Letter: Endorsing Moynihan and Kenin for First Selectman, Selectman

I have been a resident of New Canaan for 15 years. I am writing to share my endorsement of Kevin Moynihan for the office of first selectman and Christa Kenin for selectman. Kevin Moynihan has fresh and new ideas about the issues that are pressing our town right now: cell service (our emergency services site an important need), natural gas (lower costs of energy for town municipalities equals tax savings) , and commuter parking (make our town more desirable and help the abysmal real estate market). Not only do I like his ideas, Kevin has the work ethic and skills to bring these long overdue projects to fruition. Equally, if not more, important than the issues above, is the state of our schools.

Letter: Roger Williams Should Not Be Appointed to Board of Finance

I am writing in response to the report that Roger Williams is being considered for appointment to the Board of Finance. I believe that our first selectman should not consider appointing Roger Williams to the Board of Finance. If appointed, Mr. Mallozzi grants a four-year term to a person that voters, in our most recent election, overwhelmingly decided should not be serving our government. As has been reported, Roger Williams failed to win re-election when he lost to his fellow Republicans by more than 1,000 votes. The next closest candidate, Kenneth Campbell, beat Mr. Williams by over 81 percent of the votes.

Finance Board Will Hear Public Comments on Saxe at Nov. 10 Meeting

The Board of Finance will hear comments from the public at its regular meeting on Nov. 10—a widely anticipated date, as officials are expected to decide on funding for a capital project at Saxe Middle School. The finance board does not automatically or regularly include a public comments period on its agenda. Its chairman, First Selectman Rob Mallozzi, said he “absolutely” supports hearing from residents on such important matters. Mallozzi in emails over the weekend to parents who are advocating for a full, estimated $18.6 million building project at Saxe, proposed a public comment period where speakers would be allotted three minutes instead of the usual two.

‘Let’s All Pull Together As a Community’: Town Council Public Hearing on Saxe

One seventh-grader and two grandparents on Wednesday night joined dozens of fellow New Canaanites, most of whom identified themselves as tax-paying parents, in voicing support for a proposed renovation and expansion of Saxe Middle School during a public hearing at Town Hall. More than 200 residents packed into a standing-room-only meeting room to address the Town Council, applauding fellow supporters who took to the podium (see a list of sound bites below) to urge the legislative body to approve a proposed $18.6 million project. During a regular meeting that followed the hearing, the Town Council received an updated presentation from the Saxe Building Committee—including enrollment projections that are driving a space crunch at the middle school, and reasons for doing the full project now rather than in pieces—and four councilmen came out publicly in favor of it. Councilmen asked just how much the full project would cost individual taxpayers annually (a $148-per-taxable-account figure, based on a bond issuance at 3 percent interest over 20 years, is different from figures released earlier this year), whether the proposed build-out addresses future Special Ed space needs (yes, though a compromise will need to be found elsewhere within Saxe), whether long-term enrollment is expected to dip again (enrollment in grades 5 to 8 is expected to exceed 1,300 even 10 years from now) and how a request for plans on phased-in building project would affect the agreement with the architects (there will be additional costs) as well as the overall project’s cost. Building Committee Chairman Penny Rashin said if just the auditorium was renovated now, it would cost $2.1 million more in the short term to finish the other pieces, and $3.5 million more if the town waited three years (though the second figure could qualify New Canaan for higher state reimbursement).

Letter: Full Saxe Building Project—Do It Once, Right and Now

To the Board of Selectmen, Town Council and Board of Finance:

What has made our school district so successful is that our community has supported the education of the whole child. It was an understanding that our children find their own paths to personal growth by excelling in academics, sports, theater, art, music, foreign language, STEM programming, etc. This concept of the whole child is especially important in the middle school years, which tend to be challenging. All these efforts have allowed New Canaan Public Schools to be recognized as shining examples of best practices. Families continue to move to New Canaan because of the excellent schools and our wonderful community.