Other options for holiday tree lighting are in the air

FALLS VILLAGE — The Board of Selectmen gave a provisional endorsement to the Recreation Commission to develop a plan for a permanent town Christmas tree on the Town Farm property (site of the town pool). The decision was made during the board’s regular monthly meeting Thursday, Feb.9.Margaret Caiati, appearing for the commission, said the idea is to draw attention to the Town Farm property and its possibilities for hiking, cross-country skiing, sledding parties and so on. To avoid detracting from the traditional tree lighting on the town Green, the comission plans to develop a holiday festival for the center of town.She said it would be nice to drive along Route 126 and see a lit-up tree.Selectman Chuck Lewis said he thought it was a good idea, “but I wouldn’t want to see the town Green abandoned. It’s good for businesses” when the tree lighting occurs.Selectman Greg Marlowe agreed with Lewis. “It’s critical to keep the flow into the downtown,” and First Selectman Pat Mechare said while she had “mixed feelings” about moving the tree lighting from the Green, she thought the proposal worthy of further study. Also:• Mechare reported that the Falls Village Voluunteer Fire Department’s building committee (of which she is a member) is looking at revisions to the plans for a new firehouse on Route 7, to bring the cost down without changing the footprint. The existing plan was defeated in a referendum last year.• The town has set up an emergency notification system with AT&T. Anyone with an AT&T land line is in the system; people with other services have to register.• The annual town report for the 2010-11 fiscal year should be at the printer this week, and the selectmen will be setting a date for the annual town meeting shortly.• Mechare reported she was elected chairman of the Northwestern Connecticut Council of Governments.• The meeting was held as a special meeting on Feb. 9 because the usual date, Monday, Feb. 13, is a state holiday.

Latest News

Legal Notices - November 6, 2025

Legal Notice

The Planning & Zoning Commission of the Town of Salisbury will hold a Public Hearing on Special Permit Application #2025-0303 by owner Camp Sloane YMCA Inc to construct a detached apartment on a single family residential lot at 162 Indian Mountain Road, Lakeville, Map 06, Lot 01 per Section 208 of the Salisbury Zoning Regulations. The hearing will be held on Monday, November 17, 2025 at 5:45 PM. There is no physical location for this meeting. This meeting will be held virtually via Zoom where interested persons can listen to & speak on the matter. The application, agenda and meeting instructions will be listed at www.salisburyct.us/agendas/. The application materials will be listed at www.salisburyct.us/planning-zoning-meeting-documents/. Written comments may be submitted to the Land Use Office, Salisbury Town Hall, 27 Main Street, P.O. Box 548, Salisbury, CT or via email to landuse@salisburyct.us. Paper copies of the agenda, meeting instructions, and application materials may be reviewed Monday through Thursday between the hours of 8:00 AM and 3:30 PM at the Land Use Office, Salisbury Town Hall, 27 Main Street, Salisbury CT.

Keep ReadingShow less
Classifieds - November 6, 2025

Help Wanted

Weatogue Stables has an opening: for a full time team member. Experienced and reliable please! Must be available weekends. Housing a possibility for the right candidate. Contact Bobbi at 860-307-8531.

Services Offered

Deluxe Professional Housecleaning: Experience the peace of a flawlessly maintained home. For premium, detail-oriented cleaning, call Dilma Kaufman at 860-491-4622. Excellent references. Discreet, meticulous, trustworthy, and reliable. 20 years of experience cleaning high-end homes.

Keep ReadingShow less
Indigo girls: a collaboration in process and pigment
Artist Christy Gast
Photo by Natalie Baxter

In Amenia this fall, three artists came together to experiment with an ancient process — extracting blue pigment from freshly harvested Japanese indigo. What began as a simple offer from a Massachusetts farmer to share her surplus crop became a collaborative exploration of chemistry, ecology and the art of making by hand.

“Collaboration is part of our DNA as people who work with textiles,” said Amenia-based artist Christy Gast as she welcomed me into her vast studio. “The whole history of every part of textile production has to do with cooperation and collaboration,” she continued.

Keep ReadingShow less