To the Editor:
Are you mad at your inflated property revaluation? Do you feel that the town is deliberately inflating property values in order to save tax dolla...
Two matches. Two wins.
This one was a bit tougher than the first, but Newtown High School's boys' volleyball team - a three-set victor against visiting Darien i...
Shirley M. Camejo, 84, of Delray Beach, Fla., former longtime resident of Newtown, died on March 30, at Bethesda Hospital in Florida. She was the widow of Raul ...
The fourth annual Newtown Woman's Club Spring Fling Sing-Along - in the Alexandria Room at Edmond Town Hall on Saturday, April 14, at 6 pm - will celebrate the ...
Newtown High School' girls' and boys' lacrosse teams began the season with convincing wins - the girls posting a 15-3 victory over visiting Immaculate of Danbur...
To the Editor:
I am proud to live in the state with the steepest decline in violent crime of any state in the nation. Since Connecticut enacted tougher gun regu...
To the Editor:
I am saddened that a cloud of disappointment and criticism about judgment hangs over Elizabeth Esty as she comes to the end of her service in Con...
The Board of Education set its sights on June at its meeting on April 3 and voted to approve both graduation dates for Newtown High School and Newtown Middle Sc...
Newtown High School's Kyle Roche and Ridgefield's Alex Price each battled on the mound in the baseball season opener, in Newtown, on Saturday, March 31. In the ...
Winter's recent reminder that Mother Nature, not the calendar, really decides what season it is may not have been welcomed by many who had already had e...
Rejecting or approving town budgets has nothing to do with 'smart' growth. These budgets are expected to grow appropriately as cost of services increases.
The status quo is clearly not appealing to voters who rejected the school budget at first and only narrowly approved the town's budget. Smart growth is the name of the game here. That would be growth that respects our past, retains and ensures our vibrancy, and simultaneously widens our tax base.
The Newtown Conservation Coalition is basically a NIMBY snake oil salesman. They jump from cause to cause with the sole goal of making sure nothing changes. It is only a matter of time before they lower their threshold, get to acres, and want an accessory building, not in "their" town. They will bust out a new poster of a bulldozer tramping over a "historic" stone wall and protest in front of any town meeting.