FEMA

Christine Bates
28 Undermountain Road is a newly constructed 3 bedroom/2 bath home built on land owned by the Salisbury Housing Trust. The 1,310-square-foot house cost approximately $500,000 to build and was sold to a qualified buyer for $255,000.
SALISBURY — The 12-month trailing median price for a single-family home in Salisbury fell to $775,000 for the period ending Jan. 31, 2026 — its lowest point in the past three years — even as home values across much of Connecticut continued to edge higher.
The figure marks a decline from the $945,000 median recorded for the 12 months ending Jan. 31, 2025, and from $892,000 for the comparable period ending Jan. 31, 2024.
Median prices have been trending downward since reaching a historic high of $1,350,000 for the 12-month period ending May 31, 2025. While January and February are typically slow months for publicly listed properties, the 12-month rolling figure reflects a broader reset.
In contrast, median prices statewide — including in neighboring towns such as Sharon and Kent — continued to rise in January.
The number of sales in Salisbury on a 12 month rolling basis remained within its historic range.
A total of 49 single-family homes sold in the 12 months ending Jan. 31, 2026, compared with 47 sales in the period ending Jan. 31, 2025, and 55 sales for the 12 months ending Jan. 31, 2024. Historically, annual sales of single-family homes in Salisbury typically range between 40 and 50 transactions.
Inventory appears to be ticking up modestly. As of mid-February, there were 17 single-family homes on the market. Of those, nine were listed above $1 million and eight were below that threshold.
Only three properties were listed below the current $775,000 median price.
Local data also show how incomplete online listings can be in reflecting overall activity.
Salisbury’s January transfer records, available through the Town Clerk and published in The Lakeville Journal, show five real estate transactions. Only one — 53 Upland Meadow — was publicly listed.
The remaining transfers were handled privately off market, including the highest-priced sale at 36 Lincoln City Road, the lowest-priced transaction on Farnum Road, a commercial building on Main Street, and an affordable home sold by the Salisbury Housing Trust.
The discrepancy highlights how internet-based market data, which rely largely on MLS-reported sales, can understate actual transaction activity in towns where private, off-market deals remain common.
January transactions
145 Farnum Road — 2 bedroom/1 bath 860 square foot home on 1.03 acres sold by Lala Enterprises LLC to 145 Farnum Road LLC for $227,000.
36 Lincoln City Road — 3 bedroom/3.5 bath home on 1.05 acres sold by Belter Properties LLC to Eric and Kathryn Beelitz for $1,175,000.
332 Main Street — Commercial building on 0.33 acres sold by Colonial House & Barn LLC to McBride Builders LLC for $1,000,000.
28 Undermountain Road — 3 bedroom/2 bath newly constructed home sold by Salisbury Housing Trust to Dayana Herrera for $255,000.
53 Upland Meadow Road — 4 bedroom/2.5 bath home on 3.83 acres sold by Kevin King and Dejthankon Inprasit to Jennifer Eve Kaplan Trust for $1,017,000.
* Town ofSalisbury real estate transfers recorded as sold between Jan. 1 and Jan. 31, 2026, provided by SalisburyTown Clerk. Transfers without consideration are not included. Current market listings from Smart MLS. Note that recorded transfers frequently lag sales by a number of days. Compiled by Christine Bates, Real Estate Salesperson with William Pitt Sotheby’s International Realty, Licensed in CT and NY.
Riley Klein
The Northwest Corner was hit with another winter storm Monday, Feb. 23.
Heavy snow blanketed the Northwest Corner again this week as a late-February nor’easter swept across Connecticut.
The blizzard began Sunday night, Feb. 22, and continued through most of the day Monday, Feb. 23.
While the brunt of the storm hit the coastline — where wind gusts topped 60 mph and snowfall totals climbed to roughly two feet in southeastern Connecticut — communities in the Northwest Corner saw lighter winds but significant accumulation, with some areas measuring 12 inches of snow.
Power outages were reported across the state, with Eversource listing more than 14,000 customers without electricity Monday.
In the Northwest Corner, 67 customers were without power around noon Monday, according to Eversource’s outage map. By early afternoon, all but seven had their power restored.
Region One schools were closed Monday and Tuesday due to the storm. An email from Superintendent Melony Brady-Shanley said “an extensive clean-up effort” required a second snow day in the district.
Patrick L. Sullivan
Farmers grappling with bears, lake advocates fighting invasive hydrilla and towns seeking a greater voice in cell tower siting decisions could see relief if three bills now advancing through the state legislature are approved.
In phone interviews Friday, Feb. 20, State Sen. Stephen Harding (R-30) and State Rep. Maria Horn (D-64) expressed support for Senate Bills 146, 145 and 144 — measures addressing bear-related livestock losses, hydrilla treatment delays and the authority of the Connecticut Siting Council.
Bears
Harding said SB 146 would give farmers expanded authority to protect both livestock and crops. The bill would allow the use of deadly force against bears that injure or kill livestock and would authorize the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) to issue permits to shoot bears that have damaged crops during the prior growing season.
Horn said the legislation would also streamline the permitting process by eliminating a requirement that applications be notarized, calling the revised process “less onerous.”
Hydrilla
SB 145 targets delays in the state’s review of hydrilla treatment applications. Harding said DEEP has, in recent years, taken too long to process requests from local organizations, including Salisbury’s Twin Lakes Association, to treat infestations.
“DEEP just sits on these things until it’s almost too late,” Harding said.
Horn was less critical. “These are responsible, competent groups whose leadership has helped DEEP accelerate the process,” she said. “I think DEEP’s pretty good about it now.”
Siting Council
SB 144 would require the Connecticut Siting Council — which oversees applications for cell towers, wind turbines and certain energy infrastructure projects — to appoint a temporary, non-voting member from the host municipality for each application under review.
Horn described the council’s role as focusing on statewide infrastructure needs but said local representation would provide important community perspective. A town representative would not have veto power, she noted, but could ensure local concerns are formally heard. She also said the council currently lacks sufficient environmental expertise.
Harding argued the council has “for too long” overridden local zoning decisions without adequate neighborhood input. He said adding municipal representation would make council members “far more mindful” of local sentiment when evaluating projects.

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Riley Klein
CORNWALL — Local officials say the 2026 vegetation control plan submitted by the Housatonic Railroad Company fails to comply with a 2024 state law requiring greater transparency about herbicide use along railroad tracks.
The 16-page plan, distributed in February to Northwest Corner towns through which the railroad operates, outlines the chemicals HRRC intends to use to control vegetation along its right-of-way. Roundup appears first on the list. The company anticipates beginning herbicide applications after March 1, 2026, depending on weather and other factors.
Cornwall officials reviewed the plan during a Feb. 17 Board of Selectmen meeting.
Bruce Bennet, Cornwall’s tree warden and a member of the Housatonic Herbicide Working Group, said several of the proposed chemicals are not licensed for use in wetlands.
The plan does not identify environmentally sensitive areas along the rail line, which is required under Connecticut General Statutes Section 22a-66a(j).
“The only way to do that is to be able to produce a map showing those, which was a requirement of the legislative regulation, and they did not do that,” said Bennet. “They are not following the law.”
The regulation stipulates railroads must develop an annual operational plan that includes maps locating their rights-of-way and identifying sensitive areas not readily visible in the field, such as wetlands, waterways and wells.
Bennet said the working group produced maps and offered them to HRRC, but they were rejected.
Anna Timell, chair of the Cornwall Planning and Zoning Commission and a member of the working group, said concerns about herbicide use date back more than a decade. In 2015, she said, 24 white pine trees were killed along the railroad corridor after herbicide application.
Concerns intensified when residents realized how close spraying had occurred to bodies of water. The 2024 legislation was intended to address those concerns.
“I suspect the issue for them is that our geography is such that there’s water everywhere and it presents a real dilemma,” Timell said. “A lot more costly.”
Bennet noted there is a 45-day comment period to respond to HRRC’s plan. He urged Cornwall and other towns along the rail line — including Falls Village, Kent, New Milford, North Canaan and Salisbury — to express concern.
“The lack of maps makes this plan deficient,” First Selectman Gordon Ridgway said. He said a response letter will be sent to HRRC, and he plans to coordinate with leaders in the other towns.
The Housatonic Railroad Company did not respond to a request for comment.
Ruth Epstein
Guests at the latest ‘People and Places of Kent’ program speak about the Quality Thrift Shop. From left, Gloria Hill, Melinda Keck and Carolyn De Vita.
KENT — It’s a bargain hunter’s paradise — with a purpose.
The Quality Thrift Shop, housed in the former parsonage of the First Congregational Church on North Main Street, not only provides items at reasonable prices, but helps to fill the coffers of a long list of charitable organizations.
Volunteers who help run the enterprise spoke on Feb. 18 at the latest “People and Places of Kent” session put on by the Kent Historical Society and the Kent Senior Center. Carolyn DeVita, Gloria Hill and the Rev. Melinda Keck, a retired pastor, described how the shop operates and why it continues to draw customers from near and far.
The shop, which opened in 1989, was the inspiration of sisters Marcy Ames and Bonnie Treacy. The pair had run a similar type of shop in an Arkansas church and believed one could find success in Kent. They were right.
Starting small in a tiny room in the church’s parish house, described by the speakers as “no more than a closet,” the operation took off. It became a popular destination, originally formed to raise money for the church’s outreach programs and a nutrition site in the Philippines. Donations were plentiful the first year, with a total of $4,550 raised, Hill said.
Sales dropped off after the initial year, but the shop went through a revival when Keck became the church’s co-pastor along with the Rev. Glenn Rainsley. “We didn’t need the parsonage because we had our own home,” Keck said, so Rainsley suggested the shop move into those premises. The house went through a transformation, with many volunteers contributing numerous hours toward the conversion. The shop’s new home, with much more space, opened in 1995.
What began as a church project is now a community endeavor. The shop is staffed by volunteers who sort donations, stock shelves and run the register. De Vita said the number of volunteers has dwindled, going from 40 in 1998 down to the current 28. New faces would be welcome.
The operation is overseen by a board of directors headed by De Vita. Its makeup consists of three non-church members, reflecting the idea of community inclusion, said Keck, adding, “so we’re not so insular.”
Revenue has increased over the years. She noted that in 1989, they took in $3,300; in 2000, $24,375 and in 2025, $52,414. By 2018, total receipts since its beginnings finally topped the $1 million mark.
The trio expressed gratitude for the steady stream of donations the shop receives. “We get some very expensive items [some men’s shirts that retail for $500 to $600] and we try to price them reasonably,” said De Vita.
Alicia Winter is knowledgeable about the value of clothing and puts worthy items online.
The wide selection attracts shoppers locally, as well as those who come distances to browse and buy. She said there is one woman from Massachusetts who posted about the shop on Instagram, which brought a whole new set of customers.
In addition to women’s, men’s and children’s clothing, the shop sells shoes, purses, jewelry, household goods, knickknacks, greeting cards and whatever other items come in—some rather quirky, such as a ceremonial bride’s costume and an old-fashioned Victrola. “We get so many things we have no idea what they are,” interjected Hill.
One person in the audience said he has a friend who comes from afar because of the quality of the inventory. He said she is pleased there is no junk. The women said the donations are scrutinized to pull out clothing that may be torn or show stains. A small amount of money is earned by selling non-usable clothing for rags.
While there are a few down sides, such as some shoplifting and complaints that the prices are too high, they are far outweighed by the good. In one case, a customer who discovered cash tucked inside a purchase returned after hours and slipped the bills through the door.
Proceeds all go to nonprofits. The shop distributes funds to educational, emergency response and social service organizations.
Generosity is shown in other forms, such as giving free clothing to those proven to be in great need.
De Vita, asked about expenses of the operation, said they amount to approximately $22,000 a year for such things as supplies, cleaning and shoveling snow.
The Quality Thrift Shop is open Tuesday through Saturday from noon to 4 p.m.
John Coston
SALISBURY — The daughter of an elderly man who vanished without a trace from his Salisbury home 18 years ago has asked Connecticut State Police to appoint a new investigator to look into the case that to this day remains a mystery.
Allison Drew is haunted by the disappearance of her frail, 91-year-old father from his home on Ravine Ridge Road near the Massachusetts line after he got up from watching a movie and told his caregiver he was going for a walk. The unsolved case has weighed on Allison and her sister Bettina, Tom’s daughters, for almost two decades.
In 2020, Drew published a book about the case: “Search for My Missing Father, an American Noir” (Black Rose Writing), which examines what may have happened to her father in the time between his last conversation with a family member and the report that he was missing.
In December 2025, Drew decided to continue to press for answers, formally asking the Connecticut State Police to reopen the case.
“I would like to be able to bury my father before I die,” she said in an interview from her home in England.
At the time of his disappearance he was reportedly watching a movie. The caregiver said he got up and walked out of the room. After a few minutes when she went to look for him, he was nowhere to be found. That was July 21, 2007.
An extensive search led by State Police with K-9 dogs, a bloodhound and helicopters — joined by local firefighters and volunteers — yielded nothing. More than 500 flyers were spread around the Northwest Corner.
A national alert was issued for Tom Drew, a retired fashion designer from New York who suffered from dementia in addition to having some cardio-pulmonary issues. Press reports at the time noted that the family had alerted hospitals and homeless shelters in three states.
By mid-August, the active month-long search for the missing man was over, but State Police said they would continue to pursue information. A conclusion was drawn that if he had found his way into some kind of institutional care he would have been identified after a month had passed. If he had died, his remains would have been found because of the extensive searching, including the rugged terrain near his home known as Sage’s Ravine.
“The probability that he would not be found is astronomical,” said Allison in an interview last week. “Writing the book was helpful. But it was very stressful.”
The police investigation has not been officially closed. Drew said that once a year investigators review the case, but absent any new information it is shelved for another year.
Drew hasn’t heard back from Ronnell A. Higgins, Commissioner of the State Department of Emergency services and Public Protection, since asking him to appoint a new investigator to the case, noting what she called failures to collect certain kinds of evidence.

Drew is a professor emerita at the University of York, England, and author of scholarly books on anti-apartheid and anti-colonial movements in South Africa. Her book is a review of the facts in the case that became front page news and recounts the many rumors and suppositions and talk around town that captivated the community at the time, along with all the dead ends.
Drew hopes that the book might jog someone’s memory, prompting them to think of something that they remember that didn’t seem important at the time. For her part, she believes that her father was either buried or submerged in water somehow.
Drew also wanted to write about what it is like to have a missing person in one’s life. The recent disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of NBC “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie,has drawn significant attention since the early days of February when investigators believe she was taken against her will.
Drew found the police investigation lacking in numerous ways and her book details those perceived shortcomings and also conjectures about a lot of little things that in her view needed a closer look. Her view is that her father’s disappearance was suspicious.
“My father vanished without a trace even though he had severe cardio-pulmonary disease and could only walk a few hundred yards without getting breathless and red in the face. He also had dementia,” Drew wrote to the commissioner.
“Based on stereotypes about dementia the State Police assumed that he left his home on foot. They followed one line of inquiry only. But, despite massive searches, the failure to find my father or even his loose slip-on shoes indicates that he was driven off. The case needs reinvestigation to follow this line of inquiry.
“So, I would like the CSP to reinvestigate the disappearance from scratch,” she concluded.

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