A Year Is Too Long To Wait

It has been almost a year since former Winsted Town Planner Ray Carpentino resigned from his position, leaving an empty office in Town Hall and one fewer person working to forge economic development in town. The most recent news from the town manager’s office regarding progress has been the same it’s been for the past 11 months: Nothing new to report.

Considering Winsted’s continuing state of economic disrepair and obvious need for a full-time planner, it is astounding that a new person has not been hired yet. A replacement for Carpentino should have been found within a month of his departure.

For a town that boasts boundless economic opportunities in its public brochures and mission statements, it would only stand to reason that someone in Town Hall should be managing those opportunities, drawing in investors, filling empty buildings, signing contracts and serving as a liaison between developers and the Planning and Zoning Department — in short, being a town planner.

The lack of such a person at Town Hall has underscored the industrial blight that remains in town, including the controversial, town-owned former Lambert Kay building on Lake Street, where numerous windows along the Meadow Street side of the building have been smashed by vandals. Town employees need only to look across the street from Town Hall to see the ugly, unoccupied Barrett building looming over the Mad River.

Sadly, as Winsted has waited almost a year for a new town planner to come to town, these properties and others have remained stagnant in town. Economic development has fallen on the shoulders of committee volunteers who have other full-time jobs. No one has really taken charge of the ship.

The news at Monday’s Board of Selectmen’s meeting was exactly the same as it was six months ago. A final round of applicants is still being considered, but no one has been approached to take the job. A year has been too long to wait for a new town planner, but it looks like Winsted will have to wait a little longer.

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