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The Greenwich Weekly Newspaper, Local, local, local.
April 23, 2021
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Back Countr y | Banksv ille | Belle Haven | By ram| Chickahominy | Cos Cob | Glenv ille | Old Greenw ich | Pember w ick | R iverside | Bedford, N Y
GHS Pet Photo Contest Winner
Local News Briefs Mary Staples Webber will be Missed Greenwich icon and friend Mary Staples Webber died on April 20, 2021. We will miss her very much. See next week's issue for her story. PLEASE NOTE Free copies of this newspaper are occasionally sent through the U.S. mail to rotating areas of town. These copies contain a subscription envelope for those wishing to receive the paper every single week. The telephone number of The Greenwich Sentinel listed on those envelopes is incorrect. The correct number is 203-485-0226. SEEC Complaint Dismissed Just weeks after Robert Brady filed a complaint against the Fazio campaign committee with the SEEC (State Elections Enforcement Commission), it was dismissed. COVID/GPS Update According to the Greenwich school district’s online tracker, as of Tuesday, 17 there are 22 active cases. Of those, 20 are students, 1 is a teacher, and 1 is a nonteaching staff according to the tracker. Thirteen of those cases are from Greenwich High, three are from Central Middle, 2 are from Eastern Middle, Hamilton Avenue, and one each is from Glenville and Western Middle. The system does not report Independent School cases. Greenwich Libraries Reopen Starting this Tuesday, April 20, Greenwich Library, Cos Cob Library, and Byram Library will be open to cardholders who have made appointments to browse the new book and children’s collections for 20 minutes at a time. Items that are checked out in these express collections can be checked out for a week, will incur $1 a day overdue fines, and cannot be placed on hold, although no-contact pickup will continue. The library continues to be very mindful of COVID-19 transmission. Upon arrival, card holders will check in at the welcome desk, sanitize their hands, and follow CDC mask and social distancing guidelines. Historic Armory Proposal A pre-application has been submitted with a proposal for the historic Armory, where soldiers were trained in World Wars I and II. The proposal comes from attorney Chip Haslun on behalf of H.B. Nitkin Real Estate, seeking to construct a 6-unit residential building and 2-level parking garage. A full restoration has not been approved by the Planning and Zoning Commission, and the new pre-application will likely maintain the buildings structural integrity, only demolishing the “drill shed”. Tipping Fee Sunset Clause Extended The Representative Town Committee has voted
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BET Approves First Portion of Funds for North Mianus School Repairs. By Richard Kaufman
Dutch, an 8-month-old Cavalier King Charles spaniel and proud pup of Chloe and Reagan Sernick was the subject of the winning pet photo in a contest sponsored by the Hand and Paw Club located at Greenwich High School. The winners decided to donate their prize, a 20-pound bag of dog food and a basket of dog treats and toys, to Outreach to Pets in Need (OPIN) in Stamford.
P&Z on Moderate-Income Housing By Kris Herndon The Af fordable Housing Task Force met on April 15 to continue workshopping Section 6-110 of the Greenwich building regulations, known as the workforce housing regulation. Section 6-110 is intended to create more moderate-income housing, and was envisioned as way for police off icers, teachers, and other town employees to be able to afford to live in the town they serve. Proposals submitted under Section 6-110 must reserve 20% of units for moderate-income tenants. The statute sits alongside 8-30g, a C o n n e c t i c ut s t at e l aw w h i c h mandates a target of 10% affordable housing for towns. Like many towns
Communication Is What’s Received
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By Jill S. Woolworth, LMFT Communication is w h a t ’s r e c e i v e d , n o t what we i ntend. I f we don’t take responsibility for how we deliver our message, it might as well be lost in the mail. When communication goes awry, we often blame the recipient for not listening. But this is as useless as blaming someone for not receiving a letter. If our tone of voice, body la ng uage , or choice of words is off-putting, it is up to us to try again in a different way. If a person thinks that a message of criticism is coming, that there’s “a bomb in the mailbox,” she will run. When a person a nt ic ip ate s b e i n g told that he has messed up or neglected something, his normal human response is to esc ap e or defend himself. In moments of p e r c e i ve d t h r e a t , o u r
“I think it was an extremely successful regulation if you measure success with the number of proposals that came in through the door,” said P&Z Commissioner Katie DeLuca. with high land values, Greenwich has struggled to meet the state-mandated affordability target of 10% set by 8-30g. Though Section 6-110 is one of many ways Greenwich is working toward making housing affordable for a diverse range of residents, affordable units created under the regulation would not count toward the state target. In order to build affordable units in Greenwich, developers must forgo
building lucrative market-rate units. Since real estate, as well as other costs for builders, are high in town, the town encourages developers to take that trade-off by providing incentives in other areas, such as bonuses in Floor Area Ratio (F.A.R.), building height, setbacks, and so on for developments that include affordable units.
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Calls to Action Illustrated by Wajih Chaudhry
SENTINEL
BET Funds NMS Repairs
bra i n s defau lt to fe a r, rarely assuming the other person’s good intentions. Sydney and Adam learned how to tell each other specifically what they wanted. They grew closer as they practiced new ways to communicate. “It would mean the world to me…..” became an introduction that made them both laugh and made it highly likely the other would comply. “When you compliment me in front of your friends, I feel like your hero.” “You doing the laundry is the sexiest thing in the world.” They agree that tone matters, and that there is no such thing as an over-appreciated spouse (or colleague or employee). G re e nwi c h re s i d e n t , Jill Woolworth is author of the book, The Waterwheel, which is available locally at Diane's Books (203-8691515) or info@dianesbooks. com) or at Amazon.
SUBMIT A CALL TO ACTION FOR link will be sent to you. NEXT WEEK'S ISSUE at w w w. greenwichsentinel.com/call-to-action/ B U Y T I C K E T S O R D O N AT E TO ONE OR ALL OF THESE Donate your Brown Bags and or FUNDRAISERS Reusable shopping bags for food United Way 16th A nnual Sole distribution to Community Centers Sisters Luncheon, Thursday, April Inc of Greenwich. Contact Vanessa 29th. Luncheon guests will pick up Cardinal at (203) 869-1276 or vanessa. a wonderful lunch that morning at cardinal@ccigreenwich.org online. Greenwich Country Club. Streaming w ill beg in at 1 2:30pm. For more Join the Riverside Garden Club. information: GreenwichUnitedWay.org/ Apr i l's meeting w ill be held v ia sole-sisters-luncheon/ Zoom on Tuesday, the 27th at 9:30 16th Old Bags Luncheon & Auction am. The speaker will be Dr. Robert May 6 at 11:00 am; 16th Annual Old Marra, Associate Scientist/Forest Bags Luncheon and Auction. For more Pathologist fo The CT Agricultural information and to purchase tickets, Experiment Station. To RSVP, email visit www.ywcagrn.org/obl2021 riversidectgardenclub@gmail.com. The Thirty-Fourth Bruce Museum First two meetings are free. Gala on Saturday, June 12, 2021 at 6:00 PM on a Private Estate, honoring Susan Join Temple Sholom for a Virtual E. Lynch. Please contact Melissa Levin, Mitzvah Project/Social Action Special Events Manager, mlevin@ Engagement Fair Sunday, April brucemuseum.org, or (203) 413-6761, 2 5 f r om 1:0 0 pm to 3:0 0 pm on with questions. Zoom. This free virtual fair features breakout rooms staffed by community Sign up your child for free classes organizations looking for volunteers. Register your child for a class at They will share about their not-for- the Fairf ield Chapter of the Youth profit and how you can get involved. Passion Project (YPP). Children from This program is perfect for volunteers anywhere in CT can take short classes of all ages, including pre b’nai mitzvah in coding, story writing, philosophy, students looking for their Mitzvah origami more! Register to join for free Projects. Register to Lori Baden at lori. between April 16th & March 3rd at baden@templesholom.com and a zoom youthpassionproject.org/register.
INSIDE Editorial & Local News New Worships Columns & Worship Information Astrology Column from Sally Brompton Suduko, Crossword Puzzles & Children's Puzzles Real Estate Dashboard Earth Day Articles Education in Greenwich
The Board of Education (BOE) had requested $8.1 million for emergency repair work related to February's ceiling collapse and f lood damage at North Mianus School (NMS), but the BOE was not prepared with a specific plan for the entire amount or estimates for the cost of repairs. D r. To n i J o n e s , t h e Superintendent of Schools said t h at ac c or d i n g to t he s cho ol district's timeline, there will be a walkthrough of the NMS building for potential project bidders on May 5, with bids opening on May 19. A contract would be issued on May 24. The Board of Estimate and Taxation (BET) funded the portion of that request for which there was a specific plan in place during a special meeting last Friday, voting nine in favor, with three abstentions from Democrats Miriam Kreuzer, L e s l i e M o r i a r t y, a n d L a u r a Erickson, to approve a $2 million appropriation. The Repre sent at ive Tow n Meeting (RTM) now has the option to grant final approval. BET Democrats, school officials, and the North Mianus School community had called for the approval of the full request immediately, because they said that without all the funds, the project could be further delayed. While the full BET expressed supp or t for t he pr oje c t, BET Republicans said they would follow established protocols to deal with such appropriations, a process that has the BOE returning for interim
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Bruce to Reopen Apr. 27 T h e B r uc e Mu s e u m w i l l reopen to members and the public on Tuesday, April 27, 2021, with Let in, Let go, a multi-sensory v ideo projection installation created by Holly Danger, a video artist based in Stamford, CT, who has brought experiential events and immersive installations to audiences around the world. Hol ly Da nger tra nsfor ms ordinary spaces into moving experiences. Each work is a sitespecific, one-of-a-kind experience that comes to life with the energy and presence of the viewer. On view in the Museum’s main gallery through Sunday, May 30, Let in, Let go, explores the synchronization of video, art, light, and sound, and how it relates to emotion, connection, and experience. Her piece Soul Seasons won “Most Innovative,” at the Digital Graffiti Festival in Alys Beach, FL This year, Danger is the honored recipient of the Artist Fellowship Award by the Connecticut Office of the Arts, as well as the Equity Match Grant from the Stamford Women’s Development Council. To learn more, visit hollydanger. com. Upon the Bruce Museum’s reopening following a temporary closure since January 12 , admission w ill be on a “Pay as You Wish” basis th roug h Monday September 6, 2021, with a suggested donation of $10 per adult.