January 15, 2021

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The Greenwich Weekly Newspaper, Local, local, local.

January 15, 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

COVID-19 Numbers Show Improvement in Greenwich

By Richard Kaufman

After seeing a surge in cases which stemmed from the Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year holidays, it appears as if the COVID-19 curve is f lattening in Greenwich. First Selectman Fred Camillo and Vice P resident of P ublic Relations at Greenwich Hospital, Dana Marnane, relayed some positive news on Wednesday du r i ng t he week ly COV I D -19 briefing. As of Tuesday, Greenwich had 180 active cases, down 55 from the week before. However, cases

increased by 240 over that time period, bringing the total number of residents who have tested positive since the pandemic began to 2,905. The death toll increased by two since last week, to 75, since March. At Greenwich Hospital as of Wednesday afternoon, 27 COVID-19 patients are being treated in-house, down from 34 last week. Of the 27, four are in the Intensive Care Unit, two of whom are on ventilators. To date since March, Greenwich Hospital has discharged 1,010 patients home or to a rehab facility. “We a re def i n itely seei ng a f lattening of that curve, and

we’re starting to see a downward trend. We’re starting to feel a little hopeful,” Marnane said, noting that outpatient offices and procedures a r e op en , a nd t he ho spit a l’s Emergency Room is accepting all patients. “We want to urge people not to delay care. If they’re having any concerns, especially if they’re heart or stroke related, don’t delay, come in,” Marnane added. The State of Connecticut is slated to move into Phase 1B of the vaccine distribution campaign on Jan. 18. Officials from Greenwich Hospital, the tow n health

department, and Camillo were scheduled to have a meeting on Wednesday afternoon to iron out details on how the distribution will be implemented. Greenw ich Hospital has administered more than 1,900 vaccinations to staff, and will expand outward in Phase 1B, which is expected to, as of Wednesday, include people aged 75 and above, front line essential workers and individuals and staff in congregate settings. However, the priority groups could change, as Gov. Ned Lamont will have the final say on who gets the vaccine next.

“We are working on our plan and plan to start that [vaccination] process next week, and hopefully by the end of this week start to register people. We encourage eve r yon e to b e v a c c i n ate d ,” Marnane said. Information for Greenwich residents who are eligible to be vaccinated will be released shortly, Camillo said. “We’ll get a plan in place and get it out as soon as possible. We want to see what the Governor’s committee says Thursday on the next phase,” Camillo said. At Greenwich Point, Camillo

said workers at the admission booth will remain indefinitely due to high volume in recent weeks. Because Greenwich is still in a COVID red zone, capacity is set at 75%, which equates to about 750 cars. Only those with valid Greenwich ID can be admitted. Many people have had to be turned away. “Hang on, and hopefully with the stabilization and flattening of the curve and we see more people get vaccinated and we start to turn the corner, we’ll be able to go back to the normal winter policy,” Camillo said.

Local News Briefs You Need to Know Portal Opens for Vaccine Registration Local doctors are recommending a portal through the Town of Fairfield for vaccine registration. For our Connecticut residents: there is a website from Fairfield CT that may help residents register for a COV I D-19 vaccine more easily. According to the website, registration is currently for people 75 and older. The site form is actually listed as a survey with the following language, "The survey below is to enable registration for COVID-19 Vaccination for those eligible at this time. This survey enables the Health Department upload your initial information into the Vaccine Ad m i n ist rat ion M a nagement System ( VA MS) wh ich is the system you will use to register for vaccination. Within 24 hours, each individual will receive an email from CDC.GOV/VAMS providing instructions to register in VAMS, complete the required medical forms and to select a vaccination appointment." The form is available here: fairfieldct.org/covidvaccinesurvey The Town of Greenwich should be rolling out their plan shortly.

SENTINEL

Bruce Museum Announces Temporary Closure The Bruce Museum announced today that it will be temporarily closed to the public ef fective Tuesday, January 12, 2021, due to challenges encountered during the ongoing construction project to create the New Bruce, which make it difficult to keep the public galleries open. Museum staf f will continue to work, and public programs, which are all online already due to the pandemic, will continue as planned. This closure comes as the Museum looks to the future, with the construction of a major 43,000-square-foot addition that will double the size of the Museum by fall of 2022. “We are enduring some of the g row ing pains associated with any major expansion,” said Robert Wolterstorff, The Susan E. Lynch Executive Director. “I’m very hopeful that we will reopen soon.”.”

the table this winter. The GPD w i l l hold a fo o d drive at the town’s Public Safety Complex off Greenwich Avenue at 11 Bruce Place from 8 a.m. to noon Jan. 23, rain or shine. The most needed items are cereal, oatmeal, beans, peanut butter and jelly as well as canned tuna, chicken and chili. The food drive is part of their ongoing initiatives to help the community.

Drought Update Aquarion Water Co. is showing that the Greenwich reservoir was at 62.3% capacity as of the end of December. Water restrictions, which function on a scale of 1 to 4, with 4 being the worst, remain at Level 3.

Stadium Update

Members of a Representative Town Meeting committee did not endorse a resolution calling for greater oversight of stadium construction improvements at Greenwich High School. Greenwich Police The full RTM is also expected Organizing Jan 23 to vote on the resolution, which Food Drive calls for the creation of a building The Greenwich Police committee to run the project, at Depar tment is ask ing for the their next full meeting on Jan. 19. community’s help for their drive to ensure all residents have food on

L.O.V.E.

EVENTS Editor@GreenwichSentinel. com ANNOUNCEMENTS Weddings & engagements; promotions, achievements; births; letters to the editor; obituaries. These are free. Beth@GreenwichSentinel. com SPORTS Paul@GreenwichSentinel.com ADVERTISING Peter@GreenwichSentinel. com; call 203-4850226; or buy online at GreenwichSentinel.com/ Advertise STORY IDEAS Publisher@ GreenwichSentinel.com COLUMNISTS Columnists and community impact. Jenny at CommunityImpact@ GreenwichSentinel.com JIM KNOX info@beardsleyzoo.org LETTERS Editor@GreenwichSentinel. com CORRESPONDENCE PO Box 279 Greenwich, CT 06836

By Jill S. Woolworth, LMFT We have been trained to solve relationship problems the way we’d solve any ot her problem. Th is is what got us good grades in school and promotions at work. However, our ability to fix the problem is not what our partner wants when he or she is upset. Rather, he or she wants to be seen and heard. An easy way to know what to do is remember the acronym L.O.V.E. Listen twice as much as you want to listen. Open space for your partner to talk more by asking what else happened. Va l i d a t e t h a t w h a t upset your partner really happened and is worthy of concern. (“That was a rough morning!”) And Empathize by sharing how you would have felt in that situation. (“I would have been angry, too.”)

Discounted Radon Testing

nation has stood for more than 244 years. Every American of all political stripes, backgrounds, and viewpoints must stand together in condemnation of this lawlessness and di srespect for our nation . There is NO excuse for what we are witnessing in Washington, DC, and there should be zero tolerance nor should there be excuse making for those who are involved in actions that are creating a stain upon the image of the greatest nation on Earth. Our forefathers who wrote the foundation of our Democracy would most assuredly be appalled by this lack of respect. This degradation of Democracy needs to end now. The world is watching, and history is recording the actions of those in charge, and especially of those who remain silent. No nation can claim to be the world’s leading democracy when it can’t secure its own Capitol. We are better than this. We are a nation of laws. We are a country that has led by example. We are American s . We mu st retur n to the moral compass of respect and bipartisanship that have made this country the global leader it is. First Selectman, Fred Camillo

The month of Januar y has been designated as Radon Action M o nt h b y t h e Un i t e d S t a t e s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and Greenw ich health officials are urging residents to safeguard against the “silent killer.” T h r o u g h o u t Ja nu a r y, t h e town of Greenwich is offering discounted radon testing kits for air and well water, which can be obtained from the Department of Health Laboratory, located on the ground floor of Town Hall during COVID/GPS Update In-person classroom learning lab hours, Monday through Friday, r e s u m e d t h i s w e e k i n t h e 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Visit Greenwich Town website. Greenwich Public Schools. According to the school district’s online tracker, as of Camillo Issues Statement Wednesday, 19 new coronavirus on Washington Events cases had been reported. One of the most honored There are 29 active cases. traditions of our great Republic is Of those, 19 are students, 5 are the peaceful transition of power. te achers, 2 a re non-te ach i ng What is transpiring today in our staff and 2 are outside providers, Nation’s Capitol is disgraceful and New Briefs Continue on Page 2 according to the tracker. against everything good that this

Become the voice of Greenwich young people. Apply to the Greenwich Sentinel Foundation Student Journalism Institute (SJI). The institute has one opening per school in Greenwich and will serve as a venue for students to learn about the writing and editing process; engage with their peers; and publish their work. SJI is excited to provide our community with broader insight into how our local youth see the world while connecting and bringing our large community closer. To receive an application or find out more send an email to: communityimpact@greenwichsentinel.com

Illustrated by Wajih Chaudhry

SUBMIT

Eleven of those cases are from Greenwich High. Three each are from Hamilton Avenue School and Western Middle School; two each at Eastern Middle, Glenville and North Mianus Schools; and one each at Central Middle, Cos Cob, New Lebanon, Old Greenwich, Parkway and Riverside schools.

Calls to Action

SUBSCRIBE www.GreenwichSentinel. com/subscribe SUBSCRIBER DELIVERY ISSUES & REQUESTS Thomas@maninmotionllc. com or call 203-515-2288

Legislators Sworn In T h e C o n n e c t i c ut G e n e r a l Assembly opened its 2021 session, taking the oath of office outdoors. From the windblown blacktop on the south side of the Capitol, Secretary of State Denise Merrill called the roll for the Senate. The House followed at the north steps of the Capitol, overlooking Bushnell Park. With Democrats winning super majorities of 24-12 in the Senate and 97-54 in the House, re-election of Senate P resident P ro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, to a fourth term, and the election of Rep. Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, as the new speaker were pro forma. Democrats will fully control all three branches of government in Connecticut this legislative session.

I n it ia l ly, prac t ic i n g L .O.V. E . m a y b e counterintuitive. When we treat others with L.O.V.E, it c a l m s t hei r d ist re ss and often enables them t o d i s c ove r t h e i r ow n solutions. Ian and Amanda are both doctors. Professionally, they have impressive toolkits. It wasn’t easy for them to learn to keep their toolkits closed—until they began practicing L.O.V.E. with each other. “I’m ready for your suggestion s” is their way of signaling to each other that they feel sufficiently heard to engage in problem-solving. G r e e n wi c h r e 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.

Community Centers Inc. needs paper bags or large handled bags for food deliveries (think fresh direct bags). The bags can be dropped at CCI’s new home at 2 St. Roch Avenue, Greenwich CT. Reach out to Vanessa at (203) 869-1276 or Vanessa.Cardinal@ ccigreenwich.org for more information. TAG, the Transportation Association of Greenwich needs volunteers to deliver groceries MondayFriday between 9:30am and 1:00pm. Volunteers are desperately needed on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday mornings. Hop on the TAG bus one of these mornings to deliver grocery bags via contactless delivery. Go to https://www.ridetag.org/ and click on volunteer to get started or reach out to TAG at 203 637-4345 or debbie@ridestag.org. Come join the Kids In Crisis Winter Scavenger Hunt, an exciting family-friendly virtual event. The game will be ‘live’ February 5 – February 15, 2021. The Scavenger Hunt is full of fun challenges including

Winter Wonderland, Cold as Ice and Bundle Up. Proceeds help support Kids in Crisis. To join in the hunt sign up on their website today: https://www. kidsincrisis.org/ or call 203 661-1911. Jewish Family Services needs shoppers for their Supermarketing for Seniors program. Take an extra shopping trip during the week to help a senior fill their cupboards. Each senior provides a shopping list and grocery money. Reach out to JFS to partner with a local senior: email ebrown@jfsgreenwich. org, call 203-622-1881 or go to their website: https:// jfsgreenwich.org/, for more information. Inspirica needs dinners for the women and children living in their Stamford shelter. Order a meal from a restaurant or grocery store to be delivered to: 141 Franklin Street Stamford, CT 06901. Please reach out for more information or with any questions, by contacting Sydney DeLago at sdelago@InspiricaCT. org or call (203) 388-0122.

Happy

100

th

Birthday!

Mary Marino Schomp


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