Date: Fri 31-Jan-1997
Date: Fri 31-Jan-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
Town-Hall-South-FHH-office
Full Text:
Packing Up For The Big Move w/ cut & map
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
For months now, the move to Fairfield Hills has only been the subject of talk
in the lower level of Town Hall South. Now the boxes are coming out, and it is
time to stop talking and start packing.
The 20-plus full- and part-time town employees who work at the deteriorating
Main Street building will be temporarily housed in the first floor at Canaan
House in Fairfield Hills beginning February 10. First Selectman Bob Cascella
received the go ahead to enter into a two-year lease agreement with the state
Monday from both the Board of Selectmen and Legislative Council.
The move will take place February 7-8, with all offices to be closed on
Friday, February 8.
With just one week remaining until the temporary move there is anticipation in
the air throughout the offices of parks & recreation, building, land-use and
health. The employees have mixed feelings about the move. After all, it is not
a former office building these people are moving into, it's a former mental
hospital.
The employees, many of them already packing boxes, discussed the move
Wednesday afternoon.
"We're going to make the best of it," said Town Engineer Ron Bolmer.
No one is looking forward to the packing. Just about everything must go.
"We can't get rid of anything because it's all kind of permanent," Mr Bolmer
added.
The unpacking will likely go on for a few days after the employees settle in
to their new home, but all offices will be open for business on the morning of
Monday, February 10, according to First Selectman Bob Cascella.
Janet Burns of the land use department is hoping the leaking and excess
moisture at Town Hall South she had to deal with will finally be a thing of
the past.
"We're going to miss the mushrooms," she joked, referring to the fungi that
began growing in the P&Z office last winter.
The Parks & Recreation Department will finally be getting windows, something
it never had at Town Hall South. Earlier this week, Deborah Mesinger and
Charlene Paternoster were packing boxes with whatever they could get their
hands on.
Larry Russell of the health department said it will probably take the public a
while to get used to the new location in the early going, but said his office
was dealing with about the same amount of space.
Down in the Building Department, Jean St Jean and Barbara Dzitko were looking
for recruits to come in and help with the packing but were having little luck.
"We're cleaning out our desks and getting things packed up," said Mrs St Jean,
who regularly walks the spacious grounds of the former state mental hospital.
The Town Hall South employees are heading to Fairfield Hills just temporarily,
but there is no telling what the future holds in store. A new permanent site
for their offices has not yet been found.
The police department is expected to eventually take over the vacated portion
of Town Hall South.
