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Annual egg hunt provides fun for all ages
Patrick L. Sullivan
Apr 08, 2026
Children swoop and dive for Easter eggs during the annual Falls Village egg hunt.
Patrick L. Sullivan
FALLS VILLAGE – Eager children lined up at the edge of the ball field at Lee H. Kellogg School Saturday, April 4, waiting for the start of the Easter Egg Hunt.
One youngster broke prematurely. The other children hollered at him, and he trotted back a bit sheepishly.
Matt Gallagher, director of programs and operations for Great Mountain Forest Corporation, delivered instructions through a bullhorn. “Take your marks, get set, GO!”
And they went.

In a whirlwind of activity, children ages six and up swooped and dove across the field to grab the plastic eggs filled with candy.
Younger participants between the ages of three and five had their eggs hidden on the playground, while the toddlers had theirs in the sandbox.
Recreation Commission head Melissa Lopes said the set-up ensures younger children have a fair chance without being overrun by older participants.

Three “golden eggs” were hidden, with lucky finders winning larger prizes, including a big candy bar and a couple of gift baskets with toys.
The main event on the ball field lasted about five minutes.
Afterward, the Easter Bunny mingled with the crowd, and the children removed their candy from the plastic eggs and deposited the latter in a bin for use next year.
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Police Blotter: Troop B
Lakeville Journal
Apr 08, 2026
Median Prices Stay Above $700,000
Christine Bates
Apr 08, 2026
The property at 16 Upper Main St., located just behind Sharon Green, sold for $525,000 on March 23. The 0.15-acre parcel had been assessed at $261,700.
Christine Bates
SHARON — The median price for a single-family home in Sharon continued to climb on an annual basis, even as it edged down slightly from the previous month.
The 12-month trailing median price, excluding condominiums, reached $710,000 for the period ending March 31, 2026. That marks a 34% increase from $530,000 in the same period a year earlier and an 8% rise from $655,000 two years ago.
Sales activity remained steady within Sharon’s typical range. A total of 39 single-family homes sold in the 12 months ending March 31, compared with 44 sales in the prior year and 38 sales in the same period ending March 31, 2024. Historically, annual sales in town tend to fall between 35 and 45 transactions.
The seasonal spring surge of new listings has not yet appeared and inventory in all categories remains limited.
As of April 3, there were nine single-family homes on the market. Of those, seven were listed above $1 million and no residential properties were listed below the current $710,000 median price. Eleven parcels of land are listed for sale on the MLS ranging from $139,000 to $2,495,000. Furnished rentals account for six out of seven rental listings.
Sharon March Transfers
8 Mudgetown Road – 4 bedroom/4.5 bath home built in 1750 plus 600 square foot cottage built in 1989 was sold by Arete Warren to Robert Nestor and William Reynolds for $1,450,000
16 Upper Main Street – 3 bedroom/1 bath home on .15 acres built in 1870 was sold by Jeanne Xanthos to Peter and Nichole O’Reilly for $525,000
50 Dug Road – 4 bedroom/2.5 bath home on .26 acres was sold by Laura Geer to Timothy Halle and Stephanie Saetta for $481,144.75.
* Town of Sharon real estate transfers recorded between March 1, 2026, and March 31, 2026, provided by Sharon Town Clerk. Transfers without consideration are not included. Current market listings from Smart MLS and market statistic from Infosparks. 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.
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Salisbury Central School delivers fast-paced spring musical
Patrick L. Sullivan
Apr 08, 2026
SCS students take the stage in “How to Eat Like a Child” Tuesday, March 31.
Patrick L. Sullivan
LAKEVILLE – The cafeteria at Salisbury Central School was alive with music and laughter on Tuesday, March 31, as fourth and fifth graders presented a rollicking performance of “How to Eat Like a Child and Other Lessons in Not Being a Grown-Up.”
The show – directed by music teacher Jennifer Moros – maintained a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it pace, unfolding in a series of 22 vignettes. Each story addressed an aspect of childhood, like how to stay home from school, how to ride in a car and how to laugh hysterically.
Audience members of a certain age were reminded of squabbling with a sibling over territory in the back seat of the station wagon, or making prank phone calls.
Each segment was quick and to the point, and the cast and crew handled the frantic pace with an ease that indicates a lot of rehearsals.
The show was supported by the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation and by SOAR.
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Falls Village selectmen propose $2.6 million spending plan, up 7.3%
Patrick L. Sullivan
Apr 08, 2026
File photo
FALLS VILLAGE – The Board of Finance received the proposed spending plan for 2026-27 from the Board of Selectmen at a special meeting Monday, March 30.
First Selectman Dave Barger presented the proposal, which totals $2,600,436 — an increase of $177,610, or 7.33%, from the current year.
The plan does not include a pay increase for the selectmen. All town employees will receive an increase of 2.5%, except the highway department, whose employees are on a separate step-based pay scale. The average increase for those employees is 3.73%.
Barger said the selectmen’s goal is to “invest in residents and infrastructure” to ensure the town remains “affordable and welcoming.”
Board of Finance member Andrea Downs observed that while several budget lines have large percentage increases, the dollar amounts are far less dramatic.
The Board of Education will present its proposed spending plan on Thursday, April 9, at Town Hall
at 6 p.m.
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HVRHS students, 21st Century Fund showcase partnership
Ruth Epstein
Apr 08, 2026
Connecticut Attorney General William Tong talks with students Jonas Johnson (left) and Ayden Wheeler at the 21st Century for HVRHS event held at the Interlaken Inn on March 31.
Ruth Epstein
FALLS VILLAGE – Housatonic Valley Regional High School students have traveled the world, built robots and helped steward the environment thanks to support from the 21st Century Fund for HVRHS, whose impact was on display March 31 at a showcase at the Interlaken Inn.
The event, titled “Celebration of the Lives We’ve Touched,” featured student-led displays highlighting those experiences, all supported by grants from the fund.
Founded in 1994, the fund was the brainchild of the late Jack Mahoney, a longtime teacher and principal at the school. While on a sabbatical, he visited other high schools across the country and learned that many had established organizations to fund student and teacher projects outside the annual budgets. He brought the idea back, paired up with Salisbury resident, the late Diane Hewat, and in 1994, the 21st Century Fund for HVRHS was born. It has since raised and distributed close to $1 million to the HVRHS community.
The fund supports projects that allow students and teachers to expand learning beyond the classroom, encouraging creativity, exploration and real-world experience. The fund also supports the high school journalism program with the Lakeville Journal.

Students lined the room with their displays. Addie Diorio and Ivy Zheng of Canaan, members of the Robotics team, explained how they have to build a robot from scratch and program it to participate in two competitions a year. “You have to make a commitment,” said Diorio. “From January to March, we worked on it six days a week.” The 13 members are mentored by Devin Rout and Ben Lesch.
Both students said the experience has opened their eyes to the field of engineering, which they may pursue. They, like the others, expressed their deep gratitude for the assistance given by the fund. “It costs a lot of money for parts and competition fees,” Diorio said. “The 21st Century Fund has given us a lot of grants.”
Logan Padelli of Canaan and brothers Owen and Alastair Schnepf of Wassaic, NY, were at the Envirothon booth. That club’s members, which has teacher David Moran as its advisor, aim to improve the environment and ecosystem.
“We like to spend time in nature,” said Owen Schnepf.
This year, students will compete in New Haven on May 21, where they will be tested in five areas: wildlife, forestry, soils, aquatics and current issues, the latter of which changes every year. This year, the topic is non-point soil solutions.

They are appreciative of the fund that, among other things, paid for soil kits and allows them to travel to competitions.
Chris Crane of Canaan and Michael Gawel of Sheffield, Mass., were at the vo-ag table, where they described the lab land, a two-acre parcel just down the road from HVRHS that the school is leasing from Eversource. Students are learning how to monitor irrigation practices at the nearby Housatonic River and will be installing gardens to provide fruits and vegetables for the school cafeteria.
“Everything is student-driven,” said Crane, “and we get industry leaders to guide us.” They both remarked how much help the project has received from the fund.
International Travel Club teachers Danielle Melino and Letitia Garcia-Tripp said they have sent 300 students around the world on service trips to places such as Japan, Thailand, Italy, Greece, Ireland, Scotland, Iceland and the Galápagos Islands. Students visited schools and interacted with children, planted gardens and worked at an elephant sanctuary.
While the teens have to help fundraise for such trips, financial barriers were reduced given the help of the 21st Century Fund. One student showed a video of a trip she’d taken, using it as her capstone project.

Among those who addressed the audience was state Rep. Maria Horn, D-64, of Salisbury, who said nonprofits are facing uncertainty because of federal funding cuts. She praised Mahoney and Hewat for their foresight in establishing the fund to “widen students’ horizons and let them pursue new ideas. There are so many in this community who support our kids.”
Connecticut Attorney General William Tong, who was in attendance, said he was so impressed by the projects he saw and, even though it sounds like a cliché, noted that education is the answer. He touched on some of the issues his office is working on and then mentioned the Birthright Clause now before the Supreme Court, something of which he, as the son of immigrants, has great interest.
Tong said he still marvels that someone who once worked in his parents’ Chinese restaurant could grow up to become Connecticut’s 25th attorney general. “My life was only possible here and no other place in the world,” he said.
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