: photo collage project and framing.
  • Open Doors Shelter: bike tune-ups, neighborhood cleanup, Community Closet organizing.
  • Pivot Ministries: painting, flooring, classroom fixes.
  • Recovery Community Development: construction-style service project.

One of many projects — this one at Bridgeport Rescue Mission.

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In 2020, Maureen Belford was an “06880” Unsung Hero.

A Westporter and educator for over 43 years in the Catholic school system, she had a remarkable impact on students and families. She helped countless elementary and middle schoolers grow and learn.

Now she’s earned more kudos.

On Saturday Maureen received the St. Augustine Medal of Honor, on behalf of The Catholic Academy of Stamford. It was awarded for her “dedication, service and commitment to Catholic education.”

Congratulations, Maureen! (Hat tip: Madeline Bayliss)

Maureen Belford

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As we get ready to turn the page to October, today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature highlights one of the first trees in town to show its fall colors. Ed Simek spotted it, on Treadwell Avenue.

(Photo/Ed Simek)

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And finally … in honor of tomorrow’s Coffee with a Cop (story above):

(October will bring dogs on the beach, gorgeous foliage, and the final quarter of the year. It’s a great time to support “06880.” Please click here to make a tax-deductible donation. Thank you!)

 

 

 

[OPINION] Community Garden Chair Says: Build New Long Lots Now!

Lou Weinberg is chair of the Westport Community Gardens, and director of the Long Lots Preserve. He writes: 

To the parents and teachers (and kids!) at Long Lots Elementary School, and to the rest of our fine community:

I believe it is time to move on, and build a new school at Long Lots without any further delay.

I am a recently retired, former public school teacher. I understand the value of education. I spent 2 decades promoting that philosophy to a couple of thousand students.

Lou Weinberg spent 2 decades in front of a classroom. Not long ago, he addressed the Westport Rotary Club.

I loved teaching, and I think I was pretty darned good at it. That’s what my students and most of their parents have told me. I’ve had a mutually positive relationship with the vast majority of kids I have shared a classroom with.

I worked in a school that had constant leaks, mold, and no air conditioning on the second floor, under a black tar flat roof.

Broken floor tiles were a constant issue. Bathroom sinks and urinals leaked. Concrete stairways outside the school were severely dilapidated. The list is a lot longer, but you get the picture.

I want you to hear this from me.

I firmly believe that a new school is severely needed at Long Lots. I know it should be done as expeditiously and as economically as possible.

I want the children in this town to have the best education, from the best teachers, that they possibly can. No doubt that is currently the case, and will be the case, for as long as there are schools in this district.

I am blown away by elementary school teachers, who serve many different bosses (including the little ones in the classroom) every single day, fielding hundreds of different requests, problems and issues, while preparing and delivering instruction on several different subjects, in several different ways.  I know it helps exponentially to have the right environment in which to perfect their craft.

I completely understand the needs of students served by Stepping Stones too. I have had hundreds of students in my career with different and special needs, requiring differentiated instruction and a whole lot of love. Places like Stepping Stones are worth their weight in gold to the students they serve, their parents and ultimately, to the community they live in.

The original Long Lots Junior High School opened in the mid-1950s.

Of course I have advocated for preserving and protecting the Westport Community Gardens, the Long Lots Preserve, and the green open space adjacent to the school.

My advocacy has never been about opposing the creation of a new school. I believe that the school construction should have begun already, and that the process should have included consideration for the gardens and preserve.

Unfortunately, it did not.

This statement should not be taken to mean that I and the many people in town who support having a community garden, preserve and green open space are giving up on our request that an equitable site for a new garden be found.

I have the utmost confidence in Paul Leibowitz, and the rest of the Planning & Zoning Commission’s thoughtful and diligent work on this issue. They will render a decision, and we will all move forward.

I believe it is time to move on and build a new school at Long Lots without any further delay.

Thank you for reading this.

(“06880″‘s Opinion pages are open to all Email submissions to 06880blog@gmail.com.)

Roundup: Galas Galore, Making Strides, Poet Laureate …

You can’t say there’s nothing to do in Westport.

Yesterday afternoon, a couple of thousand folks strolled and ate their way through Slice of Saugatuck, sponsored by the Westport Weston Chamber of Commerce.

Yesterday evening, Wakeman Town Farm’s Harvest Fest drew — as always — a capacity crowd.

The food stations were as spectacular as the views of the gardens, and the community vibe. It’s one of Westport’s best parties of the year (with a kick-ass band).

(Photos/Dan Woog

Yesterday, Westport Emergency Medical Services hosted their own fundraiser, at Cedar Point Yacht Club.

That event, called “Band Aid” — get it? — also had all the ingredients needed for success: food, drinks, music, and tons of people enjoying themselves.

(Photo/Jonathan Alloy)

And of course, the Westport Country Playhouse’s annual fundraising gala, featuring Kirstin Chinoweth, was a sold-sold, super-smash success.

But wait! There’s more!

Tonight, Peter Frampton comes alive at the Levitt Pavilion.

If you missed all the fun — or you had such a good time, you want more — get ready for next weekend.

Westoberfest — sponsored by the Westport Downtown Association — rocks Elm Street on Saturday (September 21, 2 to 5 p.m.).

Saturday afternoon and evening (3 to 7 p.m.), the Westport Rotary Club’s LobsterFest packs Compo Beach.

See you there!

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Felicia Sale invites “06880” readers to join Restore, in the fight against breast cancer.

As co-owner of the Post Road East wellness center offering cryotherapy, IV drips, infrared saunas and more, she has witnessed the profound impact the disease has on individuals and families.

Last year, her own life was forever changed when she was diagnosed with a non-invasive, early stage breast cancer confined to the milk ducts.

She was lucky. It turned out to be atypical/abnormal cells, but the journey to that discovery was very challenging.

Felicia underwent a bilateral mastectomy, a decision that was both physically and emotionally demanding.

She had not realized how many people in Westport had been affected by the disease until she went through it herself.

Felicia says, “I want to thank Pink Aid, and all the women in Westport who helped me navigate this journey. You know who you are. Your support was my strength, and I wouldn’t have been able to move forward without you.”

To pay it forward, she is forming a team for Making Strides Against Cancer, the October 20 walk-and-more at Sherwood Island State Park (9 a.m. to noon).

“This is a fantastic opportunity to come together as a community, have fun, and make a difference,” Felicia says.

Click here to join the Restore team, or make a donation.

As a special incentive, anyone donating $50 or more will receive a free core service at Restore. This includes a whole body cryo, infrared sauna session, red light therapy or compression therapy.

You’ll get a team t-shirt, too.

And the knowledge that you are “making strides” to make a difference, in the fight against breast cancer.

Felicia Sale

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Westport will soon have a new poet laureate.

Donna Disch succeeds Jessica Noyes McEntee, in the 2-year post. The public is invited to meet (and hear) the new laureate this Tuesday (September 17, 4 p.m., Westport Library).

The Westport Arts Committee and 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker will lead the event.

Disch is a 24-year Westport resident. She earned an MFA at Vermont College, and has participated in poetry workshops for more than 20 years.

Her poems have been published in the Aspen Anthology, Poetry East and Charleston Magazine, among others. A former high school English teacher, she  loves working with children. Disch looks forward to taking more poetry into our schools.

McEntee, her predecessor, worked closely with the Westport Public Art Collections Committee, adding poetry to artworks hanging in schools and Town Hall.

A poem of hers can been seen alongside the Passages sculpture recently installed at Pasacreta Park on the river. McEntee ran poetry workshops at Westport’s Center for Senior Activities, MoCA CT and the Library.

Donna Disch

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Luca Lombardo is perfect — 13-for-13 — as the extra points kicker for Boston College’s football team.

The 2022 Staples High School graduate is a 5-11, 174-pound junior, in his second year with the Eagles.

He kicked for Staples as a senior, after spending much of his youth as a soccer player. He was on Beachside’s MLS Next academy team, which prohibits members from playing high school soccer. (Hat tip: Dave Briggs)

Luca Lombardo

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Orange meets green on Saturday, October 5.

From 10:30 a.m. to noon that day, Westport Book Shop, Earthplace and the Westport Tree Board are sponsoring a kids’ “Paint Pumpkins on Jesup Green” event. There will be “special animal visits,” too.

Youngsters are encouraged to wear Halloween costumes.

Ready for painting. (Photo/June Rose Whittaker)

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It’s a “flying fingers folk fest.”

The Flying Fingers Jug Band returns to First Folk Sunday on October 6 (12:30 p.m., Saugatuck Rowing Club). They were hit last year, and are back by popular demand.

The FFJB will be joined by singer/guitarist/First Folk Sunday mastermind Suzanne Sheridan.

The band features an eclectic mix of instruments, including washboard, string bass, jug, dobro, mandolin, fiddle, banjo, kazoo, mouth harp and stove pipe.

They “fuse the energy of post-Prohibition revelry, the vocal harmonies of bluegrass, and the authenticity of a juke joint.” Former Westonite David Barron plays banjo and mandolin.

They have appeared in some of New York’s coolest taverns, and made their national TV debut on the Food Network’s “The Kitchen.”

Click here for tickets. The music cover charge is $15. Table service is available for brunch or lunch, along with cocktails and beverages.

For more information on First Folk Sunday, click here or call 203-984-7562.

Flying Fingers Jug Band

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Lou Weinberg sends along today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo — and a plea. He says:

“This rough-legged hawk was hunting a red squirrel in the Long Lots Preserve, surrounding the Westport Community Gardens.

“It moved so intently, disregarding my presence for the most part, and focused on the hunt. It was incredible to watch.

(Photo/Lou Weinberg)

“The variety of trees, shrubs and wildflowers in the Long Lots Preserve makes it possible for nature to do its thing.

“The base of the food chain there (plants, insects) is very strong, and supplies energy all the way up to top level predators like this hawk. A healthy population of top-level predators keeps our ecosystems in balance.

“This rich, green open space is incredibly important to keeping our environment healthy through carbon sequestering, water retention and recycling, oxygen generation, temperature cooling, nutrient cycling and habitat supply.

“It would be incredibly disappointing to compromise this open space, especially considering the rapid pace of development and lack of open space on this side of town.

“It provides a wonderful opportunity for residents to take a break, slow down and appreciate the healing qualities of nature. What is being created here provides a phenomenal opportunity for environmental education for our children.

“Over a dozen local businesses and organizations have donated in-kind services to create this preserve. Over 100 people have donated tens of thousands of dollars to make the Long Lots Preserve a reality.

“Protecting this open space will benefit the town for generations. In a world where the environment is falling apart at the seams, this is an absolute model of suburban open space environmental rehabilitation.”

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And finally … Cannonball Adderley, the famed saxophonist and bandleader, was born on this date in 1928. He died in 1975, age 46, following a stroke.

Mercy, mercy, mercy!

(“Mercy me!” I hear you say. “How can I support ‘06880’?” It’s easy! Just click here, to make a tax-deductible contribution. We thank you!)

 

 

 

Pic Of The Day #2670

Westport Community Gardens and adjacent Long Lots Preserve: an aerial view …

… and a close-up view of some plots (Photos/Bill Armstrong)

[OPINION] Gardeners Support A New Long Lots School

Lou Weinberg is chair of the Westport Community Gardens, and director of the Long Lots Preserve. He is concerned about a perception that gardeners oppose renovation of Long Lots Elementary School. He writes:

Members of the Westport Community Gardens and the volunteers involved with the Long Lots Preserve support the construction of a new/improved Long Lots Elementary School.

If the development of a new/improved Long Lots Elementary School truly requires the use of the existing gardens space during construction, then our request is to rebuild the gardens, post-construction, in their current location.

Members of the Long Lots Community Gardens and friends, at an open house last fall.

This is our position. At no point in this process has the request for consideration and regard for the gardens and preserve delayed the process of constructing a new/improved school. Not by a second.

To imply otherwise is false. Furthermore, the current efforts by some community members to vilify the gardeners and blame them for delays in the process is misguided. The gardeners are not the problem. The gardeners are not the enemy.

If anybody tries to convince you that the Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve are responsible for getting in the way of a beautiful new school for the town of Westport, they are misstating facts. We all want the school.

The process is supposed to get us there. I very much hope the new 8-24 application will include the school, fields, and restoration of the community gardens and preserve. Let’s get this done together!

 

[OPINION] Community Gardeners “Dismayed By March To Eliminate Assets”

The Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve team write:

Dear Town of Westport elected officials and residents:

Tonight (Thursday, October 19, Town Hall Room 201), we expect the Long Lots School Building Committee to announce the decision of First Selectwoman Jennifer Tooker, with respect to the future of the Long Lots Elementary School building project.

We know that her decision supports the LLSBC’s option to build a new school while simultaneously eliminating the 20-year-old Westport Community Gardens, and at least part of the newly created Long Lots Preserve.

This does not have to happen. A much-needed new school can be built without destroying the gardens and preserve.

Westport Community Gardens. They’re surrounded on 3 sides by the Long Lots Preserve.

The Westport Community Gardens have been, and continue to be, a nationally recognized, award-winning first-in-class standard of community building, environmental stewardship and unlimited educational opportunity.

The Long Lots Preserve is a volunteer-built model of suburban open space environmental rehabilitation. We believe that any other town in America would celebrate, promote and protect what we have created there.

The Board of Education specifications for a new Long Lots school have nothing to do with putting a ballfield over the Westport Community Gardens. The proposed ballfield is not for the educational and recreational needs of the students at Long Lots Elementary School. From what little we have been told, this appears to be an effort by the Parks & Recreation Department to replace the Garden with a new ballfield under the guise of a new school build.

We continue to be dismayed by the town’s march towards eliminating these 2 town assets when there are options to save them.

There are 120 plots in the Westport Community Gardens. Gardeners range in age from elementary school to 90s.

The LLSBC’s recommendation to put a large ballfield with dugouts and a scoreboard, and perhaps artificial turf and lights, flies in the face of the chair of the LLSBC’s statement that what is displaced needs to be replaced.

This decision by First Selectwoman Tooker breaks up a 20-year-old community of over 300 Westport friends and neighbors, hurts our seniors and devastates the environment.

Our seniors love this place. There are many of us, and this is one of the best passive recreational opportunities the town offers.

In a world that seems to be falling apart at the seams environmentally, Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve are teeming with life.

Hundreds of trees and shrubs and wildflowers have been planted, at no cost to the town. The American chestnut tree has been reestablished. Dozens of resident and migratory birds use this because of the habitat and great food sources provided there. Thousands upon thousands of native bees and honeybees gather nectar, pollen and live on site.

Night hawks, swallows and bats fly above the gardens at dusk because the place is teaming with insects, their critical food source. Red squirrel, grey squirrel, garter snake, ground hog, fox, toad, all inhabit this space. The gardens and preserve an ecological treasure. This administration is looking to cover it with a ballfield.

Wildlife abounds in and around the Community Gardens. (Photo collage/Lou Weinberg)

Meanwhile, in the same neighborhood as the gardens and the preserve, there is rampant development, trees are being cut down and more residential units are being built. These new residents are going to be looking for outdoor planting space. We provide that.

The new proposed school is being built over a small, underutilized baseball field and a soccer field; not the Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve. We have over 20 fields in town, and 1 community gardens.

Athletics and field use is critical, and this administration should find equitable resources elsewhere in town rather than placing them on this environmental community gem. With some creativity, the ballfields lost during construction can be placed back on the property when the old school is torn down.

This administration’s decision also hurts the neighbors who did not sign up for a ballfield immediately adjacent to their homes that will bring noise, flooding and most likely, lights.

The road to this decision occurred without ever consulting the gardeners, the preserve team, or the neighbors.

Evening at the Community Gardens. (Photo/Lou Weinberg)

The road to this decision included dangling an option to keep the gardens in place, destroying the gardens and starting them over again on another space near Long Lots School, and then, at the last minute, eliminating the gardens and restarting them at Baron’s South because the gardens will be “destroyed anyway” during construction. We were notified of the latter decision on Monday.

Thus far we have yet to see a peer review of the decisions that have been made by a few people on this approximately $100 million expenditure, the single largest capital project in Westport’s history.

We believe that scenarios are out there that can be attained where everyone wins. Unfortunately, there has been no institutional will on the part of the Tooker administration to get that done.

We should not allow a small group of politically appointed people to make decisions that affect so many of us. Doing business this way breeds distrust, dismay, ill will, and ultimately disengagement.

Where there is a will, there is a way. We firmly believe that including more people in this discussion can, and should get everybody a win.  These discussions should have happened already. Why didn’t they?

Jennifer Tooker: Be the hero.

Thank you.

Community Gardens Win National Award

While controversy grows in Westport over the future of the Community Gardens, dozens of gardeners are crowing.

They’ve just won a national award.

The American Community Gardening Association — a nonprofit with 252 members including parks, school gardens and urban farms — has named Westport the “Sustainability” winner. The honor “recognizes a community garden group leading environmental stewardship efforts in the care of their garden and the environment.”

The Westport Community Gardens won, director Lou Weinberg says, because “we are an organic garden, we compost all our waste, we have wildflower beds and milkweed beds, we are a monarch butterfly waystation, we are part of the Pollinator Pathway and Green Corridor, we donate fresh food, we support our local garden club, we support Eagle Scout projects, we build community, and we have created an ecologically rich habitat in a preserve surrounding the garden that is home to wildlife including resident and migratory birds and thousands of pollinators.”

Weinberg gave credit to “the town of Westport, Parks & Recreation Department, Public Works Department, dozens of local, state and national organizations, and hundreds of town residents who have spent over 100,000 volunteer hours building the Westport Community Gardens and the Long Lots Preserve.”

The award will be presented tomorrow, in Houston.

A few dozen of the Westport Community Gardens. There are 120 plots on the site.

No Decisions — Yet — By Long Lots Building Committee

Mia Bomback reports:

No decision was made last night on an elementary school.

Or a garden.

But the Long Lots School Building Committee inched closer to a final plan, at their meeting in Town Hall.

Members discussed 6 proposals for renovating or reconstructing the 70-year elementary school. They also discussed a timeline for presenting those plans to the Planning & Zoning Commission, and Board of Finance.

The various proposals faced criticism from Westport residents, who are particularly concerned about the impact on the adjacent Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve. No votes were taken on the half-dozen plans — or their effect on the gardens and preserve — pending cost estimates from Newfield Construction.

Long Lots Elementary School. The Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve (not shown) are to the left of the parking lot in the lower left corner. (Drone photo/Brandon Malin)

Plans A and B — which call for the renovation of and addition to the existing school — raised concerns among committee members due to undersized classrooms. Members said those plans fail to meet state Board of Education requirements. 

Plan B would replace the gardens with a baseball diamond.

Plans C, C-ALT, D and E call for the complete demolition and reconstruction of Long Lots Elementary School. Plans C, D and E would require relocation of the garden, while Plan C-ALT would allow the garden to remain at the expense of Long Lots’ baseball diamond.

Plan C would relocate both the school and the garden.

Advocates for the community garden voiced support for Plan C-ALT, arguing that moving a garden of this size is “impossible,” and that the only way to safeguard it is to keep it where it is.

James Mather, a longtime Westporter, said, “You can’t move a garden that took 20 years of work. Your casual indifference that the garden is a potted plant is disgusting.”

Some gardeners expressed concerns that their interests are being overshadowed by sports fields. They demanded that a Parks & Recreation Department survey detailing the usage of the sports fields on Long Lots property be publicized before any decisions about which plan (or plans) to move forward with are made.

Westport Community Gardens, and adjacent Long Lots Preserve.

“We see the care that you take in deliberating athletic fields, and we don’t see that with the gardens,” gardener Toni Simonetti said.

“I just can’t believe that this far into the process we don’t have any record of how utilized the lower-level baseball field is, and we’re considering destroying a garden that is treasured and loved by 120 families,” Mather’s wife Karen said. 

Long Lots School Building Committee members debate Plan E (shown on large screen). (Photos/Mia Bomback)

Ex officio committee member Liz Heyer — who also sits on the Board of Education — reassured the gardeners that their voices and opinions were being taken into account. She noted that board members previously voted against plans that would limit parking access to the gardens.

The committee’s intended timeline also posed controversial. Chair Jay Keenan expressed a desire to request an 8-24 (municipal improvement review) from the P&Z or secure funding from the Board of Finance in the coming weeks, ideally presenting to the Representative Town Meetings on November 14. 

John Suggs, an RTM District 9 candidate advocating for the garden’s preservation, likened this timeline to the “moral equivalent of the Amy Coney Barrett being rushed through the US Senate confirmation process one week before the election.”

“Believe me, the voters are pretty speaking out on this,” he said.

The committee plans to make their recommendation after receiving price estimates from Newfield Construction, expected within the next one and a half to 2 weeks.

(Reporter Mia Bomback is a Staples High School junior, and a writer for Inklings)

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Community Gardens And Long Lots School: Plotting The Future

We can launch a telescope a million miles beyond Earth’s orbit, and receive images from 13.6 billion light years away.

We ought to be able to figure out how to build a school without uprooting a town treasure.

Granted, Westport is not NASA. But we’ve got more than our share of smart minds in town.

James Webb space telescope.

If some human beings can overcome problems like how to unfurl mirrors in space, protect them from the sun’s light and heat, and send commands across unfathomable distances of darkness, others ought to be able to solve the dilemma of where to put a building, baseball diamond or some construction equipment.

This isn’t rocket science.

As Westport confronts the shouldn’t-be-daunting issue of how to keep a 20-year-old garden and preserve that, thanks to stupendous volunteer effort and sweat equity, has increased biodiversity, boosted Westport on its path toward Net Zero, and raised produce for hungry Fairfield County neighbors — and at the same time brought joy, comfort and a sense of community to hundreds of Westporters, from tots to 90s — we need to tap the talents, creativity and energy of all our residents.

Our town is filled with architects, engineers, contractors, environmentalists, sports management professionals, educators, financiers, non-profit executives and more.

Every day, they face challenges. Every day, they devise solutions.

Let’s put our differences aside. Let’s put our heads together. Let’s grow — as the 100-plus Community Gardeners, and thousands of friends urge — the garden and the school together.

Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve. (Drone photo/Franco Fellah)

Here are a few things to think about:

How big a footprint does the new school actually need? Can it be vertical, rather than horizontal? To those who say an elementary school should be one story, well … Kings Highway. Saugatuck. Greens Farms. The old Bedford (now Town Hall).

Do we really need to include Stepping Stones preschool (currently located at Coleytown Elementary)? Why is that a given? Is there somewhere else it can go, lessening the size?

If a Babe Ruth baseball diamond is crucial, where else could it go? How about on the roof of the new school? Union City, New Jersey has one. Other types of athletic fields have been built on rooftops too, including Brown University.

Here’s more outside-the-box (that box being the Community Gardens) thinking:

Baseball could partner with (or rent from) Greens Farms Academy. It’s diamond is unused on weekends. Could Babe Ruth play ball there?

Greens Farms Academy baseball diamond.

The town owns land just west of The Saugatuck co-op housing, on Bridge Street. For decades, it was a playing field for what was then Saugatuck Elementary School.

There is also plenty of land at the 40-acre Fairfield County Hunt Club. Would they want to sell or rent part of it? We won’t know until we ask.

Then there’s this: The Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve comprise nearly 4 acres. A typical baseball field is 4.5 acres.

Instead of relocating what’s already there to another, as-yet-undetermined site, find that location now — and put the baseball diamond there instead.

One plan shows a baseball field on the current site (left) of the Community Gardens … 

Good people can certainly differ. But in the 10 weeks since “06880” first broke the news that the Community Gardens and Preserve may be “supplanted” by the Long Lots project, hundreds of Westporters have spoken in favor of retaining them.

They span the political spectrum. They are all ages. Some have been here for decades; others just moved in. Some are gardeners; many are not. Some are parents of Long Lots children.

In all the comments on this blog, on Westport Journal, and in public meetings, I can’t recall one person (other than members of the Long Lots School Building Committee) who has said: “We should replace the Gardens and Preserve with a baseball field, or the school itself.”

If you want that, please make your voice heard.

If you don’t, please put on your thinking cap.

We’re not asking you to design the James Webb Telescope.

All we need is a way for a garden and school to share space.

Comm

… while another shows a new school there.

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Long Lots School: No Decision Yet

A decision on whether to renovate Long Lots Elementary School, or build a completely new one, was expected by the end of August.

Last night — August 31 — the Long Lots School Building Committee met again, without taking action. A decision now appears a few weeks away.

In a packed small conference room at Town Hall, an overflow crowd watched as the committee looked at half a dozen plans.

It appears that the “renovate in place” option is unlikely.

The status of the Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve also remains unclear.

One of the plans presented (below) would replace the gardens with a Babe Ruth-sized baseball diamonds (lower left on the drawing). The gardens would be relocated to a wetlands area nearby.

A second plan shows a new school, built on the current Gardens and Preserve site:

(Drawings courtesy of Toni Simonetti, Westport Front Porch)

(“06880” will continue to cover the Long Lots School project story. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)