Tag Archives: Westport Rotary Clubs

Roundup: Health Insurance Help, Post-Election Events, Stop & Shop’s Snafus …

Last week, Access Health CT – the state’s health insurance marketplace – sent notices that many policyholders will see monthly health insurance premiums rise in January.

Congressman Jim Himes provides links to these resources:

  • Click here for the Access Health CT website general information page.
  • Click here to see which plans are available next year.
  • Click here to see if you qualify for low- or no-cost coverage.
  • Click here to find an insurance broker who can help.
  • Click here for more information on changes to federal health insurance policy.

For more help, call 1-855-805-4325, chat online with a specialist, or schedule a one-on-one appointment with an enrollment specialist.

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Speaking of public policy: Westporters came out in droves yesterday, to support the 2 Rotary Clubs/Police Department food drive at Stop & Shop.

The special collection was necessary, to stock Homes with Hope’s food pantry. The federal government stopped funding SNAP (food stamps) yesterday.

Residents can still help, of course. Food can be dropped off at the Gillespie Center on Jesup Road (behind Barnes & Noble). Click here to donate directly to Homes with Hope.

Another way to help: Shop directly from Greens Farms Church’s Amazon Wish List (click here).

Homes with Hope’s Community Kitchen is open daily for lunch (12 noon) and dinner (5 p.m.). It’s at the Gillespie Center on Jesup Road (behind Barnes & Noble). (Hat tip: Jeff Wieser)

The police van, behind these volunteers, is full. 

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It’s been a busy couple of months for the Westport League of Women Voters.

They’ve worked tirelessly to educate voters, and get them to the polls.

(Just tuning it? Still trying to make up your mind? Not sure where to vote? Click here to learn more.)

But even after the races are decided, the LWV will do more.

On November 12 (9:30 a.m., VFW), they host a coffee and “post-mortem/recap” of the election. Speakers include the registrars of voters.

Two days later (November 14, 2 p.m.), the LWV has reserved a block of tickets to see “Conscience at the Westport Community Theater. It’s the Connecticut premiere of the play about Margaret Chase Smith of Maine, the only Republican senator to oppose colleague Joseph McCarthy. Tickets ($20) are first come, first served. Email Barbra Utting: kubuguzu@gmail.com.

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A reader writes: “I shopped at Stop & Shop for 58 years. It’s the best: extraordinary variety, excellent staff, nice customers.

“As I got older, I migrated to home delivery. I was an engineer for 51 years, and until last week the service and quality were at aerospace level. For the last 3 years, I’ve been awed by the precision and speed with which weekly orders were delivered to our doorstep.

“They were packed in a Norwalk facility, and delivered from there. Every driver was cooperative, helpful and well trained. They should be working for SpaceX.

“Two weeks ago, Stop & Shop emailed that they are migrating to a third party delivery service.

“Last night we received the first attempt. It was 3 hours later. Four items were missing out of 24, totaling $28 of the $86 order. They were delivered in soggy, torn paper bags.

“I called the home delivery number this morning at 9, and was 9th in line. I called back at 10, and was 23rd in line.

“I then contacted the Greens Farms manager. He apologized, offered a shopping certificate, and delivery of the missing items today. We’re grateful.

“Their new service may be at the low end of what could be an uncomfortable learning curve. It’s sad to see such a beautiful service vanish. For all our sakes, I wish Stop & Shop the best in fixing the problem.”

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The Saugatuck Congregational Church — white, steepled, set far back on a massive lawn, a few steps from downtown — looks straight out of a Hallmark New England movie.

It was in those pews, in 1835, that a group of men hammered out the details that created the town of Westport from parts of Norwalk, Weston and Fairfield.

But it did not happen exactly there.

From its founding in 1822 through August 28, 1950, the 200-ton Saugatuck Church was located diagonally across the street, where the Shell station is now.

That year — in a day-long move so impressive it was documented by Life magazine — the church was rolled across State Street to its present site.

Yesterday — 75 years and 2 months after the move — Saugatuck Church celebrated that momentous occasion. The event included a (much smaller) re-enactment of the move, food trucks, a bounce house, lawn games, a screening of footage from the move, and a few words from Rev. Steven Savides.

Celebrating an anniversary, at the “new” Saugatuck Church location. (Photo/Haris Falk)

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From looking back, to looking ahead: The Westport Library Store holiday shop opened yesterday.

 And it’s bigger than ever. This year, the Writing Center on the main level has been transformed into the popular marketplace for gifts.

 

It’s filled with scarves, hates and gloves; jewelry; home

 décor like bells, candles and chimes; lanterns and lights;  journals, notebooks and notepads; puzzles and games; sketchbooks, coloring books, pens, markers, watercolors — and (of course) more. 

 

All purchases are tax-free. Proceeds support Library services and programs.

A few of the Westport Library Holiday Shop items.

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Neighbors & Newcomers of Westport — the group that is not just for recent arrivals — has several interesting events this month. They include:

  • Sip & Shop (November 10, 6 to 8 p.m., Scout & Molly’s): 20% discount for members.
  • Friendsgiving Lunch (November 20, 12 p.m., Le Pain Quotidien)
  • Cooking Group (date TBD): Cooking and serving a meal at the Gillespie Center.

For more information — including membership — click here.

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The Westport Garden Club has beautified Westport for over 100 years. They do their work quietly. Many people have no idea they even exist.

But the Federated Garden Clubs of Connecticut does.

The other day, at a lunch attended by 320 gardeners from around the state, they earned an Award of Excellence in Flower Achievement, for their “Westport Town Treasures” show.

Singled out were president Nathalie Fonteyne, and show co-chairs Kelle Ruden and Kara McKenna Wong. Citations were presented to Joellen Bradford for the Best Education Division, Ann Lester (Best Design Division), Joanne Heller (Outstanding Staging), and Ellen Greenberg (for design of the commemorative program (with art by Kerstin Rao.)

The club also received The Mary Loncin Flower Show Award. and a check for $100 for the top evaluated Standard Flower Show in Connecticut.

Individual honors (not flower show-related) went to Susan Nettesheim, who redesigned and maintains the club’s website, and serves as official photographer; Dottie Fincher, a member since 1971, for her exceptional contributions to the annual plant sale over many years, and Katje Donovan, for over 20 years of service as treasurer.

The Westport Garden Club is now planning their annual wreath designs for town buildings, preparing for winter in their 7 public gardens, and developing the 2026 Youth Poetry Contest. For more information, including membership,  click here.

Westport Garden Club members, at the awards ceremony.

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Attention, all veterans (and active duty personnel): Splash Car Wash will honor your service on Veterans Day (November 11), with a free car wash.

Stop in any time that day — presumably before or after the 11 a.m. ceremony at Town Hall.

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A few years ago, Danya Herman met Dr. Tom Catena. He’s a missionary doctor, doing important humanitarian work in war-torn Sudan.

The other day, Danya hosted Dr. Tom in her Westport home. He was joined by Dr. Jon Fielder, another missionary doctor and co-founder of African Mission Healthcare,

“It was so inspiring to hear Dr. Tom’s story, the hardships he and the Mother of Mercy hospital face, the countless lives he’s saved and impacted, and to get to talk with someone living a true life of purpose,” Danya says.

“He and Dr. Fielder are heroes to my family. They represent how, through their faith and sense of purpose, they live out our Jewish values of pikuach nefesh  (preservation of life), and tikkun olam (repairing the world).

Dr. Jon Fielder (left) and Dr. Tom Catena and guests, at the Herman home.

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Today’s serene “Westport … Naturally” scene comes from behind the Levitt Pavilion. It’s a vantage point few people know about. It’s sure worth the short walk.

(Photo/Larry Bartimer)

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And finally … in honor of Splash Car Wash’s generous Veterans Day offer (story above):

(Another day, another Roundup filled with news and information you can use. If you appreciate this daily feature — or anything else on “06880” — please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Food Help, Emergency Registry, Ukraine Aid …

Because of the government shutdown, SNAP benefits (food stamps) will be halted or delayed to many local residents, starting today.

In response to this, Westport Rotary Club and Sunrise Rotary Club have organized an emergency food drive for today (Saturday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.), at Stop & Shop.

Rotary volunteers, with help from the Westport Police Department, will be there to collect food for Homes with Hope’s Gillespie Center Food Pantry.

The most needed items are rice, pasta, pasta sauce, canned goods 9tuna, soup, vegetables, beans, fruit), cereal, oatmeal, peanut butter and jelly.

Food can also be dropped off at the Gillespie Center on Jesup Road (behind Barnes & Noble). Click here to donate directly to Homes with Hope.

Another way to help: Shop directly from Greens Farms Church’s Amazon Wish List (click here).

And don’t forget: Homes with Hope’s Community Kitchen is open daily for lunch (12 noon) and dinner (5 p.m.). It’s at the Gillespie Center on Jesup Road (behind Barnes & Noble).

A September food drive stocked Homes with Hopes’ food pantry. With SNAP benefits ended, more donations are needed. The pantry is open Monday, Tuesday and Friday from 1:30-4:30 p.m., and Thursday from 1:30 to 6 p.m.

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For a while, Westport has had 2 different registries for residents in crisis.

One was used by the Department of Human Services to check on seniors living alone with medical needs during storms and other emergencies. The second was managed by the Police Department, to help first responders understand the needs of people with disabilities during 911 calls.

Now they’ve merged. Human Services, and the Police and Fire Departments, have launched “Westport Ready.”

To register, click here. For help completing the form, or to request a mailed copy, call 203-341-1050 or email humansrv@westportct.gov.

NOTE:Westport READY is a support tool, not a rescue list. Households should still maintain their own emergency plans and supplies.

Residents should also enroll in NIXLE town alerts online, or text 06880 to 888777, CT Alert, and the Fire Department’s Community Connect program.

Westport now offers one streamlined service for seniors and people with disabilities during emergencies.

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Meanwhile, on a lighter — by which we mean, Halloween — note: There was one less house this year to trick or treat at, in the Compo Beach neighborhood.

16 Westport Avenue was recently torn down. The new home — documented in an intriguing Westport Project video series — is not yet finished.

But kids and parents passing by got a “treat” yesterday, thanks to builder Chris O’Dell and his crew:

Not far away in the Compo neighborhood, this house went all out:

(Photo/Louise Pepin)

You’ve heard of spooky Area 51?

Nevada’s got nothing on Westport.

We have Area 23 — on Juniper Road. Here’s how it looked last night, for trick-or-treaters who dared enter.

(Photo/Pam Long)

And across town, this creature on Sylvan Road North was handing out full-size candy bars. You didn’t even have to walk up the driveway.

Every car that passed by honked.

(Photo/Susan Garment)

Here’s one more eerily lit scene. This is Gorham Avenue:

(Photo/Jamie Walsh)

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Missed either (or both) League of Women Voters debates this past week?

Want to see one (or both) again, to confirm (or make) your ballot choices?

You’re in luck! They were recorded, and uploaded to the Westport Library YouTube channel.

Click here or below for the 1st Selectman and Planning & Zoning Commission debates.

Click here or below for the Board of Education debate.

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Speaking of the election:

Through the first 12 days of early voting, 12.46% of eligible Westport voters have cast ballots. That’s 1 out of every 8.

The breakdown:

  • Democrats: 1,370 of 7,945 eligible voters (17.24%)
  • Republicans: 378 of 3,332 eligible voters (11.34%)
  • Unaffiliated: 609 of 7,588 eligible voters (8.03%)

Early voting continues this weekend, also at Town Hall:

Saturday, November 1           10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday, November 2             10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The polls are open Tuesday (Election Day), from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., at the 9 RTM district locations.

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This is the final chance for tickets to tomorrow’s 3rd annual “Historic Homes of 06880” tour.

On Sunday, from 1 to 4 p.m., we’re partnering with our friends at KMS Team at Compass to offer an inside look at 4 historic houses.

They’re at 221 Greens Farms Road, 249 Greens Farms Road, 155 Long Lots Road, and 209 Wilton Road. Click here for details of each.

Tickets are $60 each, $100 for 2. Click here to purchaseProceeds help fund “06880”‘s work — which, as always, chronicles Westport’s past, present and future.

249 Greens Farms Road — one of 4 historic homes on tomorrow’s “06880” tour.

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Tomorrow (Sunday, November 2, 5 p.m.), Chabad of Westport launches its Film Series.

They’ll show “Blind Spot”: the first documentary exposing campus antisemitism before and after October 7, 2023. After the screening, executive producer Leonard Gold will take part in a conversation about the film. Click here to register.

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Westport was the first community to form a sister city partnership with one in the Ukraine, shortly after the Russian invasion. In less than 4 years, our town has provided over $300,000 worth of food, clothing, wood pellet stoves, communications equipment, trash trucks and more, to our war-torn friends.

Ukrainian Aid International — the boots-on-the-ground non-profit founded by Westporters Brian and Marshall Mayer, which has delivered over $2.5 million in aid to the region — is hosting 2 events soon. Both highlight the sister cities program — and the new “Sister State” relationship between Connecticut and Donetsk, the front-line oblast.

UAI’s team and local leaders will over personal stories, and describe first-hand experiences of their partnerships.

The first is November 9, at 2 p.m. (Ferguson Library, Stamford). The second is November 10, at 4 p.m. (Fairfield Public Library; register here).

Solidarity, in Donetsk.

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The next Westport Country Playhouse Script in Hand play reading — “The Machine” — is Monday (November 3, 7 p.m.)

It’s a “smart, fast-moving thriller about a poet, an AI, and the tricky questions that arise when technology starts writing our art for us.” Click here for tickets, and more information.

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Club 203’s next event is “Giving Thanks Together.”

Westport’s social group for adults with disabilities gathers at the Senior Center on November 12 (6:30 to 8 p.m.) for turkey sandwiches and apple pie, laughter, bingo, and a celebration of friendship and connections.

MoCA\CT will be there as usual, with an art activity that’s a creative way to reflect on what everyone is thankful for this year.

As for “06880”: We’re thankful that Club203 offers a space for all Westporters to find those friends, and make those connections, that are so important in life.

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Growing season is hanging on.

So were these — the focus of today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo, from Wakeman Town Farm.

(Photo/Niki von Praag)

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And finally … Happy All Saints Day!

(Be a saint! Please click here to support “06880,” your 24/7/365 hyper-local blog. Thank you. PS: You’re an angel too.)

Zach Slater’s Great Week

Last week was a pretty good one for Zach Slater.

Zach Slater and Maggie Feczko. A member of Westport Sunrise Rotary, she's been one of Zach's most avid fans during his oratory competitions.

Following up on his 1st place finish in Westport Rotary’s 4-Way Test Contest, the Staples senior placed first in the Rotary International District 7980 contest in East Haven (and a $500 scholarship).

Zach had to tweak his earlier speech about the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy — between the Westport contest and the one last weekend, the landscape shifted — but the judges loved both his content and delivery.

Moving from the military to the swimming pool, Zach set a Staples record for the highest point score for 6 dives.

And he got an acceptance letter from his first choice university, Penn State.

“06880” has no idea what this week holds in store.  Perhaps Zach will restore peace to Egypt, or invent a new color.

Don’t put it past him.

Zach Slater Demolishes “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”

The Secretary of Defense is for it.

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff is for it.

So — particularly eloquently — is Zach Slater.

Zach Slater

“It” is repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” — the policy that prohibits gay men and lesbians from serving in the U.S. military.

Zach — a Staples senior, and captain of both the water polo, and swimming and diving, teams at the high school — tackled the controversial rule during the finals of the local Rotary finals last week.

Organized by both Westport Rotary Clubs, the oratory contest asks students to apply Rotary’s 4-Way test to ethical issues.

The test asks:  Is it truth?  Is it fair to all concerned?  Will it build goodwill and better friendships?  Will it benefit all concerned?

Zach’s answer to “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” is a resounding “no!”  Here’s what he said:

Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.  It is a policy that has discharged over 14,000 members of our armed forces.  It is a policy that has cost our government hundreds of millions of dollars and it is a policy that has rid our armies of brave gay, lesbian and bisexual service members.

I have determined that this policy must be abandoned and I have done by asking myself:  Is it the truth?  Is it fair to all concerned?  Will it be beneficial to all concerned?  And will it build goodwill and other friendships?

First, is it the truth?  Some of our political and military leaders believe that “don’t ask don’t tell” creates cohesion among the armed forces.  They claim sexual orientation ambiguity makes sure that there will be no distractions while fighting for our country.

However, those serving in the military feel differently.  A study released this pass week by the Pentagon reports that over 70 percent of people serving in the army are comfortable with gay, lesbian and bisexual peers.  A majority of Americans, also 70 percent, believe that gay people should be allowed to serve openly.  This is what America wants, this is the truth, and why “don’t ask don’t tell must be repealed.”

Second, is it fair to all concerned?  “Don’t ask, don’t tell” is not fair to those brave enough to risk their lives for our country.  If discovered to be gay, a serviceman or woman is immediately discharged, and any openly gay person qualified to serve our nation is turned away at military offices around the country.

According to the Pentagon, over 75% of young Americans are unqualified to serve in the military because of growing drug use, obesity, law-breaking and poor education.  Yet a physically fit, law-abiding, well-educated gay person interested in serving is not allowed. Why someone interested in protecting us, Americans, should be turned away, simply because of their sexuality when there are only so many people qualified to fight?  This is unfair and why this policy must be forgotten.

Third, will it be beneficial to all concerned? “Don’t ask, don’t tell” is disadvantageous to our country and all Americans. Expelling someone from the military because of their sexuality simply makes us less strong.  It is one less person keeping us at home safe, safe from an enemy, safe from terror, safe from corruption and safe from the evils of our world.

There are an estimated 66,000 closeted gays is the armed forces.  Imagine if all of them were to be outed and discharged.  That is 66,000 less people keeping us safe.  By abandoning “don’t ask don’t tell,” more gay people would feel comfortable joining the armed forces.  Therefore, more people to keep us safe and more people fighting for the greater good.  It will be beneficial to all concerned if “don’t ask, don’t tell” were to be revoked.

Fourth, will it build goodwill and other friendships?  “Don’t ask, don’t tell” currently limits goodwill and friendships in the army because it is a policy not in touch with the times.  The Servicemembers Legal Defense Network reports that a majority of those who have fought in 21st century wars do not care if someone is gay or straight and do not find any connection between sexual orientation and job performance.

The Joint Force Quarterly reported “after a careful examination, there is no scientific evidence to support the claim that unit cohesion will be negatively affected if homosexuals serve openly.”  And if gays were allowed to be open, in a way they could be there true selves, creating true cohesion between the troops, building true goodwill and friendship.  This is why “don’t ask, don’t tell” should be repealed.

By using the rotary four-way test, I have come to the conclusion that “don’t ask, don’t tell” is not the truth; “don’t ask, don’t tell” is not fair to all concerned; repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” will be beneficial to all concerned, and repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” will build true goodwill and friendships.

This policy is not in touch with the times and is unsupported by a majority of Americans, and servicemen and women. This is why it must be repealed, and this is why it must be repealed now.  Those who understand that this policy is not right must call their senator today and let them know that they can repeal this policy today, and let them know that “don’t ask, don’t tell” is not the truth, not fair, not beneficial and does not build good will and other friendships.

Zach’s speech won him $500, and advances him to the Rotary 4-Way Test regional contest next month at Fairfield University.