Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

BOE talks about reopening in fall, bandwith a challenge

WEBUTUCK — The Webutuck Board of Education (BOE) held its reorg meeting for 2020-21 on Monday, July 6, via Zoom (for more, go to www.tricornernews.com). After 15 minutes, it moved to its regular meeting and plans for reopening following this year’s COVID-19 statewide closure. 

Business Administrator Robert Farrier gave an update on those plans. With his team focused specifically on facilities and maintenance, food service and transportation, Farrier’s group met and is preparing a draft plan; it will meet with the other groups and draft a plan that the district will review before submitting to the state.

Seeing as the BOE awarded the septic system construction bid to OCS Industries, Inc., for its capital improvement project at the BOE’s June 29 meeting, Farrier said the district will have a kickoff meeting once the company has everything in order and submit their submittals of insurance. Construction was anticipated to begin on-site by mid-July.

Director of Student Services and Curriculum and Instruction Jen Eraca said her team is focused on technology, which she said was at the crux of how the district is going to function in September. Working with the instruction team, she shared her plans to meet with administrators to come up with a preliminary roll out. She added plans to meet with the district’s health services about transportation and getting students into the building. 

Eraca gave an update on a grant with Harvard University, focusing on rural school districts. She spent time recently with Webutuck Elementary School Principal Jennifer Hengen and Eugene Brooks Intermediate School teacher Amanda Simon discussing the project.

The Extended School Year just startedy; Eraca will contact staff to see how it went and how students’ needs were met. After reaching out to Webutuck High School Principal Katy McEnroe about failures for the 2019-20 school year, she reported that 16 students failed. She plans to do further analysis on the subject.

Superintendent of Schools Ray Castellani reported there will be no new hiring this year. He added Governor Andrew Cuomo is waiting for school districts to turn in plans on reopening to his task force. Castellani said the district has a number of options. So far, it’s running into many issues regarding rotating students in the building, transportation needs, food service needs, class sizes and schedules, etc.

“The good news is I think we can accommodate any plan that we come up with,” Castellani said. “We have enough space and we’re small enough that we can accommodate K through sixth every day; we have enough staff to accommodate smaller class sizes… We have lots of ideas.”

The biggest issue the district is facing is, Castellani said, is the amount of bandwidth if the district were to do everything virtually. According to www.webopedia.com, “bandwidth” refers to both “a range within a band of frequencies or wavelengths” and “the amount of data that can be transmitted in a fixed amount of time.” 

This is especially important if the district brings in students in grades seventh through 12th on a rotating basis or does virtual instruction. For students in K through sixth, the district has the capacity to bring students in person, though it’s noted that they are still working on what that schedule would look like.

Latest News

Motorcycle crash near Route 7 prompts Life Star landing at HVRHS

Motorcycle crash near Route 7 prompts Life Star landing at HVRHS

A Life Star helicopter lands on the front lawn of Housatonic Valley Regional High School on Saturday, May 16, to transport a motorcycle crash victim to a hospital.

Aly Morrissey

LIME ROCK — A motorcycle crash involving a car temporarily shut down a section of Route 112 near the intersection with Route 7 on Saturday afternoon, drawing a large emergency response and prompting a Life Star helicopter landing at Housatonic Valley Regional High School.

Emergency responders at the scene confirmed the incident involved a motorcycle and passenger vehicle. Route 7 was closed from Dugway Road to the intersection of Routes 7 and 112 while crews responded.

Keep ReadingShow less
Van strikes utility pole, closes Route 112 for hours

Traffic was diverted near Wells Hill Road after a crash closed part of Route 112 Friday afternoon.

By James H. Clark

A van crashed into a utility pole on Route 112 near Wells Hill Road Friday afternoon, leaving the driver hospitalized in serious condition and forcing the highway to close for several hours.

The crash was reported at approximately 3:20 p.m., according to Connecticut State Police Troop B.

Keep ReadingShow less
Voices from our Salisbury community about the housing we need for a healthy, economically vibrant future

Renee Wilcox

If you’ve ever wandered through Paley’s Farm Market, you probably know Renee Wilcox. For thirty years, she has been greeting you with unmistakable warmth—always ready with a smile. Renee grew up in Millerton, but it was in Salisbury that her family found something they’d never had before: a true sense of home. In 2003, she and her husband Bill were living in Millerton, but Bill—a volunteer with the Lakeville Hose Company—was already part of Salisbury life. When the Salisbury Housing Trust finished eight new homes on East Main Street (Dunham Drive), Renee and Bill were the first to sign on.

The story of those houses is really a story about the best parts of our community. Richard Dunham and his wife, Inge, along with the Housing Trust board, poured years of energy and hope into the project. Renee can’t help but light up when she talks about the people who helped her family settle in. Digby Brown came by to install appliances and bathroom cabinets; Barbara Niles spent hours painting; Carl Williams assembled bunk beds for the kids. Rick Cantele, at Salisbury Bank, helped them with their finances so they could qualify for a mortgage, while neighbors arrived at their door with fruit baskets and welcoming words.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Trade Secrets: a glamorous garden event with a deeper mission

Heavy stone garden ornaments, a specialty of Judy Milne Antiques from Kingston, at Trade Secrets 2025.

Christine Bates

Tucked away on Porter Street in downtown Lakeville, Project SAGE is an unassuming building from a street view. But cross the threshold a week before Trade Secrets — one of the region’s biggest gardening events, long associated with Martha Stewart and glamorous plants of all varieties — and you’ll find a bustling world of employees and volunteers getting ready for the organization’s most important event of the year.

“It’s not usually like this,’ laughed Project SAGE director Kristen van Ginhoven. “But with Trade Secrets just around the corner, it’s definitely like this.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Two artists, two Hartford stages, one shared life

Caroline Kinsolving and Gary Capozzielo at home in Salisbury with their dogs, Petruchio and Beatrice

Provided
"He played his violin, I worked on my lines, we walked the dog, and suddenly we were circling each other perfectly."
Caroline Kinsolving

Actor Caroline Kinsolving and violinist Gary Capozziello enjoy their quiet life with their two dogs in Salisbury, yet are often pulled apart to perform on distant stages in far-flung cities. Currently, the planets have aligned, and both are working in Hartford, across Bushnell Park from one another. Bridgewater native Kinsolving is starring in “Circus Fire,” the current production of TheaterWorks Hartford, while Capozziello is a violinist and assistant concertmaster of the Hartford Symphony Orchestra. While Kinsolving hates being away from home, she feels the distance nourishes their relationship.

“We are guardians of each other’s confidence and self-esteem,” she said.

Keep ReadingShow less
Local filmmaker turns spotlight back on Hollywood’s Mermaid

Esther Williams in “Million Dollar Mermaid” (1952).

Provided

For decades, Esther Williams was one of Hollywood’s brightest stars, but the swimming sensation of the silver screen has largely faded from public memory — a disappearance that intrigued Millerton filmmaker Brian Gersten and inspired him to revisit her legacy.

As a millennial, Gersten grew up largely unaware of Williams’ influential career. His teen years in Chicago were spent with friends who obsessed over movies, spending hours at their local independent video store,and watching anything that caught their eye. Somehow, though, they never ventured into the glossy world of synchronized-swimming musicals of the 1940s and ‘50s.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.