The public is invited to attend a program, "The Opioid Crisis: What you need to know," to be hosted by Trinity Episcopal Church on Sunday, April 29, from 11 am until 12:30 pm.
John D'Eramo, president ...
Visitors to the Newtown Municipal Center on April 13 may be immersed in an atmosphere of blue and green as town employees and school district staffers join Executive Assistant Susan Marcinek, who is h...
Ten large teal ribbons were wrapped around poles and trees near the center of town earlier this week. They were put into place by a volunteer from The Women's Center of Greater Danbury (WCGD), to remi...
Evening passersby on Main Street may have noticed that Edmond Town Hall has taken on a blue cast, and a colorful banner hanging over the front door explains the reason why.
April is Autism Awareness M...
MONROE - Newtown American Legion Post 202 is supporting the Sippin-Winspur American Legion Post 176 of Monroe in sponsoring the Third District Walk-A-Thon for Connecticut Children's Medical Center (CC...
CORRECTION (Wednesday, April 4, 2018): The spelling of Kelly McLachlan Rudis's name has been updated. It was incorrect in the initial post of this feature.
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The Visiting Nurse Association ...
The Avielle Foundation Brainstorm Experience has announced the next two guests in its speaker series. The nonprofit's year long program features a diverse group of thought lead...
The Resiliency Center of Newtown (RCN) was recently awarded two $15,000 Community Impact Grants from New York Life. The funding will help the community service nonprofit formed in the months after 12/...
The second installment of The Avielle Foundation's Brainstorm Experience speaker series nearly sold out the Edmond Town Hall theater February 27 as Golden Gate Bridge suicide survivor Kevin Hines took...
The Resiliency Center of Newtown (RCN) announces a new offering: Mind-Body Medicine Skills Group.beth@resiliencycenterofnewtown.org.resiliencycenterofnewtown.org for additional information about this ...
I’m not sure I would call this a victory lap.
The contentious relationship between the NIMBY crowd and local builders has not served Newtown well. In fact, this kind of obstructionist approach is part of what leaves us with worse outcomes. We have already seen projects like the cinder block row housing on Oakview pushed through in ways many residents were unhappy with, and it is only a matter of time before a company like Vessel Technologies decides to block up an area like Castle Hill if we continue down this path.
We need to learn how to work with builders, not meet every proposal with lawsuits, angry Facebook groups, and organized opposition. That does not mean residents should stay silent or accept every plan as presented. It means we should engage constructively, negotiate for better outcomes, and work toward development that fits Newtown rather than spending everyone’s money fighting until there are no good options left.
Let’s learn to work together.
"Think about women seeking reproductive healthcare." In which state does Brandon think he's running for office? If that's your moral imperative to run for office, move to Texas and insert yourself in their culture wars. Campaigns like this one choose the very odd "but Trump" angle because they have no other leg to stand on. Mitch has represented Newtown with integrity in Hartford, and it is evidenced by the complete lack of criticism of his record in the statements above.
That may have been true in 1995-2008 when every new unit of housing had 1.5 kids, but with an aging population and declining birth rates, our demographics have stabilized and our enrolment has been decreasing for 20 years while population has remained relatively flat at 28k. Less people in the homes. Not all households use the same amount of services as 2/3rds of our budget is for education. For example, Senior housing uses very little services relative to the taxes they pay, and we recognize that with a Senior Tax Credit to keep them here. It is the same for one bedroom units. Age diversity distributes the costs of education, and housing diversity supports age diversity, allowing young people to live in town and seniors to downsize (freeing up their colonials for new families.) Newtown and R-2 zoning pushes a type of building geared towards families with kids, but 4,000 sq ft 4 br homes with big lawns to mow are not what young people or empty nesters are looking for or can justify at those phases of their lives. There is also a commercial aspect as CT business associations routinely support housing so their employees can afford to live close to their jobs. Commercial tax payers need employees, be it manufacturing, medical, retail, services or our restaurants. Without a workforce, commercial property is less desirable, the commercial assessments decline and more of the tax burden gets shifted onto residential at revaluation. Housing supports the school district too. Where can a bus driver afford to live in Newtown? Why would a bus driver commute to our community to drive a bus when the municipalities they can afford to live in also need bus drivers? Newtown schools would have to pay more to incentivize them to commute further (increasing traffic on the highways.) Its no wonder we have had a chronic a bus driver shortage.
It may seem like a foreign concept to a partisan political insider, but many in Newtown feel Mitch won by a larger margin because of his years of community focused constituent service, helping local families and businesses navigate state bureaucracy during COVID, and successfully advancing legislation, especially for seniors and our special education families.
Sad to see that Mrs. Pesce has passed.
She was my teacher at Sandy Hook School Grade 4 1964-65.
I believe it was her first year teaching,
We shared the same birthday.
She was my “favorite” teacher.
May she RIP.