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Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Bridgeport man charged with Fairfield home invasion, pursuit

FAIRFIELD — A Bridgeport man faces a slew of charges after he allegedly broke into a Fairfield home, assaulted a resident and fled with cash and jewelry — all before leading police on a pursuit in his vehicle and then on foot.

Guilherme Lima-DaSilva, 40, of Houston Avenue in Bridgeport, was charged with home invasion, assault on an elderly person, second-degree threatening, second-degree larceny, second-degree robbery, unlawful restraint, reckless driving, engaging police in a pursuit, evading responsibility, unregistered motor vehicle, misuse of plates and no insurance.

It all started when a woman called the Fairfield Police Department’s Emergency Communications Center around 2 p.m. Tuesday after she got a call from a concerned relative of a Fairfield resident.

The woman told police she got a call from her sister, who said there was a suspicious person on her property on Coventry Lane. Then, she told police, she heard her sister yell “no, no” and the line was disconnected.

Police immediately responded, but they didn’t have the exact address. About four minutes later, police got another 911 call from a home at the end of the dead end Coventry Lane road, reporting someone broke into her home and attacked her, wielding a knife. That man was later identified as Lima-DaSilva.

The 62-year-old victim told police the suspect took off in a black vehicle. A responding officer spotted the vehicle matching the description, and saw that the driver also matched the victim’s description. The officer tried to pull the suspect over as it turned into the driveway of a home on Black Rock Turnpike.

Police said the officer got out of his car, requested identified from the driver and started to walk back to his patrol car when...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-man-charged-with-Fairfield-home-13808889.php

Report: 39 anti-Semitic incidents reported across CT in 2018

There were 39 incidents of anti-Jewish harassment, vandalism and assault reported statewide in 2018, according to data released Tuesday by the Anti-Defamation League.

The number of anti-Semitic incidents reported across Connecticut reached a peak high in 2017 with 49 incidents, up from 38 in 2016, the ADL said.

“While the number of incidents reported to our offices declined slightly in 2018, the level of reported anti-Semitic incidents over the last three years is the highest we have seen in over a decade,” said a statement from ADL Connecticut Regional Director Steve Ginsburg. “Here in Connecticut, we are redoubling our efforts to educate students, communities, law enforcement and leaders on this pernicious age-old hatred.”

The ADL’s report featured data from criminal and non-criminal acts of harassment and intimidation, including distribution of hate propaganda, threats and slurs. The data was compiled using information from victims, law enforcement and community leaders.

The full report can be found at adl.org/audit2018.

The ADL data found 19 cases of harassment and threats, 19 cases of vandalism and one assault in Connecticut in 2018.

This data was released Tuesday, just a few days after a shooting at a California synagogue left one dead and three wounded. Following the weekend shooting, Connecticut religious organizations called the incident one of many showing a “disturbing” trend of attacks on the Jewish community.

Nationwide, the Jewish community saw...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Report-39-anti-Semitic-incidents-reported-across-13808466.php

Bridgeport school superintendent quits

BRIDGEPORT — Schools Superintendent Aresta Johnson is calling it quits sooner than she announced.

In a letter sent to staff on Tuesday, Johnson said she is leaving the position effective July 31, 2019.

Johnson earlier told the board she would not serve past April 2020.

The news came as a surprise to both Board Chairman John Weldon and Board member Maria Pereira. Neither said they received the email that staff received just before 5 p.m. on Tuesday,

In it, Johnson quotes Maya Angelou and said she will miss the district’s school children.

During her tenure, Johnson was faced with drastically shrinking resources and a school board that regularly spent meetings arguing. They also gave her mixed signals, telling her to get out in front of budget season by holding community forums only to cancel them when they shown an unfavorable light on the mayor and city council members.

Weldon said he would call a special meeting within a couple of days to plan for a replacement.

(will be updated)



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-school-superintendent-quits-13808201.php

Officials say St. Vincent’s, Hartford deal good for all

TRUMBULL — Hospital officials and others testified Tuesday that the sale of St. Vincent’s Medical Center in Bridgeport to Hartford Healthcare would benefit both organizations.

The public hearing, which took place before the Connecticut Office of Health Strategy at the Trumbull Marriott, drew around 40 people, including leaders and employees from both hospitals and community members.

It was part of the state’s Certificate of Need program, which requires some health care providers to obtain state approval before making major changes such as mergers, acquisitions, changing access to services or discontinuing a medical service.

“Our priority is the integrity and transparency of this process,” said Michaela Mitchell, attorney for the Office of Health Strategy, before opening the hearing to testimony.

The proposed sale of St. Vincent’s by its current owner Ascension, the nation’s largest nonprofit health system, to Hartford Health was announced roughly a year ago. But St. Vincent’s had been looking for a partner for some time, said Dawn Rudolph, the hospital’s president and chief executive officer, during her testimony.

Rudolph said the hospital has faced many challenges in recent years, including the loss of many primary care physicians to retirement and other factors. Fewer doctors meant the hospital had to serve fewer patients.

“Despite our best efforts, we struggled to keep pace,” she said.

Rudolph said Hartford Healthcare was specifically selected as a partner because it was the best equipped to, among other things, provide the hospital with more resources.

Meanwhile, Hartford Healthcare CEO Elliot Joseph testified that adding St. Vincent’s to its network would both...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Officials-say-St-Vincent-s-Hartford-deal-good-13808106.php

Bridgeport announces street sweeping changes

BRIDGEPORT — The city is launching a new street sweeping program on Wednesday that will double the amount of time citywide street-sweeping occurs.

Rather than have street sweeping happen monthly, the revised street sweeping program will have citywide sweeping twice a month. The cleaning will now also coincide with assigned recycling days — so residents will know what day and time their streets will be cleaned.

Public facilities asks residents to move their vehicles from roadside parking spaces from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on their assigned street sweeping day.

Mayor Joe Ganim said in a prepared statement that the coordination with the recycling pick-up schedule will make it easier for residents to keep track of street sweeping.

“We need everyone’s support to ‘pick it up!’ and keep Bridgeport clean,” Ganim said.

The new program was designed to ensure recycling employees can travel safely down streets with less cars parked on the roads.

The news release about the changes said, “clean streets not only give the city an overall clean appearance, but aids in helping reduce traffic accidents and pollution in our byways and waterways.”

Visit https://bit.ly/2ZNVrNe for a breakdown of the street sweeping schedule.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-announces-street-sweeping-changes-13808057.php

FAQ on the Bridgeport FBI probe

When did the FBI investigation into Bridgeport begin?

It’s not known exactly when the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office began looking into possible impropriety and corruption in Bridgeport, but it appears to have begun after the city investigated possible misappropriation of cash from the sale of scrap metal by the city’s Public Facilities Department.

City Police Chief Armando Perez notified the FBI of the investigation and the city conducted an internal probe of cash metal sales that led to disciplining city employees, including firing Deputy Public Facilities Director Joe Tiago and docking Public Facilities Director John Ricci a month’s pay.

Perez has said his department opened a case regarding the scrap metal claim and other alleged improprieties after city council members last fall received an anonymous letter outlining alleged improper behavior by city officials, including how scrap metal sales were handled.

What is the FBI looking into?

With approval from a Grand Jury, the FBI in on Feb. 4, 2019, issued a subpoena to the city for a variety of records. The request sought all files, emails and other correspondence related to Vaz Quality Works, G. Pic & Sons Construction and Seaview Equipment Sales and Rentals, which is owned by Luis Vaz, owner of Vaz Quality Works. The FBI requested records dating back to January 2015, which covers Mayor Joe Ganim’s tenure in office.

Vaz and G. Pic have received millions from the city over the years for a variety of work. Vaz built the city’s $3.5 million public facilities garage on Housatonic Avenue and G. Pic has...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/FAQ-on-the-Bridgeport-FBI-probe-13807989.php

Ansonia Planners delay decision on Main Street apartments for a month

ANSONIA — The future of two Main Street buildings has been put on hold for a month while designers work on architectural, landscaping and trash management plans for what would be the first downtown housing project in the area in years.

The city’s Planning and Zoning Commission tabled the project until May 20 after hearing from two residents and four Aldermen who attended a public hearing on renovations to the former four-story medical office building at 158 Main St. and the three-story former Glazer’s Appliance and furniture store at 200 Main St.

Both are owned by Tonino Mavuli and his family.

“This is a very important project at a very critical period of time in Ansonia,” said Sheila O’Malley, the city’s economic development director. “The downtown area has languished for many years. Right now, I would say it’s flourishing. What we really need are permanent residents living, shopping and eating in the downtown.”

The Maulvis said they hope to convert the upper two floors of office space at 158 Main to 14 apartments: four studios, two one-bedroom and one two-bedroom on each floor. At 200 Main, the plans are to build 19 apartments, 13 of them studios on the upper floors.

The renovations would mean the commercial tenants on those floors — Michael Marcinek’s Fletcher Thompson, an architectural and engineering firm; Greg Stamos, a local lawyer; Tom-Watt, a fundraising sales firm; BHcare, a non-profit health care firm and the Valley Independent Sentinel — would move to lower floors.

Marcinek said he did not believe the month’s delay would affect plans to have the apartments ready in December once they get their approvals.

“We can start on the...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Ansonia-Planners-delay-decision-on-Main-Street-13807405.php

Bridgeport teachers told hall duty doesn’t include confronting intruders

BRIDGEPORT — When classroom teachers at Columbus School were assigned lunch duty this fall, it violated their contract.

It took awhile, but the practice was stopped even though a class action grievance that was filed was never sustained. Afraid the issue could resurface the teacher’s union sought and received school board approval on Monday in the matter.

The board, however, denied a second part of the grievance that sought to clarify contract language that allows teachers to be assigned hall duty.

Columbus teachers taken off lunch duty, instead were assigned to monitor hallways during lunch shifts.

Eric Marshall, an attorney representing the Bridgeport Education Association said the problem isn’t hall duty but what’s in that job description. The contract doesn’t spell it out.

Some teachers, apparently confused hall duty with security detail, which the contract specifically prohibits. There have been instances where teachers on hall duty have taken it upon themselves to approach people who slip in through side doors or angry parents demanding to see a teacher.

That left some board members confused.

“What is the grievance, exactly?” asked board member Joe Lombard.

“Are we saying that when security is away and someone comes in a building an adult would not direct a person to the main office,” added LaMar Kennedy, the board’s newest member.

Board member Joe Sokolovic said it appears that some teachers might be taking it upon themselves to act as security.

“I am wondering what we are doing here,” Floyd Dugas, an attorney for the school board, said. “In most districts I represent if problem fixed, it goes away.”

...

from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-teachers-told-hall-duty-doesn-t-13807965.php

Number of unvaccinated children in CT schools to be released

HARTFORD — As measles continues to spread in the United States with cases surpassing 700 this year, the Connecticut Department of Public Health plans to release information on just how many unvaccinated children attend each school in the state.

Department of Public Health Commissioner Renee Coleman-Mitchell sent a letter Tuesday to all school superintendents to let them know they will be posting public and private school immunization-related rates on their website by the end of the week.

Coleman-Mitchell said the school-level information is to “increase public awareness of immunization rates in local communities, which may lead to increased engagement and focus on increasing immunization rates to reduce the risk of vaccine-preventable diseases.”

Previously, the Department of Public Health said it would not publicly disseminate school-based information or even the number children per town that aren’t vaccinated based on their religious or medical exemptions.

In response to a CTNewsJunkie Freedom of Information request in February, the department said, “Under Conn. Gen. Stat. sec. 19a-25, the Department cannot publish, make available or disseminate reports of the findings of studies of morbidity and mortality (such as a school or school district’s immunization rates) or any other documents that include identifiable health data or any item, collection, or grouping of health data that makes the individual or organization supplying it or described in it identifiable (e.g. in the case of the annual immunization survey, a specific school).”

The lack of information prompted House Majority Leader Matt Ritter and Senate President Martin Looney to team up to...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Number-of-unvaccinated-children-in-CT-schools-to-13807928.php

Schools, cops, taxes: Bridgeport Council has tough budget choices

BRIDGEPORT — A divided City Council began the final week of budget season debating which of three spending areas should be their priority: The failing schools, the under-staffed police department or Mayor Joe Ganim’s small election-year tax cut.

The emotional Monday meeting, attended by 15 of the 20 council members, was supposed to focus on compiling a list of potential reductions to Ganim’s proposed $565 million 2019-20 fiscal plan.

But it instead turned into 90 minutes of drawing lines in the sand and speech-making. Even council budget committee co-chairs Maria Zambrano Viggiano and Denese Taylor-Moye were sometimes on opposing sides.

“I from the beginning have been against the tax cut,” Viggiano told her colleagues. “My taxes are ridiculously high but I just don’t think giving people back a few dollars a month will change their lives.”

According to the Ganim administration, the average household will save $150 a year in taxes. But Viggiano and some other council members argue the $4.5 million cost of the tax break would be better invested in other priorities — like education.

The school district sought $16 million more than its current spending plan, but Ganim’s budget flat-funded education at $247.7 million for the fourth year in a row.

“I would rather cut the taxes,” Taylor-Moye said. She and like-minded colleagues claimed they want to give more dollars to students, but expressed distrust of Board of Education spending.

“If we give them $16 million right now, they’re still going to complain,” said Councilwoman the Rev. Mary McBride-Lee,...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Schools-cops-taxes-Bridgeport-Council-has-13807768.php

Stratford walk, car show to benefit Alzheimer’s Association

STRATFORD — Oronoque Village will host its sixth annual Mini Walk and Car Show to benefit the Alzheimer’s Association’s Connecticut Chapter on Saturday morning, June 1 (rain date is Sunday, June 2).

Registration begins at 9 a.m. at the South Clubhouse parking lot on South Trail and the short walk, loops around South Trail, starting at 9:30. The recommended entry donation is $10 per walker, but donations above the entry are very much appreciated. Water will be provided for the walkers. At 10 a.m. the Car Show begins in the back parking lot. A $10 entry donation per car is recommended. There will also be a bake sale so please bring money to indulge in our delectable baked goodies after the walk!

Every 67 seconds someone in America develops Alzheimer’s. Our Connecticut families dealing with the affects of this disease need our support now more than ever! These funds will be used within Fairfield County to provide services for people with Alzheimer's disease.

All proceeds will go directly to the Alzheimer's Association, Connecticut Chapter. It will be a great morning for camaraderie, exercise, and giving back to the community!

For more information, please call Barbara at 203-386-0533.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Stratford-walk-car-show-to-benefit-Alzheimer-s-13807621.php

Endangered Species Day event planned for May 6 in Bridgeport

BRIDGEPORT — The public is invited to celebrate and learn about endangered species during an event in the city next week.

The event takes place at the Color Blends House, 893 Clinton Ave. in Bridgeport, at 11:30 a.m. on Monday, May 6.

Endangered Species Day, which has been celebrated worldwide annually since it was started by the U.S. Senate in 2006, is typically celebrated on the third Friday in May. But the day will be celebrated early in Bridgeport.

On May 6, the city of Bridgeport is partnering with The Endangered Species Coalition, Sierra Club, Audubon Society, Nature Conservancy and Defenders of Wildlife for the Endangered Species Day event.

At the May 6 event, keynote speaker Christine Cummings, director of A Place Called Hope Birds of Prey Rehabilitation Center, will talk about her center’s two ambassador birds: a barn owl and a peregrine falcon.

Visit endangeredspeciesday.org to RSVP to the event.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Endangered-Species-Day-event-planned-for-May-6-in-13807594.php

Bridgeport’s Beardsley Zoo to host photography exhibit

BRIDGEPORT — The city’s Beardsley Zoo will host its first ever zoo photography exhibition this summer.

“Photography Goes Wild” is set to open Thursday, July 25. Photo submissions are due by June 30 and can be dropped off at the front gate or the zoo’s welcome center.

The zoo said in a news release that the opportunity is meant to give the zoo’s many “ dedicated amateur and professional photographers” a chance to submit their best work for public viewing.

Opening night for the exhibit kicks off July 25 with a festive celebration for the public, giving attendees the chance to view the photos and for photographers and meet each other and discuss their work.

Each photographer is able to submit three photos — 8 inches by 10 inches, matted and with a $10 fee per photo.

Photos must include animals from the Beardsley Zoo. Older photos from previous years and current photos will be accepted.

Milford Photo will provide first, second and third prizes — gift certificates to the store in varying amounts. First place gets a $200 gift card, second place a $100 gift card and third place a $50 gift card.

Other than the judged photos, a “People’s Choice” photo will be selected. The public attending the event will have the option to vote for their favorite image by making a $1 donation for each vote.

Photos will be offered for sale after the opening, with a portion of the proceeds going to support the zoo.

Ahead of the exhibit, Milford Photo will have representatives on zoo grounds Saturday, June 22, with a display of cameras and lenses. Milford Photo will loan out lenses that day for a free trial. There will also be a guided zoo walkabout with animal photographer and...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-s-Beardsley-Zoo-to-host-photography-13807571.php

Gun safety research funds part of proposed federal budget

WASHINGTON — After more than a 20-year hiatus the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would receive funding for firearm injury and mortality prevention research under a budget plan supported by a House Appropriations subcommittee led by Representative Rosa DeLauro.

The research money is included in an appropriations bill that would provide $189.8 billion in discretionary funding in the next fiscal year to the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services and Education that DeLauro’s subcommittee is considering this afternoon starting at 4 p.m.

The $189.8 billion spending proposal for 2020 represents an $11.7 billion increase over current funding and $47.8 billion more than President Donald Trump requested in his 2020 budget. DeLauro has called Trump’s proposal “cruel” and “reckless,” saying it would do irreparable damage to critical social safety net programs such as Social Security and Early Head Start.

The bill includes $25 million for the CDC and $25 million for the National Institutes of Health to fund firearm injury and mortality prevention research. It’s been more than two decades since Congress included specific funding for the CDC to conduct such research.

Republicans last month said they were wary of providing new money for gun research, claiming Democrats are trying to score political points because the CDC already has the authority to study gun violence. However, the CDC, which collects data on gun violence injuries, said it’s limited in what it can do without more money. A 2018 budget deal clarified that the federal government can study gun violence, as long as it doesn’t use the research to promote gun control, according to Politico.

DeLauro’s subcommittee proposal would reject Trump’s...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Gun-safety-research-funds-part-of-proposed-13807560.php

Democrats back off capital gain tax increase

HARTFORD — Democrats’ decision to punt a proposed increase of the capital gains tax may be a signal that lawmakers are falling in line with Gov. Ned Lamont’s promise not to increase taxes on the wealthy.

The vote by the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee on Tuesday to replace a capital gains tax increase with a study bill comes less than 48 hours before the committee is expected to unveil its complete tax package.

The move could signal centrist Democrats are now flexing their muscle, said Eric Gjede, vice president for Government Affairs for the Connecticut Business Industry Association, which opposed the increase.

“There’s a number of moderate Democrats who are starting to be a little bit concerned with some of the policy choices being made,” said Gjede.

Lamont opposed tax increases on investment income, just as he promised not to raise income taxes on the state’s richest residents. He says he wants to hold tax rates steady, but he has proposed some tax expansions, like applying the state sales tax to more goods and services.

But to some Democrats in the legislature, boosting taxes capital gains was a way to shift to a more progressive tax model and share the states’ tax burden more equally across tax brackets.

The Democrat-led Finance Committee filed legislation earlier this month to bump up the tax on capital gains by 2 percentage points, but only for households already the top state income tax of 6.99 percent. That change was anticipated to raise $200 million a year for the state.

But on Tuesday, committee leaders revealed substitute language for the bill that said the legislature would only study the idea of raising the capital gains tax. The committee voted to pass the bill,...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/politics/article/Democrats-back-off-capital-gain-tax-increase-13807545.php

Shelton man gets two years for child porn possession

MILFORD — A Shelton man was sentenced to two years in prison Tuesday on child pornography and domestic violence charges.

Joseph Callahan, 30, pleaded guilty to second-degree possession of child pornography and two counts of disorderly conduct in February.

The charges stem from a state police investigation in which cops used peer-to-peer software to find users trading child pornography and connected to Callahan’s computer.

Police then obtained a search warrant after tracing the IP address to Callahan’s home on Shelton’s Trolley Bridge Road.

During the May 2017 search, Callahan admitted looking for child pornography on the Internet, and cops found more then 20 images of child pornography on devices owned by him.

After posting bond, he was arrested after getting into a physical altercation with his mother and father while intoxicated last December and has been behind bars since.

In court Tuesday Callahan’s lawyer said Callahan is an alcoholic who was bullied as a child and has since been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and ADHD.

Callahan apologized and told Judge Peter Brown he is getting treatment.

“I’m very sorry for what I did,” Callahan said. “I’m going to try to get help for my alcoholism and turn my life around, sir.”

The judge then sentenced Callahan to an eight-year prison term to be suspended after two years, followed by 10 years of probation.

Callahan must register as a sex offender for 10 years and follow a host of conditions while on probation, including not possessing any pornography, not having unsupervised contact with minors, reporting any sexual or romantic relationships and passing random breath and urine tests.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Shelton-man-gets-two-years-for-child-porn-13807520.php

Milford pimp takes plea deal on eve of trial

MILFORD — A Nevada man accused of being a pimp more than three years ago took a plea deal Tuesday before jury selection was due to begin in the case.

Jerome Edison, 48, pleaded guilty under the Alford doctrine to a charge of third-degree promoting prostitution before Judge Peter Brown.

A plea made under the Alford Doctrine means the defendant doesn’t admit guilt but concedes he could be found guilty of the crime if he went to trial.

Edison, who has a Las Vegas address but ties to Connecticut, was arrested at the Hampton Inn Feb. 24, 2016 after a sting operation conducted by a state police organized crime task force targeting human trafficking and underage prostitution.

Assistant State’s Attorney Matt Kalthoff said an undercover state police detective arranged to meet a co-defendant of Edison’s through an internet ad.

Edison drove the woman to the Hampton Inn, and she was arrested once she got to the detective’s room.

Cops arrested Edison in the parking lot of the inn, and found another woman in the car with him.

Edison and the woman arrested by state police gave different stories to explain why they were there, after which he was taken in to custody.

Since then, the prosecutor said more evidence linking Edison to prostitution has come to light — such as a 2018 arrest in Windsor in which he and another woman were...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Milford-pimp-takes-plea-deal-on-eve-of-trial-13807469.php

Stamford parents claim son, 5, was sexually assaulted in school bathroom

BRIDGEPORT — Stamford school officials failed to take action when a 5-year-old child was threatened by a classmate resulting in the boy later being sexually assaulted by the same classmate, a lawsuit claims.

The suit, filed in Superior Court here on behalf of the parents of the 5-year-old, states that the principal and staff of the Roxbury Elementary School breached their obligation to keep the young boy safe and violated state law by failing to report the incidents to the state Department of Children and Families.

Norwalk lawyer Michael Skiber, who represents the parents of the 5-year-old boy, declined comment on the lawsuit.

Stamford school officials did not immediately return calls for comment.

In mid-May 2018, the mother of the 5-year-old boy complained to her son’s teacher that a classmate of her son had crawled under a bathroom stall that her son had locked and blocked the 5-year-old from leaving the stall, according to the lawsuit. The suit states the aggressor student then stabbed the 5-year-old with a pencil and begged him to “die here with me.”

Despite being informed of the incident, the suit states that school officials took no action to keep the boys separate.

On May 21, 2018, the lawsuit states that the 5-year-old was excused by his teacher to go to the bathroom. While he was in the stall the aggressor student went into the stall with the boy and sexually assaulted him, causing him serious injury, the suit states.

As a result of the assault, the suit states that the 5-year-old boy suffered serious and permanent physical and psychological injuries that will require treatment.

On its website, the state Department of Children and Families instructs...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Parents-sue-Stamford-school-officials-over-13807401.php

In Sikorsky’s $938M helicopter award, billions more at stake

Sikorsky Aircraft received a $938 million contract to design an armed reconnaissance helicopter for the U.S. Army, with four other manufacturers in the running to field a replacement for the mothballed Kiowa scout helicopter.

The government of India is seeking approval from the U.S. government to purchase two dozen Seahawk helicopters at a total contract value as high as $2.6 billion.

And the aviation industry comes together in less than two months at the biennial Paris Air Show, where helicopter makers often time announcements on big contracts to generate extra attention.

The Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft program could means billions of dollars in sales for the winning contractor, with Sikorsky having its main production plant in Stratford as a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin.

Boeing, Sikorsky’s partner developing the SB>1 Defiant prototype under the U.S. Department of Defense’s Future Vertical Lift competition for an adaptable helicopter prototype to varying missions, is competing on its own for the new FARA program.

Textron subsidiary Bell Helicopter is also a FARA entrant, with the manufacturer having produced some 2,200 OH-58 Kiowa helicopters and variants over a 45-year period. Also readying bids are startups Karem Aircraft of Lake Forest, Calif.; and AVX Aircraft, located in Bell’s backyard in Fort Worth, Texas, and teaming with the New York City-based defense giant L-3 Communications.

The Pentagon issued specifications last October for the new helicopter, with the goal of winnowing the field to two competitors next year in advance of a 2023 “fly off” to award any resulting contract.

Under its former parent company United Technologies, Sikorsky had put together a string of design...



from Business https://www.ctpost.com/business/article/In-Sikorsky-s-938M-helicopter-award-billions-13807315.php

Farmington man arrested, wanted in Stratford in connection to recent shootnig

NEWINGTON — Newington Police say they arrested a man who was wanted by Stratford Police for a recent shooting.

Police say that they had increased patrols on the Berlin Turnpike due to the recent stabbing at the Plaza Azteca. While conducting a location check around 2 a.m. Tuesday, an officer saw a black Infinity G35 leave Plaza Azteca. The registration didn’t match the car.

Police pulled the driver over, and he was identified as 22-year-old Kenneth Darryl Jones from Farmington. It was soon discovered that Jones was wanted by the Stratford Police Department. He had an active warrant out for his arrest. Police say Jones was charged with assault stemming from a recent shooting in Stratford.

Jones was taken into custody on the motor vehicle charges without incident, and was turned over to the Stratford Police Department.



from Newington – FOX 61 https://fox61.com/2019/04/30/farmington-man-suspect-to-shooting-in-stratford/

Wrong license plates leads to man’s arrest in Stratford shooting

A driver, who was stopped for misuse of license plates by Newington officers early Tuesday morning, turned out to be wanted for a shooting in Stratford.

Kenneth Darryl Jones, 22, of Newington, was turned over to Stratford police after Newington officers learned he had an arrest warrant for first-degree assault. The charge stems from a recent shooting in Stratford.

Jones was taken into custody without incident.

Sgt. Christopher Perry said Jones was stopped after his black Infinity G35 sedan was seen leaving the parking lot of the Plaza Azteca restaurant on the Berlin Turnpike at 2 a.m. Tuesday. Newington police have been conducting location checks in the area after a recent stabbing at the restaurant.

Police said the plates on Jones’ vehicle did not match the registration.

Before Jones was turned over to Stratford police, he was charged with misuse of marker plates.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Wrong-license-plates-leads-to-man-s-arrest-in-13806930.php

‘SNL’ comic reportedly bails on Bridgeport gig

BRIDGEPORT — “Saturday Night Live” cast member and stand up comic Pete Davidson reportedly walked out on a show at The Stress Factory in Bridgeport Monday night, standing that the club’s owner, Vinnie Brand, had made jokes about Davidson’s love life.

According to “Us Weekly,” Brand went out on stage — against Davidson’s wishes — and said “‘don’t ask any questions about his exes Ariana Grande or Kate Beckinsale.”

Davidson, 25, reportedly apologized to fans via his Instagram Stories account later that night and promised to reschedule a show for them in the next week at a different location.

Fans also took to social media, including the Stress Factory Facebook page. Under a post announcing that Davidson would be performing, disappointed fans complained about the fact that he never took the stage. However, it seemed Brand performed in his place.

“Was in attendance last night and Pete never performed but I’ll tell you what Vinnie put on one hell of a good show!” wrote one poster. “Definitely a great time, was my first time there and I’ll be back.”

Another fan said she was “disappointed that he walked out” and did not perform.

Brand could not be reached at the club Tuesday morning.

One of Davidson’s claims to fame is that he is the youngest member of the current “SNL” cast, as well as the first “ cast member to be born in the 1990s.

Davidson shot his first one-hour stand up special for Comedy Central in 2016 and was named one of Forbes’ 2016 “30 Under 30.”



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/SNL-comic-reportedly-bails-on-Bridgeport-gig-13806856.php

Bridgeport to hold 47th Parent Convention in May

BRIDGEPORT — The district’s 47th annual Parent Convention will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., on Wednesday, May 29 at Housatonic Community College.

Admission is free but advanced registration is required by May 17. The theme for the event is “Getting into the Rhythm Of Empowerment through Leadership.”

Sessions will be held on the 2020 Census, special education, Internet safety, math, parental rights and responsibilities, and how the state supports families with bilingual and English as a Second Language students.

Registration forms are available at local schools. This will be an adult-only event with no child care provided. For more information, contact Albert Benejan at abenej@gmail.com



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bridgeport-to-hold-47th-Parent-Convention-in-May-13806797.php

Democrats pitch state spending plan with education increases

HARTFORD — The legislature’s budget-writing committee, led by Democrats, released their vision of state spending for the next two years.

Unlike Gov. Ned Lamont’s budget which tackled both spending and revenue, the thick binder distributed to lawmakers, lobbyists and journalists Tuesday morning contained no tax recommendations. The General Assembly’s Democrats will publish their revenue plan by Thursday.

Here are the highlights of the new state spending proposal:

Education

The committee recommended increasing funding for education grants to towns for public schools by nearly $38 million next fiscal year and $78 million in FY 2021. The governor’s budget did not include these increases, instead opting to keep the grants the same as currently appropriated.

Lawmakers also opted to provide about $9 million more to magnet and charter schools and after school programs than Lamont in FY 2020. They would send nearly $11 million more to those schools and programs the next year.

Both the committee and the governor also plan to cut funding to private schools to pay for health services. This would save the state nearly $3.5 million in each of the next two fiscal years.

Debt and bonding

Large portions of the state budget go toward paying off the state’s debt. Increased credit-worthiness of the state has resulted in lower than anticipated debt service payments. Thus, the committee eliminated $14.4 million that the governor had put toward debt service in FY 2020 and $64 million in fiscal year 2021.

With these savings, the committee decided to reject the governor’s proposed “debt diet” and keep general obligation bond issuance at current levels. These bonds — the state...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/politics/article/Democrats-pitch-state-spending-plan-with-13806750.php

Eliminating CT car tax would raise property assessment rates

HARTFORD — A bill that would eliminate car taxes but make up for the loss of local revenue by increasing the property tax assessments on homes and businesses was panned Monday by the two municipal lobbies.

The bill calls for phasing out property taxes on motor vehicles over a five-year period, except on rental cars, and increases the property tax assessment rate from 70 percent to 100 percent to offset the municipal revenue loss. The bill was one of 15 that was up for a Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee public hearing.

Bills, including some that would impose a flat, statewide tax rate for all cars regardless of which town they’re registered in, have been raised in the past. A law passed several years ago sought to use a half percent of the sales tax to offset losses in towns that ended up losing money from lowering their motor vehicle tax mill rate. The theme is the same — that it is unfair that the same car is taxed at different rates depending on the municipality where it is registered.

During the recent gubernatorial campaign, Gov. Ned Lamont floated the idea of a single statewide rate for motor vehicle taxes as a fairer, more equitable way for all taxpayers.

Municipal leaders say that’s a great idea in theory, but wonder where they are going to make up for the lost revenue.

Harwinton First Selectman Michael Criss, testifying on behalf of the Connecticut Council of Small Towns, said: “shifting more than $850 million onto the backs of homeowners will overwhelm property taxpayers and devastate housing values throughout the state.”

“Eliminating this tax and increasing the uniform assessment rate, will shift hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional property taxes onto homeowners and businesses,”...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Eliminating-CT-car-tax-would-raise-property-13806550.php

Cops: Woman charged in restaurant fight, hit officer with purse

MILFORD - A 42-year-old Milford woman was arrested after alllegedly fighting with staff at SBC Restaurant on New Haven Avenue Monday night.

Police went to the restaurant around 8:30 p.m. “on a report of a female fighting with the staff.”

The investigation led to the arrest of Michelle Scott, of Jepson Drive, who fled the scene on foot when officers arrived.

Scott was apprehended on Daniel Street and is additionally accused of striking an officer in the face “with her purse and closed fists.”

She was charged with second-degree breach of peace, interfering with an officer and assault on a police officer.

She was held on a $1,000 bond.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Cops-Woman-charged-in-restaurant-fight-hit-13806490.php

First American Medicine Patent – Today in History: April 30

On April 30, 1796, Samuel Lee Jr. of Windham, Connecticut, received a Letters Patent for his composition of bilious pills—a patent medicine that eventually became known as “Dr. Lee’s Windham Bilious Pills.” Lee’s patent was the first American patent for a pill of any kind as well as the first in its patent class.

An advertisement for Samuel Lee's "True and Genuine Bilious Pills" from the Connecticut Journal, June 28, 1797

An advertisement for Samuel Lee’s “True and Genuine Bilious Pills” from the Connecticut Journal, June 28, 1797

At the time Lee patented his pills, patent medicines imported from England were already common in America. Savvy entrepreneurs regularly created marketable medicines by mixing different combinations of extracts—but these compositions were not necessarily effective for treating the ailments they claimed to cure. The “True and Genuine Bilious Pills” prepared by Samuel Lee claimed to “remove pains in the head, stomach and bowels – – – the gripes and all obstructions.” They also were advertised as being an “excellent help for the gravel, scurvy, cholic, jaundice, dropsy . . . and therefore convenient for all travelers by sea or land.”

The success of a patent medicine was often linked to the reputation of its maker and Samuel Lee Jr. was the son of Dr. Samuel Lee, a respected local physician. Dr. Lee served as surgeon to the crew of the schooner Oliver Cromwell, which entered the privateer service in Norwich, Connecticut, during the Revolutionary War.

As Yankee peddlers spread their wares beyond New England, “Dr. Lee’s Windham Bilious Pills” soon appeared in stores up and down the East Coast. This success brought competition, however, and Samuel H. P. Lee, a druggist in New London, began selling a similar composition called “Lee’s New-London Bilious Pills.” Advertising from 1797 actually indicated that Samuel H. P. Lee had been an early distributor of Samuel Lee’s “True and Genuine Bilious Pills.” A very bitter pill for Samuel Lee Jr. to swallow, especially when Samuel H. P. Lee patented his own preparation in 1799 and marketed it under the name “Dr. Lee.” Both of these pills were the subject of additional patents and renewals and remained popular for years—possibly as a result of the very public feud that played out in newspaper advertising of the time:

A certain H. P. Lee, a young man, residing in New-London, has formed a Pill of a different composition, calling them “Lee’s New-London Bilious Pills,” which from the familiarity of names, may be passed off upon the public as the Pills of the present Patentee. It is therefore necessary to inform the public, that said Samuel H. P. Lee, of New -London, is no relation or connection of mine. – Samuel Lee Jr.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/first-american-medicine-patent-today-in-history-april-30/

Preliminary state budget vote today in Capitol

HARTFORD — The General Assembly’s budget-writing committee on Tuesday is expected to approve a new two-year budget of about $43.3 billion, kicking off off a five-week negotiation period with Gov. Ned Lamont before the June 5 adjournment.

The Appropriations Committee’s scheduled debate and vote will be combined with a Finance Committee budget later this week that will result in the Democrat-dominated legislature’s vision of state spending and taxes.

For up-to-date information on public policy issues, sign up for the CT Politics newsletter.

While total spending is about equal to Lamont’s February proposal, there’s bound to be conflict between lawmakers and the governor over what extent, if any, towns and cities may pay for some of their teacher pension costs. The question will be can Lamont succeed where his predecessor, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy failed.

Final revenue projections for the 2018 tax year are also expected Tuesday, giving lawmakers a better idea of how much the next budget, which takes effect July 1, can spend. The state must have a balanced budget. The new budget, which is the central reason for the legislative session, will be negotiated behind closed doors between lawmakers and Lamont, at a time when nearly 1,000 bills remain active in the approval process.

kdixon@ctpost.com Twitter: @KenDixonCT



from News https://www.ctpost.com/politics/article/Preliminary-state-budget-vote-today-in-Capitol-13806251.php

Police catch dirt bike rider after pedestrian struck

HARTFORD - Officers working a private job jumped into action after they witnessed an illegal dirt bike driver strike a pedestrian in a construction site Monday afternoon.

The officers gave the victim medical aid while other officers chased Nathaniel Dejesus, 19, of Hartford, on foot, police said.

Dejesus was taken into custody quickly and charged with multiple offenses including first-degree reckless endangerment, reckless driving, interfering with police and evading responsibility.

He is being held on $50,000 bond until his arraignment Tuesday in Hartford Superior Court.

"We take public safety seriously and do not chase dirt bikes," Hartford police said on their Facebook page.

"We are happy we could assist the victim and apprehend the suspect."



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Police-catch-dirt-bike-rider-after-pedestrian-13806124.php

Crash into tree leads to Westport man’s DUI arrest

WESTPORT - A Westport man has been arrested and charged with DUI after a crash into a tree last month.

Police said Jason Ritzzo, 32, of Pebble Beach Lane, crashed into a tree on Ferry Lane around 11:30 p.m. on March 8.

“In speaking with Ritzzo, officers smelled a strong odor of alcoholic beverage on his breath. Initially, Ritzzo declined medical treatment and requested the opportunity to perform Standardized Field Sobriety Tests. Ritzzo was unable to perform the tests to standard and was later transported to Norwalk Hospital for evaluation,” police said in a release.

Officer Michael Morrin later submitted a search warrant applicant for Ritzzo’s medical records, which was approved. Ritzzo’s blood alcohol content was found to have been over the legal limit.

Police later submitted an arrest warrant application for Ritzzo, which was approved.

Last Friday, Ritzzo turned himself in on the outstanding warrant.

He was charged with operating under the influence of drugs/alcohol, insurance coverage fails minimum requirements, failure to carry license and failure to drive in proper lane. Ritzzo was released after posting $2,500 court set bond and is scheduled to appear in Norwalk Court on May 7.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Crash-into-tree-leads-to-Westport-man-s-DUI-13806109.php

Bear kills 5 goats after climbing fence at CT farm

BURLINGTON - A local farm is mourning the loss of five goats to a bear, according to its Facebook page.

Grazin' Goats Farm, in Burlington, raises Nigerian Dwarf goats as part of a school project, the farm’s owners posted.

The farm reported early Monday that a bear had climbed over the six-foot high kennels and killed five goats named Inky, Ginger, Stitch, Junior and Frost.

“It is with a heavy heart that I post this," the Facebook page said. "Yesterday we suffered a devastating loss."

The state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection is investigating and working to trap the bear, the farm said.

In the meantime, the family said they aren't sure what the future holds since one of the goats lost was a beloved show goat.

There have been other incidents where bears have attacked farm animals in Connecticut.

In October 2018, a Prospect man shot a bear that got into a goat pen.

Prospect police said “His wife had woken him after hearing a commotion in the goat pen. The homeowner ran outside, heard the goat screaming and saw the bear attacking the goat The homeowner, in an effort to protect his livestock, shot his shotgun in the direction of the bear, causing the bear to run into the woods.

The goat sustained severe injuries and later died.

In November 2017, a small female black bear was killed after it attacked two miniature horses on a Southbury farm. The bear killed one of the horses before environmental police were able to euthanize the animal, which weighed around 150 pounds.

In June 2017, a male black bear...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Bear-kills-5-goats-after-climbing-fence-at-CT-farm-13806078.php

Shelton bus drivers postpone strike

Shelton buses will run as scheduled Tuesday, April 30.

After hours of negotiations Monday, CSEA SEIU Local 2001, the union representing Shelton school bus drivers and monitors, and Durham School Services appear to have found common ground, and any strike has been put off for now.

"A strike is postponed for the time being,” said CSEA SEIU Local 2001 Communications Director Ben Phillips. “We think we have agreement on all substantive issues and are meeting again (Tuesday, April 30) to finalize an agreement. The strike authorization remains in place until a formal tentative agreement is signed.”

Phillips offered no details on any potential deal.

This is the latest twist in Shelton school transportation saga, which took the turn toward a walkout by drivers and monitors on Wednesday, April 24, when the union voted to authorize a strike against its employer, Durham School Services.

That strike authorization vote was followed two days later by an informational picket by drivers and monitors at the bus garage on Riverdale Avenue. It was there that some drivers admitted that, if no negotiations were held by Monday, April 29, a one-day walkout was planned for today, Tuesday, April 30.

“This is a last resort,” said driver Peter Miani on Friday, as his fellow workers marched in the bus garage lot chanting slogans demanding a fair contract. “We’ve tried just about everything, and it is not working. We are considering that if (Durham) does not come to the table on Monday, we’re going to strike Tuesday. A one-day strike and see where it goes. Hopefully that is enough to let them know we are serious.”

Phillips could not confirm any firm walkout date, saying only that the union wants to negotiate and...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/news/article/Shelton-bus-drivers-postpone-strike-13806007.php

Expect a wet commute this morning

Wet roads and rain could cause some traffic problems during Tuesday’s morning commute.

The National Weather Service says rain is expected to taper off before 9 a.m.

So far, the state Department of Transportation is reporting an major problems or accidents on the state’s major roads.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Expect-a-wet-commute-this-morning-13805986.php

Monday, April 29, 2019

'Bark in the Park' at Dunkin' Donuts Park Benefits Fidelco Guide Dogs



It was “Bark in the Park” night at Dunkin’ Donuts Park Monday, an event that lets the dogs out, all for a good cause.

Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

from NBC Connecticut - Sports http://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/sports/Bark-in-the-Park-at-Dunkin-Donuts-Park-Benefits-Fidelco-Guide-Dogs-509247791.html

Should cops chase people for traffic violations?

HARTFORD — A lawsuit brought by the mother of an Oxford teen who died in a police chase led to a debate in the state Supreme Court Monday about when police should and shouldn’t pursue suspects.

The boy, 15-year-old Brandon Giordano, was riding in the back seat of his friend’s Ford Mustang when it crashed in Oxford March 9, 2012, after a chase that began in Seymour when Police Officer Anthony Renaldi saw Ramirez’s illegal “ground effects” lights.

Mother Angela Borelli’s lawsuit initially sought $15 million in damages when she filed the lawsuit, which claimed Renaldi shouldn’t have chased Ramirez’s car.

Derby Superior Court Judge Theodore Tyma threw the case out of court in September 2017, agreeing with the town that Renaldi was acting with discretion during the chase, and thus “clothed in discretionary act immunity” which protects the town.

Lawyers representing Borelli and the town argued before the Supreme Court Monday over the meaning of a state law concerning police chases, and what amount of discretion cops should have in deciding when — and when not to — engage in a pursuit.

Borelli’s lawyer, Steven J. Errante, said it should be up to a jury to decide whether the Renaldi acted appropriately based on expert testimony — and that he has lined up a former state trooper to testify Renaldi should not have chased Ramirez’s car for a traffic infraction.

“We’re going down that road of...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Should-cops-chase-people-for-traffic-violations-13805156.php

Newtown cyclists take new path on gun-control mission

WASHINGTON — After the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School, a group of 26 bicyclists created a tradition of riding from Newtown to Washington D.C. each spring to promote gun control. But not this year.

This year Newtown’s “Team 26” has a different destination — the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pa., where about six months ago, 11 people died and seven were wounded as they worshiped.

“We rode to Washington six years in a row and during that period of time, Congress has remained paralyzed and has not done anything to make our communities safer,” said Monte Frank, an attorney who organized the Team 26 rides.

The team’s focus now is to ride through communities to promote activism “with the expectation that Washington will follow as the culture changes and people are calling for safe communities,” said Frank, who ran unsuccessfully as an independent for lieutenant governor last year.

He said Team 26, named after the 26 victims of the Newtown shooting, is modeling its campaign after the civil rights and LGTB movements, which pressured politicians to move to outlaw discrimination.

As the riders approached Philadelphia Saturday, they learned of another shooting - at the Chabad of Poway synagogue in San Diego, Calif., that resulted in the death of one woman the wounding of a rabbi and two others.

“It rocked us to the core,” Frank said.

He said his mother is a Holocaust victim and he had always heard the phrase “never again.”

“Unfortunately, that’s becoming ‘yet again,’” Frank said.

Shortly after the cyclists arrived in Baltimore, the journey’s halfway point, eight people were shot, one fatally, in a neighborhood in the western part...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Newtown-cyclists-change-course-on-gun-control-13805060.php

Trump meets with state Teachers of the Year after all

He didn’t present the award, but President Trump met Monday with the 2019 Teachers of the Year including the national winner, Rodney Robinson of Richmond,Virginia.

Connecticut Teacher of the Year Sheena Graham, a music teacher at Harding High School in Bridgeport said she was so happy the teachers were granted to meet the president, which is a tradition.

“There are no words to describe the emotions that flowed through the room,” said Graham. “It was truly an inspirational moment.

On Friday, Nancy Rodriguez, a spokeswoman for the Council of Chief State School Officers which administers the program, announced that U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos would be presenting the award and that the president would not be in attendance.

The ceremony took place in the Eisenhower Building at 1650 Pennsylvania Avenue.

Afterwards, Graham said the contingent of 57 teachers were surprised to be led to the West Wing of the White House where they met with Vice President Pence, and then the president in the Oval Office.

Graham said some teachers had tears in their eyes.

“He sat at his desk for the group pictures then shook each of our hands, had us say our name and where we were from,” Graham said.

Graham said Robinson, who teaches social studies inside the Richmond, Va., Juvenile Justice Center, got to tell Trump about his platform and his students.

Afterwards, Graham said Robinson called the encounter professional.

“I felt honored,” Graham quoted Robinson as saying.

She called the meeting great.

It has often — but not always — been a tradition that the president hand out the award after it was developed in 1952. Trump...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Trump-meets-with-state-Teachers-of-the-Year-after-13804879.php

Ex-corrections officer gets 10 months for sexually abusing Danbury inmate

BRIDGEPORT — A former prison guard convicted of sexually abusing a female inmate at the Federal Correctional Institute in Danbury was sentenced to 10 months in prison Monday.

In a prepared statement, U.S. Attorney John H. Durham said 33-year-old Carlos Sanchez “engaged in sexual activity with a female inmate at the prison” on two occasions last July and August.

Sanchez, formerly of Middlebury, pleaded guilty in December to one count of sexual abuse of a ward.

The charge carries a maximum punishment of 15 years in prison, but a plea agreement in the case said federal sentencing guidelines called for a sentence of 10 to 16 months.

U.S. District Judge Victor A. Bolden handed down the 10-month prison sentence, to be followed by five years of supervised release.

Sanchez is free on a $50,000 bond and is required to report to prison on May 21.

This matter was investigated by the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Anastasia E. King.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Ex-corrections-officer-gets-10-months-for-13804782.php

Shelton housing project receives $1.1M in federal tax credits

Development of the long-awaited River Breeze apartments in Shelton could be on the horizon, thanks to a needed boost from the Connecticut Housing Finance Authority.

The Shelton-based project at 223 Canal St. was one of seven housing development projects across the state to receive part of $10.3 million from the 9 percent low-income housing tax credit program on Thursday. River Breeze was approved for more than $1 million in tax credits.

The federal program is meant provide an incentive to private investment in affordable housing by awarding tax credits to developers. The developers can sell their credits to investors to obtain equity financing for their developments. This recent batch of projects is expected to generate almost $100 million in equity statewide.

Norwalk-based Washington Village was also among the list of projects to benefit from CHFA funding, receiving a $2,182,797 tax credit as part of the Norwalk Housing Authority’s Master Redevelopment Plan Project of the housing complex in south Norwalk. Phase 3 of the project includes building 108 rental units to replace 64 units in five buildings.

“We all know that more affordable housing is needed in Connecticut,” said Seila Mosquera-Brunoin ,CHFA Chairwoman and Commissioner of the Department of Housing, in a Thursday press release. “The tax credits awarded today will help to build new housing and renovate existing units to provide safe, sustainable housing for residents.”

River Breeze is expected to bring 68 units of mixed-income apartment units to the former Rolfite property fronting the Housatonic River in Shelton.

The development is part of the Shelton Riverfront Master Plan which called for construction of 650 units along Canal Street facing the river...



from Business https://www.ctpost.com/business/article/Shelton-housing-project-receives-1-1M-in-federal-13804765.php

Monroe library to host book talk

MONROE — Edith Wheeler Memorial Library, 733 Monroe Turnpike, will host a book talk for adults at 6:45 p.m. May 7. This month’s selection is “The Radium Girls” by Kate Moore.

According to a book summary from Publishers Weekly, “Author Moore traces the lives of more than a dozen American women who were employed as luminous watch-dial painters as early as 1917...By the end of 1918...the women had begun losing their teeth...Moore details what was a ‘ground-breaking, law-changing, and life-saving accomplishment’ for worker's rights.” No registration required.

Call the library at 203-452-2850.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Monroe-library-to-host-book-talk-13804481.php

New Bridgeport cops sworn in to ‘serve and protect society’

BRIDGEPORT - Being a cop is no picnic.

The current strain of public animosity toward police officers is much like it was in the turbulent 1960s.

Videos routinely run on network news showing officers beating unarmed suspects — although most of the many thousands of officers across the country respect and uphold the nation’s laws.

So there they were Monday morning, bright-eyed and standing tall, 26 new recruits - including seven women - being sworn in at the city’s police academy.

“This is an honorable profession, don’t ever forget that,” Police Chief Armando Perez told the recruits. “We exist to serve and protect society — to serve and protect society.”

Anyone who violates that standard, the chief said, he will run out of the Police Department.

“Being a police officer is a tall order, but I know you wouldn’t be here if you weren’t cut out for it,” Mayor Joseph Gamin told them before administering the oath.

The city has not been an exception to the controversies involving police around the country.

Still fresh in many residents’ minds is the May 9, 2017, shooting of an unarmed 15-year-old Jayson Negron by a police officer. And then there was incident of the 17 police officers who were cited for lying and using excessive force to break up a party in October 2017- much of it caught on video.

Training for today’s police officers has changed to adapt to the problems now being faced by officers.

Police Capt. Rebecca Garcia, the head of the police academy, said among the new training programs recently implemented are de-escalation training for recruits and more programs aimed at forging a bridge between officers and the community.

...

from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/New-Bridgeport-cops-sworn-in-to-serve-and-13804280.php

Former state rep. Varese found dead

STRATFORD — Former State Rep. William J. Varese was found dead outside his home here on Sunday.

Police said the death of the 71-year-old Varese did not appear suspicious but would not comment on the circumstances except to say that it was outside his home on Breakers Lane.

The state Office of the Chief State’s Medical Examiner said the cause of Varese’s death is pending further study.

Varese had moved to a condominium on Breakers Lane about six months ago.

A lawyer with an office in Trumbull, Varese represented the town of Monroe in the General Assembly in the 1990s.

He worked as a reporter for the former Bridgeport Post while attending law school.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Former-state-rep-Varese-found-dead-13804212.php

Trumbull pro motorcyclist races for ALS research

TRUMBULL — Watching pro motorcycle racers duel elbow-to-elbow at 140 miles per hours, degenerative disease is probably something most spectators aren’t thinking about. Trumbull resident Chris Speights is hoping to change that.

Speights, 43, who by day is an engineer at Lockheed Martin’s Sikorsky Helicopter Division, will make his debut on the national pro racing scene Saturday in the MotoAmerica Twins Cup Class at Virginia International Raceway. Speights is also entered in races in Pittsburgh and at New Jersey Motorsports Park later this summer.

“For the past 13 years, off and on, I’ve been racing in amateur level club racing,” Speights said. “When the national pro series created this class, I applied for a license.”

Getting a pro racing license requires submitting previous results and Speights, who has been a championship level rider on the local amateur level locally and in his home state of California, got the green light to try his hand against professionals. He said the increase in competition level would be significant.

“To be honest, I’m pretty sure I won’t be standing on the podium, and I’ll really need to do my best to even qualify for the race, but just getting out on track and being seen is a win,” he said.

Speights’ one-man team SP8S Racing, will be competing in honor of Team Truman, named after his neighbor Amy Truman who was diagnosed with ALS in 2014 and succumbed to the disease in November 2018. Team Truman in the past five years has raised more than $100,000 for the ALS Therapy Development Institute (TDI), a non-profit biotech organization based in Cambridge, Mass.

“I put the ALS livery on the bike and the plan is to have people see it, these national events usually draw...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Trumbull-pro-motorcyclist-races-for-ALS-research-13804176.php

Raising CT bottle fees to a dime nears deadline to move forward

HARTFORD — The co-chairs of the legislature’s Environment Committee are urging its colleagues to pass legislation that increases the bottle deposit fee from a nickel to a dime.

The legislation would also expand the current bottle bill, which is focused on mostly carbonated beverages and water to include juices, teas, and sports or energy drinks effective July 1, 2020. According to the Container Recycling Institute, it’s estimated that approximately $340 million new beverage containers per year would be covered.

The Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee has until Thursday afternoon to forward the bill to the House in order to keep it alive.

“It increases redemption rates. It increases recycling rates and gets the trash out of the blue bins, and actually recycles these bottles and cans,” Sen. Christine Cohen, D-Guilford, said.

The bill, which increases the fee from a nickel to a dime, would also increase the amount of money redemption centers receive and lower the amount of money the state keeps from the unclaimed bottle deposits. The bill also allows distributors to keep 20 percent of the unclaimed bottle deposits.

The goal of the legislation is to get residents to redeem 90 percent of the containers that have a deposit on them.

Rep. Michael Demicco, D-Farmington, said the state’s bottle bill is more than 40 years old, and like anything else, “it needs to be modernized, upgraded, tweaked a little bit.”

“The goal is to increase the amount of recovered and recycled materials,” Demicco said.

He said they are trying to increase the value of the products that are recycled because putting them in the blue bin degrades the value of the recyclables.

Jennifer...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Raising-CT-bottle-fees-to-a-dime-nears-deadline-13804167.php

Griffin to host program on meditation

DERBY — Griffin Hospital, 130 Division St., Derby, will host a free program to help individuals relax through meditation at 6 p.m. May 16.

Janice Lautier, director of spiritual care and education at Griffin Hospital, will host “Finding Peace,” an experiential meditation session. Several techniques will be offered with time to explore each. There will also be an opportunity to participate in a group meditation. This talk is part of Griffin Hospital's Healthy U Talks, a series of free wellness talks featuring Griffin Hospital medical experts and community partners providing trusted health information and answers to questions on a wide range of topics.

To reserve a spot or for more information, call 203-732-1511 or visit griffinhealth.org/events.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Griffin-to-host-program-on-meditation-13804153.php

Ansonia to host National Day of Prayer May 2

ANSONIA-The city will once again host the National Day of Prayer May 2 in Veterans Memorial Park.

The service, open to all, will take place from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in the park adjacent to City Hall. Should it rain it will move inside City Hall to the Aldermanic chambers.

The theme of this year’s event is Love One Another.

This marks the 68th observance of the National Day of Prayer which came about through a joint resolution of U.S. Congress in 1952 that was signed into law by President Harry S. Trumam. In 1988 President Ronald Reagan set the first Thursday as May as the permanent observance of the National Day of Prayer.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Ansonia-to-host-National-Day-of-Prayer-May-2-13804125.php

Big Y says no decision made on Ansonia store future

ANSONIA-While the signs outside the Big Y Supermarket downtown seek a tenant, the Massachusetts-based chain said no decision on that store’s future have been made.

“The landlord was preemptive in putting this out,” Claire D’Amoro-Daly, Big Y’s vice president of corporate communications, said Monday. “He jumped the gun. We have made no decision and are still weighing all options on that location.”

D’Amoro-Daly pointed out there are still three and a half years left on the store’s lease in the Ansona Plaza Shopping Center on 403 Main Street.

But no matter what happens, D’Amoro-Daly said with their new World Class Markets opening on Route 34 in Derby and the Boston Post Road in Milford “we don’t anticipate any job losses.”

All this came about Friday when both city officials and Alan Schwartz, whose Glen Equities owns the shopping center said a new tenant is being sought for the 65,000 square foot space.

Big Y has anchored that shopping center since it opened in 1996. The center also includes Bob’s, a clothing and footwear store and Marshal’s/Home Goods.

For the past two years Big Y has been renovating a former Walmart store on New Haven Avenue in Derby into a Big Y World Class Market. The company hopes to open that store in November.

The Ansonia store is about three and a half miles from the new...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Big-Y-says-no-decision-made-on-Ansonia-store-13804081.php

State courthouse in Bristol to close

Bristol Superior Court will closed on Aug. 30 and cases transfered to the New Britain Judicial District courthouse, the Judicial Branch announced Monday.

Chief Court Administrator Patrick L. Carroll III said the Judicial Branch has already starting working with Bristol Mayor Ellen Zoppo-Sassu, Chief State’s Attorney Kevin T. Kane and Chief Public Defender Christine Perra Rapillo to facilitate the courthouse closing at 131 North Main St. and transfer of the cases to the New Britain courthouse at 20 Franklin Square.

“We are very grateful to Mayor Zoppo-Sassu for understanding why this move is necessary and beneficial to all parties,” Carroll said. “Moreover, given the daily challenges that the Judicial Branch, prosecutors and public defenders continue to face because of reduced resources, this move allows us to position those resources more effectively, and thus provide the best services possible to the people we serve.”

“The City of Bristol has valued its long-term relationship with GA 17, but we also recognize the need to seek regional solutions to economic challenges,” Zoppo-Sassu said. “We are pleased that there will be only a relocation of services to New Britain and no job loss. This is a part of what I see as an evolution of downtown and what type of services we want here. While some may see this as a negative, I prefer to view it as yet another opportunity for the city to review options for the space that might help us cut our costs or improve efficiencies.”

Kane said, “For generations, prosecutors assigned to the Bristol courthouse have provided outstanding service to the communities they serve. While grateful for that service, closing the Bristol GA courthouse and transferring the cases to New Britain will help the Division...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/State-courthouse-in-Bristol-to-close-13804067.php

Fairfield PD investigating Southport liquore store robbery

FAIRFIELD-Police are looking for a man dressed in blue who held up Pequot Liquor, 3430 Post Road, Southport on April 26.

Lt. John Bucherati said police used a K-9 in an attempt to track the suspect on Kings Highway to no avail. Now detectives are working the case.

A clerk at the store said the man, wearing a ski-mask and baggy clothes brandished a silver gun while demanding money just before 9 p.m. April 26.. He fled on foot after being given an undetermined amount of cash.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Fairfield-PD-investigating-Southport-liquore-13803986.php

Monroe budget headed for referendum

MONROE — In roughly a week, Monroe residents will get chance to vote on the town’s proposed 2019-2020 budget, which First Selectman Ken Kellogg hopes does the job of funding town services and improvements, while simultaneously keeping taxes low.

“The budget was developed with an overarching goal of controlling taxes, while ensuring that we continue to invest in roads and infrastructure, deliver cost-effective services to our community, provide excellence in education, and maintain the good financial health of the Town,” Kellogg said in a news release issued Friday.

On May 7, Monroe residents will head to the polls to vote on whether to approve a $87,852,877 budget, which carries a tax increase of .97 percent from the previous fiscal year. The budget proposal breaks down to $28,940,637 proposed for the municipal budget, $57,246,740 for the board of education budget and $1,665,500 for fund appropriations and contingency.

The contingency line is partly intended to address the uncertainty over how much state aid Monroe will receive in the state budget.

The budget represents a 3.47 percent increase from the 2018-2019, with much of that due to a 1.81 increase in overall operating expenditures. The increase in operating costs is due to such factors as contractual obligations under collective bargaining and anticipated rises in health care costs.

In the news release, Kellogg said controlling the tax burden was partly the result of conservative spending, and a growing grand list, among other factors.

“By fostering collaboration among departments and creative programming,” the release read, “this budget incorporates certain service improvements without impacting...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Monroe-budget-headed-for-referendum-13803950.php

Taxation of recreational marijuana debated at CT Capitol

HARTFORD — How to tax recreational marijuana and what to do with the revenue will be debated at the state Capitol Monday as the final piece of legislation regarding the legalization of cannabis receives a public hearing.

The Democrat-backed bill proposes a 9.35 percent sales tax on cannabis and $35 per ounce levy on cannabis flowers and $13.50 per ounce on the rest of the plant. This rate is similar to the 20 percent effective tax rate in Massachusetts, which has already legalized adult recreational use of the drug.

Economists agree that legalizaing recreational marijuana is a chance to protect public health, shape consumer behavior, reduce an illegal market and increase state revenue.

Determined to reverse the impact of the war on drugs, the bill also suggests using the revenue from legalized recreational marijuana to invest in impoverished urban areas, instead of marking the money for general state use.

But opponents of legalization argued that the revenue and other benefits of legalization do not eclipse the social costs.

Republican Rep. Vincent Candelora of North Branford and Sen. Tony Hwang of Fairfield spoke against legalization in a press conference Monday morning. Most, if not all, Republicans in the Connecticut legislature oppose legalization, although Republican caucuses have not done a vote count yet, Candelora and Hwang said. Some Democrats, including Sen. Alex Bergstein of Greenwich, also oppose legalization.

Hwang and Candelora were joined by Susan Klein of Brookfield whose husband was killed in a car accident when an 18-year-old girl, who later admitted...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/politics/article/Taxation-of-recreational-marijuana-debated-at-CT-13803879.php

Shelton teen latest arrest in Milford car break-ins

MILFORD-A Shelton teen is the latest person to be charged by police for a series of car break-ins that have plagued this seaside city.

David Cruz-Valentin, 18 of Canal Street, Shelton, was arrested on a warrant April 26. He is charged with several car break-ins that occurred on Nov. 4, 2018.

The warrant charges Cruz-Valentin with three counts of third-degree burglary and three counts of sixth-degree larceny. He is also charged with individual counts of conspiracy to committee third-degree burglary, conspiracy to commit sixth-degree larceny, second-degree larceny and conspiracy to commit second-degree larceny.

Conspiracy charges often involve other individuals who helped plan the crime. It was not immediately known who is involved with Cruz-Valentin in connection with these break-ins.

Bond for him was set at $35,000 pending a May 21 appearance in Milford Superior Court.,



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Shelton-teen-latest-arrest-in-Milford-car-13803810.php

Mass man charged by Milford PD in Eli’s Tavern ruckus

MILFORD-A disturbance at Eli’s Tavern downtown led to the arrest of a Massachusetts man who police said tried to strike an officer.

Jordan James, 21, of Swampscott, Mass was charged by police with second-degree breach of peace, intefering with a police officer, assault on a police officer and third-degree criminal mischief.

He was released on a promise to appear in Milford Superior Court on May 21.

Police were called to Eli’s Tavern on Daniel Street around12:45 a.m. Sunday on a report of a disturbance caused by an unruly patron who would not leave. When approached by police James became uncooperative and attempted to strike an office with a closed fist, police said. He was taken into custody.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Mass-man-charged-by-Milford-PD-in-Eli-s-Tavern-13803722.php

Disabled tractor-trailer truck closes I-95 lane

NORWALK - A disabled tractor-tractor truck has closed one lane of southbound I-95 Monday morning.

The state Department of Transportation said the center lane is closed between Exits 15 and 14.

The disabled truck, first reported at 10:48 a.m., is causing a slowdown of southbound traffic in the state.

A state DOT truck is parked behind the tractor-trailer.

State Police are also on the scene.

DOT also reports there is a disabled vehicle on the southbound Merritt Parkway.

The left lane is closed between Exits 46 and 44. The incident was reported at 11:06 a.m.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Disabled-tractor-trailer-truck-closes-I-95-lane-13803653.php

Ex-Golf Galaxy employee charged in gift card thefts

MILFORD-A former employee of Golf Galaxy was arrested by police on a warrant charging him with stealing $440 in gift cards.

Police charged Joseph DeGennaro, 28, of Peak Avenue, Milford with stealing the cards between December and March while he was employed at the facility.

He was released on a promise to appear in Milford Superior Court on May 21.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Ex-Golf-Galaxy-employee-charged-in-gift-card-13803673.php

State: Milford package store sold booze to minors, permit revoked

MILFORD - The State Department of Consumer Protection has revoked the liquor license of a Boston Post Road package store for violating state law by repeatedly selling alcohol to minors, the agency said.

Underage drinkers were coming out of Mike's Package Store at 748 Boston Post Road, Milford, after having purchased alcohol on at least two occasions in late 2018 and early 2019, according to state liquor control agents conducting surveillance on the establishment with Milford police.

Liquor control authorities were alerted to the store by parents, according to a five-page document issued on April 16 after the agency issued a decision to revoke the establishment's liquor license.

Liquor control agents with Milford police questioned the underage drinkers after they left the store on Nov. 24 and Jan. 11 and found that all had said they were either not asked to produce identification when making the purchase or that they had used a "fake ID" to make a purchase.

Liquor Control agent Michael Kulas indicated during January's operation that he had a clear view of the door and could see minors "entering and exiting."

The store's permittee Miquel Antonio Cerda was not cooperative with the investigation, said Kulas who also noted that no prices were posted for beer inside a cooler, a violation of state regulations and the liquor permit for the store had not been recorded with the town.

Cerda also had no age statement forms, which suspected underage minors seeking to buy liquor are required to fill out at the time of purchase.

Liquor Control agent Lisa Laflamme testified during an administrative hearing on March 21 that she also observed minors purchasing alcohol during the Nov. 24 operation.

The Liquor...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/State-Milford-package-store-sold-booze-to-13803575.php

St. Vincent’s to host stroke education program

BRIDGEPORT — St. Vincent’s Medical Center will host a no-cost public stroke education seminar and screening for patients and families from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Topics will include hypertension in stroke, risk factor reduction, life after stroke and recipe for a healthy lifestyle.

The event will take place at St. Vincent’s Medical Center in the Hawley Conference Center, located in the Elizabeth M. Pfriem SWIM Center for Cancer Care, 2800 Main St., Bridgeport. Lunch will be provided and parking will be validated for all seminar guests.

The guest speaker will be Mariette Kammerer, founder and director of KES Educational Services. Seating is limited. To register or for more information, call 475-210-5440, email Patricia.Thompson1@ascension.org or visit the St. Vincent’s web site.



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/St-Vincent-s-to-host-stroke-education-program-13803557.php

Should CT rehab or imprison juvenile offenders?

HARTFORD — Judiciary Committee members advanced a bill that would take juvenile offenders charged and sentenced as adults out of prisons in favor of placement in developmentally appropriate rehabilitative services.

Juvenile justice advocates are in favor of HB 7389, which would provide a host of new programming and supports for juveniles charged with adult offenses.

Under the bill, the juveniles held at Manson Youth Institution and York Correctional Institution would be removed and placed in a yet-to-be-determined setting that would include therapeutic services. The goal is to reduce recidivism, according to Rep. Toni Walker, D-New Haven.

“The whole point is to try a rehabilitation that changes the children’s lives,” Walker said.

But Republicans on the Judiciary Committee were not convinced. “We are talking about 16- or 17-year-olds who are correctly treated as adults as a result of their offenses,” said Rep. David Labriola, R-Oxford, during the discussion that led up to the passage of the bill earlier this month.

Labriola pointed out that in previous years the legislature approved a law that allows juveniles found guilty of murder to apply for parole after 36 years served, or 60 percent of a 60-year sentence.

“There’s a big difference between serving 36 years and serving no jail time at all,” Labriola said.

A study is being conducted to determine how the transition could be made. There are about 50 juvenile males in Manson who have either been sentenced as adults or who are being held during pre-trial proceedings after being charged as adults.

Less than a handful of juvenile females are being held at York, which is the state’s only prison for women. In both cases, the...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Should-CT-rehab-or-imprison-juvenile-offenders-13803555.php

Sinking land could ground Tweed airport expansion plans

Since 1931, Tweed New Haven Airport has sat on a spit of what was once salt marsh and wetlands straddling the East Haven border. It is wedged between New Haven Harbor where the Quinnipiac River empties, the Farm River mouth separating East Haven and Branford, and Long Island Sound. It is transected by other waterways — Tuttle Brook and Morris Creek.

And it floods.

Recent morning thunderstorms left water rimming the runways and pooling in adjacent residential roads.

It will only get worse.

No matter what predictive model you use, this piece of Connecticut is destined for inundation from sea level rise. Throw in a tropical storm like Irene in 2011 or Sandy in 2012, nevermind a replay of the Hurricane of 1938, and it’s all under water.

Yet as the legislature wrestles with a bill designed to allow expansion at Tweed including, most critically, an extension of its main runway, the dispute has largely landed on the well-worn arguments about the airport.

Opponents argue against expansion for all the predictable reasons: the airport is in a residential area, traffic will be a nightmare, noise and pollution will increase. Fans of expansion say these factors are outweighed by the need for the airport to serve as an economic driver for the region.

But there’s been almost no mention that the land itself may well be underwater by 2050.

Jim O’Donnell, executive director of Connecticut Institute for Resilience and Climate Adaptation (CIRCA), whose new interactive modeling system — use it here — shows risk to the site even now, points out that many U.S. airports are built along vulnerable coasts — JFK in New York, LAX in Los Angeles. In Connecticut, in addition to Tweed, Groton and Sikorsky Memorial Airport in Stratford both experience flooding.

“They’re all built...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Sinking-land-could-ground-Tweed-airport-expansion-13803490.php

For CT delegation, ‘Medicare for all’ a tricky political issue

WASHINGTON - Sen. Richard Blumenthal is an enthusiastic supporter of submarines, jet engines, helicopters - any piece of defense hardware made in Connecticut.

But when it comes to health insurance, the senior senator’s home-state advocacy is very much open to question.

Blumenthal is one of 14 co-sponsors of the “Medicare for All Act of 2019” - introduced earlier this month by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., a leading left-of-center contender for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020.

If signed into law, the bill would establish a health-insurance system financed by a single payer: The United States Government. It would be Medicare on steroids, with no premiums or deductibles and co-pays only for prescription drugs. Taxes might rise but out-of-pocket costs would plummet, its advocates say.

But the collateral damage to the health-insurance industry - and insurance in general - is little discussed in the debate over how to fix the 2010 Affordable Care Act. Health insurance companies employ 9,500 in Connecticut, with an annual payroll of $1.1 billion, according to data gathered by America’s Health Insurance Plans - AHIP - the main trade group for health insurers.

The largest provider of health insurance in Connecticut is Aetna, which after merging with CVS last year agreed to abandon plans to move to New York and instead remain in Hartford -roots that go back to 1819. Cigna is the other main health-insurance player with a long history in Connecticut. Its headquarters now are in Bloomfield and Philadelphia.

The Sanders “Medicare-for-all” measure would essentially wipe out the role of private insurance in health care.

The 200-plus million Americans who get private insurance (180 million through...



from News https://www.ctpost.com/politics/article/For-CT-delegation-Medicare-for-all-a-13803375.php

Wellness Wednesday: Mental Health Awareness Presentation

Please Join us on Wednesday, May 1st, 2019 at 6:30 in the Town Hall Auditorium to kick off Mental Health Awareness Month with a presentation from three Mental Health Providers and an activity led by Youth Services Coordinator: Rik Huggard.

from Newington, CT - News Flash http://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=910

Annual Postal Carriers Food Drive

Put Food out for your Newington postal carrier on Saturday, May 11, 2019- All of these donations will go to support the Newington Food Bank. We thank you for your support.

from Newington, CT - News Flash http://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=909

Wellness Wednesdays Series: Alzheimers Overview

Please join us for a stimulating presentation on Everything You Want to Know about Alzheimers in the Town Hall Auditorium on Wednesday, June 5th, 2019 at 6:30pm. Presentation by Charles Atkins, MD-world renowned author.

from Newington, CT - News Flash http://www.newingtonct.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?aid=908

Jeremiah Wadsworth, “foremost in every enterprise”

By Joel Lang

Jeremiah Wadsworth was a sea-going merchant, commissary general to the Continental army, and founder of the nation’s first banks. He also helped established the insurance and textile industries in Connecticut and served in the first three terms of the US Congress.

Had he lived in another era, his wealth and influence might have made him a figure comparable to a 19th-century financial tycoon or a 20th-century venture capitalist. As it was, the fortune he amassed, valued at $125,000 according to probate records, was one of the largest of his time and seeded the 1842 creation of the Wadsworth Atheneum (as it was then called), the nation’s oldest public art museum and one of Hartford’s most enduring institutions.

Younger Years and West Indies Trade

Jeremiah Wadsworth

John Angel James Wilcox,Jeremiah Wadsworth, 1776, engraving – Connecticut Historical Society

Jeremiah was born on July 12, 1743, to Daniel Wadsworth, minister at Hartford’s First Church, and Abigail Talcott, the daughter of Joseph Talcott, Colony governor from 1725 to 1741. Losing both parents as a child, he was raised by his uncle, Matthew Talcott, a ship owner in Middletown, then an important Connecticut river port.

His uncle sent him to sea in 1761, introducing Jeremiah to the West Indies trade. Within a decade he had become a ship’s captain and a wealthy man. As ship commander, he was as much merchant as mariner, since his duties required him to decide where and when to sell his cargo, not just transport it.

His mercantile skills led to his appointment in 1774 as commissary (supply master) for the Connecticut militia. At the outbreak of the Revolutionary War, he advanced to commissary for the eastern division of the Continental army and in 1778 succeeded Joseph Trumbull as commissary general for the entire army.

He earned the trust of General George Washington and his reputation withstood claims he profited excessively from his post, which paid by commission. He resigned in 1780, only to soon act as commissary to the 5,500-soldier French army led by Jean-Baptiste-Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau.

Later Life and Further Wealth

At the peak of his mercantile ventures, Wadsworth had trading partners in England, France, and Ireland as well as in larger colonial cities and the West Indies. One of his notable local partnerships was formed in 1779 with Barnabas Deane, brother of Silas, and General Nathaniel Greene of Rhode Island. The partnership built a large distillery and owned a fleet of ships to supply the distillery with molasses from the West Indies.

Velvet coat originally owned by Colonel Jeremiah Wadsworth

Velvet coat originally owned by Colonel Jeremiah Wadsworth, 1784 – Connecticut Historical Society

Wadsworth began to invest some of his wealth in banks even before the Revolution ended. His ownership of 104 of its 1,000 shares made him the largest shareholder in the continent’s first bank, the Bank of North America, founded in Philadelphia in 1781. He served as president of the Bank of New York, founded in 1784, and as a director of the first Bank of the United States, chartered by Congress in 1791 and located in Philadelphia.

In 1792, he was a driving force behind the founding of the Hartford Bank, the city’s first, which later became Hartford National. An anniversary history published in 1892 described Wadsworth as “the wealthiest man in town … foremost in every enterprise which promised to advance its prosperity.”

Among those other enterprises were Connecticut’s first insurance partnership, in 1794, and the Hartford Woolen Manufacture, the first mill to use power machinery to spin broadcloth. The owner of three farms, he also was noted for importing new breeds of cattle and for his experiments with crops. The inventory of Wadsworth’s estate showed the largest share of his wealth was in bank stock and farm property. He also had a large library of 1,000 volumes.

Wadsworth had married Mehitable Russell in 1767. They had three children, including Daniel. Besides founding the Atheneum, Daniel would use the fortune he inherited to fund the construction of the present-day Center Church, replacing First Church, and to restore the adjacent Ancient Burial Ground, where his father was one of the last to be interred after his death in 1804.

Joel Lang retired in 2007 from the Hartford Courant, where he wrote mostly for Northeast, its Sunday magazine; he currently resides in Bridgeport.



from Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project https://connecticuthistory.org/jeremiah-wadsworth/

Merritt Parkway southbound in Stratford closed after wrong-way crash, police say

The Merritt Parkway southbound in Stratford was closed Thursday morning after an overnight crash involving a wrong-way driver, police say. ...