Tag Archives: Westport RTM

Smoking: The Sequel

It happens like clockwork: I write a random, Westport-related post. Someone responds with an even more interesting back story.

Within minutes of this morning’s look back at our town’s former smoking culture, alert “06880” reader  Adam Stolpen clued me in to a May 16, 1987 New York  Times piece.

Cigarettes 1Headlined “A Tough Smoking Plan is Debated in Westport,” it said a proposed law would require restaurant owners to “erect walls, set up partitions or install separate ventilating systems to segregate smokers from non-smokers.” It would also limit cigarette smoking in the workplace to designated areas.

The RTM would vote on “one of the nation’s most restrictive smoking laws, rivaling ones recently approved in Beverly Hills, Calif., and Aspen, Colo.”

The Times quoted Stolpen, an RTM member and principal author of the proposal:  ”Westport is a relatively enlightened community. People come to Westport for variety of reasons. One is clean air. (People) are aware of what’s healthy and not healthy, and studious of what is in their best interest.”

Calling Westport — with about 100 restaurants — a “dining center of Fairfield County and the state,” the Times noted that many restaurateurs opposed the ban.

”I come from an Eastern bloc country,” said Horst Antosch, owner of La Cle d’Or, who was born in East Germany. ”And I am seeing a freedom of choice being taken away. This is not like an airplane. A customer does not have to come into my restaurant if he doesn’t want to.”

Chez Pierre owner Brendan J. Donohoe added, ”A restaurant, since time immemorial, has been a place where people have gone to eat, drink, smoke and make outrageous statements or whatever they want. What’s wrong with that?”

Chez Pierre was a famed French restaurant on Main Street. Today it's Tavern on Main.

Chez Pierre was a famed French restaurant on Main Street. Today it’s Tavern on Main.

The Times noted that some customers were also upset.

”People smoke in restaurants — period,” said Mitchell L. Katz, 37, a pension consultant, as he dined at the Mansion Clam House. ”If you don’t want to be in a restaurant where people are smoking, then don’t come in. ”

The piece ended with a quote from Second Selectman Wally Meyer:

I would hope that we would approve an ordinance that did not allow stray smoke to move from a smoking area into a non-smoking section. But we’re not boutique-ee. We’re going to come up with the most sensible solution that respects the rights of smokers and non-smokers.’

In fact, what followed was a typical Westport controversy. Following intense and contentious discussion, the RTM voted the proposal down.

After which Stolpen received death threats from an overwrought restaurant owner, and his mailbox was blown up.

“I attributed it to nicotine withdrawal and cherry bombs,” Stolpen says 27 years later.

Hadley Rose’s Road: From Pastrami To RTM

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

For Hadley Rose, it was a good pastrami sandwich.

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

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

Plus, Gold’s had that pastrami sandwich.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Oh, yeah. Rose will miss one more thing.

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

Hadley Rose will miss Gold's Delicatessen.

Hadley Rose will miss Gold’s Delicatessen.

RTM May Tackle Guns

Westport’s RTM — the Representative Town Meeting — usually tackles local topics. Our elected officials debate and vote on budgets, contracts and sewers.

RTMSometimes they decide huge Westport questions. The RTM okayed the town’s purchases of Longshore, Cockenoe Island and Winslow Park.

Every once in a while, the RTM ventures onto national turf.

In 1972 — following a petition signed by 1000 residents, and a 3-hour debate — the RTM endorsed a resolution calling on President Nixon and Congress to “take immediate action to withdraw from the war in Vietnam.” The vote was 17 to 15.

In 1982 the RTM passed a Sense of the Meeting Resolution urging the US and Soviet Union to agree to a nuclear arms freeze. That vote was 24 to 2, with 7 abstentions.

On Tuesday, January 8 (7:30 p.m., Town Hall), the RTM will discuss this item:

To take such action as the meeting may determine, upon the request of at least 20 electors of the Town of Westport, for the RTM to place an item on an upcoming agenda … involving a request to support gun control legislation in the United States and urge the President and federal legislators, as well as Connecticut state legislators, to enact a ban on automatic and semi-automatic assault weapons and high-capacity magazine clips.  Furthermore, to support closing the “gun-show loophole” that allows people to buy guns at trade shows and from private dealers without background checks.

That discussion will not be about guns themselves; its focus is whether the RTM should discuss the topic at an upcoming meeting.

If recent comments on “06880” are any indication, both sides will come out firing.

The New Blog On The Block

When Steven McClenning and his wife were ready to leave Brooklyn for the suburbs, they wanted the usual: more space, recreation, good schools.

They also wanted to be close to the train — Steven works in publishing and design, in New York. The McClennings did not want to have to buy a 2nd car, just to drive back and forth from the station.

When they learned about Westport’s commuter bus shuttle, their horizons expanded. Suddenly, they didn’t have to buy within walking distance.

For the past 4 1/2 years, the McClennings have lived happily on Oak Street. It’s a nice neighborhood — mixing old-timers and young families — with just a 4-minute walk to the Clinton Avenue corner. Every morning Steven and several other commuters flag down the shuttle, and head to train.

Last year, when the Board of Finance cut and the RTM subsequently restored transit funds, Steven paid little attention. But this year, during the same debate over the future of the buses, he got involved.

Taking the train is only half the battle. Getting there is the other. (Photo/Jeremiah Cox)

He wrote the Board of Finance. He shared his letter with fellow commuters. He gathered emails, and told them about upcoming meetings. They emailed him with comments; he forwarded them to a quickly growing list of addresses. It was an important but inefficient way to communicate.

When neighbor Rudy Bakalov offered to host a shuttle-related web site, Steven accepted. He took all the info he had — on topics like the shuttle’s effect on real estate values, parking problems at the station, ridership figures, etc. — and created a blog.

Rudy suggested the name WestportCommuter.org, so it could expand beyond mere shuttle news. “The town needs to make a long-term commitment to commuters,” Steven says. “This can be a way to bring lots of different commuting issues together.”

He hopes the blog will become a group effort. “I don’t speak for everyone, and I don’t want to,” he says. “Different people have different ideas. We need to hear all of them.”

The Westport bus shuttle map could use some spiffing up.

One suggestion: to use commuters’ talents to help market the Norwalk Transit District. “Their budget has been squeezed so tight, they haven’t been able to communicate basic information, like routes and how to get the bus,” Steven says.

A commuter-created mobile app, including schedules and a better map, would be a great blog project.

Though Steven did some political work in college, he never considered himself an activist.

But, he notes, “when an issue hits close to home, you get invested in it.”

And, he says, his recent commuter activism has made him realize how hard — and important — it is to volunteer your time.

“Everyone on the RTM does what they do for public service,” he says of the men and women who will control the fate of the shuttle system when they vote May 7. (A 70% vote is needed to restore full funding.)

“They do a lot more than I do. I have nothing but respect for them.”

Run For Westport’s Life

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

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

Run for the RTM, that is.

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

That’s all you need to know.  Really.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

How easy is that?!

The Education Budget

Tomorrow, the Board of Education presents its proposed 2011-12 budget to the Board of Finance.  The request — approximately $98 million — represents a 2.36% increase over the current year.  Before approving it unanimously, the Board of Ed cut more than $400,000 from the Superintendent’s proposal.

The Board of Finance — and, later, the RTM — will examine various cost centers.  They’ll hone in here, ask questions there, and may suggest further cuts.  It’s a springtime ritual, one folks in Tunisia and Egypt and Libya would die for (quite literally).

Before all the hand-wringing and finger-pointing begins, here are some thoughts:

Westport is not at the top when compared to similar districts. In fact, since the economy tanked we’ve been a leader in minimizing year-to-year increases (only Weston is lower).  And of all the towns in our “district reference group,” we’ve got the lowest requested annual rate of increase.

More than 82% of the budget is driven by salaries and benefits. In fact, the entire 2.36% increase requested is applied to contractual salary increases owed to employees.  The Board of Ed is asking for nothing more.  Union contracts requiring approval beyond the Board of Ed were passed overwhelmingly by the Board of Finance and RTM — and led to greater contributions by employees toward health care costs.

Over the past 2 years, there’s been a $3.6 million budgetary shortfall in the area of contractual salaries. The result has been reductions in the music and gifted programs, staff cuts in elementary schools and libraries, deferred maintenance and more.  The Board of Ed anticipates 865 employees next year — 6 fewer than this year.

Inevitably, Person A will ask why we have “x” program.  Person B will explain its importance, and question why instead we have “y.”  Person C will know that both “x” and “y” are valuable, but not say anything because it is much easier to criticize than praise.

Inevitably too, someone will note that I am an employee of the Westport school system.  That is true.  I do several things, on a part-time basis.  I earn a few thousand dollars a year from the Board of Ed.  I get no benefits — certainly not retirement.  I pay 100% of my own health insurance.

Much has changed since Horace Staples donated a high school to Westport. But his vision for a top-rate education lives on throughout town.

But I am willing to pay my fair share of the education costs (and of the entire town budget, though that’s not the topic of this post).  I know the tremendous value our schools provide for kids today.  I appreciate what they did for me, back in the day.  I know how much more in taxes my sisters in Westchester County and New Jersey pay (and don’t get the one in Gov. Christie’s state started on what’s happening there).

I know how much more — proportionally, and in some cases actually — people in neighboring towns and cities pay, for school systems that don’t come close to ours.

The debate this spring should not be about the failures of America’s educational system generally, or a bad experience one person’s child had one year with one teacher.  It should be about whether we believe Westport schools — in a wide variety of ways and, working under a staggering set of demands and for a broad range of constituencies — are preparing our children to live in, work in, contribute to and help change a dizzyingly challenging world.

And, if we believe that, whether the Board of Ed budget is a worthwhile investment in that future.

A Student’s Plea

Last year, in the fierce budget battle over education, Staples freshman JJ Mathewson emerged as a strong voice against cuts.  This year’s debate has been less contentious — but JJ still has something to say.

He asked “06880” to share his thoughts with the town.  JJ wrote:

As Westport struggles to create the town’s budget for the 2010-2011 year (the RTM meets on May 4), there is still one large area of contention:  What will the state of education be?

One year ago, JJ Mathewson (left) was a leader during a Town Hall rally against education budget cuts.

Last year the public school budget was cut by 2%.  Then an additional $1.4 million was cut by the RTM.  As a result, the public schools have experienced increases in class sizes, and many cutting edge courses at Staples have been removed.

This year the Board of Finance proposed a $1 million cut.  It was reduced to $500,000 after the Board of Education announced it would seek full restoration of the original $1 million.  The Board of Ed still seeks full restoration, to avoid further cuts in the school programs next year.

If a $500,000 cut is allowed to pass, Westport schools will notice another increase in class size.  The proposed budget is already bare, and staff shortages are likely.

In addition, over the past few years Staples has had a noticeable increase in enrollment.  Because of higher enrollment next year, further budget cuts will have a significant impact on our schools. At greatest risk are courses that teach cutting-edge interdisciplinary skills and are not state mandated.

These potential changes threaten the quality of Westport’s education. Our school system is a pillar of our community, and important to attracting residents to our community.  To contact your RTM members, click here.

Losing The Library

Theo Sullivan is a Staples water polo coach — and Westport Public Library lover.

Recently, he urged the Board of Finance to restore cuts proposed in next year’s budget.  If not, he noted, the library might have to close on many Sundays.

When he told his team what he’d said, one responded:  “I didn’t know they were allowed to close a library.”

“They” can do whatever “they” want.

So Westporters have barraged RTM members with phone calls and emails, pleading for restoration.  The RTM Finance Committee recommended restoring $45,000 cut by the Board of Finance.  The full RTM now must agree, by at least a 70 percent vote.

The Westport Library is busy all the time -- but always welcoming.

The proposed cuts have touched citizens in ways that others — aimed at public safety, recreation, even education — have not.

The reason, director Maxine Bleiweis thinks, is because the library is integrally tied in with the way the town identifies itself.

“The library embodies how nearly everyone learns, grows, and becomes creative,” Maxine says.  “It’s like part of the Westport air — and now the air supply may be cut off.”

“We don’t have time to be closed,” she says.  “We have to be open, to feed and nurture all that goes on in this community.”

Our discussion was interrupted — it seemed almost like a setup, but it wasn’t — by a call to Maxine from Keith Richards’ publicist.  If the Rolling Stones’ PR guy needs the Westport library, there can’t be anyone in the area who doesn’t.

If the library can’t get no satisfaction through the restoration of funds, Sunday closings are a real possibility.  That’s a better option, Bleiweis says, than cutting staff and services whenever the doors are open.

“You can’t have a restaurant that functions at less than full capacity,” the library director notes.  And — as has been proven over and over — the Westport library is as much a part of town life as food and wine.

Or the air that we breathe.

(The RTM begins voting Monday to accept or restore Board of Finance budget cut recommendations for all town departments.  The library is one of the last agenda items — meaning a vote may not come until Tuesday, or even Wednesday.  In the meantime, Westporters are contacting RTM members, and/or making plans to attend the meeting — whenever it is held.)

Are You Drinking Recycled Wastewater?

A scrumptious breakfast buffet.  Hot coffee and cold orange juice.  Plenty of recycled wastewater, straight from your septic system to you.

That’s the menu offered up at this Friday morning’s Sunrise Rotary Club meeting (April 16, 7:30 a.m. at Bobby Q’s).

Sure, it’s not the usual Rotary fare.  If it was, it wouldn’t have made the cut as an “06880”-worthy item.

(Courtesy of North Georgia Water)

Jonathan Steinberg and Helen Martin-Block — 2 members of Westport RTM’s Septic Education Task Force — will tell the Rotarians how they (the task force) function, and how beneficial septic systems are to Westporters who have them, their neighborhoods, and the environment at large.

The septic educators (2 words that never before in history were used together) gave a similar talk yesterday to Westport’s other Rotary Club.

According to Steinberg, some Westporters may be unaware that “the effluent of septic tanks soaks into the ground where naturally occurring bacteria provided by Mother Nature does a magnificent job of purifying it, enabling it to be drawn up from wells and consumed again.”

Go figure.

Speaking of figures:  Of Westport’s 10,000 households, 6,000 have septic systems.  Their proper care and maintenance directly impacts water quality and the environment.

The Septic Education Task Force hopes its creative approach will “instruct, entertain and lead to improved septic system management practices on a long-term basis.”

Bon appetit!

(Guests are welcome at tomorrow’s Sunrise Rotary breakfast meeting.  The $12 fee includes a breakfast buffet, but no recycled wastewater.  For more information, contact president John Hendrickson:  jendri@optonline.net)

A Taxpayer’s Lament

Here’s an open letter to the Board of Finance and RTM from a Westport taxpayer.  The writer does not wish to be identified, due to the personal information revealed.

To the Board of Finance and RTM:

I have followed with interest and dismay the decisions made by the Board of Finance on the town and Board of Education budgets.  As an employee of the Board of Education, as well as a Westport property owner, I am directly affected by their decisions.

I had planned on paying my property taxes this year (and next).  I know that times are tough and money is tight.  Now I will lose my full-time job with the Board of Ed, at worst, or have my take-home income reduced, at best.

But that’s okay; I’m industrious.  I am lucky enough to have a part-time job, in addition to my full-time job.  As long as I don’t actually lose my job, I may be able to make up my reduced take-home by taking extra hours at my part-time job.

Uh-oh.  The Board of Finance cut the Library budget.  My boss said that if the library is closed on Sundays, he will close because he will lose so much business.  So not only can I not get additional hours, I will make less money at my part-time job this year as well.

Gee.  I had planned on paying my taxes, I really had.  And if the Board of Finance hadn’t done such a good job of protecting me, I still might be able to.

Comments, as always, are welcome encouraged.

Morris Jesup might be lonelier on Sundays, if the Westport Public Library is forced to reduce hours due to budget cuts.