A Kafka-esque moment for the BOS here and in other towns

CORNWALL — A statewide response to a federal Department of Justice (DOJ) investigation has been joined by Cornwall.

The Board of Selectmen voted Feb. 16 to be included in a letter being drafted by the Connecticut Association of Municipal Attorneys (CAMA) as a response to a complaint an attorney there described as vague.

It seems all 169 towns received a letter directly from the DOJ stating that an investigation has been opened based on a recent complaint, according to Patrick Alair, deputy corporate counsel for West Hartford. 

He will write a letter from CAMA that all the towns in the state will have a chance to be a part of as a joint response. It will ask the DOJ the same questions municipal leaders are asking, which focus on exactly what it is they are responding to.

When he spoke to The Lake-ville Journal Feb. 17, Alair had a request in to the DOJ for a meeting, which he hoped would take place this week.

“So far, all we have is a summary from the DOJ, but not the actual complaint,” Alair said.

The summary, he said, claims “various towns and cities” did not offer the IVS phone voting system for the visually impaired, and said those machines are inadequate for protecting voter privacy.

Alair made the same observation as the Board of Selectmen here: all referendum and election voting is done by specific guidelines dictated by law and enforced by the secretary of the state.

“If this is an issue with those guidelines, the DOJ should deal directly with the secretary of the state,” Alair said. “Bypassing the secretary of the state’s office is like investigating a robbery done by three guys in an SUV and investigating everyone who ever owned an SUV.”

The Cornwall board conferred with its attorney, who advised signing on to the CAMA letter. The board will also write its own letter to ensure not missing a response deadline. First Selectman Gordon Ridgway said it seems certain all voting requirements were followed here.

Alair said that any communication from the DOJ is considered serious, but that this is an oddly presented case.

Latest News

Angela Derrico Carabine

SHARON — Angela Derrick Carabine, 74, died May 16, 2025, at Vassar Hospital in Poughkeepsie, New York. She was the wife of Michael Carabine and mother of Caitlin Carabine McLean.

A funeral Mass will be celebrated on June 6 at 11:00 a.m. at Saint Katri (St Bernards Church) Church. Burial will follow at St. Bernards Cemetery. A complete obituary can be found on the website of the Kenny Funeral home kennyfuneralhomes.com.

Revisiting ‘The Killing Fields’ with Sam Waterston

Sam Waterston

Jennifer Almquist

On June 7 at 3 p.m., the Triplex Cinema in Great Barrington will host a benefit screening of “The Killing Fields,” Roland Joffé’s 1984 drama about the Khmer Rouge and the two journalists, Cambodian Dith Pran and New York Times correspondent Sydney Schanberg, whose story carried the weight of a nation’s tragedy.

The film, which earned three Academy Awards and seven nominations — including one for Best Actor for Sam Waterston — will be followed by a rare conversation between Waterston and his longtime collaborator and acclaimed television and theater director Matthew Penn.

Keep ReadingShow less
The art of place: maps by Scott Reinhard

Scott Reinhard, graphic designer, cartographer, former Graphics Editor at the New York Times, took time out from setting up his show “Here, Here, Here, Here- Maps as Art” to explain his process of working.Here he explains one of the “Heres”, the Hunt Library’s location on earth (the orange dot below his hand).

obin Roraback

Map lovers know that as well as providing the vital functions of location and guidance, maps can also be works of art.With an exhibition titled “Here, Here, Here, Here — Maps as Art,” Scott Reinhard, graphic designer and cartographer, shows this to be true. The exhibition opens on June 7 at the David M. Hunt Library at 63 Main St., Falls Village, and will be the first solo exhibition for Reinhard.

Reinhard explained how he came to be a mapmaker. “Mapping as a part of my career was somewhat unexpected.I took an introduction to geographic information systems (GIS), the technological side of mapmaking, when I was in graduate school for graphic design at North Carolina State.GIS opened up a whole new world, new tools, and data as a medium to play with.”

Keep ReadingShow less