‘We Have a Guardian Angel’: New Program Helps Locals Struggling with Auto Repair and Maintenance Costs

New Canaan residents struggling with car-related costs can now get help through a new partnership involving the town, a nonprofit organization and local businesses. Caffeine & Carburetors—the antique and specialty car show launched by town resident Doug Zumbach outside his eponymous coffee shop on Pine Street—last year raised tens of thousands of dollars for the New Canaan Community Foundation and Waveny Park Conservancy. This year’s downtown C&C, scheduled for June 22, will direct all show funds—including those raised through its registration system—toward a new program that helps qualified New Canaanites with car maintenance and repair costs. 

“When we were thinking about the best use of these funds, we really wanted to make sure that it was going back into our community, and to support local families in one way or another,” C&C Director of Business Development Claire Drexler said. “And we felt like this, with the automotive tie-in, was the perfect way for us to give back to New Canaan, which has been so gracious in allowing us to continue to host this event.”

There are two Caffeine & Carburetors shows scheduled for this year, June 22 (downtown) and Oct. 19 (Waveny).

‘I Feel Great’: Sean Brennan Takes Over as Owner of C&H Auto

The NewCanaanite.com Summer Internship Program is sponsored by Carriage Barn Arts Center. One of New Canaan’s most trusted auto repair shops has a new owner. Steve Gaeta, longtime owner of C&H Automotive and Towing, recently sold the Main Street business to longtime General Manager Sean Brennan. Brennan began working at C&H during high school. “I started off pumping gas, he told the New Canaanite on a recent afternoon.

‘It’s Pretty Incredible’: New Canaan’s Steve Gaeta Marks 30 Years Owning C&H Auto

Town resident Steve Gaeta was just a few years out of high school in 1987, when he started working as a mechanic at the auto repair shop at 186 Main St. 

At the time, Gaeta recalled, the downtown had nine gas stations with auto repair shops, and within a few years the co-owners of the New Canaan Chevron, located near the corner of Main and Maple Streets, in the shadow of then-recently demolished Center School—Charlie and Hank had renamed it ‘C&H Auto’ after themselves—decided to sell. “These guys were probably my age and they were looking for an opportunity to move on,” recalled Gaeta, a New Canaan firefighter who has lived here since the late-1980s and whose daughter graduated from New Canaan High School last year. “We took that opportunity, bought it.”

That was 30 years ago. “It’s pretty incredible,” Gaeta said of the milestone. “I couldn’t be happier.

‘He Is Part of the Fabric of This Town’: C&H Auto, New Canaan Bid Farewell to Leo Lopez

Fourteen years later, C&H Automotive owner Steve Gaeta remembers clearly the day that Leo Lopez answered an ad to apply for a job at the Main Street gas station and repair shop. Lopez, an Ecuador native now 54 years old, had been in the United States just a few years when he filled out an application and returned a day or two later with 2-year-old Crystal, the youngest of his three kids, in tow. “He came back and said, ‘Sir, I really need this job,’ ” Gaeta, also a New Canaan firefighter, recalled Wednesday afternoon from the small office at C&H, a mainstay of downtown New Canaan that’s carved out a niche for superior customer service. “I hired him that day. I saw a good man that just wanted to work.