... one. "The tone is less onerous for stocks," said Steven Goldman, chief market strategist, Weeden & Co. in Greenwich, Conn. He said lighter volume and relief that the year is over likely aided the market's .....
Hyper Local News Pages
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
12/31/08 A rally and good riddance: Stocks end miserable year with advance
... one. "The tone is less onerous for stocks," said Steven Goldman, chief market strategist, Weeden & Co. in Greenwich, Conn. He said lighter volume and relief that the year is over likely aided the market's .....
12/31/08 Greenwich Citizen News Links
The country he promised to lift up during his 32-minute speech at the Hyatt Regency in Old Greenwich has been driven into a ditch: Skyrocketing unemployment, the Wall Street meltdown, the home foreclosure mess, and the auto industry on the ropes.
Yesteryear - the 2004 speech - the country appeared still on the highway and not slipping and sliding into the proverbial ditch. In fact, the President's reception by the Greenwich turnout was downright friendly. The White House Web site reported that his speech was interrupted some 50 times by either clapping or laughter.
Maxi-laughter erupted when Bush noted the presence of some of his classmates, Yale '68. The President related that they invented the expression "shock and awe."
12?31/)8 The Raw Greenwich Blog Feed Is Alittle Boring On The Last Day Of The Year
HBCC Report: Sasquatch Hit By Truck - Cache Creek, British Columbia - Well, well now, this one sound interesting. Couple days late... sorry. I must say it was strange to feel the flags start waving immediately due to that awful...
Greenwich Diva
Dean Durrant and Alison Spooner defied the odds and had second set of black and white twin - From News.sky.com Black and white twins Leah and Miya are held by big sisters Hayleigh and Lauren. Picture © Sky News Dean Durrant, 33, and Alison Spooner,...
Rock Star Diary
Happy New Year 2009 - Happy New Year! Love, Baby Madonna Brooklyn's Finest...
John Ferris Robben - T-shirt Philosophy Page At Our Greenwich
Deer in Riverside - [image: Image was shot at a quarter of a second (very slow).] Image was shot at a quarter of a second (very slow).
Horse investments tank, Miami Philanthropist George Lindemann Jr. steps in to help. - The price of thoroughbreds drops 40% so Fairfield Greenwich Group’s Jeffrey Tucker will be selling into a falling market. Oh, what will we do, what will ...
12/31/08 Greenwich Post News Links
“Obviously everyone close to the situation is very upset about it,” Ms. Burns told the Post. “We’ve all been working together with PTA Council to try and recover our money. We’ve left no stone unturned.” ......
“Right now we’re just trying to figure out the best way to proceed,” Ms. Faryniarz said. “Hopefully, we will be able to find an attorney in Washington to do this for us pro bono, but that’s something we’ve only just begun to do. We’re looking at all the options right now to get our money back.”
BREAKING NEWS
WFSB-TV Hartford
Count Me In, a Washington state-based company recently forced into Chapter 7 bankruptcy, has allegedly failed to transfer tens of thousands of dollars, and possibly more, to several Parent-Teacher Associations in Connecticut and organizations elsewhere, he said.
Blumenthal said he began an investigation after complaints from five PTAs in Greenwich that they were denied $75,000 collected in their name. They and other organizations contracted with CMI to administer registration for sports and other programs, police said.
That Greenwich Roundup Was The First Connecticut News Outlet To Report That CMI was ripping off Greenwich School Parents.
Furthermore, weeks ago we were asking why the Greenwich PTA's had not contacted Blumenthal office and criticized the PTA's for hiding the $75,000 loss and not advising them to call their credit card company immediately reverse the charges.
The PTA's Are Missing A Lot Of Money
Where Is The Parents $75,0000?
SHOULDN'T PARENTS HAVE BEEN INFORMED BEFORE DAN KULLY HOPPED ON A PLANE TO WASHINGTON ?????
WHEN WERE GREENWICH PTA LEADERS GOING TO TELL THE PARENTS THAT THEY HAD BEEN RIPPED OFF ?????
SHOULDN'T SOMEONE CALL THE GREENWICH POLICE DEPARTMENT AND REPORT THIS MISSING $75,000 ?????
MAYBE SOMEONE SHOULD BE CALLING THE CONNECTICUT ATTORNEY GENERAL ?????
SHOULDN'T PTA LEADERS BE SENDING OUT A MASS EMAIL TELLING PARENTS TO DISPUTE THE CREDIT CARD CHARGES, SO THAT THEY WONT LOSE THEIR MONEY ?????
WHY HASN"T THE GREENWICH PTA'S PULLED THE PLUG ON THEIR COUNT ME IN WEBSITE, BEFORE MORE PARENTS LOOSE MONEY ?????
WHERE IS THE LEADERSHIP IN THE GREENWICH PTA"S ?????
KIROTV
BELLEVUE, Wash. -- Parents and PTA leaders on Tuesday banged on the door of a Bellevue company that's at the center of a nationwide controversy after a KIRO 7 Eyewitness News story revealed the firm hasn't paid back money it owes to youth sports teams.
Dan Kully was among those looking for answers at the offices of Count Me In, a company that helps thousands of youth sports teams to help collect registration dues and donations.
"Seventy-five thousand dollars really hurts," Kully told KIRO 7 Eyewitness News reporter Gary Horcher. "And the last people that anyone should be taking advantage of are kids."
Melissa Greco, 28, of Stamford was arrested Dec. 30 and charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit fifth degree larceny, two counts of fifth degree larceny, credit card theft, illegal use of a credit card, receipt of goods from a credit card, third degree identity theft and criminal impersonation. According to police, Greco and Annie Curtis, 26, of Darien conspired to steal $300 in cash and a credit card from an unattended purse in Greenwich Library’s lost and found. They allegedly divided the money and used the credit cards at two local businesses. Curtis was arrested on Dec. 18. Greco was released on a promise to appear and is due in court Jan. 6.
RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT
Danny Alvarado, 36, of Port Chester, N.Y. was arrested Dec. 30 and charged with reckless operation of a motor vehicle, operating a motor vehicle with a weight greater than 9,999 pounds, two counts of operating a vehicle with unsafe tires, unregistered towing and insurance card violation. Police responded to an accident on Halstead Avenue where a car hit a tree. Investigators determined Alvarado was driving a commercial vehicle with defective equipment. He was released on a $250 cash bond and is due in court Jan. 15.
DISORDERLY
A 51-year-old Riverside woman was arrested Dec. 30 and charged with disorderly conduct. Police responded to a reported domestic incident. Police said the woman told officers she had scratched her husband’s neck during an argument. The man received a small cut to the back of his neck. The woman was released on a $1,000 cash bond and is due in court Dec. 31.
POSSESSION
Enrique Goyburu, 21, of Port Chester, N.Y. was arrested possession of less than four ounces of marijuana and intent to sell under one kilogram of marijuana. Police on DUI patrol said they saw a Goyburu driving a car with one headlight out. Officers said when his car was pulled over, Goyburu smelled of burnt marijuana and when he was asked to step out of the car offices saw, in plain view, a plastic bag lying between in the driver’s side seat and the interior driver’s side door. Upon inspection, police found six clear plastic bags containing marijuana inside the plastic bag. Police searched the car and found a plastic zip bag containing 91 small, clear plastic bags in the trunk. Officers believed this was for sale, not use. The total weight of the marijuana was found to be 4.1 grams and police seized $76 in his possession. Goyburu was also cited for not having a license and driving without a headlight. He was released on a $1,000 cash bond and is due in court Jan. 6.
DISORDERLY
A 21-year-old Greenwich man was arrested Dec. 31 and charged with disorderly conduct and second degree criminal mischief. Police responded to a reported fight and determined the man had pushed two women and damaged two of the home’s doors. He was released on a $500 cash bond and is due in court Dec. 31.
12/31/08 Where Did The Fairfield Greenwich Money Go? Well Walter Noel's Partner Sent A Big Fat Wad Up To The Saratoga New York Area.
But two weeks ago, his Connecticut-based investment firm said it had lost $7.5 billion — apparently more than anyone — in the Madoff scandal ...
Tucker serves on the board of Equine Advocates of Chatham, and has hosted multiple celebrity galas on his farm to raise money for the charity. He is chairman of Empire Racing Associates.
"We are seeking to gather all facts, work diligently with counsel to determine the appropriate course of action toward recovery, and stand ready to assist the authorities with their investigation," the company statement said.
It was Tucker who introduced the firm to Madoff in 1989, according to The Wall Street Journal. The fund that Fairfield Greenwich set up through Madoff had lost money in only 13 months over 15 years, the newspaper reported......
If Tucker cannot sustain the farm as is, there's hope at least one of the properties could be remade into a commercial operation.
"It's in a great location in a really great racing community," Brida said. "It will still thrive."
Maybe His Long Term Plan Is To Get The Hell Out Of Dodge, Before The SEC And The FBI Sieze His Assets.
Source: timesunion.com: Local Breaking News - http://timesunion.com/local/BreakingNews.asp
Madoff misled SEC in '06, got off
12/31/08 Stamford Advocate Reader Takes Exception With Niel Vidgor's Reporting
In the Sunday Advocate, staff writer Neil Vigdor wrote of the "president's mixed legacy."
Sept. 11 was going to happen regardless of who was in office. Bin Laden and his terrorist organization were determined to cause havoc in our country. Going after him in Afghanistan was justifiable. The country was behind the president 100 percent. But I'm not so sure if another president would have gone into Iraq.
As Mr. Vigdor wrote, Bush never vetoed a budget. As president, he could have demanded more transparency. He should have said "no" to the bailouts, and still, regulation and transparency were non-existent as the money was being doled out.
Tax cuts during a time of war are not a well-grounded policy. The national debt has doubled. And what of all the earmarks and pork-barrel spending that was allowed to continue during a crisis?
Katrina! Corruption! Lobbyists! Partisanship! No, we can't blame one person for the challenges we have faced, and those we will undoubtedly face, but one person could have made a difference.
Mario Salvatore
Stamford
12/31/08 When Greenwich Roundup Types, Greenwich Time Managing Editor Jim Zorba Listens
tabs firm to pick chief
By Colin Gustafson
Staff Writer
Posted: 12/31/2008 12:36:57 AM EST
The Board of Education has taken the next step in its search for a superintendent of schools by selecting a private firm to identify and vet a roster of top candidates in hopes that a new chief can take office July 1.
After reviewing bids from the five search firms that applied, the board selected Glenview, Ill.-based Hazard, Young, Attea and Associates, Ltd. to conduct a nationwide search for the town's next schools superintendent, members said Tuesday.
That firm is the same one that was selected by the town's school board in 1998 to track down a successor for then-outgoing schools superintendent John Whritner, who later became a paid consultant for the search firm.
For the current search, the firm has tapped two consultants with local experience: Deborah Raizes, former president of the Board of Education in Scarsdale, N.Y., and John Chambers, former superintendent of the Byram Hills Central Schools District in Armonk.
"The two of them bring great credentials," said Hank Bangser, chief executive officer of Hazard, Young, Attea and Associates. "They certainly understand public education at the highest-performing levels in the Northeast."
In choosing the firm Dec. 23, Greenwich board members specifically requested that Whritner, who served as superintendent between 1990 and 1997, not be involved in this search so as to avoid potential conflicts, board member Steven Anderson said.
"Some might say it's not fair that he's involved, and others could say he should influence" the search, Anderson said. By not involving Whritner at all, he continued, "nobody can draw a conclusion, positive or negative, period."
Breaking news
Posted: 12/31/2008 12:36:56 AM EST
"I think people are just adjusting to the economy and what's going on right now," he said.
And as for the midnight toast?
"We certainly try to promote that you don't exactly have to go for Champagne champagne," said Nevins. "We've got a lot of nice sparklings from Italy, Spain and California."
Like Nevins, Jean-Louis Gerin, longtime owner of Restaurant Jean-Louis on Lewis Street, said he's offering even more value this New Year's Eve than in years past.
"Last year, we charged $95 for the first seating and $120 for the second seating," said Gerin. "This year we are charging $100 for everyone." .......
After, the service everyone is moving over to Harvest Time's massive air dome. You have to see this place to believe it.
There will be a pie eating contest, Sloppy Joe's, music and other family fun events.
Versailles' car blast caused by
cigarette
By Debra Friedman
Posted: 12/31/2008 12:36:32 AM EST
Fire officials in Virginia believe a cigarette is to blame for the deadly vehicle fire that claimed the life of a former Greenwich restaurateur.
"As it appears now there was a liquid petroleum gas leak inside the vehicle that ignited by a cigarette," said James Barber, Fire Marshal and Assistant Fire Chief with the Albemarle County Department of Fire Rescue.
"Every indication is that it was just a tragic accident. It does not appear that there was any criminal wrongdoing."
Fire officials did not immediately know what set off the large explosion in Clos-Versailles vehicle, however evidence suggested a vapor explosion and fire inside the SUV, officials said. The cause of death was thermal inhalation burns, the medical examiner determined.
Barber said Clos-Versailles was carrying a liquid petroleum gas tank in the passenger compartment of the Yukon......
Blumenthal lends hand to PTAs
Groups owed $75,000 from Seattle-based company
By Colin Gustafson
Staff Writer
Posted: 12/31/2008 12:36:32 AM EST
The state's attorney general is throwing his support behind five Greenwich parent-teacher associations in their effort to recoup tens of thousands of dollars in overdue fees they say a bankrupt Seattle-area company owes them.
Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said Tuesday that his office is investigating potential violations of consumer protection laws by Bellevue, Wash.-based Count Me In, an online company that assists organizations nationwide collect registration dues and donations.
"Count Me In has no right to retain or redirect money ... that belongs to PTAs and other organizations serving our children," Blumenthal said. "Money that Count Me In should have simply held safely and then forwarded has now vanished without explanation."
In a consumer advisory issued Tuesday, he also urged parents in Connecticut to stop making registration payments to the company, which is currently undergoing Chapter 7 liquidation proceedings in federal bankruptcy court.
Blumenthal's warning comes after members of five local parents-teacher associations, at Parkway, Old Greenwich, North Mianus, Cos Cob and North Street schools, sent his office a letter alleging that Count Me In owed them $75,000 in unreimbursed fees.
The associations had been using the online service for more than two years to process parents' registrations for afterschool programs and association memberships, according to Julia Faryniarz, president of the Greenwich PTA Council......
......Blumenthal said he decided to launch the civil probe last week as a way to help the five associations recoup at least a fraction of their alleged losses to Count Me In. Under federal bankruptcy proceedings, he said, the company could end up having to pay its remaining assets to only a handful of primary creditors, leaving the associations and dozens of other clients with little or no money.
"There's certainly that concern" that the most of the overdue fees could remain unpaid, Faryniarz said. "We are happy to have the power of the attorney general on this, but we have to be realistic about being able to reclaim most of this money."
Let The Record Show:
That Greenwich Roundup Was The First Connecticut News Outlet To Report That CMI was ripping off Greenwich School Parents.
Furthermore, weeks ago we were asking why the Greenwich PTA's had not contacted Blumenthal office and criticized the PTA's for hiding the $75,000 loss and not advising them to call their credit card company immediately reverse the charges.
PLEASE SEE:
The PTA's Are Missing A Lot Of Money
By Rob Kelley
Posted: 12/31/2008 01:00:00 AM EST
The Greenwich High School boys hockey team was tired. Less than 24 hours after the Cardinals battled New Canaan to a scoreless tie in front of a capacity crowd at the Dorothy Hamill Rink, they returned to the ice to take on visiting Fairfield Warde/Ludlowe in a Tuesday matinee.
By Peter Healy
Posted: 12/30/2008 02:45:27 AM EST
In promoting the rule change, the federal government cited the 2007 Connecticut law, but apparently was unaware that the hard-fought compromise, approved with bipartisan support in the state General Assembly, allows hospitals to opt out and hire a contractor to dispense the medications, known as Plan B.
The medications do not terminate a pregnancy but stop ovulation. They can significantly reduce the risk of pregnancy if taken within three days of intercourse.
But here is a crucial fact that the White House needs to take into consideration: None of the state's 30 hospitals chose to hire contractors after Connecticut's law went into effect - including the four hospitals operated here by the Catholic Church.
Church leaders fought the law, and for a time were considering fighting it in ..... BLAH ...... BLAH ..... BLAH ..... BLAH ...... BLAH ...... BLAH ...... BLAH ...... BLAH ...... BLAH ......
Posted: 12/31/2008 12:36:31 AM EST
Gun show hosted by Westchester group
Oliver James Akel
Cos Cob
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Please send your comments to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com or click on the comments link at the end of this post.
12/31/08 2008: A year in review (Greenwich Post)
It was a year of change at the ballot box. Not only did Greenwich elect two new members to its state legislative delegation, but something happened in November that hadn’t happened since Lyndon Johnson was elected president in 1964 — Greenwich turned blue. For the first time in decades, Greenwich voted for a Democrat, favoring United States Sen. Barack Obama over Sen. John McCain for President.
Jim Himes, a former head of the Greenwich Democratic Town Committee and member of the Board of Estimate and Taxation (BET), was victorious in his race against incumbent 4th District Congressman Christopher Shays. Mr. Shays once enjoyed the support of both Republicans and Democrats crossing party lines, but Mr. Himes emerged early as a well-funded opponent and defeated the last remaining New England Republican in Congress.....
No change was bad news for the parents, teachers and students at Hamilton Avenue School. The new school, which is more than two years behind schedule, is still not complete, and an effort to move the students into the building over the holiday break didn’t get far due to concerns about parts used in the boiler system. The project is considered almost finished and with boiler repairs expected to be done in February, a move is expected by the April break at the latest.
The year had already been one of disruption for the school after mold was discovered inside the modular classrooms in March. Parents had been complaining about their children being sick and more susceptible to allergies since going into the modulars, and the discovery of the mold forced the closure of the temporary classrooms and the redistribution of Hamilton Avenue students by grade through spring of 2008. In addition, the Post confirmed the presence of mold in the new building basement after water damage from rainstorms, but the project’s building committee has denied those results......
This past summer the action on the sports field wasn’t limited to the major leagues as Greenwich found itself caught up in the drama surrounding the construction and use of a “mini-Fenway Park” by Riverside teens playing a pick-up game of Wiffle ball. Surrounded by houses, the field was built on a vacant lot owned by the town but left undeveloped for more than 40 years, and became the focal point of a dispute between the teens, who thought since the property wasn’t being used for anything else, they should be given permission to play there, and the neighbors who claimed the field was a disruption and safety hazard......
Proving it’s not immune to the economic downturn, Greenwich is facing a tough budget season with revenues down and the Board of Estimate and Taxation looking to keep the mill rate increase in the traditional 2% to 4% range. Mr. Tesei has promised belt-tightening in 2009-10 and he has already called for town departments to reduce their non-salary spending by 10% this fiscal year......
The town’s police department was kept busy by a number of high profile cases in 2008. Two men were arrested in the 2006 murder of disgraced back country millionaire Andrew Kissel, whose death became the subject of a Lifetime movie this year. Mr. Kissel’s driver, Carlos Trujillo, and Mr. Trujillo’s cousin Leonard Trujillo, were charged in connection with Mr. Kissel’s death. They have pleaded not guilty and trials are expected to begin next year.
A family dispute turned violent on Sept. 4, when police accused Gerardo Lombardi, 75, of shooting and stabbing to death his ex-daughter-in-law Alison McKnight. The two reportedly had been having a dispute over property. Police said they responded to a report of a woman screaming and found Mr. Lombardi with a gun and knife in his hand. Mr. Lombardi was charged with first degree murder and his mental status is being reviewed. This month he was declared unfit to stand trial. He is undergoing a 60-day evaluation at the Whitney Forensic Institute in Hamden......
One of Old Greenwich’s best known businesses got a new lease on life this year when former Greenwich resident Marion Boucher Holmes purchased Just Books, Too from Jenny Lawton after it seemed that the store would have to close. An outpouring of support came once it appeared the store was in danger of closing and Ms. Holmes pledged to keep the store (now known as Just Books) as an integral part of the community.......
The soapbox derby made its grand return to Greenwich Avenue this year as VivaPop brought the tradition back to benefit the United Way. Miller Motorcars sponsored the race, which featured children racing their homemade carts down Greenwich Avenue, representing local groups such as Greenwich Adult Day Care and the Girl Scouts. There had not been a soapbox derby in Greenwich since 1985. The event kicked off Septemberfest for the United Way.....
Greenwich’s schools will be looking for new leadership come the new year. Superintendent of Schools Betty Sternberg announced in October she would not seek a new contract from the Board of Education and would leave June 30. Then, this month Deputy Superintendent Kathy Greider, whom many had pegged as a favorite to succeed Ms. Sternberg, announced her resignation, effective in May, to become superintendent in Farmington. Ms. Greider cited family concerns since the commute in Farmington will be significantly shorter to her home in Berlin than it is to Greenwich......
A five-year effort to convert the Havemeyer Building into an arts center with a theater, classrooms and gallery space came to a close this year when the Greenwich Center for the Arts announced it was folding up its tent. While the project enjoyed public support, members of the Representative Town Meeting balked at possibly giving away a town-owned building for a $1 lease during tough economic times and progress could not be made in moving the Board of Education out of the Havemeyer Building. The renovation of the Havemeyer Building would have been privately financed......
12/31/08 Greenwich Calander of Events For Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Adult Lap Swim at the Greenwich Family YMCA
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
World of the Parisian Avant-Garde (Exhibit - Paris Portraits: Artists, Friends and Lovers) Bruce Museum, Greenwich
12:00 PM - 4:00 PM
'Carved with Rasps and Chisels: Sculptures by Cos Cob Resident Margaret Kane, Cos Cob
12:00 PM - 5:00 PM
'Conversations in Clay' Art Exhibit by 10 Distinguished Artists at the Katonah Museum of Art
12:00 PM - 4:00 PM
One-Person Exhibition of Cos Cob Resident Margaret Brassler Kane, Bush-Holley House Museum, Cos Cob
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
Workshop for Women 'Finding Stability amid Chaos: Coping with Stress and Loss in These Tumultuous Times' Mount Kisco
Benefits & Fundraisers
Children
Classes & Lectures
Clubs & Organizations
Exhibits, Galleries & Museums
Fairs & Festivals
Family
Food & Wine
General Entertainment
Music
Nightlife
Open House Gallery
Retail/Sidewalk Sale
Schools & Education
Seniors
Singles
Sports & Fitness
Theater & Dance
Town Meetings
Volunteer Work
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
12/31/08 COMMUNITY EVENT: The Place To Be On New Years Eve
Harvest Time Church
1338 King Street
Greenwich, CT 06830
The info, from the newsletter, after the jump. Eating well in an elegant environment will always be acceptable. Reserve at (203) 622-8450.