Benjamin A. Palagonia, 88, of Sherman died September 2 in New Milford Hospital. He was born March 30, 1927, in Brooklyn, N.Y., and was a son of the late Girolom...
To the Editor:
I appreciated Mr LaPorta's letter of last week [“Some Ideas To Save The Flagpole”] mostly due to its positive and constructive nature.
I would li...
To the Editor:
Two years ago Republicans posed the question, “Where do we go from here?” We had been through some difficult times and have still managed to mai...
“Useful, with a pleasant degree of humor,” touts the cover of the 2016 Old Farmer’s Almanac. This year’s issue is filled with tips and trends, tales of the usua...
To the Editor:
It has come to my knowledge that both our US senators and our congresswoman are marching in lockstep with the Obama administration on the Iran tr...
Patricia R. (Daino) Bonetti, 95, a resident of Fairfield for nearly 70 years, and beloved wife of 74 years to Dante Bonetti, died peacefully at her home August ...
Last fall, Two Coyotes Wilderness School launched a “365 Days of Nature for Kids” campaign to get kids out in nature year round, not just during the spring and ...
Multiple Break-Ins
Police said that on the afternoon of Saturday, September 5, they received a report that forced entries had been made into five locked mo...
The radio dispatchers at the Newtown Emergency Communications Center at Town Hall South, 3 Main Street, report the following fire calls and the responders:
...
The three-time South-West Conference champion Newtown High School football team is looking forward to continuing its run of success in conference play as the 20...
I have lived in Newtown for over 60 years and this is the first I have ever heard of the Rochambeau Trail. When I checked with the National Park Service and our state only Nationally Historic Site the official records of the Rochambeau Trail administrated by NPS does not travel through this property. If you are arguing it is "Near" the trail then where was the outrage when Big Y was built? The new development on 6 and 25 or even the Starbucks.
A lot of things have changed in Sandy Hook shopping area. The old bridge was no longer needed, the town helped create parking , brick sidewalks and classic street lights were added, and zoning was adjusted to add housing. Spending money on a bridge from nowhere makes no sense, focus on things that will add to the viability of the Sandy Hook Center.
You have Capital Tax Recovery confused with a different company, Municipal Tax Services. Municipal Tax Services works with the City of Waterbury. That was discussed at a previous counsel meeting.