Tag Archives: Rev. Ted Hoskins

Roundup: School Security Unit, DPIC Comments, Lyman Update …

Westport’s new School Security Unit begins work Monday (September 11).

The unit is a partnership of  the Police Department and Board of Education. Funding was approved unanimously this week by the Representative Town Meeting.

Officer Sean Kelley will be promoted to sergeant soon, and will supervise the unit. He was hired by the WPD in 2000, and has served as a detective in the Youth Division. He will be assigned to Bedford Middle School.

Officer Dennis Broderick will be assigned to Coleytown Middle and Elementary Schools. He was hired a year ago, after retiring as a sergeant with the Milford Police Department, where he spent over half his 20-year career in the Detective Bureau.

Corporal Rachel Hall will be assigned to Saugatuck and Kings Highway Elementary Schools. She was hired in 2016, after beginning her career with the Ridgefield Police Department. She is a member of the Marine, Motorcycle and Drone Units, and served as a desk officer.

Officer Edward “Ned” Batlin will be assigned to Long Lots and Greens Farms Elementary Schools.  He was hired in 2001, and was the DARE officer for many years. He is very active with local sports, at the high school and PAL levels.

Though the SSOs will primarily remain outside of the schools, they will work directly with administrators as needed.

In addition to providing enhanced security, they will  focus on traffic enforcement and safety concerns during student drop-off and pick-up.

Officer Ed Wooldridge will continue as Staples’ highly regarded and very popular School Resource Officer.

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John McCarthy has been adamant recently about the need for more openness and transparency in local town government.

So he took notice yesterday when the Downtown Plan Implementation Committee posted scores of comments, following their Parker Harding Plaza August 22 charrette at the Westport Library.

“Kudos to the DPIC,” John says.

“It took a lot of work to get the comments typed up. I would have been happy with just copies of people’s handwritten notes,  but nice to see they went the  extra yard.”

Click here to read them all. It’s a great way to get a feel for the pulse of the community.

Members of the public were invited to comment after last month’s Downtown Plan Implementation Committee meeting about Parker Harding Plaza. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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On Wednesday, the Flood & Erosion Board approved Vita Design Group’s plan to build a house next door to Eloise A. Ray Park, on Riverside Avenue.

A “Friends of the Park” group is concerned that the park will be unusable while construction is ongoing; that it will be used in part as a staging area, and damaged by equipment; that the park will be “forever altered by having a multi-level house, driveway, patio and walls” encroaching on it; that trees will be cut, and wildlife, and that traffic on Riverside will be affected.

They invite interested residents to email saveeloise@gmail.com.

The next hearing is before the full Conservation Board, on September 13.

Eloise A. Ray Park

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The bad news is: In Lyman, dozens of apartment buildings need repair before winter sets in.

The good news: It’s been several weeks since Russians attacked our Ukrainian sister city. And Westporters’ donations have already helped shore up 15 apartment buildings.

Ukraine Aid International’s Brian Mayer — the Westporter who co-founded the boots-on-the-ground non-profit, and helped engineer our town’s sister city relationship — provided an update yesterday.

He told First Selectwoman Jen Tooker, Police Chief Foti Koskinas and “06880” that a construction firm is doing the dangerous work of repairing roofs and windows, to enable the damaged apartments to withstand the coming snow and freezing temperatures.

Mayer recently visited Lyman Mayor Alexander Zhuravlov. Behind his desk is a shelf filled with items sent from Westport.

Tooker and Koskinas are in near daily contact with the mayor and Lyman police chief. Each time, the Ukrainian officials tell their Westport counterparts how much our town’s support means to them.

(Donations through Ukrainian Aid International will help rebuild the many heavily damaged apartments. Click here to help. Under “Designation,” click the dropdown menu and select “Westport — Lyman Sister City.”)

In July — just hours after a Russian attack killed 8 Lyman residents — Mayor Alexander Zhuravlov sent a video thanking Westporters for their support.

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Connecticut’s annual 9/11 remembrance ceremony drew a reverent crowd yesterday to Sherwood Island State Park, the site of the state’s official memorial.

From that spot in 2001, smoke from the Twin Towers was visible.

Connecticut holds its ceremony before the September 11 anniversary, so relatives and friends of those killed in the terrorist attack can also attend the New York memorial on that day.

Yesterday’s 9/11 memorial, at Sherwood Island State Park. (Photo/Harris Falk)

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Westoberfest — the Westport Downtown Association’s Oktoberfest-style event — has something for everyone.

There’s beer tasting from dozens of craft breweries, sure.

But also live music; food by Walrus Alley, Kneads Bakery, Lobstercraft and Little Pub;  a children’s area run by the Artists’ Collective of Westport and MoCA; a street magician, bubbles and face painting; a pumpkin and apple giveaway; food trucks, shopping and vendors like Savvy + Grace.

Take-home tasting glasses with koozies are courtesy of Lux Bond & Green.

It all takes place October 14 (2 to 5 p.m.), off Elm Street. Click here for tickets, and more information.

Westoberfest is for beer drinkers — and families. (Photo/JC Martin)

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Jennifer Johnson spotted this ship in Long Island Sound, earlier this morning.

(Photo/Jennifer Johnson)

“What is it dumping?” she asks.

I have no idea. But I’m sure someone in our “06880” universe does. Click “Comments” below, if you know.

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A service for Rev. Ted Hoskins — the former and much-loved Saugatuck Congregational Church pastor who died last month — will be held this Sunday (September 10, 2 p.m.) in Blue Hill, Maine. Doug Miller — Rev. Hoskins’ former associate minister in Westport — will officiate.

The service will be livestreamed. Click here for the link.

Rev. Ted Hoskins (Photo courtesy of Penobscot Bay Press)

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Forget car washes and candy sales. The Staples High School girls swim and dive team has a fundraiser that will really make you smile: a comedy show.

Their first-ever “Dive Into Comedy” (get it?!) event includes 4 comedians who have slayed it in laces like Caroline’s, Stand Up New York, Broadway Comedy Club and The Stress Factory.

It’s September 28, at the Fairfield Theatre Company. Click here for tickets (adults 21+ only).

“Don’t tread water. Get your tickets today!” the girls say. Hah!

“Make people laugh,” the photographer told the Staples swim and dive team. They did.

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But speaking of sports team car washes: The Staples boys soccer team holds theirs tomorrow. It’s 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the Christ & Holy Trinity Church parking lot on Elm Street.

Like the girls swim team, they’re raising money for costs not covered by the Board of Education budget.

Workin’ at the (boys soccer) car wash…

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Gary Lucas — a rock guitarist lauded by Bruce Springsteen and Lou Reed, who collaborated with Captain Beefheart and Jeff Buckley — is the latest StoryFest addition.

He’ll rock the Westport Library October 22 (2 p.m.), accompanying George Melford’s 1931 Spanish-language “Dracula” film with a live guitar score.

Lucas will add even more to the largest literary festival in Connecticut. This year’s 6th annual event (October 20-22) includes a keynote conversation  with legendary writer Neil Gaiman; panel discussions and author conversations; a special reading of Eric LaRocca’s new play, “Gentle Hacksaw”; a children’s event with Pinkalicious author Victoria Kann, and PitchFest (a 5-hour paid workshop where aspiring authors can speak to literary agents about their book. Click here for more information.

Gary Lucas (Photo/Michael Arkk)

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It’s not yet fall — but this guy is getting ready for winter, at Tracy Porosoff’s kousa dogwood tree. Nothing could be more “Naturally … Westport.”

(Photo/Tracy Porosoff)

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And finally … Steve Harwell, former lead singer of Smash Mouth, died Monday. in Idaho. He was 56, and suffered from liver failure.

(There is a lot going on in town. And “06880” covers it all. Please click here to help support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Linxweiler Stone Wall, Citizens’ Police Academy, Stolen Mail …

Drivers weaving carefully (and not so carefully) through the Post Road East construction zone just west of McDonald’s have mourned the loss of a dozen or so old trees by the Linxweiler house.

They wonder too what will become of the many large rocks that made up a now-dismantled stone wall, near the trees.

Former stone wall in front of the Linxweiler house.

For once, the news is good.

A Planning & Zoning Commission site plan shows that the original stone wall will be replaced with a new one, continuing around the radius into Crescent Road.

The original was drywall. Hopefully, the next will be the same traditional type.

Congratulations are due town officials, who secured the replacement of the wall. (Hat tip: Michael Calise)

Site plans for Linxweiler house stone wall.

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One of the coolest opportunities anywhere is the Westport Police Department’s 8-week Citizens’ Police Academy.

Participants gain a first-hand understanding of what our officers do, how they do it, and how the WPD fits into our community.

At the same time, residents and officers get to know each other much better.

25 community members participate in classes on law enforcement, and get hands-on experience with equipment. They also join a “ride-along” with an officer — and receive CPR/AED certification.

The program runs from 7 to 9:30 p.m. on Thursdays from October 5 through November 30 (except before Veterans Day and on Thanksgiving), and Wednesday, December 6.

The academy is open to Westport residents age 21 and older. Applications can also be picked up at police headquarters, and are due by September 18.

Westport’s Citizens Police Academy offers an inside look into every aspect of the department.

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Seen on social media yesterday:

“If you’re like me and all of your mail was stolen from your mailbox on Cross Highway, North Compo or Weston Rd (Friday) night, apparently some of it is floating around near the Willowbrook cemetery.

“With crime the way it’s been around here lately, I guess we should feel lucky our cars weren’t stolen or smashed. It’s just our personal information compromised.”

What a shame — and a hassle. (And for those whose checks are stolen and “whitewashed,” even worse.)

But among the responses was this, which is news to me: “Sign up for ‘USPS Informed Delivery’ free service. You get a daily email, with pictures of every piece of correspondence arriving in your mailbox.”

Not a good idea. It’s an invitation to thieves that there is mail — often a check — inside.

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Yesterday’s Saugatuck Congregational Church service honoring the late Rev. Ted Hoskins was a chance for old friends to remember the longtime senior and youth minister.

It was a chance too for people who never knew him to learn more about one of the founders of Westport’s homeless shelter and food pantry. Today the Gillespie Center for men — and Hoskins Center for women, named for him — and other supportive housing and food projects are run by Homes with Hope.

Rev. Hoskins — who died last month — spent the last couple of decades of his life in Maine. But — as the turnout at his remembrance proved — his mark on Westport is profound, and indelible.

Homes with Hope representatives at Saugatuck Church yesterday (from left): Pete Powell, first president; Rev. Willie Salmond, who initiated the service for Rev. Hoskins; John Walsh, board chair; Helen McAlinden, president; Jeff Wieser, past president.

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If you’re wondering what Dattco is doing, now that they’ve lost the Westport school bus contract …

Yesterday, at Compo Beach. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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Last winter, dozens of bagels sat for more than 2 weeks, on High Gate Road of Maple Avenue South.

No one knew where they came from. No one claimed them. No one cleaned them up. (Click here, then scroll down for a Roundup story.)

That was weird.

What’s even weirder is: They’re back.

Chris Grimm — who reported on the first outbreak — sent along this photo:

(Photo/Chris Grimm)

It looks very similar to several months ago.

Except this time, there is a large, unopened bag of bagels too, on the grass.

Very, very weird.

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Dermatologists Dr. Nina Antonov and Dr. Marc Beuttler of Modern Dermatology will provide free full body skin cancer screenings, and/or spot checks, at the Aspetuck Health District (180 Bayberry Lane) on September 26.

Appointments are available between 9 a.m. and noon, and 1-4 p.m. Call 203-227-9571, ext. 235, and ask for Judy. Limited to residents of Westport, Weston and Easton only.

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Speaking of health: Overdose awareness and Narcan training will be held September 26 (7 to 8 p.m., Town Hall Room C201).

It’s sponsored by members of the Westport Prevention Coalition and Westport RTM.

To register and for more information, call 203-227-7644.

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It’s never too early to think about beer.

Wakeman Town Farm’s annual family Beer Garden event is Sunday October 15 (noon to 4 p.m.).

The afternoon features live music by Hitch and the Giddy-Up + Rob Morton, lawn games, bubbles, face painting, photos with mini ponies, and pumpkin crafts for the littles — and a surprise craft by LaurelRock.

Also for adults: Eco Evolution, and a massage therapist for the adults.

Lunch options include pizza by Tony Pizza Napolitano, Food Truck Refinery and Oronoque Farms.

Local beer is sponsored by Greens Farms Spirits, with ice cream from Saugatuck Sweets and Landtech. Ccider donuts and refreshments are courtesy of KMS Team at Compass.

Tickets are $10 for adults; kids are free. Click here to purchase, and for more information. Food and beverage purchases are a la carte. Proceeds benefit Wakeman Town Farm educational programs.

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Two butterflies flitted around the Westport Library yesterday.

As great a photographer as Rowene Weems is, she could not get them together in the same shot.

But even one is wonderful enough for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature.

(Photo/Rowene Weems)

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And finally … Happy Labor Day!

(“06880” does not even take Labor Day off. If you’d like to leave a tip, please click here.) 

 

Roundup: Elliott Landon Funeral, School Security Officers, Generative AI …

The funeral for Dr. Elliott Landon — Westport’s superintendent of schools for 17 years, from 1999 to 2016 — will be held Monday (September 4, 10 a.m., Temple Israel). He died Thursday night, at 82.

Yesterday, assistant superintendent of schools John Bayers sent this message to staff:

“Elliott led the district through a very transformative period. From a facilities perspective he oversaw the reopening of Greens Farms Elementary School, the opening of the current Bedford Middle School, and the renovations of Staples High School. Those projects themselves could have pulled a superintendent’s focus away from the primary responsibility of overseeing the educational program of a district, but Elliott never wavered from keeping the focus on having excellent schools for students, staff and families.

“During Elliott’s time in Westport the words ‘Lighthouse District’ were often used to describe the strength of its schools. While Elliott had high expectations for the academic performance of students, he was always working with everyone to think about innovative ways for our schools to help students prepare for their lives after high school. He knew complacency and a focus on lofty district rankings would not serve our students, our families, our staff, and the community well. He was a true champion of meeting the individual needs of every child.

“There is no doubt stories about his incredible impact on the schools will be shared by many in the coming days, and I encourage those of you who did not have the chance to meet or work with him to listen intently as you will appreciate how his legacy is having a lasting effect on the district today. His impact is not just on our schools, but on the community as well.

“Shortly before his retirement Elliott met with the Westport News to reflect on his career. What is striking in that article (linked here) was Elliott’s realization that he had basically hired everyone in the district at that point. That is an amazing accomplishment. For those of us who were hired during Elliott’s tenure, it is also humbling.

“Please join me in keeping Elliott, his wife Joyce, their children Gillian and Judd and their spouses, their grandchildren, and their extended family in your thoughts during this difficult time.”

In 2015, students Liam Abourezk, BK Browne and Jack Sila showed Dr. Elliott Landon how they used QR codes on their smartphones, as part of a Staples High project involving art, writing and history.

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On Wednesday, 3 Representative Town Meeting committees voted unanimously to recommend approval of a School Security Officers program, proposed by the Westport Police, First Selectwoman and Superintendent of Schools.

Three officers would be assigned to 2 school campuses each: Coleytown Middle and Elementary; Kings Highway/Saugatuck, and Long Lots/Greens Farms. Staples High and Bedford Middle School already have an officer on patrol.

The SSOs would work primarily outside, including assisting with traffic and deterring potential threats. They would enter schools only for emergencies.

The full RTM will act upon the request at its next meeting: Tuesday, September 5 (7:30 p.m., Town Hall auditorium).

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StartUp Westport — the organization dedicated to harnessing our town’s tech and entrepreneurial talent, and making it an innovation hub — starts up the fall with a meeting September 14 (6:30 p.m., meet and greet cocktails; 7 p.m. program; Westport Library).

Westporter Dan Bikel — a key member of the AI community at Meta — will speak on “Generative AI: NLP, Machine Learning and Large Language Models.”

The event is free, but pre-registration is mandatory. Click here to claim a spot.

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Sherwood Island State Park — the site of Connecticut’s official 9/11 memorial — is once again the site of the state ceremony honoring the lives of residents killed in the terrorist attack.

The event is set for Thursday, September 7 (5:30 p.m.). Family members of will participate, and the names of the 161 victims with ties to Connecticut will be read aloud. Governor Lamont and Lieutenant Governor Susan Bysiewicz will participate.

The Sherwood Island memorial is located on a peninsula. The memorial is engraved with the names of people with ties to Connecticut who died on 9/11.

On a clear day the Manhattan skyline is visible across Long Island Sound. Immediately following the attacks, people gathered there to observe the devastation in Lower Manhattan.

In the following days, the area was used by the Connecticut National Guard as a staging area for relief efforts.

The 9/11 memorial at Sherwood Island State Park.

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PopUp Bagels’ tagline is “Not famous, but known.”

They may soon be shopping for a new one.

People Magazine just gave the Westport-based bakers a “Top Delicious Destination” designation.

Popup Bagels has already taken our town and county by storm. Next, they conquered the Big Apple.

Now, will it play in Peoria?

As anyone who has tried to get a good bagel outside of this area hopes: God willing.

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Yesterday’s Roundup noted that Rev. Willie Salmond will be the guest preacher at tomorrow’s Saugatuck Congregational Church 10 a.m. worship — and that all Westporters are invited to share memories of longtime pastor Rev. Ted Hoskins.

That will be Rev. Salmond’s 2nd service of the day. At 8:30 a.m. tomorrow, he leads the summer’s final early morning service, at Compo Beach.

Sunday morning beach service at Compo. (Photo/Karen Como)

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Speaking of Compo Beach:

This has been the Summer of Tents, on the sand.

Some people love the shade and breeze they provide, along with ease of putting up and taking down.

Others think they’re too big and intrusive. And too many.

But — in the waning days of the season — here is a new trend: tents that sprawl far beyond their footprint.

Yea or nay? Click “Comments” below.

(Photo/John Cravenho)

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In 2015, the Westport Weston Family YMCA received a large and unexpected gift from the estate of Ruth Bedford.

The granddaughter of Y founder Edward T. Bedford, she had died the previous year, at 99. The board of trustees established the Ruth Bedford Social Responsibility Fund. Its endowment supports grants to organizations that provide direct or supplemental educational opportunities in Fairfield County.

The fund is now accepting preliminary applications for the 2023-24 grant cycle. The deadline is September 9.

Last year, the Bedford Fund awarded $300,000 to 31 Fairfield County organizations. Their programs support equitable education programs for students.

Click here for more information. Click here for the grant application. Questions? Contact director of development Kate Guthrie: kguthrie@westporty.org; 203-226-8981.

Some recipients of the Westport Weston Family YMCA Ruth Bedford Social Responsibility Fund.

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Last spring, the Westport Library partnered with New York’s Song Arts Academy, for an 8-week songwriting workshop for middle and high school students.

This fall, adults get their chance.

The 2-hour songwriting program runs 8 Mondays (6:30 to 8:30 p.m.), beginning September 18. The course is once again taught by former Westporter Billy Seidman, an experienced songwriter and the author of “The Elements of Song Craft.”

Participants learn the techniques and mechanics of great song-writing, including critiques of famous tunes. During the final 2 weeks, participants record a song in the Library’s Verso Studio.

Previous songwriting experience is not necessary. For more information, email songartsacademy.com. To register, click here.

Billy Seidman

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Marisa Zer grows flowers for florists, shops and private customers.

Today she shares a scene at her dahlia patch — “bees lining up at the flower bar” — for our “Westport … Naturally” features.

(Photo/Marisa Zer)

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And finally … A tribute to Jimmy Buffett will come tomorrow. Meanwhile, in honor of Billy Seidman’s songwriting class at the Westport Library (story above):

 (I write the stories. You may or may not write the songs. But please write a check to support our “06880” work. Click here — and thank you!)

Roundup: Elliott Landon, Board Of Ed, Ted Hoskins …

Dr. Elliott Landon — Westport’s superintendent of schools from 1999 through 2016, who oversaw continued growth in the district and the opening of the new Staples High School building — died last night.

He came to Westport after 10 years in Long Beach, New York. Prior to that, he served 9 years as Ridgefield’s superintendent.

Landon began his teaching career at James Madison High School in Brooklyn, following his graduation from Columbia University’s Teachers College.

“06880” will post a full obituary, and service details, when they are available.

Dr. Elliott Landon, in his Town Hall office.

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There’s a local election looming. How much do you know about the boards you’ll be voting for?

Next Wednesday (September 6, 7 p.m., Westport Library), the Westport League of Women Voters hosts a forum called “Know Your Town: The Board of Education.” It follows 2 similar successful sessions, on the Representative Town Meeting and Board of Finance.

Three members of the Westport Board of Ed — chair Lee Goldstein, secretary Neil Phillips and member Dorie Hordon — will discuss how the BOE operates. Topics include governance of our school system, operating and capital budgets, deliberations on major policy decisions, and how the public can most effectively participate in the process.

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This Sunday’s 10 a.m. service at Saugatuck Congregational Church will be special. Guest minister Rev. William Salmond will provide time for worshipers to share their personal memories of Rev. Ted Hoskins, the longtime minister who died last month in Maine.

Rev. Hoskins touched many Westporters, in the church and beyond. All are welcome to attend.

Rev. Ted Hoskins

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Westport Deputy Fire Chief and Emergency Management Director Nick Marsan joined Westport Community Emergency Team members Wednesday night, for their annual picnic.

CERT is a little known — but very effective and truly important — volunteer effort. They provide support during crises allowing Police, Fire and Emergency Medical Services personnel to concentrate on their tasks.

Deputy Fire Chief Nick Marsan (far right) and CERT volunteers. (Photo courtesy of Westport Fire Department)

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Tomorrow is opening day for Elvira’s.

That is, Elvira’s Pizza. The new restaurant on Norwalk’s Belden Avenue is owned by Harry Yiovanakos, son of the founders of the former Westport deli of the same name.

Norwalk’s Elvira’s Pizza. (Photo and hat tip/Andrew Colabella)

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Here’s a first for our “Westport … Naturally” feature: a dead man’s hand mushroom.

It’s from Bobcat Trail, in the Partrick Wetlands off Wilton Road.

The wetlands are one of those hidden-in-plain-sight relatively unknown Westport jewels.

Photographer Matthew Mandell notes that there are new interpretive signs there, thanks to Earthplace. And, he says, it’s great for birdwatching.

(Photo/Matthew Mandell)

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And finally … it’s September 1. Fall does not arrive for another 22 days. But this date always makes me think of …

(Celebrate September with a donation to “06880”! Please click here — and thank you.)

Rev. Ted Hoskins: Long Life Of A Remarkable Man

Rev. Ted Hoskins — the beloved former minister of Saugatuck Congregational Church, and a longtime force in Westport’s interfaith and social justice communities — died earlier this month. “06880” paid tribute with this story.

His family has now released his obituary, describing his full, impactful life. They say: 

Theodore Gardner Hoskins, longtime Congregational minister and ardent advocate for social justice and for the sustainability of Maine’s fishing communities, died August 5 at his home in Portland, Maine, where he and wife Linda moved a few years ago, from Blue Hill, Maine.


Rev. Ted Hoskins

“Ted” was born on August 4, 1933, to Rev. Fred and Alice Hoskins, in Bridgeport, where his father was a minister. Ted attended Mt. Hermon Academy, Oberlin, and Illinois College and the Yale Divinity School. While a student at Yale Divinity School, he worked with youth at Saugatuck Congregational Church.

After ordination in 1959, Ted became associate minister to youth at Saugatuck. He served as senior minister to the South Glastonbury Congregational Church from 1962 to 1971.

In 1971, he returned to Westport as senior minister at Saugatuck until 1994, when he accepted an offer from the Maine Seacoast Mission) to be the boat minister to island communities. This included Isle au Haut, an island Ted had known and loved since age 9 where his father was the summer minister starting in the 1940s.

Local clergymen, including Rev. Ted Hoskins (Saugatuck Congregational Church) and Rabbi Byron T. Rubenstein (Temple Israel) march in front of a banner urging peace.

Ted became summer minister on Isle au Haut in the 1970s and kept the position until 2013. For many years, Ted also preached yearly at the Chapel at Ocean Reef in Key Largo, lured by the promise of a deep-sea expedition.

Ted’s ministry at Saugatuck Congregational Church — as well as his fairmindedness and diplomatic, yet tenacious, activism and advocacy in the Westport community — was legendary. He came to be known as “the conscience of Westport.”

He possessed a determined desire for social justice and fairness, as well as an inestimable capacity to lead and to galvanize people of often extremely opposed viewpoints. Through his steady and unerring moral leadership, some of the many programs that he founded or was instrumental in founding include a town shelter for unhoused men, followed eventually by an emergency shelter for women, named Hoskins Place; affordable elderly housing; countless recovery programs at the church at a time when social stigma around alcohol and substance addiction was widespread; a vibrant, town-wide, interfaith council; a program to address prison recidivism; the first satellite day care program in Connecticut, and a safe place at the church, including housing and family counseling, for runaway youths.

Hoskins Place is Westport’s shelter for homeless women.

Ted influenced the lives of many youths in Westport for the better. As he put it in a newspaper interview from the 1970s, “for some of these kids, life at home had gotten to the point where they felt the only options they had left was suicide or running away. We’re providing a third option.”

The local Thanksgiving community meal he started in the 1970s remains a town institution to this day, feeding hundreds. During the days of his ministry, Ted could always be found on feast day in the church kitchen starting at 2 or 3 a.m., prepping turkeys, and not stopping until late into the day, always with a warm smile and optimistic words to greet everyone.

Ted was a tireless moral compass for Westport and beyond. It would be impossible to quantify how many people Ted baptized and married, counseled and buried over the course of his life. Just like the doors to the church that Ted asserted must always be open, Ted’s phone was never off, day or night. As one parishioner put it when Ted and Linda moved from Westport to Maine, “There are probably 3 or 4 generations of Westporters who think that God looks like Ted Hoskins.”

Ted possessed a deep and deeply-personal understanding of coastal Maine and especially of those who make their hardscrabble livelihoods from its waters. Ted even worked as a commercial sternman in his youth and often could be seen throughout his life fishing off the docks of Isle au Haut or off his boat or teaching his children, Dan and Robin, to do the same when they were young.

Rev Ted Hoskins (Photo courtesy of Penobscot Bay Press)

On Isle au Haut, Ted was “summer minister” in name only, for he was an integral part of the community, winter and summer. In truth, Ted needed little excuse to find himself on Isle au Haut, including for a year in the 1970s when he took a leave of absence from Westport and taught at the island’s 1-room schoolhouse.

No place captured his heart like Isle au Haut. As a young man, he hauled traps, tended weir, and netted herring alongside those born there, and going back generations. There, Ted was both loved and accepted as an “islander” — no mean feat.

Aside from Sunday mornings at the church, Ted could equally be found calling square dances at the Town Hall, skillfully moderating occasionally fractious annual town meetings, hauling heavy steaming pots of water at Isle au Haut clam bakes, or rowing his skiff like a native in the island’s thoroughfare.

Above all, Ted made himself unsparingly available to share the joys and heartaches of the people around him, in Maine as in Connecticut before. As Ted put it, “People are people. A divorce or business failure in Connecticut hurts just as much as it does on a Maine island.”

Upon Ted and Linda’s move to Maine in 1994, Ted became extensively involved in issues around coastal fisheries’ sustainability. He understood innately the anxieties and precarious nature of a fishing life. This “semi-retirement” job as boat minister seemingly only served to increase the unfathomable number of endeavors that Ted met head on. “Slowing down” was not a comfortable concept to Ted; nor was ignoring injustice and need.

The island ministry led Ted to the conviction that he could better advocate for the island and coastal fishing communities from a new position he created within the Mission in 2002: minister to coastal communities. For this work, Ted studied at the Cody Institute in Nova Scotia in Community Resource Management and started or joined fishery-related organizations that have become pivotal in discussions in the Gulf of Maine over coastal and island sustainability and livelihood.

When in 2007 his role could no longer be funded through the Mission, Ted — as always — was not stopped; he continued apace with the same determination and, arguably, even more work.

He served on the boards of the Penobscot East Resource Center; Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance; Cobscook Bay Resource Center; and the Saltwater Network. He was a fellow at the Quebec-Labrador Foundation; a Founder of Stonington Fisheries Alliance; a member of the Maine DMR Lobster Advisory Council; a founder and co-chair of the Downeast Initiative; moderator for several Canadian/American Lobster Town Meetings; co-founder and facilitator of Community Fisheries Action Roundtable.

Ted also led post-hurricane work groups to Honduras and for many years to Belize, to the river/oceanfront town of Monkey River. There, local fishermen asked Ted to help them organize as he had in Maine. This led to the creation of the Belize Federation of Fishers, with Ted traveling monthly to villages along the coast for several years to galvanize and help coordinate the fishing communities, along with input from scientists and policymakers, at a national level.

Ted was a gifted leader who gained the trust of almost everyone he met through his lack of pretense, matter-of-fact nature, and quiet dignity — and a wicked laugh and cracking sense of humor. Ted also possessed a deep baritone voice that could command attention in a chapel of just about any size, often without an organ to accompany Sunday service.

He had a steadfast and lifelong sense of service to others, and many have noted his “strong and even unwavering moral compass.” He inspired others to the same, but never in a way that felt pressured. Ted had a commanding knowledge of Scripture but was much more likely to have a cribbage board than a Bible tucked under his arm.

A big, bearded bear of a man, it is not too much to say that his blue eyes twinkled both lovingly and mischievously, and his ready and charismatic smile betrayed his hefty frame. His ever-present bushy beard has been described as “Lincolnesque,” or “that of a sea captain,” and his gentle ways as “a quiet steadiness that inspires confidence.” Ted liked to wear a colorful t-shirt that his family had given him, which said, “Fish Worship? Is It Wrong?” It represented the twin themes of his life: service to God and love of the sea.

In the last several years, as Alzheimer’s more firmly gripped Ted, his family and close friends remained deeply grateful that Ted’s limitless kindness, humor, humility, and magnanimity never left him. And, in perhaps the greatest of gifts that this terrible disease usually steals, Ted never lost the ability to recall his family and others in close contact with him.

In his final weeks and months, as his limitations grew more sizeable and his dependency greater, Ted would often raise his shoulders, sigh in gentle acceptance, and declare to Linda, “well, shit.” For the countless people who knew Ted, who deeply admired him, who were moved by him and helped by him, who were inspired by him, for those many, many who loved him deeply, we could not agree more.

Ted leaves behind his wife of 35 years, Linda; his daughter Robin; stepdaughter Whitney (Paul Ovigele) and their children Sebastian and Sloane; stepson Fenner Ball (partner Maria Spencer); brother Bob Hoskins (Carol), and nephews and nieces. Ted was predeceased by his son Dan, who died young in a boating accident; sister Mary Ellen Lazakis, and his faithful lap dachshund Henry, who, by near-universal accounts, was grouchy to everyone except Ted.

In lieu of flowers, donations would be welcomed by the Maine Center for Coastal Fisheries, PO Box 27, Stonington, ME 04681, or the Maine Seacoast Mission, PO Box 699, Northeast Harbor, ME 04662.

A memorial service will be held September 10 (2 p.m.).  at the Blue Hill Congregational Church. The service will also be available online through the church website.

Remembering Ted Hoskins

Rev. Ted Hoskins — the former minister at Saugatuck Congregational Church, and one of the most influential clergy members in modern Westport history — died yesterday, one day after his 90th birthday.

He served Saugatuck Church as senior minister from 1971 to 1994. After leaving Westport, he lived in Isle au Haut, Maine. He continued his ministry on the seacoast there.

Rev. Ted Hoskins (Photo courtesy of Penobscot Bay Press)

In Westport Rev. Hoskins was known for his staunch advocacy of social justice, and for underserved populations. He was also a leader in the town’s interfaith clergy efforts.

In 1984, a fierce debate raged over the opening of a homeless shelter in the former Vigilant Firehouse on Wilton Road (now OKO restaurant).

The moral leadership of Rev. Ted Hoskins, Rev. Pete Powell, Rabbi Bob Orkand and businessman James Bacharach, plus the town support of 1st Selectman Bill Seiden, Human Services director Barbara Butler and David Kennedy, tamped much of the controversy.

The shelter opened. It was one of the first shelters in a suburban community — and still is, nearly 40 years later.

The Homes with Hope facility is now located on Jesup Road. Hoskins Place — a 5-bed facility for women — is named for the pastor.

Hoskins Place women’s shelter, on Jesup Road.

He was also active in the anti-Vietnam War movement. In 1971 — his first year in Westport — he marched in the Memorial Day parade in front of a banner urging peace.

In 2015, when Saugatuck Church was re-dedicated 3 years after a devastating fire, Rev. Hoskins returned as a guest preacher.

A full obituary — including funeral arrangements — will be posted when available.

Rev. Ted Hoskins (center) and Rabbi Byron T. Rubenstein of Temple Israel (right) march in front of a banner urging peace, at the 1971 Memorial Day parade.

Saugatuck Church Looks Ahead — And Back

Three years after a devastating fire, the Saugatuck Congregational Church is ready for its re-dedication ceremony. It’s set for this Sunday (March 8), with plenty of hope for the future.

And a special nod to the past.

A community-wide, inter-generational worship at 3 p.m. features Rev. Alison Patton, plus music by the Staples Orphenians, the Men’s Gospel Choir of First Congregational Church of Norwalk, and Saugatuck’s own youth and adult choirs.

Earlier — at 10 a.m. — Rev. Ted Hoskins returns as guest preacher. He served the church from 1971 to 1994.

That seems like a while ago. But it’s just an eye-blink in the long and storied history of the church, founded in 1832.

Tours of the newly reconstructed building begin at 1:45 p.m. Guides will probably mention that until 1950, it was located across the Post Road, and several hundred yards west.

Saugatuck Congregational has been through a lot, in 183 years. All Westporters welcome it back to its home — and wish it godspeed, for at least 183 more.

Saugatuck Congergational church