Letters to the editor - October 17 2013

Give Gordon Ridgway another term

I am writing to support the re-election of Gordon Ridgway to be Cornwall’s first selectman. As our first selectman for 20 years, Gordon has worked with citizens, town commissions and state and federal government agencies to promote Cornwall’s well-being. STEAP grant money, obtained by Gordon with assistance from Rep. Roberta Willis, built Foote Fields baseball park. Under Gordon’s leadership half a million dollars in federal and state money has rebuilt miles of Cornwall’s roads. Thanks to Gordon, half a million dollars of federal money was quickly found following Storm Irene to repair the bridge that washed out in West Cornwall in September 2011.

Before running for first selectman for the first time in 1991, Gordon organized volunteers to build our Hammond Town Beach. He has always believed in volunteerism. As a longtime member of the CVFD he has helped to organize Cornwall’s response to emergencies, including Storm Sandy and the Halloween storm of the previous fall that saw the opening of the public shelter at Cornwall Consolidated to house neighbors left without electricity and heat.

In the 1990s I served under Gordon as a member of the Board of Selectmen. Since then, as a member of the Board of Finance, I have watched as Gordon worked with the BOF to fund, support and guide improvements for the town, like our new library, the gym addition at Cornwall Consolidated School and Bonny Brook housing for the elderly, all of which he has helped us to accomplish while keeping our taxes low — usually limited to the cost of inflation.

Gordon knows his job. Vote in November to keep him working for all of us.

Wm Earl Brecher

Cornwall

 

Grateful to Hotchkiss community

I am writing on behalf of myself, the Housatonic Youth Service Bureau staff and board of directors. We would like to expresses our deep gratitude to Kevin Hicks, Nancy Vaughan and the entire Hotchkiss community for their generosity, commitment and enthusiasm in hosting the HYSB Hotchkiss Bearcat 5K on Oct. 6. The support provided through a dedicated administration, faculty and staff at Hotchkiss made it possible for this family-friendly event to be possible. 

The support from Hotchkiss, the over 250 registered runners, and our amazing sponsors, raised more than $5,000 for HYSB. All of the raised funds will go directly to support our free clinical counseling service and other programming that we make available to children, youth, and families in our community. A thank you is also in order for Peter Becks Village Store, Charity Select, Skip Barber Racing School, Joe Brien Lost Art Workshops, Pat Surdam and the energetic Hotchkiss student volunteers. 

The services and programs provided by HYSB depend on the generous financial support from our community. Because of this support, we’re able to continue our mission to serve the children, youth and families of our community. To learn more about our programs, or to see a full list of sponsors, go to visit www.hysb.org.

Nicholas Pohl, MSW, Executive Director

Housatonic Youth Service Bureau

Falls Village

 

Trucks make our streets dangerous

I was gratified to read Craig Davis’s letter (Oct. 3) addressing the issue of diminished quality of life resulting from the number and size of trucks traveling through Salisbury and Lakeville. 

Mr. Davis is certainly not alone in feeling a tipping point has been reached — through-truck traffic is becoming intolerably disruptive and dangerous. I agree that traffic has increased dramatically in recent years and now includes such behemoths as pre-fab structures on flat beds that spill over into opposing lanes of traffic. Besides those of us who live on Main Street, including young children, walkers, bikers, and people visiting local shops and cafes find their enjoyment and safety compromised by the ever-present 18-wheelers thundering by.

It is time for town officials, in conjunction with the state and trucking companies, to reinstate pre-existing routes, or create alternate ones, for through-truck traffic. The current situation is unacceptable. 

Lorraine K. Faison

 

Salisbury

 

Heavy highway traffic: It’s time to take action

Send the oversize interstate trucks back to their old route. There is no excuse for them to go through small villages, as bridge repairs were finished years ago. Read Craig Davis’s excellent letter (Sept.19 issue.)

The Taconic State Parkway won’t allow any trucks, yet oversized ones designed for four- lane highways, speed down the three hills into Lakeville, and are a menace on ice and snow. Going up small country roads may be short-cuts for them, but they are often dirty, noisy and an eyesore for residents. One, unable to make the turn onto Belgo, blocked the road to Route 44. Another hit the Reservoir sign and the pole is still not upright.

Bring these suggestions up at the town meeting Oct. 16.1) Ask the state to put up signs outside our villages requesting all Interstate trucks return to their old route, bypassing Connecticut small villages. 2) Start a petition for our representatives to ban all oversize trucks from barreling through Lakeville and Salisbury. This could be done near the Town Hall during the two voting days. 3) Contact your state representatives by phone or online, and ask for a traffic signs rerouting all oversized trucks. I have seen these signs in other villages and it works. Take action now.

Heather Kahler

 

Lakeville

 

Will we overcome school budget impasse?

In the six letters last week in the Journal that touched on today’s seventh referendum vote, one was directed, intentionally or unintentionally, at the source and not the symptoms of the region’s problem: a dearth of vision and leadership. 

The letter was a call for support for a regional board candidate from Salisbury. The letter was concise. The reasons why the writer supports the candidate were clearly stated, compelling and amply supported with fact. I don’t live or vote in Salisbury, but I appreciate the fact that the writer focused on what many have been calling for over several years: new leadership. 

I wonder, however, after reading several other letters if Misters Moore, Mauer and Hart think those who continue to vote against the referendums should lay aside our conscience, throw up our hands in frustration/disgust of those who control (or wish to control) the dialogue on school issues and give up? Mr. Mauer your statistical analysis is suspect for many reasons. In addition, your vitriol against those who don’t agree with you sounds like budgetary-debt ceiling Congressional-Presidential speak; it’s deplorable. Besides we all know too well the state of dialogue in D.C. 

The public is not embraced at regional board meetings. Interrupted, sound-bite-speaking opportunities do not generate discussion, ideas or solutions. Nor do they engender enthusiasm or respect. The we/they atmosphere of regional board meetings goes back many years and is well documented. So if there is voter/meeting-attendance apathy in the region, the manner in which regional business is conducted is assuredly one root cause. If a person’s position/opinion is neither respected nor solicited, why attend? If someone doesn’t have a problem with the cost of education in the region, doesn’t have a child in a regional school and sadly believes his vote doesn’t matter anyway, why vote? Proactive, enthusiastic, inclusive leadership from the superintendent down through the seven district boards would spark interest, discussion and participation.

As to the undertone of the letters that imply those who continue to vote against the budget don’t care about education or children, enough. If we didn’t care, we wouldn’t write letters, attend meetings, discuss issues with neighbors, vote or most importantly, support our children. The notion that we don’t care is not realistic, but it is insulting and is a non-starter when it comes to discussion.

Mr. Moore, the silver lining of which you speak is at the grassroots level. It should permeate the regional organization from bottom to top. The exuberance of young people engaged in activities they love, under the supervision of focused teachers, coaches and mentors is contagious. It is wonderful to experience or observe, but it will not continue to thrive indefinitely under the constant threat of severe storm warnings. 

Today’s budget vote may or may not end the budget impasse; November’s vote offers an opportunity for a change of guard on district boards and perhaps a new direction and promise for the region. 

Brian Kavanagh

West Cornwall

 

More disinformation

Here (groan) we go again. The (sigh) quiet and rational discourse on the editorial page of “The Lakey” for Thursday, Oct. 10, was rudely shattered by yet another shrill missive from the director of the Lauretano School of Public Pronouncements. His gratuitous attack on Salisbury’s first selectman’s handling of the planning for the new transfer station was a veritable witch’s brew of fantasy and venom — and Halloween has not even arrived! It is a pity there isn’t some magic potion that would make him fade away, or better still, vanish completely. However, failed selectmen do not fade away, they run for higher office. 

Dick Boyle

Salisbury

 

A post-November election prediction

I predict 2014 could be a year of contention — even litigation — for the town vs. Affordable Housing (AH). While I have my own opinion about the Salisbury Affordable Housing Commission (SAHC), I am not against initiatives that help people live in Salisbury; one of Connecticut’s most expensive housing towns. I do, however, disagree with what I see as a “build it and they will come” ideology, and a belief that affordable housing will socially engineer Salisbury’s “vicious cycle” as a retirement town to re-establish a “virtuous cycle” of a stable community.

In a nutshell, here’s my prediction, which I have shared repeatedly with First Selectman Rand.

A February 2012 SAHC press release stated, “The Salisbury Affordable Housing Commission, in conjunction with its consultant, Women’s Institute for Housing and Economic Development (WIHED), has entered into a 90-day option agreement with St. Mary’s Church of Lakeville to evaluate jointly the possible use of a parcel of Church property for workforce housing. Workforce housing is affordable housing for moderate-income wage or salaried workers in the municipalities where they work.”

From reliable sources, I heard that WIHED had agreed upon the purchase of the St. Mary’s property, the sale of which was — because of the political atmosphere in Salisbury — put on hold until after the November 2013 elections.

Last year, a long since removed WIHED press release on the Internet — www.wihed.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Press-Kit.pdf — said on page 5 under Additional Projects in Progress, “Lakeville Housing, Lakeville, CT — Sponsor: Women’s Institute, New construction of 32 rental units of workforce housing;” and nary a single word in The Lakeville Journal nor a single word from SAHC. 

Throughout 2012/2013 a private AH developer with an adjacent parcel of land on Farnam Road was stymied by SAHC in his efforts. WIHED, which is behind the Sharon Ridge AH complex expansion, could be a godsend for Salisbury with similar projects. Yes? No? But Selectman Rand has been adamant in telling me that he will fight to prevent any development of the St. Mary’s property on grounds of protecting environmentally sensitive wetlands.

Here’s the potential rub. Putting aside the fact that after the election there will likely — again — be two selectmen on SAHC with two SAHC members now being attorneys, WIHED is well lawyered-up with access to lots of federal and private funds to fight all zoning denials.

If such a scenario comes to fruition, WIHED would likely win, or because of litigation costs and SAHC involvement (even if they again claim it’s just another private real estate transaction), the town “leaders” will roll over like possums and Mr. Rand will claim to have fought the good fight. If WIHED wins, I suspect the long stymied private developer would either get his approval or sue Salisbury.

I have written extensively on this issue. Google: QUIS CUSTODIET IPOS CUSTODIES SCARECROWS; it should appear #1 on your search.

No doubt, if this prediction comes to fruition — and perhaps it won’t — it can all be blamed on, by then, ex-Republican Selectman Lauretano.

Chris Janelli

Salisbury Republican Town Committee

 

Salisbury

 

Sarah Polhemus for Salisbury treasurer

As a child in Salisbury, Sarah spent a lot of time hanging out at the Erickson Farm on Bunker Hill “helping” with chores, etc. Ma Erickson gave Sarah a small pail so she could help with the milking.

Later on following education, marriage and raising a family, she went to work here in town in her mother’s real estate office. When her mother, Brownie Robinson, retired, Sarah and her sister, Pettee, formed the real estate firm of Robinson and Polhemus with their office on Wells Hill in Sarah’s house. After spending 30 years in real estate, the firm closed its doors.

Sarah next served for several years as clerk of the Church Council at Salisbury’s Congregational Church.

Sarah now wishes to “pay back” the town for all the many years she has enjoyed living and working here. She was a long- time  friend of  former Selectman Charlotte Reid, who used to  urge Sarah to enter politics.

I’ve known Sarah for decades. She has for years kept up with the goings on in and out of town government.

She has an open mind, knows the physical layout of the town and its history. She gets along well with people in a low key and pleasant manner. She understands business. She has a good sense of humor, which (I believe) is necessary to survive anywhere.

I support her in her bid for town treasurer.

George Kiefer

Salisbury

 

 

 

Marshall Miles for Region One

As a former Salisbury Region One representative and parent of four HVRHS graduates, I endorse Marshall Miles for the Salisbury representative to the Region One Board. As an avid supporter of Region One, Marshall has worked tirelessly to inform the public about all aspects of the school system. In recording (for public access TV) the Region One board meetings, he has given us the information that each of us requires to make informed decisions. We can listen, reference the facts and then decide whether the Region One Board of Education and the administrators are acting in our best interests. It is an invaluable service for the community.

Salisbury, with the most weighted vote on the board, needs a representative with such a deep commitment and knowledge of the Region. He will represent us, advocate for us and continue his established leadership role.

Virginia Kruger

Lakeville

 

 

SWSA volunteers are simply great

Salisbury Winter Sports Association would like to thank the sponsors and all those who attended our fourth annual BrewSki Fest this past weekend. We greatly appreciate the efforts of Dylan Baker and Chris Battista of Stateline Wine and Spirits who have organized the vendors and products for this event. Their hard work, along with Sunday in the Country Food Drive and the SWSA volunteers have made this event more successful every year. Hope to see you all again next year!

Ken Barker, President, Salisbury Winter 

Sports Association

Salisbury 

 

Moon for Board of Ed in Salisbury

I am writing this letter in support of Keith Moon as a candidate for the Salisbury Central School Board of Education.

Keith is a long-standing member of our local community having lived here with his wife Bridget and two sons since 1989. At The Hotchkiss School he teaches all things related to Russia, including its history, literature and language. He is also the dean for the class of 2017 and the boys’ head swim coach since 1994. Keith is not only an active member of  The Hotchkiss School faculty. He also contributes his time and expertise in the wider community. For the past 19 years he has coordinated a swim-a-thon to raise money for the Northwest Connecticut Special Olympics. (The next swim-a-thon is Nov. 3 if you would like to participate.) For the past three years he has taught well-received courses on Russian literature at Noble Horizons. 

Keith is a 27-year teaching veteran and is passionate about public education in our town. Although no longer a parent of an SCS student, he believes in the high level of learning that occurs in its classrooms and is grateful for the quality education his sons have received there — an education that has stood them in good stead as they progress through their school careers.

We are blessed in Salisbury with a board of education that, despite its differences, conducts respectful dialogue with the goal of promoting and ensuring the best learning environment we can offer our community’s children. Keith is ready and willing to do his part to further that goal in the spirit of civility, humanity, and dedication that typify all other aspects of his life. 

Please vote for Keith Moon, a life-long educator and contributing member of Salisbury.

Mary B. O’Neill

Lakeville

 

 

All for Bancroft, Fuhr in election

I want to add to the eloquent letters that have already been sent to The Lakeville Journal in support of Harding Bancroft and Howard Fuhr to serve on Sharon’s Board of Finance. 

Beyond the qualifications stressed in the other letters, both candidates are friendly and humble men, with sensible and conservative approaches to Sharon’s finances:

Harding Bancroft stresses that the Board of Finance should work cooperatively with — but independent of — the Board of Selectmen. He wants the mill rate to be set as low as possible, without sacrificing critical town services, safety and education. He believes the budget process must have clear budget line ownership and accountability and be completely independent. And he wants the allocation of significant discretionary funds to be an open process with town participation.

Howard Fuhr stresses that no more taxpayer money should be spent than is necessary to maintain the town’s infrastructure and the quality of life of Sharon residents.  He believes that capital needs should be funded through a disciplined approach that involves long-term planning. And he wants adequate reserves to be on hand to cover unforeseen events, such as storms and other disasters that could jeopardize the town’s infrastructure and quality of life.

Harding Bancroft and Howard Fuhr will give Sharon’s Board of Finance the responsibility, experience and fiscal independence the town needs.  I hope that they will receive the support of voters on Nov. 5. 

Carol Ascher

 

Sharon 

 

Everyone can win for Sharon Board of Finance

Three candidates are running for the Sharon Board of Finance this election. Unfortunately the ballot doesn’t reveal that all three can easily serve together. Voting for incumbent Mary Robertson, and bringing Howard Fuhr on post-election as an alternate is what is best for Sharon.

State statute sets the Board of Finance as the only municipal board with an even number of seats, in this case six. This structure allows for a politically balanced board, to maintain checks and balances for the Board of Selectmen. Sharon’s current board functions in exactly this manner, with three voting Republicans, three voting Democrats and an alternate for each party. The current board works exceptionally well for the town, with a refreshingly open dynamic, resulting in votes which are nearly always unanimous.

Mary Robertson joined the board after being appointed to fill a vacancy. In filling the vacancy she also filled a void, being the only member with an MBA and professional background in finance. Her ability to view municipal issues as business decisions gleans insights which have helped guide the board through complex bonding and refinancing challenges. Mary has a perfect blend of gauging short-term need versus long-term strategic planning. In addition, she has served as the board’s liaison in teacher contract negotiations. Losing her service would be a blow to both the board and the town.

But the simple fact is everyone can win and have a seat on the board. Harding Bancroft is running unopposed to “move up” from his current alternate spot, thus creating an alternate opening which will be appointed immediately following the election. This is where Howard Fuhr should start on the board — not by challenging a valuable incumbent and jeopardizing Sharon’s political balance. For these reasons I encourage you to vote for Mary Robertson on Nov. 5.

Eric Seibold

Board of Finance, Alternate

Sharon

 

Fowler merits vote in Sharon

I highly recommend Jessica Fowler for the Sharon Board of Selectmen. She is an intelligent young woman who grew up in this area and attended our schools. Since her return she has actively served the town in various capacities. 

Jessica recognizes that enrollment in the school is down and that it’s hard for many people to find a good job to stay in the town. As a selectman, Jessica will be proactive in encouraging Sharon residents to get more involved in solving these problems, in working with regional groups and the state of Connecticut, and to help maintain Sharon as it is — a lovely rural town with volunteers providing firemen and EMTs. As chair of Sharon’s Long Range Planning Committee, Jessica has helped provide answers and guidelines to some of Sharon’s problems.

She will be a strong and enthusiastic asset to the Board of Selectmen.

Mardee Cavallaro

Sharon

 

We’re fortunate in Sharon

We are incredibly fortunate here in Sharon that former Selectman John Mathews has thrown his hat in our ring once again. We could have been facing an all new BOS with no actual service in this role at a critical time in our future.

John made Sharon his home not long after college in 1977 and began a new business here. He served tirelessly as our selectman for 17 of those years. He was responsible for an innovative election ordinance passed several years ago and subsequently adopted by other towns allowing candidates to run for the first selectman position only. He was an original member of our Long Range Planning Committee, past chair of the Board of Recreation, member of the Sharon School Building Committee and a host of other services to the people of our community.

We are indeed fortunate in that following so many years of dedication, John was thrown under the bus by his own party for the cardinal sin of voting his conscience rather than the party line right or wrong. He stood up for you and me, did the right thing by us, kept taxes affordable for all and his eye firmly on Sharon’s future. He scrutinized issues openly, never rubber-stamping decisions along party lines. So, again, I say we are fortunate indeed that he is ready, willing and able to serve us in his uniquely honest, open, future looking way again.

Anne Saunders

Sharon 

 

Sharon should not be like Washington

I was just about to send you, Dear Editor, a letter that began, “An interesting counter-trend may be unfolding in Sharon: Partisan sniping is in remission.” I concluded that draft with, “There’s no rancor about elections here in Sharon.”

Oops! Premature.... My Oct. 10 Lakeville Journal then arrived. I read this in the letters: “Consider [first selectman candidate Brent Colley’s] opposition. I dislike the term ‘opponent,’ so I’ll call him ‘the other guy.’ The other guy is known in town in large part for criticizing the current first selectman. It appears he has an ax to grind.... At selectmen’s meetings, he has let forth with a litany of mostly road-related complaints.” This letter — signed by Dale Jones, another electoral candidate! — then complains that the Other Guy (aka Howard Randall) “never sought a one-on-one [private?] meeting” with First Selectman Loucks. But isn’t that precisely what public BOS meetings are for? And as Dale unwittingly confirms when he sneers at Howard’s “litany” of complaints at meetings, the nameless Other Guy (unlike Dale and Brent Colley) has taken the trouble to be at most of those meetings. Dale then himself “lets forth,” with “it smacks of vendetta politics.” Well, to me, Howard’s “it” smacks of informed participation in town-meeting democracy: he has actually built roads. (By the way, Dale is laughably wrong: Howard is not at all “retired.” What stray zephyr informed Dale that he is?)

Dale was a fellow Lion who I understand recently resigned over some sort of internal dispute. He and Brent Colley may be good people — but have scant qualifications for town governance compared to what the historical record shows for Howard and selectman candidate Jessica Fowler. I earlier received this revealing email from Brent Colley: “...I am reaching out and asking people how they feel about Sharon.... I would like to know what is important to you.” OK, but Howard and Jessica already pretty much know what’s important; they’ve done plenty of reaching out — years of engaging hands-on with a wide variety of our needs. When Dale says Mr. Colley has “no agenda,” he may be less laudatory than he realizes. Yes, Howard and Jessica do have an agenda: They know what needs to get done.

Woody Allen said he once cheated on a college metaphysics exam: He looked into the soul of the student next to him. We don’t have to do that for Sharon elections, because ideologies are largely irrelevant, as are vague claims of leadership qualities. It’s enough simply to catalog the candidates’ demonstrated expertise, experience, and length of service for the people of Sharon. In fact, we do have some candidates who measure up well to those very practical criteria: Howard and Jessica, among others.

In Sharon we don’t need to study metaphysics or grind axes or gin up vendettas. Nevertheless, we are seeing demeaning little tells such as denying an honest, plain-spoken candidate his name. What do we need? A focus on proven know-how.

Alan Tucker

Sharon

 

A failure to govern

At one time political extremists were called radicals and reactionaries. Liberal and conservative weren’t pejoratives, and governing wasn’t so polarized. What happened to moderation and respect for honest differences in political philosophy? It’s time we get back to calling extremes for what they are, and empower liberals, moderates and conservatives to once again come together to forge workable solutions through thoughtful, constructive debate and compromise. Any elected official, from either side of the aisle, who doesn’t sincerely “show up at the table” has betrayed the constitutional stewardship entrusted to them by their constituents, and should be retired at the next election.

Politics is about issues and competing ideas which tend to separate people. Governing should be about coming together, bridging those differences in our, the people’s, mutual best interests.

Enough is enough. It’s time our public servants roll-up their sleeves and prove, once and for all, whether our trust has been placed wisely, or squandered. If our government is broken, it’s only because our leaders have failed to govern.

Chris Abeel

Sharon and Scotch Plains, N.J.

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