August 20, 2015
Transcription
August 20, 2015
The FuTure oF ChildCare and PresChool is here! recipe for a happy baby... Just add water and rubber ducks! PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID PALMER, MA PERMIT #22 Experience the difference a high quality program makes! EDUCATIONAL PLAYCARE PRESS Valley www.educationalplaycare.com IN SPORTS Catching on in FCBL PAGE 25 AVON • BURLINGTON • CANTON • FARMINGTON • GRANBY • SIMSBURY Vol. 7, Edition 34 Thursday August 20, 2015 in the press Bozzuto’s buys polo grounds The Farmington Polo Grounds, which had been in foreclosure proceedings for six years, was purchased by the company owned by the organizer of the Connecticut Dream Ride. Town Farm Road LLC purchased the 59.5-acre property located at 152 Town Farm Road for $1.682 million July 24 from Village Management Corp., which finalized its foreclosure on the property June 8. PAGE 17 Peggy Farrar says farewell It’s not goodbye, but see you later. That was the sentiment during the Aug. 14 celebration of Margaret “Peggy” Farrar’s 11 years as the café manager at the Canton Community Café. PAGE 17 A hands-on experience Photo by Abigail Albair The Granby Public Library held a Touch a Truck event Aug. 12 at Salmon Brook Park as a big finale to a summer series of programs in conjunction with the summer reading theme “Every Hero Has a Story.” Pictured above: Mason Skaret was more interested in the wheels of trucks than the driver’s seats and was happy to show off his smile as he ran through the vehicles while exploring. See more on page 6. YOUR SALAD IS READY Peaberry’s Cafe 712 Hopmeadow St. | Simsbury, CT www.peaberryscafect.com NEWS Wild about animals THIS WEEK A&E 4 Kids 7 Education 9 The Buzz 12 Editorial 13 Business 14 Town News 17 Calendar 23 Sports 25 Classifieds 28 “It’s a beautiful piece of property. It’s going to make a lot of people happy with the way it looks [after the renovations are done]. ... There will be things during the course of the year, but nothing specific as of yet.” -Kevin Daly in “Bozzuto’s buys, working to renovate...” on page 17 “It was a labor of love to be with the elders of our town to know them, share with them and to add enjoyment to their senior years. I’m having trouble detaching with something that has kept me connected for so many years.” Courtesy photo 9 Quotes of Note Avon reader Christine Quinn said these two turkeys have been hanging around the Rosewood Road neighborhood for over a month and are always spotted together. She said they hide out under trees during thunderstorms. If you have a photo of a critter that you’ve spotted locally, submit it for this segment to Abigail at aalbair@turleyct.com. Include “Wild About Animals” and the animal spotted in the subject line, as well as your town of residence. All submissions will be considered for inclusion in a future edition. -Margaret “Peggy” Farrar in “Farrar says farewell” on page 17 Winter Associates Auctioneers & Appraisers since 1979 AUCTION - Monday, August 31st, 6:30 pm Featuring Fine Furnishing from Devonwood Home, also Jewelry, Silver, Artwork, Etc. 18 Month Inspection: Sunday, Aug. 30th, 2-4 pm; Monday, Aug. 31st, 3-6:15 pm or by appt Certificate of Deposit 1.25% Annual Percentage Yield Take a stroke and open your 18 Month CD today! Don’t wait, start earning like the Pros. $1,000.00 minimum deposit required to open account and earn interest. Collinsville Savings Society checking account required. Penalties may apply if account is closed prior to maturity date. Rates effective 5/11/15. Limited time offer. 136 Main St Collinsville CT 06019 (860) 693-5912 277 Albany Turnpike Canton, CT 06019 (860)693-6936 MEMBER FDIC 2 The Valley Press EQUAL HOUSING LENDER August 20, 2015 *PUBLIC WELCOME, FREE CATALOG WITH AD* Illustrated catalog, terms, and directions online: www.AuctionsAppraisers.com 21 Cooke St., Plainville, CT 860-793-0288 The Dance Connection Open Registration: August 27th September 2nd September 9th 4:00 pm-7:00 pm NEW LOCATION! 1 Burnham Avenue, Unionville (860) 673-7457 danceconnectiononline.com 2 studios, dancers’ dressing room, parent waiting area, private parking lot, close to Rails to Trails, renovated historic building CLASSES BEGIN SEPTEMBER 14TH Ballet Tap Jazz Lyrical/Contemporary Hip Hop Acrobatics Pointe Specially designed combination classes for Preschool through First Grade All ages and levels Recreational and Competitive Programs New for the fall! 8 week class options for athletes Pilates Adult Classes Semi-Private class options All New Performance Team! Fun opportunity to perform with friends at local events and funtions TDC TDC Dance Dollars for referring a friend or being referred by a friend may be redeemed at time of registration TDC Home of Farmington Valley’s 2015 National Champions! August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 3 PRESSARTS&ENTERTAINMENT Limited tickets left for Taste in Simsbury The KC Sisters are one of many acts scheduled for the Hike to the Mic event. Courtesy photo Hike to the Mic rescheduled for Aug. 29 O P O I E T N A ery will have three types of cake and Cake Gypsy will serve several items including its gourmet cupcakes, both regular and gluten free. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. at The Riverview, Simsbury’s 14,800-square-foot custom-designed wedding and banquet facility. Tickets can be purchased at all Simsbury Bank branch locations (Simsbury, Avon, Granby and Bloomfield), as well as Fitzgerald’s Foods, Horan’s Flowers & Gifts, Welden Hardware, The Wine House and The Simsbury Inn. They can also be purchased online at www.ShopSimsbury. com/A-Taste-In-Simsbury. Special thanks to presenting sponsor, Simsbury Bank. Joining them are corporate sponsors Coburn & Meredith, Inc. and Dornenburg Kallenbach Advertising, as well as numerous promotional sponsors that make this happen. This event reminds people that Simsbury is the ultimate destination for dining, shopping, arts and entertainment. This event draws not only residents, but visitors from all over the state. For a complete list of participating vendors and sponsors, visit www.ShopSimsbury.com/A-Taste-InSimsbury. Chilling ghost tours at the Mark Twain House Tours will entertain, educate and perhaps frighten guests Friday and Saturday, Aug. 28 and 29. Tours step off at 6 p.m., 7 p.m., 8 p.m., and 9 p.m. After three eventful investigations by TAPS for SyFy’s “Ghost Hunters” and an episode of “My Ghost Story,” The Mark Twain House creeeeeeaks open its front door for nocturnal tours. On the Graveyard Shift Ghost Tour participants will hear about these investigations – and learn about Mark Twain’s own interest in the supernatural. Spiritualism and ghostly tales were a big part of the Gilded Age, an age of uncertainty, materialism and spectacular credulity much like today. Don’t believe in ghosts? Decide for yourself on these evening visits to the Clemens mansion. An hour-long guided tour takes visitors through the main house, the servants’ wing, and down into the basement, normally off-limits to visitors. Filled with haunted history, dark tales and Victorian traditions surrounding séances and spiritualism, these tours are as educational as they are goosebump-inducing. Tickets are $22 for adults, $17 for members and $15 for children age 16 and under. Tours are recommended for ages 10 and up. Call 860-280-3130 or visit marktwainhouse.org and click on events to purchase tickets online. Tours are sponsored by Tsunami Tsolutions. The Mark Twain House & Museum has restored the author’s Hartford home, where Samuel L. Clemens and his family lived from 1874 to 1891. The house and museum at 351 Farmington Ave. are open daily 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. They are closed Tuesdays during March. ! P The Friends of Heublein Tower, Inc. Friends of Heublein Tower, Inc, the 501(c) has announced the rescheduled date for (3) dedicated to enhancing and preserving the inaugural Hike to the Mic – Music and the iconic Heublein Tower and surroundArts Happening Aug. 29 from noon to sun- ing grounds, working in tandem with corset, with a rain date of Aug. 30. This “do- porate sponsors and the State DEEP. nation suggested” event will reward hikers Key sponsors for Hike to the Mic to to the Heublein Tower with great musical date, include Telefunken – a world-wide entertainment, food vendors and the “roy- leader in microphone technology, the al view” from one of Connecticut’s premier law firm of Mayo Crowe, accounting firm hiking destinations. Saslow, Lufkin & Buggy and DW Burr The talented Will Evans, from the Landscape & Design, Fitzgerald’s Foods band Barefoot Truth, will be there shar- grocery store in Simsbury, and the United ing the stage with dazzling sounds of At- Bank Foundation. las Gray, local kid phenomenons Kais and Contact the Friends of the Heublein Dollz, along with the sweet harmonies of Tower board member William Case at The KC Sisters. Additional performers are 860-678-1434, ext. 12 or bcase@friendsofbeing added to the lineup so check in with heubleintower.org for additional details www.hiketothemic.com to find out all the and possibilities. details. The Friends of Heublein Tower, Inc Harry’s Bishop Corner Pizzeria has is a nonprofit preservation society, estabjust been added to the food lineup, along lished in 1984, for the purpose of restoring with the folks from KC Dubliner Pub & for public use the state-owned Heublein Grill in Burlington who will be grilling Tower landmark to its original and auburgers and dogs. Noodles & Co and Ben thentic 1914 splendor. & Jerry’s Ice Cream will be on hand, proBy providing time, talent and finanviding a healthy selection of locally pre- cial assistance, the Friends of Heublein pared food, along with ice cream for all to Tower supplement the state of Connectienjoy. cut’s efforts in restoring, improving and The Heublein Tower is unquestion- interpreting the Heublein Tower and its ably one of the most unique settings in surrounding grounds. The restored tower New England and will provide the perfect serves as a museum and a place of learnbackdrop for what will be fantastic “hike ing, gathering and exploration for the edto” familyVALLEY fun. PRESS AD-final.pdf 1 8/10/15ucational 3:09 PM and social benefit of those who Hike to the Mic is organized by The visit. Tickets are going quickly quickly for the 7th Annual Taste in Simsbury Presented by Simsbury Bank, which will be Thursday, Aug. 27. A limited number of tickets are available for this gourmet dining event, and they go quickly each year. Tickets are $50, and are all-inclusive. Guests will enjoy gourmet samples, such as a Cajun shrimp with a summer vegetable cous cous from Majorca, grilled Korean beef from Republic, and a pancetta-crusted lobster mac and cheese from Evergreens Restaurant at The Simsbury Inn. These are just some of the outstanding menu choices that guests will be able sample from. Along with the amazing food created by some of the best restaurants in Greater Hartford, craft beer will be provided by Red Stone Pub, Thomas Hooker Brewery and Back East Brewing Company. Select fine wines will be served by The Wine House and M&R Liquors, and RIPE Craft Bar Juice will feature fresh, handcrafted cocktails. Wild Moon, Hartford Flavor Company and Waypoint Spirits will round the amazing beverage providers. Ice cream, gelato and sorbet will be served by award-winning J. Foster’s Select Batch Ice Cream, A Little Something Bak- C PATIO OPEN! Let’s meet at the M Y CM MY CY CMY Fish House K www.SaybrookFishHouseCanton.com The Intersection of 44, 202 & 179 • MINI GOLF NOW OPEN ACROSS THE STREET • 2015 Elite Sponsors 4 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 OF CANTON est. 1978 Reserv. Accepted: 860.693.0034 • Open 7 Days & 7 Nights Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11:30-4 • Sat. 12-4 Dinner: Mon.-Thurs. 4-9 • Fri. & Sat. 4-9:30 • Sun. 12-8 PRESSARTS&ENTERTAINMENT Granby mother authors book about raising a child with autism By Sloan Brewster Senior Staff Writer When Martha Griffin-Weis learned her son had autism she felt isolated and alone. It was the early 1990s and the diagnosis was very rare, the Granby author explained. Griffin-Weis recently released a book on the experience; titled “Set Apart: A Mother’s Steps to Peace,” the book is about raising a child with autism. “The reason I wrote the book is that I have raised a son with autism,” Griffin-Weis said. “He’s now 29 years old. He was diagnosed at a time when no one ever heard of it.” One day, her son was healthy and behaving fine. Suddenly, his behavior changed, she said. People wanted to blame her. “People thought, ‘Oh you’re a terrible mother,’” she said. For her part, she could not accept the diagnosis. What was worse is that institutionalization was the conventional treatment in that time, and she deemed that to be unacceptable for her son. “You looked in these old text books and they had these horrible definitions of what [autism] was,” she said. Using fictional names – Maggie and Ben – the book is based on what she and her son went through on a daily basis. “The story about Maggie and Ben is based on a true story, but due to the sensitivity of the topic and to offer my son some privacy, I chose to create the characters of Maggie and Ben,” Griffin-Weis explained. Like her real life counterpart, Maggie is completely alone. “Nowadays everybody you know knows someone who has [autism],” Griffin-Weis said. Not Maggie. “She’s isolated. No one wants to play with her kid. No one wants to be around her,” Griffin-Weis said. Another thing Maggie has in common with Griffin-Weis is the suspicion that the cause of the autism is somehow connected with vaccines. Despite believing in that connection, Griffin-Weis is not opposed to vaccinations. Rather, she believes there may be an additive, a preservative, or something in the vaccine that is causing an adverse reaction. The book also looks at another concern for Griffin-Weis: that of the potential loss of medical and religious freedom, she said. “The legislation that’s currently going on is about removing medical freedom,” she said with regard to laws that could mandate vaccines and remove clauses that allow people to refuse them for religious reasons, or simply to gain additional time to research vaccines and their ingredients. “That is in danger of being eliminated and that’s a problem,” Griffin-Weis said. “I am not anti-vaccine but I am concerned with losing this freedom.” The book is also about the daily travails of the people in it: those things that transcend the story of a mother and a son with autism. Such things include love and marriage and divorce. “It’s about how having a special needs child affects the marriage,” the writer said. “‘Set Apart’ touches on lost love, female fortitude, insightful research and, above all, lighthearted humor regarding a sometimes overlooked population of incredibly lovable individuals,” according to a write up. “In- sightful and well researched, this story is full of emotion and humor.” The book is also about ups and downs and, like Griffin-Weis’ own life, there are happy times, moments of joy and laughter, and sad times. Interwoven in the story is information about how to deal with these challenges. “I had a couple people tell me, ‘Boy you’re really learning a lot and you don’t even know it,’” Griffin-Weis said of the writing process. Other readers told her that they were laughing one minute, and crying the next. “We did a lot of that,” she said. The book also has a faith element, as Griffin-Weis turned to her Christian faith to help her get through many of the challenges she faced. “It is a book that is inspirational for mothers and families,” she said. “When you’re isolated like that, you need some place to go.” Griffin-Weis started writing “Set Apart” about seven years ago, when her daughter went to college and her son was in a transitional post-high school program. She worked on it for a while, then set it aside to get her master’s degree in health sciences. “I felt l like I needed more credibility,” she said. “I don’t feel like that now, but I did then.” After graduating, she forgot about the book for a time, or at least she tried to, but she kept thinking that it was important. She ultimately returned to writing. “It was very scary. It’s a very personal story. ... I really resisted it quite a bit, but I had a lot of encouragement,” Griffin-Weis said. “I had people say, ‘Thank you for writing this.’” Griffin-Weis wrote while seated near a Courtesy photos Martha Griffin-Weis (inset) authored “Set Apart: A Mother’s Steps to Peace.” window. Although the words often came of their own accord and she would have to grab whatever paper she could find to put them down, many of these incidents took place at night when she would awaken from sleep. “I had this urgency that would come to me and, sometimes in the night, full sentences would come to me and I would jot it down,” she said, adding that the process was very healing. “It was amazing what came out. It was just sort of channeled through me. ... It was sort of out of your power, all of a sudden. You have to go with it.” Griffin-Weis self-published “Set Apart” through the Westbow Press. It is available on Amazon, The Westbow Press Bookstore and barnesandnoble.com Does your lawn need help? TORRINGTON SCHOOL SCHOOL BALLET of Now Scheduling Fall Lawn recovery services for customers looking for a local company they can trust. Does your lawn need help? ANNUAL PROGRAM SERVICES Pre-Ballet & Ballet Appreciation for children ages 4 through 13 No nal additio for e g r a h c nd Grub a e g d e Nuts Control OPEN HOUSE AUGUST 27: 4 - 6 pm Come meet TSOB’s teachers Ms. Susan Szabo & Ms. Cassie Sprance, as well as the whole team at The Nutmeg Ballet including Artistic Director Victoria Mazzarelli. 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Local, Family Owned Since 1983 32 years setting industry standards Veterans & Senior Discounts August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 5 Jack Proctor gets behind the wheel of a tractor. Makena Guglielmone was much more interested in the loader of this backhoe than the vehicle itself. Time to ‘touch a truck’ T he Granby Public Library held several programs this summer in conjunction with the summer reading theme “Every Hero Has a Story.” The big finale was a Touch a Truck event Aug. 12 at Salmon Brook Park in Granby. All Granby First Responders were present along with five vehicles, including department of public works trucks, a police car, fire truck and ambulance. The event served to bring community members together and honor local heroes, according to children’s librarian Joan Beatson. Above: Elena Vanase gets behind the wheel of a backhoe. Above: Dylan and Cody Sandora explore a public works vehicle. Below: Brycen Fera was all smiles and sunglasses as he posed in a fire truck’s driver’s seat. On vacation? Don’t let a problem ruin your relaxation. Above, right: Kaya Wyzik checks out the buttons in a firetruck. Right: Chase Warnke examines a fire truck with the help of his grandfather, Jim. Photos by Abigail Albair SUMMER SPECIAL $1000 OFF SEPTIC SERVICE Suburban Sanitation Service Notice of Application • New septic systems installed and repairs of existing systems • Alternative repairs of septic systems using the non-invasive terralift or soil air techniques • Real estate inspections for home purchases • Portable restrooms for all occasions Our family has been providing prompt and courteous service since 1955 www.subsanserv.com 18 Colonial Rd., Canton, CT • 860-673-3078 • 860-693-2737 6 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 This is to give notice that I, PHILLIP J. CHABOT 718 CAMP ST FARMINGTON, CT 06032-3059 Have filed an application placarded on 08/8/2015 with the Department of Consumer Protection for a RESTAURANT LIQUOR PERMIT for the sale of alcoholic liquor on the premises at 280 AVON MOUNTAIN RD. AVON, CT 06001-3943 The business will be owned by: THE NORTH HOUSE INC. Entertainment will consist of: Acoustics (Not Amplified), Disc Jockeys, Live Bands, Comedians, Magicians Objections must be filed by: 9/19/2015 PHILLIP J. CHABOT Read Valley PRESS AVON • BURLINGTON • CANTON • FARMINGTON • GRANBY • SIMSBURY online at www.TurleyCT.com PRESSKIDS Farmington girls are finalists in Google robotics competition By Ted Glanzer Staff Writer Three rising eighth-grade girls from Farmington are spending a good chunk of their summer vacation as one of 30 finalist teams in a Google robotics competition called Xprize Moonbots Challenge. Irving A. Robbins Middle School students Hannah Zink, Sanmati Choudhary and Olivia Hofmann comprise To the Moon and Beyond, the only junior-finalist team in the competition from Connecticut. Hannah said they got involved in the competition through the recommendation of a former robotics coach who said it was a good thing to get involved in. “In sixth grade we were all involved in a robotics competition … and that’s where we got inspired by robotics,” Sanmati said. The Moonbots competition is divided into two phases. The first called for teams to create a video about what inspires them about the moon. The girls did theirs based on a Native American legend regarding a rabbit that convinced a crane to fly it to the moon. “We wanted something from America, because there are teams from all over the world,” Olivia said. “The crane flew the bunny to the moon, but the bunny was so heavy, he stretched out the crane’s feet. When he jumped off, he hit the crane on the head, which is why cranes have a red patch on their heads. Now the bunny is sometimes seen on the face of the moon.” Based on the strength of the video - in which Sanmati starred as “Luna” - the girls’ team was one of 30 selected for phase 2 of the competition. The girls selected a Vex IQ robot, which they are required to construct and program. The robot they chose must autono- mously complete five missions on a six foot by six foot moon-like surface that the team also had to construct. To the Moon and Beyond named their robot “Stanley” and created their moon surface out of foam. The challenges that the girls came up with include having Stanley pick up an astronaut stranded in a crater and have her placed back in front of her lunar home. Stanley also has to place a waste-water container on top of a water purifier and activate it, and he also must lower an asteroid shield on the lunar home. “It’s all related to living on the moon somehow,” Olivia said. In a nod to the Native American legend that advanced the girls to the second phase, Stanley must also activate a gyrocopter that has a toy rabbit attached to it. “We based our missions on what our robot would scientifically have to do on the moon,” Hannah said. “The adult competition of Moonbots is trying to get an actual rover on the moon.” The girls completed the first phase in June and they received their robotics kit from Google in July. They have until Aug. 31 to finish phase 2, which they are working feverishly to accomplish. On Aug. 31, they will show off their final product via Skype to the judges. When the girls received their robotics kit, they also received four additional robots. Julie Zink, Hannah’s mother, said that there was some confusion as to why they received the extra robots and software. As part of the competition, Google is requiring the entrants to find an underserved community and donate the additional hardware and software. The girls decided to donate the four extra robots, and Stanley when they are finished, to the Hartford Public Library to help start a Photos by Ted Glanzer Hannah Zink, Olivia Hofmann and Sanmati Choudhary comprise team “To the Moon and Beyond” in the Google Moonbots competition. In front of them is Stanley, their robot. robotics program in the city. The dynamic trio has been meeting three or four times a week for up to three hours each session to work on their project, program, tinker and troubleshoot. Each of them said that they love what they are doing, which is encouraging considering that robotics has in decades past been viewed as more of an endeavor for boys. The members of To the Moon and Beyond don’t see it that way, however. “It’s really nice to be in something and have it be all girls, because you kind of stand out,” Olivia said. “In robotics, the majority is boys. It’s nice to be inspiring to girls that they can do that, too. It doesn’t have to be boys.” Sanmati and Hannah agreed. “I don’t think that gender matters in this country,” Sanmati said. “My parents didn’t want me to get involved in this. … But now that I’ve been exposed to this, it’s fun. It’s interactive. Most girls don’t get to do that.” “I think it’s just a stereotype that only boys can do it,” Hannah said. “I definitely think it’s better that both genders can do it. There’s no disadvantage to being a girl.” The girls also gave a presentation at the Farmington Public Library’s main branch Monday, Aug. 17 as part of an outreach effort. More than 50 children and adults signed up for the event, which included a demonstration of Stanley in action as well as provided an opportunity for children to get hands-on experience with LEGO Mindstorm Robotics. Visit moonbots.org to learn more. my Dad asked “ When for a second helping… My father’s dementia had taken many things away, including his appetite and ability to enjoy mealtime. My family and I had become so worried about his weight. Last night, I was there at dinnertime when he asked for seconds – for the first time in years. That was my Benchmark moment. ” At Benchmark Senior Living communities all across New England, families are rediscovering the small, precious moments they thought were lost forever. Families trust Benchmark’s Memory Care program because we always expect more and deliver more on behalf of our residents and their families. This is why we were awarded the OPTIMA Award for exceptional programming and person-centered service by Long Term Living Magazine in 2014. Our innovative Memory Care program features brightly red-colored tableware that makes it easier for residents with dementia to see their meals – which encourages them to eat and drink more. ® What will your Benchmark Moment be? Experience your Benchmark moment with someone you love. Visit www.BenchmarkMoment.com or call 1-866-500-9746. Ask about our special Summer Savings & Benchmark Loyalty Program. 1-866-500-9746 www.BenchmarkMoment.com Connecticut Locations: Avon, Brookfield, East Haven, Hamden, Meriden, Middletown, Milford, Mystic, Niantic, Ridgefield, Rocky Hill, Shelton, South Windsor, Trumbull, Waterbury, Woodbridge | Please visit www.BenchmarkMoment.com for locations in MA, RI, NH, ME & VT. BSL100003 Moments Memory Ad [VP/WHP-10x6]CT.indd 1 August 20, 2015 The Valley8/6/15 Press 4:16 PM7 PRESSKIDS Scout seeks Eagle rank through sand court project By Sloan Brewster Senior Staff Writer Kevin Kryzwick has been a Scout since he was 5 years old. When Kevin, a 16-yearold member of Boy Scout Troop 23 who will be entering his junior year at Lewis Mills High School, was featured in The Valley Press in 2009, he was a 9-year-old Cub Scout. He had won first place in the Father-Son Bakeoff with a cake resembling the U.S. Capitol. His mother, Christine Kryzwick, had the photo handy last week as her son was inteviewed about his more recent Scouting achievements. “It just shows the progression. It’s just interesting,” she said. Kevin recalled how he built the house and senate buildings from sheet cakes and made the columns out of white chocolate pretzels. He shaped the dome with a mixing ball, and even crafted the famous cherry blossom trees from pretzels and popcorn. Seven years later, Kevin is working on a new project. Though it’s a few years before his 18th birthday, he has already started his Eagle Photo by Sloan Brewster Kevin Kryzwick stands near the spot at Malerbo Field where he plans to construct a sand volleyball court for his Eagle Scout project. Behind him is a swing set, which, he said, was also an Eagle project by another Scout a few years ago. Scout project and plans to complete it this fall, assuming he gets all the money he needs to do it. He wants to install a sand volleyball court beside the pavilion at Malerbo Field. He already started fundraising and has $2,500 of the $6,300 he will need to complete the court. Kevin sent letters to friends and family and some businesses for donations and also set up a fund for the project through the Main Street Foundation. He CLAMS FRIED FRESH ENJOY OUR HAND-CUT FRIES! GREENHOUSE TOMATO PLANTS WITH BEER BATTERED COD LIKE NO OTHER! DELI CASE OF HOUSE MADE HEALTHY SALAD OPTIONS Classes Begin the week of September 15TH! WEEKLY SPECIAL SANDWICHES ARE FLYING!! FRESH EGGPLANT IS BEING HARVESTED Complete your meal with a visit to the Frozen Gnome! We also Cater! Summer Hours: Cafe Open: Mon., Wed., Thurs. 11:30 to 7; Ice cream: 11:30 to 8 Cafe Open: Friday & Saturday til 8pm; Ice cream Fri /Sat/Sun until 9pm 511 Spielman Hwy, Burlington • 860-673-8111 8 The Valley Press 45 South Main Street, Unionville, CT 06085 (2nd Floor, above Chang-An Chinese Kitchen) PRODUCING DELICIOUS FRUIT & FOR OUR BLT’S! FISH TACOS also got the town to agree to do the excavation. Kevin, who has been playing volleyball for two years, is on the Lewis Mill boys volleyball team. His interest in the sport was sparked by his sister, Tori Kryzwick, who has been playing for about six years. The closest sand court is in Bristol, Kevin said. “Sand’s more fun,” Kevin said. “When you’re playing, you want to dive and stuff. It gives you a nice cushion.” To install the court, Kevin and volunteers from his troop need to have gravel and sand delivered and haul it into the hole the town’s Public Works Department will excavate. Then, they will pour cement for the poles that will hold up the net. While some Boy Scouts do not make Eagle Scout until they are almost 18, Kevin will still be 16 when he hits that mark. He attributes his success to his mentor and troop leader, Andy Klimkoski, who, he said, has a lot of experience as a Scout himself. He also had two sons rise through the Scouting ranks including his son Alex Klimkoski, who is Kevin’s best friend. To make Eagle Scout, Kevin must acquire at least 21 merit badges. Of those, 12 are required and the rest are by choice. Included in the badges he could chose himself, Kevin opted for the school and cooking badges. For the school merit badge, he had to maintain an average of 85 or better and improve over the course of the school year. As far as the cooking badge was concerned, he remembered having to cook bacon over and open fire, which he enjoyed. Kevin has to get four more badges before he will be finished. To donate to the volleyball court, log onto mainstreetfoundation.org, click on “Donate Now,” scroll down to “Designated and Project Funds” and from there click on “Malerbo Volleyball Court Fund.” August 20, 2015 Open House / Walk-In Registration Dates: Wednesday, September 2nd 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM Saturday, September 5th 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM We offer the following dance classes: Adult Ballet Stretch & Tone, Ballet, Creative Movement, Hip Hop, Jazz, Mommy and Me, Theatre Jazz, Tap Ages 2 - Senior Citizens! We also offer: Art Explorers, Creative Kids - Theatre Arts Dance With Your Doll, Indian Dance, Music Together, Tumbling, Voice Lessons, Yoga For a brochure or more info, visit SpotlightDanceCtr.com Call (860) 404-1755 or email SpotlightDanceCtr@gmail.com Photo by Ted Glanzer Rico Biggart gives his father, Ame, a hug while his mother, Francesca, looks on. Teen returns home to Canton to celebrate high honor By Ted Glanzer Staff Writer Colleen Brown was called upon by former Canton resident Rico Biggart to write a letter of recommendation on his behalf so that Biggart could achieve the rank of Eagle Scout. It was, Brown said, the easiest letter that she’s ever had to write. “These recommendations were based on our observations of how he exemplifies the Boy Scout oath and Boy Scout law,” Brown said at a Biggart’s Eagle Scout Court of Honor at La Trattoria in Canton Saturday, Aug. 15. “From the time Rico was a little boy, he has had all of the attributes of a Boy Scout.” Brown, who has known Biggart for 12 years and was one of his teachers, said that Biggart is kind, generous, loyal to his friends and family and true to his beliefs. “He is one of those kids that teachers call upon to mentor a new student or to help a student who might be struggling or to help someone who might just need a friend,” Brown said. Just 5 percent of Boy Scouts ever achieve the highest rank of the Boy Scouts of America. “It takes a whole lot of planning. It takes a great deal of leadership, dedication and a ton of heart,” Brown said. Biggart had to earn 21 badges and plan and execute a service project that benefitted the entire community to earn the rank. His project was to construct a welcome sign at the William Goodrich Jones State Forest in Texas. “A lot of work went into that project,” Brown said. “Rico had to work with state park officials to have his plan approved. Once it was approved, the site had to be prepped for the sign. A steel frame had to be welded, the sign had to be commissioned and installed and, finally, the site had to be landscaped. It was quite a project.” Brown also noted that Biggart, who will be a high school senior in the fall, was a member of student government and founded and ran an origami club in Canton. Biggart and his family moved to The Woodlands, Texas in April 2014, where he completed his requirements for the rank of Eagle with BSA Troop 89. Prior to that, he grew up in Canton and was a member of BSA Troop 77. More than 70 people showed up for Biggart’s Court of Honor, which was held in Canton specifically so family and friends in and around Connecticut could attend. Videos of Biggart’s troop in Texas were played congratulating him on his achievement. Texas Scoutmaster Keith Landau explained the value of Biggart’s Eagle badge. “In dollars and cents it is worth $75,” Landau said. “Probably $35 in silver, $2 worth of ribbon and the rest of it in manufacturing and handling costs. … Is your Eagle badge worth $75? Of course not. Your Eagle badge is priceless.” Biggart also received words of reflection from Shaylyn Hauswirth, his former nanny, and Peter Fortier, the director of religious education at St. Patrick’s Church. Hauswirth said that Biggart showed maturity beyond his years, choosing to do what was right over what was popular. “He doesn’t care what others think of him, so long as he knows he’s doing the right thing,” Hauswirth said. Biggart was presented with his Eagle plaque, scarf and badge by his mother and father, Francesca and Ame Biggart. PRESSEDUCATION Student traces soldier’s steps in Normandy, tells man’s story By Sloan Brewster Senior Staff Writer Standing at a World War II gravesite in Normandy, France, Connor Lisle delivered a eulogy for a man he had never known, a soldier he could never have known, as the man died decades before the high school student was even born. “I had chills,” said Lisa-Brit Wahlberg, who was graveside listening to the moving tribute. Lisle, a 17-year-old rising senior at The Master’s School in Simsbury, researched the soldier’s life, wrote the eulogy and traveled to France with Wahlberg, his teacher, as part of the Silent Hero Project of the Normandy Institute. Once Lisle and Wahlberg were accepted into the program, which, according to Wahlberg is funded by a Albert H. Small, a veteran who wants today’s youth to fully understand the sacrifice of those who gave their lives in the war, the work began. The idea of the project is to give a voice to the soldiers who died so far away from home, she said. According to a press release, the program, which is in its fifth year, is coordinated by National History Day and is funded by a generous donation from Small, a veteran himself. The program brings students and teachers from around the world to Washington, D.C. for visits to the National Archives, Arlington National Cemetery, and lectures from World War II veterans and historians. The final stage was the trip to Normandy. First, Lisle had to choose a soldier from Connecticut who died during the Invasion of Normandy on D-Day. Something about Harlan E Rugg, who was from Fairfield, resonated with Lisle, Wahlberg said. Lisle found Rugg’s picture in his high school yearbook. The deeper research took Lisle, Wahlberg and the 15 student-teacher teams from all over the country, to the National Archives in College Park, Md., where they pieced together what they could find. “We got so connected with our soldier,” Wahlberg said. “First of all, there was not a lot of information so we were on this historical treasure hunt. ... It was really neat to go through these old documents, pictures, death records.” Wahlberg saw the project as a scholarly venture. “The students became historians,” she said, “I felt like they started to realize how preserving things into the past will help into the future.” Lisle learned that Rugg, a Glider trooper, was a second lieutenant in the 81st Anti-Aircraft Battalion of the 101st Airborne AAA Division and landed behind enemy lines June 6, 1944. One thing Lisle noticed right away when he was looking at Rugg’s yearbook photo was an identical boy in the picture next to him. “Our soldier, he was a twin and his brother served in North Africa,” Wahlberg said. Rugg’s brother died in 2000. Rugg, who received a purple heart, was 22 when he was killed. Military service was not new to the Rugg family, Rugg’s father and grandfather both served. His father fought in World War I and his grandfather was a soldier in the Civil War. Rugg’s grandfather kept a journal while he was in the war and it is now in the library at the University of Connecticut. Lisle was even able to connect with a memorabilia collector online who had Rugg’s hat and uniform and some family pictures. As Lisle dug deeper and deeper into Rugg’s history, he learned the man and his twin enlisted together Dec. 17, 1941. “It was right after Pearl Harbor,” he said. “They enlisted in the aftermath of a patriotic rush.” Rugg landed in a covert mission behind enemy lines and died there as well. One challenge was finding living relatives, and Wahlberg and Lisle are still looking for them. The research project and trip were learning experiences for student and teacher. “It will be something that I bring to my classroom,” Wahlberg said. “I learned so much as a teacher.” The other student-teacher pairs in the group had equivalent successes and one research project culminated with a reunion between a U.S. and French family. The local newspaper in the town where the boy lived did a story on his research and a family member of the soldier he was learning about contacted him and gave him photographs. The family also had relatives in France, so they planned a trip and met up with the students and teachers there. PBS, which also followed the group on the journey, was there to tape the encounter and included it with a broadcast of the trip in segments called “Following in the Footsteps of History.” The 10-day trip included visits to museums, visits with historians and a walk along the beach where the Invasion of Normandy took place, “To put my feet on that beach where all of that happened was very overwhelming,” Wahlberg said. “It’s something I’ll never forget.” The students also went to the graves of the soldiers they researched and delivered eulogies they wrote based on all they learned. In crafting a eulogy for Rugg, Lisle added the personal details he learned and the information about the man’s father’s and grandfather’s service, he said. He also talked about the rural Connecticut town in which he lived and the myriad activities in which he participated during high school. Rugg was in the glee Courtesy photo Connor Lisle and Lisa-Brit Wahlberg, a student and teacher team, stand beside the Normandy, France grave of World War II hero Harlan E. Rugg, a Fairfield man who died at the Invasion of Normandy. This summer, Lisle researched Rugg and delivered a eulogy at his graveside. club, performed in the school play and was a dedicated photographer. “It was overwhelming because you feel grateful. You feel just overwhelmed with sadness about the sacrifices that not only these soldiers made, but their families made and I think for me it made me want to be a better American in a way, just to be worthy of their sacrifice,” Wahlberg said. “It was very solemn.” Lisle felt the same way. “It was very moving. I mean, I feel like I do know him,” he said. “It almost gives you chills when you’re there. ... It makes you feel quite small. It’s very sobering.” Wahlberg asks that anyone with any connection Rugg, be it family members or friends that might have known him or his family, contact her at The Master’s School. She is particularly interested in contacting Harlan’s sister, Frenette Rugg Parker, or anyone who knows or knew her. Wahlberg’s email is lwahlberg@masterschool.org and her phone number is 860-651-9361. The Valley’s Premier just got better!! UNLIMITED Sizzling Summer Special WASH PROGRAM Existing FastPass Customers Welcome 25 34 49 BUY THE FIRST $ BUY THE FIRST $ BUY THE FIRST $ PLAN FOR PLAN FOR PLAN FOR GET THE SECOND GET THE SECOND GET THE SECOND $ $ PLAN FOR PLAN FOR PLAN FOR $ Limited time to sign up July, August and September. Promotional Rates good for 6 months from purchase. 24.50 17.00 12.50 Keep every car in your family looking its best this summer! RT 44 across from Hoffman Auto Group formerly Valley Car Wash www.ctautospa.com Kids eat FREE at dinner all summer (1 kids meal per adult meal) 10% off Breakfast with this ad Tuesday-Saturday 8am-8pm Sunday Brunch 8am-3pm GREAT WINE & BEER Gluten Free Vegan & Vegetarian Specialties 2015 1st - Gluten Free Menu 3rd - Gluten Free Bakery Simsbury Town Shops, 928 Hopmeadow St., Simsbury 860-413-2392 www.popoversimsbury.com August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 9 Swimmer medals at Special Olympics World Games By Ted Glanzer Staff Writer Simsbury resident Selina Derungs couldn’t have predicted when she first stepped in a pool 22 years ago that it would lead to her receiving three medals – a gold, silver and bronze – at the Special Olympic World Games. The games were held in Los Angeles from July 25 to Aug. 2. But there Derungs was, on the medal stand three times, winning gold in the 4 x100 freestyle relay, silver in the 100-meter individual medley and bronze in the 200-meter freestyle event. “It was awesome,” Derungs, who was one of four athletes from Connecticut to compete in the World Games, said in a telephone interview. “I’ve always been a good swimmer.” Perhaps, but her three-medal haul was a bit surprising, considering that Derungs, 33, hadn’t ever participated in a World Games before and only took part in her first national competition last year, where she earned two gold medals and one bronze. Prior to those experiences, Derungs only competed in local Special Olympics events. She joined 6,500 athletes from 165 countries at the world competition, which was covered extensively by ESPN. More than 500,000 spectators took in the two-week event. “[The World Games] are very different compared to local events,” Derungs said, noting “the [sheer] amount of people.” She was also not used to competing first in preliminary rounds, then final rounds next day. She could have had an even more suc- Courtesy photo Selina poses with her medals with her coach of the USA team, Amy Bristoll Clark, and the Special Olympics of Connecticut president Beau Doherty. She earned a gold medal in the 4x100 freestyle relay, silver medal in the 100-meter individual medley and a bronze medal in the 200-meter freestyle event at the Special Olympics World Games. cessful World Games, but for a disqualification in the 100 breaststroke. “I got a disqualification, but I beat my best time by five seconds,” said Derungs, who works at Goodwill and Old Navy when she’s not swimming. Derungs trained twice a week for an hour in preparation for the World Games. She and her mother and father, Janette and Walter Derungs, spent two weeks in the Los Angeles area, taking in the sights and adjusting for the time difference with her fellow athletes. “It was overwhelming, but it was also exciting to see all the different countries represented, like New Zealand and Canada,” Derungs said. Walter Derungs agreed that it was an amazing experience. “Obviously it was very exciting to be a part of it,” he said. “We saw the Opening Ceremony with Michelle Obama and Stevie Wonder, with the stadium filled with 50,000 people and 7,000 athletes.” Walter Derungs, who emigrated with his family from Switzerland to Simsbury in 1990, said it was particularly meaningful for him to see the Swiss contingent. He said he was “very proud” of what his daughter accomplished in the pool. Derungs, for her part, said that she would love to participate on the world level again. “If I have another chance, I definitely would do it again,” she said. The 2015 Dream Ride Experience to benefit the Special Olympics will be held this weekend, Aug. 21-23. The event will include a motorcycle rally, twilight car cruise and car show, the Dream Concert Country Music Festival, and food and activities for the entire family. See details and register at www.dreamride.org. New England Dance & Gymnastics Centers Making dreams come true for over 30 years! Free recital video and trophy to all students! Ages 2 - Adult *Valid 8/13/15 - 8/29/15. One coupon per family per day. Can’t be combined with other sales, coupons, vouchers or deals. Not valid on sale priced merch. Prior sales excluded. VP Boys & Girls Beg.-Prof. Levels TAP • BALLET • JAZZ • MUSICAL THEATRE ZUMBA • LYRICAL • POINTE • GYMNASTICS HIP HOP • CONTEMPORARY • PIYO • Dads love our recitals - only 1 to 1-1/2 hours long • Terrific 2s (diapers OK) Kinderdance & combo classes! • Nationally recognized friendly adult teaching staff! • Trophies to every dancer at our recital, not just a ribbon or medal! • Opportunity to join our nationally ranked competition teams! 11 Mill Pond Dr., 28 Southwick Rd., Granby, CT Westfield, MA 860-653-1974 413-568-3731 www.newenglanddance.com 10 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 Haley Huelsman and Jade Cloud cast members on Dance Moms! FREE TRIAL CLASSES EVERY THURSDAY IN AUGUST! Three local students earn scholarships Courtesy photo Pictured left to right: Kim Dessert, principal of F.M. Kearns Primary School; store manager Bob Pont; PTO President Tammy Littles; Jim Nilsson, president of Geissler’s Supermarkets and Geissler’s Supermarkets owner Robert Rybick. PTO thanks Geissler’s Supermarkets for ongoing support In June, the Granby PTO hosted its final meeting of the school year at the Cambridge Brew House and honored Geissler’s Supermarkets for their ongoing support of the Granby primary and intermediate schools. In March 2007, Geissler’s started a ‘give back’ program that returned 5 percent of all pretax receipts of more than $35, not including alcohol, tobacco or lottery ticket sales, to the Granby PTO. Parents are asked to submit receipts to F.M. Kearns, Kelly Lane and Wells Road schools, and as of May 26, 2015, more than $100,000 has been donated because of the program. Funds collected have helped to purchase classroom and playground equipment, visits by local authors and artists and other PTO initiatives during the last eight years. Geissler’s celebrated 92 years in business in April and has operated in Granby since 1987. Jim Nilsson, president, is a third-generation member of the family-owned business, and the company is currently transitioning to its fourth generation. St. Mary Star of the Sea to hold charity golf tournament St. Mary Star of the Sea Church in Unionville will host a charity golf tournament to benefit the House of Bread in Hartford and the children of the Haitian parish of Ste. Thèrése de L’Enfant Jésus in Lilavois, Haiti, Tuesday, Sept. 29 at Blue Fox Run, 65 Nod Road in Avon. Registration begins at 11 a.m. with a shotgun scramble at noon. Fees, which include 18 holes of golf, box lunch on the course, cocktails and dinner, are $125 per person or $500 per foursome. A dinner-only option is available for $40 per person. Many members of the St. Mary Star of the Sea parish community support the two beneficiary charities through financial contributions and donations of time and talent.The House of Bread provides food, shelter, housing and education to the Hartford urban community, serving nearly 2,000 people every day. Ste. Thèrése de L’Enfant Jésus, located in a country ravaged by earthquakes, epidemics and political instability, struggles to sustain its parish school and nurture its students. Funds raised at the tournament will be earmarked to provide a daily meal for the students of Ste. Thèrése. For more information or to sign up as an individual or foursome, or for dinner only, contact George Crow- ley at 860-463-2069 or 860674-0844 or Georgecrowley@comcast.net. Jacob Tilton of Canton, Lucy Tomasso of Farmington and Sarah Fayerweather of Simsbury each received a $1,000 scholarship from Connecticut Dunkin’ Donuts franchisees at the 11th annual Dunkin’ Donuts Scholarship Breakfast July 14 at the Toyota Oakdale Theatre in Wallingford. They were three of 50 qualified Connecticut high school seniors to receive a $1,000 scholarship this year. Recipients were granted scholarships based on academic performance and community service. They also had to be high school graduates and planning to enroll as full time undergraduate students at an accredited two-year or four-year college, university or vocational-technical school for the upcoming academic year. As college costs con- August 20, 2015 tinue to rapidly increase, local Dunkin’ Donuts franchisees are proud to help recipients pursue higher education by providing scholarships to students living in the communities they serve. In the past 11 years, local Dunkin’ Donuts franchisees have awarded more than $825,000 in scholarships to deserving students in Connecticut. Dunkin’ Donuts franchisee Scott Fanning, who spoke at the Scholarship Breakfast event, said, “We are excited to give back to our local community and assist with the education of future generations by acknowledging hard work and understanding the high cost of college tuition.” Mike Abramson, vice president of the Hartford Yard Goats, also spoke to the recipients to recognize their achievements and applaud their success. The Valley Press 11 Historical Society preps for new exhibit The Avon Historical Society is pleased to announce a new exhibit “A Canal Runs Through It: Faith, Commerce and Education in Old Avon Center.” It will be open September through October in the display cases outside the Local History Room of the Avon Free Public Library. The exhibit highlights the restoration of the 20-foot-tall Cupola that is now standing on the front lawn of the Avon Board of Education building on Simsbury Road. The cupola once stood on top of the second Towpath School which was built in 1949 and demolished in 2006. The cupola stands as a reminder of the original Avon Town Center that was at the crossroads of routes 44 and 10 today, hence the origins of this exhibit by the Avon Historical Society. This exhibit will showcase the historic center of the Avon Congregational Church (1819), Farmington Canal (1827-1847), Farmington Canal Railroad (18501991) and three schools. This area saw business- es start and grow such as O’Neill’s Chevrolet-Buick, which has its origins on a barn still standing on Simsbury Road. There was also the Avon Congregational Church (1819), the Avon Baptist Church (1818), both Towpath Schools (the first built in 1879 and the second in 1949), and the very early District Center School. The town center was the main stop on the Farmington Canal and later the Farmington Canal Railroad. This exhibit will feature photographs, textbooks and yearbooks; there will be artifacts and records of commerce, religion and business that occupied the center at various times. Scrapbooks from the former Towpath Schools include graduation booklets, drawings, and even photos of a 1960s Teen Club. The Avon Historical Society welcomes any additions to its collection of Avon Center entities or for the archives of the Local History Room at the Avon Free Public Library. For more information on both, visit www. avonhistoricalsociety.org. Courtesy photo Premier Energy of Canton presented a $500 check to the Granby American Legion Riders Group Post 182 as a donation toward the Rider’s Legacy Fund. Pictured above are Joe Hukill, Bill Simanski, Dean Martel, Staci Demers, Steven Martell, Ken Rafoss, Jackie Evonsion and Ed Evonsion. Check presented to American Legion Riders Group Premier Energy of Canton presented a $500 check to the Granby American Legion Riders Group Post 182, as a donation toward the American Legion Rider’s Legacy Fund. Dean Martel, owner of Premier, said he is proud to assist veterans whenever possible. All his oil trucks display decals of each military service branch. “I’m pleased to donate to such a worthy cause,” Martel said when he learned that the Legacy Fund provides a college education stipend to children of service members who died on active duty. Kenny Rafos, director of the Rider’s Group, accepted the check on behalf of the Legacy Fund. “We can never repay the debt owed to those who gave their life for our freedom; however, assisting their children is an honorable way to recognize the family’s loss,” he said. The Granby American Legion Riders Group, an adjunct of the Shannon Shattuck American Legion Post 182 in Granby, was recently formed. It is part of the state and national American Legion Riders organization. American Legion Riders chapters are well known for their charitable work, which have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for local children’s hos- pitals, schools, veterans’ homes, severely wounded service members and scholarships. Since 2006, riders nationwide have raised money for the Legacy Scholarship Fund, established to provide scholarships to children of U.S. military personnel killed since Sept. 11, 2001. For more information about GALRG, visit its Facebook page, American Legion Riders Post 182. read the paper or visit us online... Valley PRESS TO ADVERTISE: 860.651.4700 www.TurleyCT.com 12 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 PRESSOPINION Letter to the EDITOR Overreaction in Avon To the editor: Diane Carney Avon resident Letters policy Letters to the editor should be 400 words or less in length. Political letters should be 250 words or less. Guest columns will be published at the discretion of the editor and should be no more than 650 words in length. No unsigned or anonymous opinions will be published. We require that the person submitting the opinion also include his or her town of residence and a phone number where they can be reached. We authenticate authorship prior to publication. We reserve the right to edit or withold any submissions deemed to be libelous, unsubstantiated allegations, personal attacks or defamation of character. Send opinion submissions to: our editor, Abigail, via email at aalbair@turleyct.com or via mail to 540 Hopmeadow St., Simsbury, 06070. Deadline for submissions is Friday at noon for the following week’s edition. Call our office, 860-651-4700, with questions. PRESS VALLEY I have been following the controversy in Avon concerning replacing high school social workers with psychologists. As usual, Avon parents react to any change that might affect their children with hysteria. Instead of acting like responsible, caring adults by approaching the issue calmly with respect for others, nasty letters are written, no-confidence petitions are circulated and irate parents and those who support them rant and rave at Board of Education meetings. Personal accusations are made against the superintendent and the board chair. This behavior is typical of so many parents in Avon. Superintendent Mala has stated that he is “disappointed that this is the venue that people chose to continue the discussion about this matter.” Get used to it, Mr. Mala. Avon parents are on the attack, again, and you are the target this time. 540 Hopmeadow St. Simsbury, CT 06070 Phone: 860-651-4700 Fax: 860 606-9599 www.TurleyCT.com Beyond the desk of the EDITOR When friends have kids end. A baby was born last week- I’m sure many babies were born last weekend but there is one of particular importance to me at this time. He is the son of one of my Abigail Albair, oldest and dearest friends. Editor His name is John – my friend, not the baby – and he welcomed his first child Sunday night, more than 30 hours after he and his wife arrived at the hospital. He called me at 12:24 p.m. Saturday as I left Fernridge Park in West Hartford where I had, appropriately, been surrounded by children for an hour while I took end of summer photographs on the splash pad there. “We’re at the hospital. She’s having some darn painful contractions, so I think I should probably go,” he said with equal parts excitement and nervousness in his voice. “You should definitely go,” I said. “Hug her for me. I love you.” I’ve been accused more than once in my life of throwing the word “love” around. I had a friend in college whose face would twist into a strange expression whenever he heard me tell a friend I loved them, arguing that I offered it up so frequently it was beginning to lose meaning. I’ve always subscribed to the Greek’s approach to love: they have multiple words for different types of the emotion, including the love of deep friendship and a selfless love for everyone. It’s always been important to me to tell those I love that I do so, because love can only make the world a better place, in my opinion. John and I have had this type of philia, as the Greek’s would say, the love of deep friendship, for more years of my life than we have not. Friends since we were just kids, we’ve always been there for one another. He took me to my ring dance my sophomore year of high school. The first time I had my heart broken, he arrived on my doorstep with a carrot cake in hand. He insisted that I cut the exact center from the dessert, complete with a giant carrot made of frosting, and drown my sorrows with a lasting sugar high. Years later, to return the favor, I spent the day after a girl let him down watching movies with him while he laid on his couch wearing the shirt and tie he’d slept in from the night before. He spent four hours on a train, a subway and then a ferry to surprise me on my 22nd birthday. He insisted I take calculated risks, such as sliding down a modest but slippery waterfall in a river in which we spent many summer days. I wound up with a five inch long bruise on my leg, but I laughed a lot and committed a good story to memory that day. On my wedding day, he served as an usher and held open the door to the church sanctuary while my dad and I prepared to walk down the aisle. I sang the Ave Maria at his wedding and – for the sake of the performance – saved the tears for their first dance. Of the two of us, he was always more reckless. He often lacked direction and completed more jokes than homework assignments. He also grew up into one of the finest men I’ve ever met. I’m not at all surprised that he became a parent first. He’s honest, hardworking and conscientious. He has a lot of love to give. He’s going to be an incredible father. Part of the reason I believe I’ve always felt so strongly about telling my friends that I love them is because I was an only child. Friends are the siblings you choose for yourself and I’ve never wanted to take for granted the fact that they chose me as well. John’s wife was nearly a week late when she delivered their baby. Just a day before she went into labor, I texted him to check in on the progress. “What’s the status of my nephew?” I asked him. “I can’t wait to meet him.” I have so many things I want to tell this little guy about how fortunate he is to have his parents. I want to spoil him, as aunties do, and savor the precious, fleeting moments of his infancy. There is a whole big world waiting for every new baby, and I have very important words to share with this kid repeatedly until I know the message has taken hold. “If you find a friend half as good as your dad,” I’ll tell him, “remember every day how lucky you are.” The Valley Press is a publication of TurleyCT Community Publications Delivering local news, sports, entertainment and more to the Farmington Valley community Keith Turley Publisher Abigail Albair Editor aalbair@turleyct.com David Heuschkel Sports Editor Melissa Friedman Advertising Director 860-978-1345 Melissa@turleyct.com Barbara Ouellette Classified Sales classifieds@thevalleypress.net August 20, 2015 FIND US ON The Valley Press 13 PRESSBUSINESS New Montessori school opens Farmington doors to children By Ted Glanzer Staff Writer Farmington Montessori Children’s Room is scheduled to open its doors for its first classes Aug. 31. Located at 315 Plainville Ave., the Montessori school will cater to children ages 1 to 6. The new business takes the place of the Farmington Early Learning Center, which closed two years ago. Owner and teacher Tinasha Amunugama said in a telephone interview that the school will run from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., with before- and after-school care that runs from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. There are options for half-day programs as well, Amunugama said. “For the kids signed up for the after-school program, we will have special theme days - like yoga or dance,” she said. “We will have classes that will be at the school.” Amunugama said she is “a Montessori kid,” as her mother was a Montessori teacher for 26 years. “I was introduced to it through my mom,” she said. “I actually worked in the same school with her in Armonk, N.Y. I’d been with them for five years. Then I got married and moved to Windsor last year. I worked at the Ellington Montessori school last year. Now I’m ready to move on to my own school. … I think I’m ready for it right now. I gained a lot will be flooring, where children learn various skills such as buttoning shirts and using zippers. “They learn to do it through the use of materials,” Amunugama said. “It’s all to help with fine-motor skills and to have hand-eye “It’s all to help with fine-motor skills and to have hand-eye coordination. There are practical life and basic living skills.” –Tinasha Amunugama of experience through the years with different-aged kids. My passion is to work with preschoolers. I’ve done it for the past six years. I enjoy what I do. I think I’m ready to go.” The Montessori philosophy, according to alfredmontessori.com, is characterized by “an emphasis on independence, freedom within limits, and respect for a child’s natural psychological, physical and social development.” Amunugama said the school will be divided into two separate classes. She said there will be math and language taught during the day, with “a lot of classical daily skills.” There coordination. There are practical life and basic living skills.” There will also be a sensory area with colors and shape, and materials that teach that philosophy, Amunugama said. For example, there could be 10 blocks of different sizes that she or another teacher will stack from biggest to smallest. When a child picks up the blocks, the teachers will let him or her figure out how to do the arrangement. “We don’t say they are doing it wrong; there won’t be negative feedback,” Amunugama said. “Once they realize the tower doesn’t balance, they learn the con- Photos by Ted Glanzer Owner and teacher Tinasha Amunugama has started the Farmington Montessori Children’s Room located on Route 177. cept a few times over.” There will be stations set up in similar fashion, she said. “There will be things that go together, and opposites, and rhyming,” she said. “Things that teach science and geography, learning about different countries and cultures. We also let them learn lessons through feeling stuff in their own way to understand the activity itself.” Amunugama said it is important for children to learn about different countries and cultures, which will be discussed during “circle time.” Science will center on different activities like recycling. “Each month will have a couple of themes that we incorporate in circle time for a half an hour for both classes,” she said. Amunugama said she is starting to gain her footing in Farmington; she held an open house last Saturday for people to learn more about the school. She said that a significant amount of work went into renovating the inside and outside of the building. For more information, email Amunugama at info@ montessorichildrensroom. com or call 914-907-9670. smart financial guidance for women www.planningwiseforwomen.com You can’t help but think there has to be a better kind of financial advisory relationship out there for you… and you’d be right. Nancy B. Fellinger, CFP® 860-784-2605 or nancy@coburnfinancial.com Call or email for your no cost, no obligation consultation 14 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 Valley PRESS read the paper or visit us online... TO ADVERTISE: 860.651.4700 • www.TurleyCT.com PRESSBUSINESS In the House through the Garden sees success in Simsbury By Sloan Brewster Senior Staff Writer A new consignment and antique store in Simsbury that has been open for just one month is already expanding. On Wednesday, Aug. 12, In the House through the Garden, located on Jim Gallagher Way, was flocked with customers. As they made their way into the little shop, owner Thomas Mach congenially welcomed them in and apologized to each one about the mess, explaining that the store was expanding already and would be taking over a couple of empty rooms upstairs to offer studio space to local artists and to hold classes and workshops. One woman said she was very excited about the workshops and smiled as she gazed around the store, despite the temporary clutter. As each one politely congratulated him for the expansion, expressed excitement over the prospect of workshops and told him how quaint and lovely the shop was, Mach offered them a glass of wine or champagne. For those who declined, he suggested other refreshments. “I have everything,” Mach said. The list included cappuccino, espresso, bottled water, a variety of sodas, beer, wine and champagne. Mach plans to offer a beverage to every customer that enters the store. At the workshops, the beverages will also be on hand as will hors d'oeuvres and other treats. “I wanted to create a shop that’s totally different than anything else that you can experience,” he said. In June, Mach found the available space, rented it and quit his job as the vice president and store manager at Macy’s. “I knew someday I would want to open up my own shop and this spot opened,” he said. “It had to be in Simsbury.” On July 10, one month after he left his job, he opened the store. Mach, who previously lived on Long Island, had always wanted to move to New England “for the New England lifestyle,” he said. He had very specific wishes. “I wanted a white house with a red front door,” he said. “It had to have the red front door.” Five years ago, he bought a colonial house just like that in Simsbury. He’s been restoring it ever since. “I love it,” he said. “I love this town so much.” An avid antique collector for 30 years, Mach has filled the house with special pieces, he said, but when he was opening the store, he had a mover bring many of them into the store, thinking that was the only way he would be able to open. Before opening, however, he also launched an ad campaign, specifically using Facebook to inform potential consignment sellers of his plans to sell antiques. Much to his great surprise, he had to send all his own antiques back home so he could make room for the many, many pieces people wanted to sell in the store. He even had to put some folks on a waiting list, but pieces seem to be going rather quickly, which he told customers as they looked around. One big appeal for the store is the Annie Sloan chalk paint sold there. Annie Sloan, an English company with limited distribution, is very particular about where its products are sold, Mach said. The nearest dealer is in Norwalk and Mach said it was a privilege to be able to sell it in Simsbury. Once he was approved to sell the products, Mach went to training in New Orleans. Chalk paint is not actually chalk, Mach explained. Annie Sloan invented the product when she was looking for paint to create the right finish for distressed furniture she wanted to paint. “It’s called chalk [paint] for the finish and colors,” Mach said. “It is known as the world’s best paint ... you can paint on anything – wood, fabric, metal.” Sloan also has a line of books that Mach will sell in the store. “Annie Sloan’s Workbook for Colour & Paint Ideas & Inspiration” contains hints scrolled along the edges of the blank pages where sketches and notes are meant to be added by the books’ readers. The hints say such things as “Paint free hand borders – they always look best, even if you make mistakes” or “Know your complementary colours – red and green, blue and orange, purple and yellow” and then “Mix a colour with its complementary and add white to make it a grey.” Sloan also gives suggestions on how to make a piece look unique. “Paint over metal handles, wipe them while the paint is still wet so just a little of the metal is showing. After they are dry, wax,” she wrote. “For a project, why not paint a concrete floor and finish it with lacquer? Photo by Sloan Brewster Thomas Mach, owner of In the House through the Garden on Jim Gallagher Way in Simsbury, makes his own potpourri from self-created recipes out of hand-picked items. Customers can make their own as well, sifting through the products and choosing aromas that best suit their needs and desires. Apply the paint thickly then use a hairdryer to make it crackle. Do this on just a few places, not all over the furniture.” Sloan repeatedly invites the book’s readers to visit her boards on Pintrest. Among Sloan’s products are chalk, paint, wax, stencils, brushes, fabric and varnish. Mach plans to offer workshops on how to use Annie Sloan paints to do such things as decoupage, gilding, rehabbing lamps and other projects. He will also offer other workshops in a series he has dubbed Creative Living. Creative Living will include wine tastings, cooking classes, gardening classes, potpourri making and art history. One of the Creative Living classes he has planned will take place at the Simsbury Public Library and will be on bow making during the holiday season. “That sounds like a great girl’s night out because we’re always trying to think of what can we do to go out instead of hosting one,” cus- tomer Amy Dillan said when Mach told her about the workshops. “That’s fantastic. I can’t wait to have the classes.” He will also offer one of the upstairs rooms as studio space on a rolling basis to local artists and will sell products by local artists. Mach also sells pet treats from Brownstone Bakery and, as a dog lover, he brings his dogs to work, though he did not have them there while he was doing the expansion project. Mach also offers potpourri in the store, and it has been a big draw since he opened, he said. The jar of Orange Grove aroma has sold out three times already. Mach makes his own potpourri from recipes he has created and also offers individual ingredients so customers can create their own scents. The store has more than 50 different dry ingredients that he has hand selected. “I wanted something so unique and something that people would enjoy,” Mach said of the assortment of products he sells, including the antiques, artisans products, jewelry and Annie Sloan paints. He also has his own stationary, designed by Lady Pym of Manhattan and exclusively sold at In the House through the Garden. “It’s like having Brimfield right here in Simsbury,” Dillan said. You’ll love our lights... Old Lights On offers a wide variety of period lighting from the late 1800s through the 1930s – Victorian, Arts and Crafts, Art Nouveau and more. Whether it’s an amazing chandelier for your dining room or an unusual sconce for the bedroom, no one works harder than we do to find what you’re looking for! Old Lights On BUYING, SELLING & RESTORING ANTIQUE LIGHTS SINCE 1989 WE GUARANTEE IT! Farmington • 860-676-2713 Please leave a message if we’re not there! email: info@oldlightson.com www.oldlightson.com August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 15 PRESSBUSINESS People on the move Girard, a lifelong resident of Simsbury, brings her 20 years of collective banking experience and service to local communities. Over the past six years she has helped people realize their dreams of homeownership, as well as achieving their long- and shortterm financial goals through home refinance. “I look forward to working with the Windsor Federal Savings team to meet the mortgage needs of our market area while providing the bank’s recognized quality customer service,” she said. Girard is a 2015 graduate of the Connecticut School of Finance and Management and currently serves on the Granby Chamber Simsbury’s Mary Girard named new mortgage loan originator at Windsor Federal Savings Ray Halsted, senior vice president of lending and Lori LePauloue, vice president of residential and consumer lending of Windsor Federal, recently announced that Mary Girard has recently joined the association as a mortgage loan originator. of Commerce Annual Memorial Golf Tournament Committee. An accomplished knitter, she also enjoys baking, the Connecticut shoreline and spending time with her three children and extended family. Girard will work out of the Granby office located at 21 Hartford Ave. and can be reached at 860-298-1448. Taste by Spellbound opening second location Miriam Rieder, the owner of Taste By Spellbound, will open a shop at the Prom- enade Shops at Evergreen Walk in South Windsor. The first location of Taste by Spellbound is located at 5 Ensign Dr. in Avon. “We are so excited about this next big step in Taste’s by Spellbound’s journey,” Ruth Harvey, Reider’s mother who works with her daughter in the business, said. A grand opening iss scheduled for Aug. 21 from 6-9 p.m. Taste by Spellbound was also recently featured on Food Network’s new show “Great American Food Finds.” For more information, visit shop.spellboundgirl.com. How do you visit all tHese amazing restaurants in one nigHt? A Taste Simsbury Thursday, augusT 27, 2015 5:30-8:30PM at10 winslow ThE rivErviEw PlaCe simsBury, Ct 7tH annual in Presented By tiCKets availaBle online at www.sHoPsimsBury.Com, at simsBury BanK loCations, Fitzgerald’s Foods and otHers. see sHoPsimsBury. Com For a ComPlete list. SPONSORS ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 16 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 Valley PRESS West Hartford PRESS Glastonbury LIFE Newington LIFE Rocky Hill LIFE West Hartford LIFE Wethersfield LIFE Valley LIFE the e&m group david mozeleski, CFP®, CrPs®, CrPC® PRESSNews Taking a snooze while the shelter clears Bozzuto’s buys, working to renovate polo grounds By Ted Glanzer Staff Writer FARMINGTON — The Farmington Polo Grounds, which had been in foreclosure proceedings for six years, was purchased by the company owned by the organizer of the Connecticut Dream Ride. According to records filed at Farmington Town Hall, Town Farm Road LLC purchased the 59.5-acre property located at 152 Town Farm Road for $1.682 million July 24 from Village Man- agement Corp., which finalized its foreclosure on the property June 8 after more than half a decade. According to records filed with the secretary of the state, Town Farm Road LLC is owned by Bozzuto’s Inc. The chairman, president and CEO of Bozzuto’s, Michael P. Bozzuto, is the organizer of the Connecticut Dream Ride, a massive fundraiser for The Hometown See GROUNDS on page 22 Farrar says farewell Community Café manager retires after 11 years Photo by Ted Glanzer Cupcake the cat catches a cat nap during the Clear the Shelters event at Mary’s Kitty Korner Saturday, Aug. 15. Many adoption stories to come out of MKK that day when numerous animal shelters across the state had special adoption deals to spur additional adoptions; Mary’s Kitty Korner dropped the adoption fee for cats over the age of 3 from $95 to $50. Read more on page 20. New firehouse construction underway By Sloan Brewster Senior Staff Writer BURLINGTON — Work has started on Burlington’s new Lake Garda firehouse. The old firehouse on Monce Road, which was built in the late 1960s, was demolished last month, according to acting Fire Marshal Tim Tharau, who is also chairman of the department’s Building Committee. The new firehouse will be built by Enfield Builders, whose $1.8 million offer was the lowest of 11 bids for the job and, according to Tharau, was $250,000 below projection. The department signed the contract with the builders in June, he said. The project should be Photo by Sloan Brewster The site where the old firehouse once stood is now a construction zone as the new firehouse is built. It is slated for completion in May 2016. completed by May of next year. In the meantime, the station’s fire trucks are being stored at the nearest station, the Whigville Sta- tion, on Jerome Avenue, approximately two miles away. See FIREHOUSE on page 21 By Alison Jalbert Assistant Editor CANTON — It’s not goodbye, but see you later. That was the sentiment during the Aug. 14 celebration of Margaret “Peggy” Farrar’s 11 years as the café manager at the Canton Community Café. Farrar worked at the café since 2004 as an employee of the Community Renewal Team, as more time is required in her job as a remedial reading tutor at Cherry Brook Primary School, a position she has held for 21 years. Senior and Social Services staff, café volunteers and seniors gathered during the senior center’s regularly scheduled lunch to thank the retiring Farrar for her time and dedication. Claire Cote, director of senior and social services, said the town is lucky to have had Farrar as part of the team. “Peggy has felt connected, she’s felt loved, she’s felt frustrated, she’s felt overwhelmed, she’s felt proud. … She is, and I feel I can speak for her, so proud to Photo by Alison Jalbert Peggy Farrar retired last week from the Canton Community Cafe. have been here,” she said. Cote explained that there is a lot of behind-the-scenes and off-the-clock work necessary to run the café, and that Farrar has been the constant, the energy and the glue that has held the program together. “It’s not just the knowledge she brings of this town and her love of her neighbors and all you folks, but it’s her determination to see this program flourish, See FARRAR on page 22 Home by bridge will be torn down, park with river access to be built in place By Sloan Brewster Senior Staff Writer SIMSBURY — Betty Hudson’s house in Simsbury will be torn down and a park will be developed on the property. At its Aug. 10 meeting, the Board of Selectmen decided to raze the house where the former state senator, feminist champion and special assistant to Gov. Ella Gras- so lived from 1978 until 2014, when she could no longer care for herself. Hudson said she loved the house, which she bought after divorcing her husband Don Hudson, and proudly showed off its architectural features during a tour in January 2014. She pointed out aspects designed by the home’s original owners who had designed and built it. She liked the shelving built into the walls and the room with an Asianstyle divider that she said matched her style. Her favorite room was the sunroom, where she enjoyed sitting under the window and looking at the view of the river and Old Drake Hill Flower Bridge. She also loved the south facing window from her bedroom, where she could see a different view of the river and felt the rays of the sun in the afternoon. In a phone call shortly after she moved to an assisted living facility in Branford, Hudson reiterated how much she wished she were back at her home in Simsbury. “I miss the place a lot,” she said. “It’s a great spot and I loved it.” While the town plans to demolish the entire house, it may retain parts of the foundation in order to use it later to build a pavilion. While two volunteer organizations – the Audubon Society and the Farmington River Watershed Association – have said they would like to reside in the house and some folks at a public hearing in April suggested using it as a spot to give local classes, the board opted to demolish it due to its condition and the cost to complete repairs. August 20, 2015 See PARK on page 22 The Valley Press 17 • • • • 18 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 West Woods has new assistant principal this school year By Ted Glanzer Staff Writer FARMINGTON — West Woods Upper Elementary School will have a new assistant principal to start the 2015-16 school year, according to the top school official. Superintendent of Schools Kathleen Greider announced the hiring of Michael Wilson as assistant principal “after a comprehensive national search.” “The assistant principal search committee and our District Leadership Council worked diligently to find a leader with the knowledge, skills and leadership qualities that matched West Woods School’s culture of collaboration, high expectations and a deep care for all students,” Greider said in a press release. “Mr. Wilson was selected from a strong and experienced pool of candidates.” Wilson joins the Farmington school district from Region School District No. 6, where he taught for 10 years: seven years in grade six at the Goshen Center School and three years in grade seven at Wamogo Regional Middle School in Litchfield. He was the grade seven team leader until he was appointed to the position of math department chair. Wilson earned his master’s degree in science from University of Bridgeport and his bachelor’s degree from Trinity College. He received his middle grades math certificate from Quinnipiac University. In addition, he attended the University of Bridgeport to acquire his educational leadership certification. “I am extremely honored to have been selected as the new assistant principal of West Woods Upper Elementary School,” Wilson said. “I am eager to get to know the students, their families, faculty and staff members. I look forward to supporting the Farmington public school’s vision, mission, and beliefs, as we enable students to become self-directed leaders of their own learning. I am excited to work collaboratively with my fellow colleagues as we keep student learning and achievement at the forefront of all of our actions.” Wilson replaces Teresa Giolito, who was appointed the principal of the Florence E. Smith STEM School in West Hartford. The school district had been searching for a new assistant principal since July. Farmington Board of Education Chair Mary Grace Reed said she was pleased with the appointment. “Mr. Wilson is a highly effective administrator who embraces all aspects of Farmington’s mission, vision and core beliefs,” Reed said. “He is committed to building strong relationships with all stakeholders while continuing West Wood’s focus on innovative and strategic improvement. The Board of Education enthusiastically welcomes Michael to the Farmington in the historic Collins Axe Factory 10 Depot Street (at Rte. 179) Collinsville, CT 06022 • (860) 693-0615 Voted Best Antique Shop Hartford Magazine 2014 Over 70 Dealers • 2 Floors Furniture • Art • Pottery • China • Glass • Jewelry Vintage Clothing • Books • Sports Items, etc. OPEN DAILY 10-5 • Air Conditioned - Delivery & Shipment Available from I-84 or W. Exit 19/Rte. 4 W to Rte. 179 N to Collinsville Village From US44/202 W to Rte. 179 to Collinsville Village www.antiquesonfarmington.com MAGLIERI construction & paving inc. 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All You Need Is McLean is a not-for-profit senior living community in Simsbury, CT offering a continuum of services including independent living, assisted living and memory care assisted living, an adult day program, short- and long-term skilled nursing, outpatient rehabilitation and wellness, post-acute care and home care and hospice. www.TheNewMcLeanVillage.org 75 Great Pond Road | Simsbury, CT 06070 August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 19 McLean seeking memory care volunteers for fall training session SIMSBURY — McLean’s memory care volunteers are a close-knit group of caring individuals who provide a range of nonmedical services to those with memory impairment and their families. Services for clients may include one-to-one social interaction, sharing a passion for hobby, music or art therapy, writing someone’s life history with them, reading aloud, or just simply engaging in a much needed conversation. Visits may take place in the client’s home, an assisted living community, or a skilled nursing environment. The frequency may vary depending upon client needs and volunteer availability. McLean will provide an orientation and training session to get volunteers started. This includes an in-person interview, eighthour class featuring a curriculum handbook and presentations from expert guest speakers covering a wide range of relevant topics. Volunteers also gain a practical understanding of the work through a mentoring program and are encouraged to participate in valuable monthly in-ser- vice training on timely and useful subjects. Sign ups are now available for the Sept. 22 training. Call Gao Vang, McLean volunteer coordinator for memory care, at 860-658-3941 for details. McLean is a notfor-profit senior living community in Simsbury offering a continuum of services including independent living, assisted living and memory care assisted living; an adult day program, short- and longterm skilled nursing, outpatient rehabilitation and wellness; post-acute care, home care and hospice. Lobster Loop 5K road race and walk coming up this weekend CANTON — An annual event that allows residents to enjoy the company of friends and neighbors while helping students get a richer learning experience is scheduled for this Sunday. The 24th annual Lobster Loop 5k road race and noncompetitive health walk will be held on the Canton Town Green, at the corner of Route 44 and Dowd Avenue, Sunday, Aug. 23. Registration will open at 7:30 a.m.; the race will start at 8:30 a.m. This event is hosted by the Canton Middle School PTO and all fundraising proceeds will benefit technology updates for the middle school. Especially now, as states are cutting budgets, the Canton PTO fills in gaps for students that aren’t available through any other source. The traditional gold, silver and bronze medals in 18 categories will be awarded, along with four first place trophies. Registration fee day of the race is $25. Bikes, strollers, roller-blades, etc. and animals are not allowed. Budget Blinds’ Anniversary Sale! Buy now & SAVE Hurry! Sale Ends August 31, 2015. Photo by Ted Glanzer Judy Catzman didn’t choose Diamond the cat; Diamond chose Catzman during the Clear the Shelters event at Mary’s Kitty Korner Aug. 15. ‘Clear the shelters’ event a success at Mary’s Kitty Korner By Ted Glanzer Staff Writer GRANBY — Judy Catzman is a self-proclaimed dog person. Catzman can’t own a dog in the condominium complex in which she resides. So, she found herself at Mary’s Kitty Korner in Granby Saturday, Aug. 15 to see if she could adopt a cat. No long after she arrived, Catzman was eyeing Diamond, a cute, female, grey tabby that has been at the shelter for a little while. Known for her coy personality, Diamond had no problem sauntering up to Catzman, almost demanding to be taken home. There were 16 adoption stories to come out of MKK Aug. 15, which was “Clear the Shelters Pet Adoption Day,” sponsored by NBC Connecticut. Numerous animal shelters across the state had special adoption deals to spur additional adoptions; Mary’s Kitty Korner dropped the adoption fee for cats over the age of 3 from $95 to $50. The event went extremely well, according to Cathy Gonyer, Mary’s Kitty Korner vice president and treasurer. “We’ve had 12 adoptions by 1 p.m.,” Gonyer said, noting that Mary’s Kitty Korner was open for three more hours. “It’s going fantastic.” Gonyer said July and August are slow ANDERSON TURF IRRIGATION, INC. Protect your grass and landscaping investment! 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Offer good at only participating franchises 20 months for animal shelters, so the Clear the Shelters event provided a huge boost for Mary’s Kitty Korner. “It’s hard to keep saving [cats] when you don’t have any room,” Gonyer said. “Now we’re making some room for new cats. This has been huge for us.” Mary’s Kitty Korner plays host to about 50 cats, now down to about 35, and another 50 that are in a foster program. The event also provided a huge boost for the cats and prospective owners like Michael and Alison Bogatay of Canton, who decided to adopt Misty, a gorgeous grayhaired female tabby. “We had a cat for 20 years who picked us,” Michael Bogatay said. “She died a few years ago, so now we felt like it was time to give a cat a home.” The Bogatays specifically cited the Empty the Shelters event as having spurred them into action. Mary’s Kitty Korner is a 501(c)(3) organization that is located at 281 Salmon Brook St. in Granby. Its hours of operation are Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m. Adoption fees are $95 for adult cats, $150 for kittens and special breed adults such as Himalayan and Persians. For more information, visit www. maryskittykorner.org. Groundbreaking for new library slated for spring By Sloan Brewster Senior Staff Writer BURLINGTON — Ground should be broken for the Burlington Public Library expansion sometime next spring, and a year later, it should be ready to open its doors. At the Aug. 10 Board of Selectmen meeting, Craig Winter and Sandy Mazeau, co-chairs of the Library Board of Director’s Building Committee apprised selectmen of the status of the expansion project, stating that they anticipate a ground breaking in the spring. In a phone call Friday, Aug. 24, Library Director Marie Spratlin Hasskarl said paperwork was stalling the process. Specifically, she was referring to the contracts with the Connecticut State Library, which provided a $1 million grant toward the project and the contract with the architect. “We can’t do anything until the contract[s] [are] signed,” she said. Once the contracts are signed, Barbara Joslin, architect and project manager, will create an in-depth design of the planned library. “They have to do the project, the plan, the nitty-gritty of the design,” Hasskarl said. She estimated that that part would take about five months to complete. Once it’s FIREHOUSE from page 17 The department also has an immediate mutual aid agreement for emergencies with the Tunxis Hose Company No. 1 in Unionville. The foundation of the new building should be put in at the end of August or the beginning of September, Tharau said. While crews get the necessary permits and dig out the soil, the engineers are taking the time to review the drawings for the 6,000-square-foot building. The new building will be about half the size of the main firehouse on the George Washington Turnpike, Tharau said. It will have two bays, like its predecessor, but they will be double the depth to fit the trucks, which have increased in size since the 1960s. The doors to the bays will be 14 feet wide. Inside, there will be bathrooms, showers, a small kitchen and a 200-square-foot multipurpose room. Though there will not be any sleeping quarters, the building will be built to accommodate a future expansion with sleeping space. done, it’ll be time for the ground breaking and then the real work will begin. “I’m thinking [it will take] a year,” Hasskarl said. “It just depends how fast everything moves along.” During the construction phase, library staff and all the books and other better layout.” There will also be a Community Room that will have space for up to 100 people and will be useable at night and after hours, when the rest of the building will be closed. “They’ll be able to come in and out when we’re not open,” Hasskarl said. “It’s like a 42 percent increase in the size of the library. ... Nowhere near what we wanted, but you can always compromise.” –Sandy Mazeau of the library board’s building committee items will remain in the building but will be shifted from space to space as needed, Hasskarl said. The library board had considered moving everything to another location, but that’s an expensive endeavor as the library’s Internet and computers would have to be moved as well. Hasskarl is looking most forward to having more space when the project is finished. The teen area, which currently consists of books, audio books and a beanbag chair, will grow to 500 to 600 square feet. “[It will be] roughly a whole room,” Hasskarl said. “The other thing is the Local History Room will be bigger and will have a “It’s really designed to last 50 years,” Tharau said. The building will also have modernized technology and lighting and with a new furnace promises to be energy efficient. The inclusion of showers are a big perk for the firefighters, Tharau said. “The building that we had before didn’t have any showers, so if they came back with contamination they had to actually bring it home [to clean up] or go the firehouse in the center of town,” he said. “That’s huge.” The new station will also have a generator. “The building will act as another emergency facility in that part of town, so if there’s no power [people in the area] be able to get water,” Tharau said. The building will also have an area for training. At the May referendum, voters approved the replacement of the fire station, which was estimated to cost the town $1.6 million with an additional $1 million toward the project coming from the State Bond Commission, First Selectman Ted Shafer has said. Voters also approved a 3,000 square There will also be a couple of small meeting rooms. “So, we’re just looking for more and flexible space in ongoing years,” she said. The expansion will be built on the acre of town-owned land in the back of the building, that, according to Hasskarl, was purchased 10 years ago for that purpose. The shape of the building will remain much the same, only bigger. “We’re a ‘square U’ now and we’ll continue to be a ‘square U,’” Hasskarl said. “It’s just going to go out in the back toward the cemetery.” The Center Cemetery is located behind the library and next to the First Congregational Church. Voters approved the library expansion project at a referendum in May. The design for the library expansion has shrunk since its original inception. The latest drawings call for a 3,000-square-foot expansion to be added to the 9,000-square-foot building at a $2.6 million cost, with $1 million of that coming from the state grant. “It’s like a 42 percent increase in the size of the library,” Mazeau has said. “Nowhere near what we wanted, but you can always compromise.” An earlier plan called for a 6,500-squarefoot expansion that would have cost between $3.6 and $4.7 million. That, too, was a scaledback version with previous plans slated to cost between $5 and $7 million. At the May referendum, voters also approved the replacement of the Lake Garda Fire Station, which will cost the town $1.6 million with $1 million toward the project coming from the State Bond Commission, First Selectman Ted Shafer has said. Acting Fire Marshal Tim Tharau has said the new station would have 14-foot bays and will be able to accommodate current and future equipment needs. Ground has already broken on that project – see the below story for details. File photo A rendering of the new firehouse that is currently under construction foot expansion project for the local library, at a $2.6 million cost, with $1 million of that coming from a state grant. Ground should be broken on that project sometime next spring – see the above story for details. Everything for Your Home VALLEY FiREPLACE & STOVE, LLC 220 Albany Tpke., Canton A+ 860-693-3404 www.valleyfireplaceandstove.com 860-953-2200 7 CODY STREET • WEST HARTFORD, CT MageeCompanies.com August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 21 GROUNDS File photo The Board of Selectmen decided last week to demolish this home to make way for a park with river access. PARK from page 17 “Too much work needs to be done on the building,” said First Selectman Lisa Heavner. The recommendation to tear down the house came from the Open Space Committee, which was tasked with creating a development plan for the half-acre parcel and the adjoining 1.8 acres of town owned land beside the Old Drake Hill Flower Bridge. The committee held numerous public sessions including one with the Parks & Recreation Commission, according to the recommendation document, which was included in the Board of Selectmen’s meeting packet. “Our recommendation incorporates the idea that ‘less is more’ with this property,” the committee stated. “Careful consideration was given to operational costs, erosion and invasive species management, landscaping with native plants, passive use recreation with access to the river, and incorporating current Flower Bridge uses and needs.” The recommendation included demolishing the house, building a “simple open air structure,” providing canoe and kayak access via Hop Brook, which runs into the Farmington River from behind the house and planting native plants to stabilize the riverbank and enhance the landscape. In addition, it suggested adding park infrastructure such as a water source, garbage cans, portable toilets, picnic tables or benches, and bicycle racks. The committee also suggested keeping an existing shed to be used for storage. The Old Drake Hill Flower Bridge Committee, the nonprofit that cares for and maintains the flower bridge, also endorsed the proposal, Heavner said. Selectmen unanimously approved the plan and said they thought it was a good idea. “I think in the end it’s going to be a great town asset,” said Selectman Cheryl Cook. The town set aside $48,000 when it bought the house to be used for developing the property and, at its Aug. 5 meeting, applied for a grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency to cover 75 percent of the estimated $40,000 cost to raze the house. from page 17 Foundation, which in turn funds Special Olympics programs in many international communities. The charity also supports pet rescues, U.S. Military veterans and organizations that fight diseases and support children and those with disabilities. Kevin Daly, vice president and general counsel of Bozzuto’s Inc., said that, in the short term, the property will be used for this year’s Dream Ride, which is scheduled for Aug. 21-23. Crews could be seen working on the property last week to prepare for the event that is expected to draw thousands of motorcyclists from all over the country. The 15th annual Dream Ride weekend also includes the Dream Cruise, which is a parade of antique cars that chauffeur Special Olympics athletes from Papa’s Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram in New Britain to the Farmington Club, where a gala will be held with delicious barbecue, music and a raffle from from page 17 what sustained me.” She said her position recognizing its importance enabled her to understand in so many people’s lives,” the importance of the café and how it brings people Cote said. She commended Far- together. She recalled those rar for going above and who came in with friends, beyond at the café in many as well as those who came in alone and made new ways. On behalf of First Se- friends at lunch. “It’s not about the food; lectman Richard Barlow, who was unable to attend, it’s about what’s next,” FarCote presented Farrar with rar said. “I’m very grateful to a proclamation from the all of you.” Ernesto Rios, coordinaBoard of Selectmen. A visibly emotional tor of operation/nutrition Farrar said her work at the department at CRT, said café has been “a labor of when it comes to a person love.” like Farrar, words are not “I hope you felt that. It’s enough. “On behalf of CRT, we’re honored and glad to be able to have worked with you, had us as part of your team and seen the hard work you put in,” he said. Marble Floor Polishing • Honing • Grinding • Cleaning • Sealing Marble Limestone Granite Terrazzo Tile Repair & Installation • Regrouting • Sealing • Mexican Tile Refinishing STONE &TILE SERVICES 860-913-4473 P.O. BOX 433, AVON, CT 06001 EMAIL: ZIG@ACNINC.NET Visit us at stonepolishingct.com NOW ACCEPTING CREDIT CARDS 22 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 6:30 to 10 p.m. Friday, Aug. 21, as well as the Dream Show, a car show, which is held Aug. 22 and 23. The Dream Ride, which is the brainchild of Michael A. Bozzuto of Bozzuto’s, Inc., started with about 500 riders in its first year and morphed into thousands of participants over the years, according to Farmington Police Chief Paul Melanson. The polo grounds is more suitable to handling the ever-growing traffic that the event generates. “It’s a beautiful piece of property,” Daly said of the polo grounds. “It’s going to make a lot of people happy with the way it looks [after the renovations are done].” Daly said that there were no long-term plans for the property, though he speculated that the site would play host to additional Special Olympics events. “There will be things during the course of the year, but nothing specific as of yet,” Daly said, noting that Bozzuto made the decision to purchase the property quickly once it became available when the foreclosure was finalized. The Farmington Club, which is next door to the polo grounds, was originally going to host the Dream Ride. Daly said that the Farmington Club will still cater the event. “The two properties complement each other very well,” Daly said. Through the years, the polo grounds had played host to various events, such as a large antiques expo and equestrian competitions. In 2009, the then-owners of the property, Stephen Jenkins and his two sons Jon and Jason Jenkins, fell behind on the mortgage and foreclosure proceedings were started. FARRAR Make Your Marble Shine Again! ZIGGY OSKWAREK Photo by Ted Glanzer The Farmington Polo Grounds will be the site of The Dream Ride this weekend and likely more Special Olympics events in the future. Photo by Alison Jalbert Peggy Farrar, left, chats with a regular attendee of the Canton Community Café during her farewell luncheon held Aug. 7. He told the crowd that in searching for a new café manager, they were not replacing Farrar, but simply finding someone else to hold that position. “It was a labor of love to be with the elders of our town to know them, share with them and to add enjoyment to their senior years,” she told The Valley Press. “I’m having trouble detaching with something that has kept me connected for so many years. It’s important for me personally; it’s enriched my life.” check it out AVON–––––––––––– Boy Scout Troop 274’s Eagle Court of Honor Ceremony for Jack Kostal and Frank Campanelli Friday, Aug. 21, 7 p.m., West Avon Congregational Church, 280 Country Club Road, public welcome Avon Newcomer’s Club meeting Sunday, Aug. 30, 2:30-4 p.m., Pine Grove Elementary School, 151 Scoville Road, ice cream treat for kids, learn about club’s interest groups, www. avonnewcomers.com for more information Summer worship at Avon congregations: in August worship at the Avon Congregational Church, 6 West Main St., with the ministers, the Rev. Martha Chenault and the Rev. Brian Hardee, alternating leading the worship Avon historic sites open every Sunday through September from 2-4 p.m. for tourist season – Pine Grove Schoolhouse, 3 Harris St., and Derrin Farmhouse, 249 West Avon Road Tuesday Crafters meeting weekly on Tuesdays at 10 a.m. at Avon Congregational Church, 6 West Main St., on drop-in basis to do simple sewing and knitting projects BURLINGTON––––––– Burlington Parks & Rec pro- grams at www.burlingtonctparksandrec.com: Kickbox Combo Mondays and Wednesdays thru Aug. 26, 6:30-7:30 p.m., walkins $10 per class; Fitness Mix – evenings Tuesdays and Thursdays, thru Aug. 27, 6:15-7:15 p.m., fee $10 CANTON–––––––––– At the Canton Senior Center, 40 Dyer Ave., 860-693-5811: • Canton Community Café open every Wednesday and Friday, suggested donation for 60+ $2.50, $4.50 for others, pre-register by noon the day before at 860-693-5811 • Learn How to Self-Manage Your Diabetes workshop Thursdays thru Sept. 24, 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m., register • Commodity Supplemental Food Program for residents age 60+, if interested in program and fit income guidelines call Claire Cote 35th annual Lobsterfest celebration Friday, Aug. 21, 6-9:30 p.m.; Saturday, Aug. 22, noon9:30 p.m.; Sunday, Aug. 23, noon-4 p.m. or until sold out; music on Friday from The Johnny Larson Band with Carolyn Rae, Saturday includes music by Mighty Soul Drivers, Touch-aTruck, face painting and balloon animals, $20 includes one full lobster and sides Farmers Market vouchers for Canton residents either 60 years or older, or younger than 60 and permanently disabled, living in subsidized housing – informational sessions Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 11 a.m.-noon thru Aug. 26 at the Community Center with Claire Cote to qualify for vouchers (860-693-5811) Mills Pond Pool open thru Labor Day, Sept. 7, pool memberships and daily passes available at the pool, daily fees $5 residents/$7 non-residents Calling all crafters for the Canton Holiday Craft Fair Nov. 21 at Canton High School, contact Tammie Coffey at dremkr@aol. com FARMINGTON–––––– Events at Farmington Senior Center, 321 New Britain Ave., Unionville, 850-675-2490, ext. 3: Pickleball Tuesdays and Fridays, 1:30 p.m.; Bridge Tuesdays 1-3 p.m., Co-Ed Pool Mondays 10 a.m., Bible Study: Tuesdays 10:30 a.m., Salon Discussion Group Wednesdays, 1p.m., Pinochle Thursdays 1p.m. At the UConn Health Center: • New Stroke Survivor Group Wednesday, Aug. 26, noon-1 p.m., Outpatient Pavilion, third floor, 860-679-4846 • Childbirth Preparation Class Saturday, Aug. 29, 8:30 a.m.5 p.m., Onyiuke Dining room, $100, 860-679-7692 Five Corners Thrift Shop at First To submit an event for the calendar, e-mail Sally at sedwards@thevalleypress.net Church of Christ, 61 Main St., Unionville, super summer clothing sale, most summer clothing $1, hours: Saturdays, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. GRANBY–––––––––– Granby Senior Center, 15 North Granby Road, 860-844-5352 • Trip to Nathan Hale Homestead Friday, Aug. 21, departing at 10 a.m., cost $9 • Trip to Burgundy Brook Farm in Palmer, Mass., Wednesday, Aug. 26, departing at 8:30 a.m., $5 At Lost Acres Vineyard, 80 Lost Acres Road, North Granby, 860324-9481: • Elizabeth Rhoades and Shauna Shane art show Aug. 21-Sept. 13, artist reception Aug. 21, 5:30-8 p.m. • Music by Zoe Berman Friday, Aug. 28, 7 p.m., $7 Dog Park fundraiser: canine swims at Salmon Brook Park Sunday, Aug. 30, noon-3 p.m., $10 per dog SIMSBURY–––––––– At the Simsbury Senior Center, Eno Memorial Hall, 754 Hopmeadow St., 860-658-3273: • Lunch at Eno Wednesday, Aug. 26, noon, register – chicken parmesan with pasta • Lunch Café at Eno Friday, Aug. 21, 11 a.m.-noon, $2 each for soup and sandwich – garden vegetable soup, chicken or tuna salad sandwich • Bocce on the new bocce court Tuesdays at 10 a.m. (weather permitting) • Pickleball at Simsbury Farms Ice Rink Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, 4-5:30 p.m., thru October At the Simsbury Free Library, 749 Hopmeadow St., 860-4081336: • Geneaology Road Show Saturday, Aug. 22, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., free to members, $5 for non-members, RSVP by calling museum or emailing simsburyfreelibrary@ gmail.com • Art on the Hill series featuring the work of visual storyteller Devin Febbroriello on display thru Aug. 31 The Second Chance Shop of Simsbury, 12 Station Street is having a storewide 50 percent off sale Aug. 24 through 31. The shop is open Monday through Saturday 10a.m.-2 p.m. Chamber of Commerce Fun Run/Walk of 3-5 miles at 5:30 p.m. every Tuesday, meeting and ending at Red Stone Pub, 10 Jim Gallagher Way VALLEY & BEYOND–– Tunxis Community College “Super Saturday Registration Blitz” Saturday, Aug. 22, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., junction of Routes 6 and 177, Farmington, 100 Building, call 860-773-1490 for more information At the Library Avon Public Library, 281 Country Club Road, 860-6739712, www.avonctlibrary.info: • Ready for School Storytime Tuesday, Aug. 25, 10:30-11:15 a.m., ages 5-7, register • Tinker Tuesdays Tuesday, Aug. 25, 1:30-4:30 p.m., drop in • Learning to Move and Moving to Learn Through a Rainbow of Gymnastics Thursday, Aug. 27, 10:30-11:15 a.m., for toddlers, register • Avon Police Department: Women’s Situational Awareness and Personal Safety Thursday, Aug. 27, 6-8 p.m., with Lt. Kelly Walsh Burlington Library, 34 Library Lane, 860-673-3331, www.Burlingtonctlibrary.info: • Read to Crosby Tuesday, Aug. 25, 3-4 p.m., ages 4 and up, read to Labradoodle Crosby, register Canton Public Library, 40 Dyer Ave., 860-693-5800: www. cantonpubliclibrary.org, beginning Saturday, July 11, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., closed Sundays • Adult Film Series: “The Theory of Everything” Friday, Aug. 21, 1 p.m. • Books/DVD donations for book sale in September during library hours thru Aug. 29 Farmington Library, 6 Monteith Drive, 860-673-6791, ext. 1, www.farmingtonlibraries.org: • Afternoon at the Bijou Thursdays, 2 p.m.: “Woman on the Run” Aug. 27 • Farmers Market Friday, Aug. 21, 2-5 p.m. • Superhero Super Engineers Saturday, Aug. 22, 10 a.m.noon, ages 5 and up, register • Back to School Craft Buffet Aug. 24-27, 3-4:30 p.m., ages 7 and up, drop in • An Evening with the Dog Listener Monday, Aug. 24, 6:308:30 p.m., with Dog Listener Pat Wright, register • Social Media 101 Tuesday, Aug. 25, 7-8:30 p.m. and Wednesday, Aug. 26, 10-11:30 a.m., focus on social media marketing with Facebook and Twitter, register Barney Library, 71 Main St., 860-673-6791, ext. 2 • Novel Ideas Book Group Tuesday, Aug. 25, 1:15-2:30 p.m., copies of current book available at service desk Granby Library, 15 North Granby Rd., 860-844-5275: • We Love LEGOS Tuesdays, 1 p.m. • Craft Week begins Monday, Aug. 24 • Crafternoon for Kids Thursday, Aug. 27, 1 p.m. Simsbury Library, 725 Hopmeadow St., 860-658-7663: • Download to Kindle – Small Group Instruction Tuesday, Aug. 23, or Wednesday, Aug. 26, 1-2 or 2-3 p.m., register. • Blogging with WordPress Tuesday, Aug. 25, 10 a.m.- noon, part 2 Thursday, Aug. 27, 10 a.m.-noon • Achieve Peak Sales Performance: Business Acumen – Business Knowledge and Insight, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 6-8 p.m., with Duane Cashin, register • Leveraging LinkedIn: Beyond the Basics Wednesday, Aug. 26, 10 a.m.-noon, register • Spanish Conversation Group Wednesday, Aug. 26, 10:3011:30 a.m., drop in • Books wanted for September Used Book Sale, collection site at library thru Aug. 29 Children’s programs • Once Upon a Story Time with Mrs. Moody Monday, Aug. 24, 10:30-11 a.m., ages 2 and up, drop in August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 23 Arts & Events At the Wadsworth Atheneum, 600 Main St., Hartford: • Gallery Talk: “Analyzing Abstraction” Thursday, Aug. 27, noon • Mark Bradford / MATRIX 172 thru Sept. 6, site-specific wall drawing • Peter Blume: Nature and Metamorphosis thru Sept. 20, exhibition on influential modernist painter • Aspects of Portraiture: Photographs from the Wadsworth Atheneum thru Nov. 15, featuring nearly 50 examples of photographic portraits in a variety of styles At the Mark Twain House & Museum, 351 Farmington Ave., Hartford, 860-2803130: • Graveyard Shift Ghost Tours Friday, Aug. 28 and Saturday, Aug. 29, hourly tours 6-9 p.m., $22 • Writing Nature Poetry workshop Saturday, Aug. 29, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., $40, with poet and essayist David K. Leff At Bridge Street Live, 41 Bridge St., Collinsville: Aug. 22, 8 p.m., Comedy Night: Steve Guilmette and Christine Hurley; Aug. 23, 7 p.m., Muscle Shoals Music Revue feat. Amy Black and Sarah Borges; Aug. 28, 8 p.m., Lipbone Redding with The Lipbone Orchestra At Infinity Music Hall and Bistro 20 Greenwoods Road North, Norfolk, 860-5425531: Aug. 22, 8 p.m., Kashmir – The Ultimate Led Zeppelin Tribute Band; Aug. 27, 8 p.m., Free Film Festival presents “Tommy” 32 Front St., Hartford: Aug. 22, 8 p.m., Justin Hayward of “Antiques Roadshow” to with special guest Mike appraise items on Sunday, Dawes; Aug. 28, 8 p.m., The www.papermaniaplus.com BoDeans At the Crown and Hammer 2015 Virtuosi Summer Mu- Pub, 3 Depot St., Collinsville: Snuffbox and friends Friday, sic Institute and Festival 860-325-2826, www.insti- Aug. 28 starting at 9:30 p.m. tute.thevirtuosi.org • Young Division Orchestra Work by Summer Arts AdPerformance Friday Aug. 21, ventures Camp students 1:30 p.m., Tunxis Communi- on display at Drezner Visitors’ Gallery in the Farmty College • Brandenburg Concerti, ington Valley Arts Center, 25 part 2, Friday, Aug. 21, 7:00 Arts Center Lane, Avon, Aug. p.m., Tunxis Community 26-29, noon-4 p.m., closing reception Saturday, Aug. 29, College 2-4 p.m. 68th annual Papermania antique paper show Sat- Auditions for “The King urday, Aug. 22, 10 a.m.-5 and I” to be performed by p.m., and Sunday, Aug. 23, The Theatre Guild of Sims10 a.m.-4 p.m. XL Center, bury, auditions for ages 8-14 Hartford, $8 admission, se- Wednesday, Aug. 26, 6:30-9 nior citizens and college p.m., Eno Memorial Hall, students admitted for half Hopmeadow St., audition price Sunday, Gary Sohmers preparation info at www. theatreguildsimsbury.org Auditions for “Fiddler on the Roof” to be performed at the Mandell JCC, 333 Bloomfield Ave., West Hartford, Sept. 1 and 2 by appointment only, shows will be Dec. 3-12, book an audition time at www.mandelljcc.org or 860-236-4571 Open string auditions for Farmington Valley Symphony Orchestra for its 35th season, contact music director Jonathan Brennand at musicdirector@fvso.org if interested Dog-related art sought for “Best in Show” exhibition at Drezner Visitors’ Gallery at the Farmington Valley Arts Center, 25 Arts Center Lane, Avon, submit online before Wednesday, Sept. 2. Drainage “We’re a versatile Landscape and Site Development company committed to prompt, personal service, and quality professional results for all of your commercial and residential projects -- big or small.” Excavation & Grading Septic Work Demolition Complete Landscape Services Stone Patios, Walkways, Sidewalks & Walls Tree Trimming and Removal SIMSBURY, CT 860-651-6130 WWW.CRSLANDSCAPE.COM 24 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 Now offe our prograrimng a AVON HIG t H SCHOOL Trucking Delivery of Landscape Products: including stone, soil, sand and mulch Avon Driving School • Start Classes Anytime • Take Classes in Any Order • DMV Testing On Site • Free Drop Off and Pick Up From Home, School or Job • CT State-Mandated 8-Hour Safety Course Available Register Today! www.avondrivingschool.com Or Call Us at: 860.408.9098 PRESSSports Gray Simsbury’s Titans Matters By Scott Gray Photo by David Heuschkel Simsbury native Kyle Decker, left, took his first swing at being a head baseball coach this summer with the Torrington Titans, while Simsbury’s Chris Myslow, right, ran the team in his first year as president and general manager. Myslow and Decker lead Futures Collegiate Baseball League team By David Heuschkel Sports Editor Being the highest-ranking team official of the Torrington Titans doesn’t preclude Chris Myslow from duties usually done by interns. The Simsbury resident, who took over as general manager this year and recently added team president to his title, handed out free tickets at the Memorial Day parade in Torrington in the spring. He has emptied garbage cans at Fuessenich Park and ran to the store to buy hot dogs when the concession stand ran out. Whatever it takes to make the Futures Collegiate Baseball League team a success, Myslow is willing to do it. “I do it all. It’s literally the chef, cook and bottle washer,” he said before Torrington’s season ended with a 3-1 loss to the Bristol Blues in the first round of the playoffs last week at Muzzy Field. Myslow isn’t Simsbury’s only link to the Titans. Kyle Decker, who played for the FCBL team from 2012-14, was named interim head coach in late June after Dan McNamara resigned. Decker and Myslow have known each other for years. Prior to joining the team this season, Myslow would attend games to watch Decker. Simsbury natives Mike Gibbons and Matt Quintana also played for Torrington in recent years. “It’s a great opportunity,” said Decker, who finished up his collegiate baseball career at Oberlin College in May. “I wasn’t about to leave Mr. Myslow hanging at all. He’s a guy I’ve known for a while and have a lot of respect for. I know he joined this organization partially because of me. I remember when I was a player here, he would drive up and watch me play.” The transition from Titans player last year to assistant coach this spring to the head guy in the middle of the season was See LEADERS on page 26 Crispino and Doyle catch on together in FCBL By Matt Monitto Correspondent Cody Doyle and Mac Crispino have been baseball buddies for several years, starting when both played on a travel team in their early teens. Two years ago, Crispino joined Doyle on the American Legion team in Avon. The two were reunited this summer as teammates on the Torrington Titans of the Futures Collegiate Baseball League. It was fitting that Doyle and Crispino hit back-to-back in the Titans batting order for the FCBL playoffs against the Bristol Blues last week. As fate would have it, they were the last two hitters in a season-ending 3-1 loss Aug. 12 at Muzzy Field. With two on and two out in the ninth, the inning was extended, as Doyle got hit by a pitch to load the bases. Crispino got an opportunity to atone for his mistakes on the bases in the eighth inning when he was picked off to stymie a rally, but he grounded into a fielder’s choice to end the Photo by game. David Heuschkel “Obviously, coming up in the end with the bases loaded, everyone wants to get a hit right there,” Crispino said. “I’m upset about it, but you’ve got to learn from stuff like that. That’s going to sit in my mind in the offseason, and hopefully that’ll fuel me.” In a couple weeks, Crispino will be heading back to Fairfield University for his junior year. Doyle, a sophomore catcher at Sacred Heart University, will be on the other side of town. Avon’s Cody Doyle See TEAMMATES on page 27 The book is still out on Anne Donovan’s future as head coach of the Connecticut Sun. On paper, the final year of her three-year deal with the WNBA team isn’t going well. The Sun finished last week’s action two and a half games out of playoff position in the East after falling back to .500 (12-12) with backto-back losses to the New York Liberty at home Friday night and to the Dream in Atlanta on Sunday. On course for a third straight season out of the playoffs, Sun General Manager Chris Sienko may have reason to put a “help wanted” sign on his coach’s office door. Donovan may be the most snake-bitten coach in WNBA history. She was never able to coach the team she had on paper. That team rarely made it to the floor. This season, no team in the WNBA suffered greater losses than the Sun, whose star player, Chiney Ogwumike, was lost at the outset with a knee injury that claimed her entire sophomore season. Also lost for the season was team sparkplug Allie Hightower, and last week, two more key players fell: first round pick Elizabeth Williams with a bruised knee and forward Alyssa Thomas, who left last Wednesday’s home win over the Tulsa Shock with a shoulder injury. Both are expected to miss two weeks, roughly half the remainder of the season. Donovan won’t use injuries as an excuse or an argument for continued employment. Perhaps her best argument was provided last week by ESPN Magazine, in a column about WNBA teams “tanking” the season in hopes of improving themselves via the draft. It points out that while the WNBA, like the NBA, has a lottery that limits the chances of the team with the worst record getting the first pick, unlike the NBA, with 13 lottery teams, only four WNBA teams make the lottery with the number of balls in the drawing for the team with the worst record, giving that team a 45 percent chance of landing the first pick. For the Sun, that first pick would have particular significance at the gate as well as on the floor. UConn senior forward Breanna Stewart is the hands-down number one pick, roundly considered by scouts to be the top talent ever to come out of the college ranks. No one could blame the Sun for playing for draft position. It would be their only chance of landing “Stewie,” one pick no one will trade away. To Donovan’s credit, the Sun aren’t playing that game. The ESPN article specifically mentioned three teams that appear to be playing for draft, not playoff, position. The Sun was not one of them. To the contrary, and to Donovan’s credit, the shorthanded and undertalented Sun have played a number of recent games as if their season depended on each outcome, which, by the way, it does. Down 19 points to the Indiana Fever in the fourth quarter, the Sun pulled the streak to three with a minute to play. After the All Star break, the Sun again trailed the Fever, this time by nine points, and battled back to lose by two in overtime. Last Wednesday, they trailed the Shock by nine at the half and, after losing Thomas, battled back to take a four point lead after three quarters on the way to the See GRAY MATTERS on page 27 August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 25 Photos by David Heuschkel Left: Kyle Decker offers pointers to players on the Torrington Titans before a playoff game against Bristol last week at Muzzy Field. Right: Decker, standing at attention during the Star-Spangled Banner, finished up his eligibility to play for the Titans last summer, but the 22-year-old looks like he can still be in the lineup. LEADERS from page 25 fairly seamless for Decker. He has a good baseball IQ and a strong pedigree. His father, Bill, just completed his third season as head coach at Harvard following a 22-year stint at Trinity. “Growing up, being a coach’s kid, you know what to do [as a coach],” said Kyle, who has worked at baseball clinics run by his father. “Just being a player, you know what to do.” Since his parents recently moved to Massachusetts Kyle has been staying in Farmington with the Schweighoffer family. Kyle and Jeff Schweighoffer were teammates at Oberlin and Mike Schweighoffer, Jeff ’s father, is a former minor league player. There’s plenty of hardball talk in the house. Decker doesn’t know where he’ll be next summer. He has one semester left to graduate. His major is politics, but he sees himself in baseball. Ultimately, his goal is to be a college baseball coach. He has inherited the teaching gene from his father. “As an older player, you find yourself trying to help younger guys,” Kyle said. “Even this year as a senior [in college], I was trying to help some of the younger guys.” Some of the players on the Titans weren’t much younger. Decker was teammates with some last summer. The FCBL is comprised of 10 teams throughout New England with college players. “I’m not stupid. It’s not easy playing for a kid who’s 22 years old, only a year old- Master Elite Roofing Contractor FREE WE DO ROOF REPAIRS 25 Year - 100% Workmanship Warranty backed by Shingle Manufacturer HAIL DAMAGE INSPECTIONS • • • • Roofing Experts Vinyl Siding Specials Replacement Windows Seamless Gutters Quality you can count on for years. REFERENCES (Over 500 Satisfied Customers) 28 Years Experience • Honest Pricing • No Hidden Costs • Clean, Courteous Installers ME# 11852 FULLY INSURED CT LIC #632484 www.larichremodeling.com $750 OFF Complete ROOF 18 SQ. MIN. 26 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 LA RICH LLC www.larichremodeling.com Cannot be combined with previously signed jobs. Expires 8-31-15. er than you,” Decker said. “But for the most part, a lot of these guys, especially the returning players, have done a good job. I haven’t tried to be [overly demanding]. I probably should have been. That’s something I should change moving forward. “I can coach third base all day long, giving signs. Obviously I’m learning there, too. There really hasn’t been one particular aspect that’s been a challenge. Ultimately, you’re the guy in charge.” Decker hasn’t abandoned the idea of playing professionally. He’s looked into playing in Europe and Australia. If those opportunities don’t come to fruition, he wouldn’t mind returning to the Titans next year. “I want to play as long as I can,” he said. Decker is happy to see his former Titans teammate – and former neighbor – playing in the minors. Mike Gibbons signed as an undrafted free agent with the New York Mets last August and is having a decent season in the low minors, going 3-4 with a 3.54 ERA in nine starts this summer. Meanwhile, Myslow anticipates resuming his duties with the Titans next spring. “I will be the first returning GM in five years,” he says. Myslow was encouraged to see more than 1,400 fans for the team’s home opener in early June, though many were from the tickets he handed out the previous week at the parade. But attendance took a steep dip. According to the FCBL website, the Titans averaged 340 and were ninth in the 10-team league. “I really have to try to do a better job of getting the community engaged in knowing what we are,” Myslow said. “People may not know a specific date we have a game, but I need to let them know we play baseball games at the park from the first week of June to the first week of August. It’s more brand awareness.” Myslow, who has a sports marketing background, is already planning his 2016 strategy. The immediate goal is to build a fan base. He wants to retain the families – kids 10 and under get free admission – and target senior citizens, knowing many grew up in a time when baseball was the most popular sport in the country. He is working with a local writer on the history of Torrington baseball, which dates back to 1865. Don’t expect any gimmicks or zany promotions to attract fans to the park. “I tend to be a traditionalist and don’t want to distract people from the game,” Myslow said. “Some people like that stuff and some don’t. Just putting it in there of the purpose of putting in there, I’m not a big fan of.” Trenchard’s preparation pays off By Matt Monitto Correspondent Submitted photo A two-sport athlete at the Salisbury School, Ian Trenchard of Avon had some big hits on the baseball diamond and made a huge defensive player on the football field. TEAMMATES from page 25 “I was able to get some opportunities to play and make the most of it,” said Doyle, who hit .275 in 35 games and was third on the team with a .362 on-base average. “We won the conference this year. Our goal every year is to win the conference championship.” As a sophomore at Fairfield, Crispino started 40 games, hit .259 and led the team with 22 walks. In one 11-game stretch, he hit .450 (18-for-40) with GRAY MATTERS from page 25 the win. Against all odds, with an incentive to lose, Donovan has the Sun playing with an eye to the playoffs. She’d have a better chance of pulling it off if she had the talent to match up better with the opposition. Speaking of ESPN, there was an interesting note two weeks ago on, of all places, CNBC, the cable financial network, which said Disney stocks were the main drag on the Dow on a recent down day, citing Disney media properties, primarily ESPN, which was bleeding viewer subscriptions, as the main culprit. This led to an interesting question by one analyst, who wondered if sports media, the primary source of revenue for major league sports, goes stagnant, does that mean we’ve reached the limit on player salaries? By the way, there was seven multi-hit games. He had a career-high four hits against Sacred Heart in the first of two games between the crosstown rivals. When the teams met a week later, Crispino had two hits, including a RBI single that tied the game in the eighth. Crispino joined the Titans in midseason and hit .195 in 35 games. He played two outfield spots and saw action at the corner infield positions. Doyle hit .234 in 31 games behind the plate. It was the first season in the FCBL for both players, an interesting tie to the final major of the golf season and our local PGA Tour event, other than the appearance by Farmington’s Suzy Whaley, the new secretary of the PGA, as the announcer introducing Saturday’s pairings on the first tee. The tie was PGA Championship winner Jason Day, who was committed to play in the Travelers Championship. Among the first notices to go up in the media facility on the Monday of Travelers’ week was one announcing that Day had withdrawn after suffering a vertigo-related fainting spell at the U.S. Open the previous Saturday. Hartford Healthcare arrived at the TPC River Highlands specially equipped to treat Day’s condition in the event he did come to Cromwell, but no one could blame him for not hopping on a cross country flight from Seattle. Ian Trenchard was not the biggest player on his high school teams at the Salisbury School. The Avon native wasn’t always on the field – baseball or football – during his first two years at the allboys private school located in the northwest corner of the state. When the time came to contribute, the 5-foot-5-inch Trenchard had a knack for making the most of his opportunities. Trenchard, a middle infielder, was part of Salisbury’s run to the 2015 Western New England Prep Baseball League championship, as a walk-off 4-3 victory over Wilbraham & Monson gave Salisbury their fourth straight WNEPBL title in the spring. “Throughout the season I wasn’t a starter, but I was given a lot of opportunity to play,” said Trenchard, who started as the designated hitter in the championship game. This summer, Trenchard got an opportunity to play in U.S. Baseball Championships with the Team Connecticut Baseball (TCB) 17-U squad in Richmond, Va. TCB was the lowest seed in the 20-team bracket and went 1-2 in pool play, finishing ninth overall. “We knew we had to get down to business because we knew we had a lot of baseball ahead of us,” Trenchard said. “I’ve been playing with some of these kids since I was 13. I knew from the beginning of the season that we had something special.” In his best individual but it wasn’t the first time they played at historic Muzzy Field, where Babe Ruth is said to have hit the first homer in the park in 1919. “You play at Muzzy growing up a lot of the time, and this is kind of like home,” Crispino said. Torrington and Bristol are the only Connecticut teams in the FCBL. Six teams are in Massachusetts and two in New Hampshire, making for some lengthy bus rides and late-night journeys, including one across a body of water at night. A road game against the Martha’s Vineyard Sharks includes a ferry ride onto the island. Getting back to the mainland is a little adventurous, though. “Every time you go to Martha’s Vineyard, you take a commercial boat there,” Crispino said. “But, at the end of the game, no commercial ferries are running. The league has a 15-passenger boat, and the whole team and the umpires get on it, and we take a 35-minute ride across the ocean at night.” game, Trenchard went 2-for4 with a double and drove in three runs. TCB won three playoff games before being eliminated in the double-elimination pool play. “Ian was our leadoff hitter, got on base many times, stole bases and scored runs,” TCB coach John Susi said. “He was also stellar at second base playing defense.” John Toffey, who was Trenchard’s baseball coach at Salisbury, said, “[Ian] is a gamer who seems to make big plays in big moments. He has a tremendous work ethic and gets the most out of his ability.” Toffey’s quote is not only true of Trenchard’s play on the diamond. In a 63-28 victory over Taft on the football field, Trenchard made the most of his brief appearance. “When our starting safety got a leg cramp, Ian had to come on,” said Tom Trenchard, Ian’s father. “The coach said, ‘Trench, don’t let this guy get past you, because they’ll be coming after you.’” Sure enough, Taft’s quarterback launched a pass his way. Trenchard made a leaping interception at the goal line and nearly returned it for a touchdown. The play reminded Tom Trenchard of a quote from his high school football coach: Preparation meets opportunity. “Ian was only in for one play,” his father said, “and the Salisbury headmaster called it the best interception he’s ever seen.” As he prepares for his junior year at the prep school, more opportunities are sure to arise for Ian Trenchard. Photo by David Heuschkel Mac Crispino is another player from the Farmington Valley who was a regular in the Torrington Titans lineup. The Valley’s only Full Service Hand Car Wash Connecticut • Florida • Nebraska • Ohio Full Service TJ Maxx Works Hand Wash 1949 Rt. 44 Russell Speeder’s Car Wash $ Commuter Lot Wal-Mart Save $4.00 with this coupon. reg. $23.49 Big Y Includes: full service hand wash, undercarriage wash, foam wax, clean wheels, shine tires, vacuum carpets and mats, clean all glass inside and out, towel dry exterior, wipe dash, console and dry door jambs. Russell Speeder’s 8-30-15 Car Wash Exp. Exp.10-7-14 vpfs 265 West Main Street • Avon (860) 269-3136 Full Service Hand Wash Hours: Monday Thru Saturday 8am til 6pm Sunday 9am till 5pm August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 27 Classifieds Help Wanted Help Wanted School Nurse – Per Diem The Farmington Valley VNA is seeking CT-licensed RN’s for per diem School Nursing coverage in the Granby School System during the school year. Experience with pediatric or school nursing preferred. For more information, please contact Jodi French, RN at nursesup@granby.k12. ct.us. Farmington Valley VNA 8 Old Mill Lane, Simsbury, CT 06070 www.farmingtonvalleyvna.org EOE STORE MANAGER - Consignment Originals with 4 stores and 32 years in business is opening a location in Avon, CT. We are looking for the right person to come on board and join our management team! We are looking for career minded applicants. Must have minimum 2 years Management experience and plenty of passion. Salary negotiable depending on experience. Please send resume to: jleathe@consignit.com Licensed Medical Social Worker PER DIEM Help us make a difference in our community! The Farmington Valley VNA is seeking an experienced, compassionate Licensed Clinical Social Worker to assist in our Home Care and Hospice program 1-2 days a week. For more information, please email Karen Bignelli at kbignelli@farmingtonvalleyvna.org. Farmington Valley VNA 8 Old Mill Lane, Simsbury, CT 06070 www.farmingtonvalleyvna.org EOE FASHION MERCHANDISER/CUSTOMER SERVICE - Do you have an eye for fashion? Are you talented, energetic, and love dealing with people? Consignment Originals with 4 stores and 32 years in business is opening a location in Avon, CT. We are looking for the right people to staff our new location in Avon!. Salary negotiable depending on experience. Must have minimum 1 year Retail/Merchandising experience. Please send resume to: jleathe@consignit.com Farmington Valley based landscape and excavation company looking to hire experienced people in various aspects of the field such as landscape maintenance, patio stone work, trucking etc. Offer paid holidays and vacation, plus bonuses. Must have clean driving record and Class A or B CDL license is a plus. Serious inquiries only! 860-573-3125. Help Wanted At Your Service Does Health Insurance confuse you? CAREGIVERS WANTED THROUGHOUT CT We are looking for mature, responsible individuals. • Choose your own hours • FT/PT positions available • Live-in positions available • 80% medical/401k Apply Online Today at www.caregiverjobsct.com or call 888-844-4442 DCP HCA 0000101 Pet Services • • • • • • • Affordable Care Act plans Medicare Supplement Insurance plans Medicare Advantage Plans Prescription Drug Plans CT Exchange plans Dental/Hospital/Cancer plans And more! SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS - AVON Free no obligation no pressure consultation at my office in West Hartford or home visits available upon request! 860-922-2005 Call Dylan Cowen at 860-922-2005 today, to make the confusion go away! Your local licensed independent Health Insurance Broker. dylanjcowen@gmail.com There is no extra cost when purchasing insurance through a Servicing Agent PIANO LESSONS for all! Take lessons from a patient and experienced teacher, all ages and levels welcome. Private instruction with a classically-trained pianist, graduate of McGill University (B.Mus and M.Mus). Studio located in Tariffville. Please contact Claire for more information: 201-213-6645, claire.paik@ gmail.com MUSIC LESSONS Experienced private instruction in Piano, Voice, and Guitar. Please call Aimee Allen at (860) 990-5184. Hiring and training for September 2015. Four hour minimum daily guaranteed, other hours available. $17.20/hour to start For details contact Kim Bush 860-470-7200 END OF SUMMER SPECIAL One time offer: Buy 3 hours of cleaning for $110.00. Bonded & Insured, Gift Certificates Available. MORAWSKI CLEANING LLC A Super Service Award Winner Call Sandy at 860-651-4601 • MORAWSKICLEANING.COM morawskicleaningllc@msn.com 28 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 “Where your memories are cherished forever” We make house calls and service from all veterinarians Robert L. Sagarino Licensed Funeral Director and Aftercare Provider 860-306-5853 24/7 Service www.forevercompanions.com info@forevercompanions.com For Sale Kayak For Sale: Current Designs, Sirocco Gulf Stream, 16.5 ft., Orange. New $1549, Barely used, asking $1,000. Call 860-841-1455. 36 TRAVELING MUSIC TEACHER Music lessons in the comfort of your own home. Musician Billy Romanos offers piano and guitar lessons for all levels, ages, and styles of music. Over 40 years experience. Graduate of Berklee College of Music in Boston. Billy 860-978-3333 Wanted I BUY houses AS-IS. Cash. Forever Companions Cremation, Burial, Advanced Planning “We do Obama care and the Affordable care act plans!” Call us to make it easy! 860-922-2005 Come see why people say “I have my health insurance with Dylan!” Pet Loss Services, LLC Union Eye Works, a family eye care practice, seeks full-time enthusiastic Front Desk Manager. Duties include phone and email correspondence, patient scheduling and intake, health insurance assistance and other front-office administrative tasks. Professional demeanor, outstanding interpersonal skills and interest in combined health care/retail setting essential. Serious candidates contact: Dr.Trimble@unioneyeworks.com. At Your Service GUITAR LESSONS in your home. I am a Hartt School of Music graduate with thirty years of teaching and recording experience. I have helped many students prepare for Jazz Band music auditions, improvise, and learn to play their favorite songs. All styles, levels, and ages with references available. Tom Tribuzio, 860-673-1210. 6he5ct@sbcglobal.net Call TODAY 860-674-9498 or Email: john@boucherbuilding. com. CT.REG.# 530518. PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertised in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968, revised March 12, 1989, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, handicap, or familial status or intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination; and is also subject to the State of Connecticut General Statutes Sections 46a-64c which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, creed, color, national original, ancestry, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, age, lawful sources of income, familial status, or physical or mental disability, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate or for the sale or rental of residential property which is in violation of these laws. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. Home Improvement $29-1 week BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY $150- 6 weeks $300-13 weeks Add WEST HARTFORD Press for 1/2 Price! AIR COND. & HEATING BATHROOMS BATHROOMS BATHROOM Bathroom Pros Baths & Tiling Our Specialty Full & Partial Remodels Also...Kitchens, Floors, Painting, General Repairs & more Support local business tune-up your system $125 for AC or heat Schedule both and save 10%* Suffield 668-8000 West Hartford 232-8002 HIC #613103 CHIMNEYS $20 OFF L I C E N S E D & VALLEY CHIMNEY SWEEP LLC 220 Albany Tpke., Rte. 44, Canton Village, Canton, CT 06019 A+ 860-693-3404 HIC License #0674006 WWW.VALLEYCHIMNEYSWEEPLLC.COM 28 years experience. Free Estimates. Insured. Call Robert Call For Free Estimates EQUIPMENT REPAIR Home of the CHAMPS CHIMNEY SWEEP! With Full Safety Inspection F R E E E S T I M AT E S HIGH QUALITY WORK G R E AT P R I C E CALL TODAY 860-594-8607 www.chimneychamps.com DRIVEWAYS DRIVEWAYS RENEW ASPHALT MAINTENANCE Call for Free Estimates CPA REG. #593039 ELECTRICAL Residential * Commercial * Industrial 860-242-6486 advancedequipmentct.com CT Lic. 575422 ELECTRICAL Call today for your FREE, no obligation consultation & estimate. Pick up and Delivery Available 860-269-3103 www.renew-asphalt.com Brannack Electric Inc. 155 Brickyard Road, Farmington, CT 06032 35 Peters Road Bloomfield Kyle HOME IMPROVEMENT AVALLONE CONTRACTORS HOME IMPROVEMENT 24 Hour Emergency Service • Generator installations • Interior & Exterior Lighting • Remodeling & Additions • Service Upgrades • Telephone, Cable TV, & Computer Network Wiring • Repair & Upgrades • Pool & Spa Wiring License #103858 & 103859 • Fully insured www.brannackelectric.com HOME IMPROVEMENT www.JPCountryBuilders.com Old Fashioned Quality You Can Live With J C Remodeling RY BUILDERS O UN T •Additions • Bath • Kitchens LL C P Replacement Since 1988 In business for a blessed 29 years (860) 582-0712 •Windows & Doors • Siding • Decks Lic#0621710 Fax: (860)410-1190 or (860) 583-2183 PO Box 9656, Bristol, CT • 860-738-1502 John T.Yacawych 860-589-2267 Pat Collin Email: avallonecontractor@att.net ROOFING SIDING REPLACEMENT WINDOWS GUTTERS ADDITIONS TOTAL REMODELING INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Lic.#514976 LLC NEW CONSTRUCTION • REBUILDING • REPAIRS CAPS • CHIMNEY LINERS • WATER PROOFING Leaf Blowers • Snow Blowers • Tuneups & Repairs HOME IMPROVEMENT CEILINGS $99 EQUIPMENT SERVICE REPAIR for FREE estimate 860-749-8383 • 860-930-7722 860.953.6519 Pre-Season Tune-Ups Darrell Insured • Prompt Service SPRAY-TEX Call • Sealcoating • Hot Crack Filling • Line Striping EQUIPMENT REPAIR ADVANCED EQUIPMENT INC. 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Worker’s Comp & Liability August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 29 HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT BARRETT ENTERPRISES LLC Home Improvement Contractor So Many Amateurs . . . So Few Professionals!! • Complete Basement Renovations • Kitchen & Bathrooms Updated • Windows/Doors Installed • Pre-Finished Floorings • Custom Ceramic Tile • Maintenance-Free Decks • Finish Carpentry • Complete Painting Service • Custom Countertops - COMPLETE MAINTENANCE & REPAIR • Siding • Decks • Kitchens • Bathrooms • Remodeling • Improvements Jim Barrett, Owner SMALL OR LARGE • WE DO IT ALL! CT. LIC. #602130 • Office (860) 796-0131 www.berkshirewoodsmiths.com Licensed & Insured 860.738.4931 or 203.232.9114 Lic. #HIC0625936 HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT Visit us at www.dhradomski.com NICK LOW PRICES CONSTRUCTION CT REG. Serving the Farmington Valley for over 10 years ROOFING #509749 SIDING • WINDOWS DOORS • GUTTERS • DECKS • AWNINGS * Concrete * Stone Walls * Patios * Bricks * Belgium Blocks * Chimneys * Wood Fencing D.H. RADOMSKI, INC. HOME IMPROVEMENTS 203-206-2839 JUNK REMOVAL LANDSCAPE DESIGN Junk Removal Price includes dump fees, labor and fuel cost. We will remove junk from basements, attics, and garages Mattress & Box Springs $50 extra. “Building Trust By Doing Jobs Right!” P.O. Box 791 pinnaclemaintenance@comcast.net Farmington, CT 06034 www.pinnaclemaintenancellc.com T 860-284-8975 Fax: 860-255-7900 LANDSCAPING LANDSCAPING Arboretum LANDSCAPE & DESIGN, LLC Stone Work • Patios • Retaining Walls Custom Vinyl & Wood Fencing Sidewalks • Fire Pits • Pruning • Plantings Tree Removals CT LIC# 0630444 FULLY INSURED 860-906-6736 Expert Tree Climbers & Crane Service Land Clearing • Brush Clearing Shrub Removal • Hardscaping New Lawn Installations MASONRY ALLSTAR MASONRY Specializing in all types of jobs. • stone work • stucco • chimneys • repairs • patios • walls • steps • concrete work and much more. Fully licensed and insured. HIC #0563329. Free Estimate and work guaranteed at a great price. 860-417-9355 (work) 860-567-3342 MASONRY Stonewalls • Brick Walls Bluestone • Steps Fireplaces • Chimneys Patios • Sidewalks We can also do all Masonry Repairs! Fully Insured Quality Workmanship Free Estimates • Lic#0604514 Ken (203) 558-4951 30 The Valley Press August 20, 2015 860-296-3405 LANDSCAPING FallMowing Clean-ups Weekly • Mulching Aerating • Overseeding Hedge Trimming & Pruning • Mulching • Weekly Mowing Powerwashing • Stump Grinding Pruning • Hedge Trimming Complete Landscape • Powerwashing • StumpServices Grinding • Complete Landscaping Services SENIOR DISCOUNTS MASONRY F&R MASONRY All work done by Father and Son • Stonewalls • Sidewalks • Steps • Chimneys • Patios • Repairs & more Serving the Farmington Valley Lic #0637257 Insured Free Estimates 203-805-9114 MASONRY MASONRY Dennis Volpe STONE MASON CONTRACTOR 860.225.3077 cell 860.839.8971 30 Years Experience • License #0630165 • New Britain, CT SPECIALIZING IN: Stone Wall Patios & Veneers • Patio Walls - Walk Ways Chimney Rebuilding - Brick & Block Additions - Partition Walls Basement Waterproofing - Drainage Work - Pre-Cast Retainer Walls Pre-Cast Artificial Stone Veneers - Ceramic Tile Installed Bobcat Service - Snow Plowing - Trucking MASONRY AD MASONRY Stone Walls • Veneer Stone Brick Walls • Blue Stone Steps • Fireplaces Chimneys • Patios • Sidewalks Pavers • Retaining Walls All type of Masonry Work • Patios • Walls • Driveways • Pools in Stone • Brick, Bluestones & Pavers • Stairs and Walkways All Masonry Repairs Satisfaction Guaranteed ~Free Estimates ~ Lic#0637095 Andi’s Masonry Buki - MASONRY KC MASONRY LANDSCAPING • Pool Patios • Poolscapes • Lawn Installation • Tree & Shrub HYDROSEEDING Planting EROSION CONTROL • Pruning Based In & Serving The Farmington Valley • Walkways For Over 18 Years & Patios Fully Licensed & Insured • Walls & Steps • Yard Drains • Excavating • Grading cell: 860-250-2908 • Snowplowing • Bucket Loading For single truck load up to 1 Ton Spring Cleanups • Mulching • Mulch Deliveries FREE ESTIMATES LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS $149 PINNACLE MAINTENANCE, LLC. 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PESTS REPAIRS/GARAGES Home Improvement (860) 645-8899 Creating HARMONY between customer, contractor & community PAINTING WINDOWS (SO YOU DON'T HAVE TO) • Free estimates • Fully Insured & Bonded • Uniformed • Reliable “Residential” WINDOWS & DOORS *Sales * Service * Installation* A BETTER VIEW WINDOW CLEANING, PLUS (203) 284-8836 860-249-1558 www.fishwindowcleaning.com/3053 860-747-8875 thewindowmanofct.com * thewindowmanofct@aol.com *Bill Morrell Contractor * Ct Lic.#0509785 * Insured* August 20, 2015 The Valley Press 31 Let Us RENEW YOUR DRIVEWAY Our Saw, Cut & Patch Service offers nearly permanent repairs to heavily damaged areas. We specialize in: • Seal Coating • Asphalt Cut & Patch • Hot Crack Filling • Line Stripping RENEWLLC ASPHALT MAINTENANCE Owner operated family business with owner on every job site. 860-953-6519 HAVE YOUR DRIVEWAY SCHEDULED WHILE YOU’RE ON VACATION VISIT WWW.RENEW-ASPHALT.COM FOR A FREE EVALUATION OF YOUR DRIVEWAY LIC. #575422 • FREE ESTIMATES • FULLY INSURED • SERVING THE HARTORD AREA FOR OVER 18 YEARS 32 The Valley Press August 20, 2015