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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

5/26/09 Press Release: Western Middle School and Greenwich Department of Health Updates

You Wont Read This In The Greenwich Time......

Western Middle Schoo Parents And Staff Are Invited To A Swine Flu Meeting On Wednesday May 27, 2009 At 6 PM

See attached for the 5/26/09 GPS Update and a Greenwich Department of Health Update on H1N1 Influenza.

A Forum with Health Professionals has been set for:
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
6:00PM
Western Middle School Auditorium

Parents, staff and members of the community are welcome.

Kim Eves
Director of Communications
Greenwich Board of Education
290 Greenwich Avenue
Greenwich, CT 06830

http://www.greenwichschools.org/

Phone: 203-625-7415
e mail:
kim_eves@greenwich.k12.ct.us
Fax: 203-869-8003

=========================

NEWS RELEASE
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:

Caroline Calderone Baisley, MPH, RS Tom Mahoney, MS
Director of Health Public Information Officer
Tel [203] 622-7836 Tel [203] 622-6460

May 26, 2009

UPDATE ON H1N1 INFLUENZA

As of this date, sixteen cases of H1N1 flu (swine flu) have been confirmed in Greenwich residents. The majority of cases involve school age children. All have recovered or are at home recovering. None have required hospitalization.

Director of Health Caroline Baisley said, “To date this virus has been relatively mild in the majority of cases. However, for individuals with underlying medical conditions or compromised immune systems the symptoms could be more severe, even requiring hospitalization. It is possible that some individuals infected with H1N1 have not had symptoms. She cautioned that the number of reported cases of H1N1 most likely do not reflect the true picture of infection in the community. Physicians are being advised to consider treating patients based on influenza-like-illness regardless of rapid test results. Baisley also stated, “Because there are tests pending at the State Laboratory, we anticipate receiving notice of additional confirmed cases.”

Like other flu viruses, novel H1N1 flu spreads from an infected person to others primarily from coughing or sneezing. Sometimes people become infected by touching a surface with the virus on it and then touching their eyes, nose or mouth. Because people with novel H1N1 are thought to be infectious from one day before showing symptoms up to seven days after becoming ill, anyone who experiences influenza-like-illness (ILI) should:

Stay home and not attend school or work for a minimum of 7 days even if symptoms resolve sooner

Stay home from school or work until at least 24 hours after all symptoms have resolved

Symptoms of Influenza-like illness
Fever (100°F or 37.7°C) with cough or sore throat
Other symptoms may include – headache, runny or stuffy nose,
body aches or chills, nausea, vomiting or diarrhea

Residents are reminded to utilize stringent infection control measures to reduce the spread of influenza, including but not limited to:

Cover your cough or sneeze with a tissue or the crook of your elbow
Wash your hands often with soap and water; use alcohol based hand sanitizer if water is not available
Try not to touch your mouth, nose or eyes
Avoid close contact with people who are sick
Stay home from school, work and other group activities if you are sick

For more information on H1N1 (swine flu):

Greenwich Website:
http://www.greewichct.org/
Connecticut Flu Watch: www.ct.gov/ctfluwatch/swineflu
Connecticut Department of Public Health: www.ct.gov/dph
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:
www.cdc.gov

=========================

GREENWICH PUBLIC SCHOOLS HEALTH UPDATE TUESDAY, May 26, 2009

FORUM SET FOR WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 2009 – 6:00 PM
at Western Middle School AuDitorium
with health care professionals

Please check the Greenwich Public Schools Web Site regularly
for the most up to date and accurate information:
http://www.greenwichschools.org/page.cfm?p=6651

School Opening Status - Western Middle School and Glenville classes at Western Middle School will remain open and on schedule, tomorrow, Wednesday, May 27, 2009.

Meeting with Health Professionals – The Greenwich Department of Health has set up a meeting for Wednesday, May 27, 2009 at 6:00PM at Western Middle School’s auditorium. Local health care professionals will provide information and answer questions on the H1N1 flu virus. Parents, staff and members of the community are welcome to attend. Dr. Matthew L. Cartter, MD, MPH, the State Epidemiologist, will be one of the participants in the Wednesday evening program.

H1N1 Cases – There have been no additional confirmed Greenwich Public Schools cases of the H1N1 flu virus. To date, there have been 11 confirmed cases of the H1N1 flu virus. Please note that, per the Greenwich Department of Health’s May 26, 2009 release, there are 16 confirmed cases in Greenwich residents – only 11 of those 16 are from the Greenwich Public Schools.

Absenteeism – 229 Western Middle School students out of 492 were absent from school today. This is less than on Friday, May 22, 2009 (260 were absent). 33 Glenville students out of 108 located at Western were absent today.

GDoH Attendance Guidance - The Greenwich Department of Health has issued an important notice with School Attendance Guidance for ALL schools. It has been posted to the web site – all parents and staff are urged to read the memo and to adhere to the guidelines. In summary, the guidance states that anyone exhibiting flu-like symptoms should remain at home for a minimum of seven days.

RECAP OF EVENTS/DECISIONS:

* Activities/Sports - Regarding interschool activities and sports: Generally, if students and staff are not exhibiting symptoms and are in school – then activities and sports will continue as scheduled. There may be exceptions made on a case-by-case basis. The following are exceptions that have been made primarily due to the fact that either the teacher running the program and/or a number of students participating are ill and are at home:
- 5th grade Orientation at Western Middle School for New Lebanon School, Glenville School, Parkway School and Hamilton Avenue School students has been postponed
- Glenville’s Spring Concert at Western Middle School has been postponed.
- Adventure Racing for Western Middle School and Eastern Middle School students scheduled for 5/27/09 has been canceled.

* WMS Washington D.C. Trip - District and school professionals are working with WorldStrides, the company organizing the Washington, D.C. trip, to reschedule the trip for some time in June, if possible. There are no guarantees that this will be possible.

The District is aware that the cancellation and/or postponement of this trip will result in a negative financial impact on families that did not elect to take out insurance for the trip. We will make every effort to explore options for these families.

* On May 23, 2009, after consultation with and as recommended by State and Local Departments of Health and physicians, Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Betty J. Sternberg, canceled the Western Middle School 8th Grade trip to Washington, D.C planned for May 26-29, 2009. Dr. Sternberg said, “While this was a very difficult decision, after a thorough review of all of the facts, consultation with several health professionals at the State and local level, and two meetings with Western Middle School parents, we have decided that it is in the best interest of our students to cancel the trip.”

* Given the information available by May 23, 2009, regarding the rate and severity of student illnesses, the school medical advisor and Greenwich Hospital infectious disease physician recommended that the district cancel or postpone the Washington trip.

* By May 23, 2009, Nineteen (19), 6th grade, WMS students had experienced flu-like symptoms, were tested by a healthcare provider using the quick flu test and received negative results – these students are sick but not with a flu.

* By May 23, 2009, Fourteen (14), 6th grade, WMS students have experienced flu-like symptoms, were tested by a healthcare provider using the quick flu test and received positive results – these students are sick with a flu but at this time we do not know if it is H1N1 – the State Department of Health is conducting additional tests to determine if their flu is the H1N1 flu virus.

* On By May 23, 2009, The District did not expect to have the results of these H1N1 tests until mid to late week the following week.

* By May 23, 2009, additional cases of students with flu like symptoms at WMS have not been reported to the school or Town Dept of Health.

* On May 22, 2009, there were an uncommonly high number of absences at WMS, however, most did not appear to be due to student illnesses.

* By Wednesday, May 20, 2009, approximately 55 students had been to the infirmary at Nature’s Classroom and 19 were sick enough (multiple symptoms, fever) to send home, the other students were experiencing a range of symptoms but were not sick enough to have parents called to pick them up.

* On Monday, May 18, 2009, 130, WMS 6th graders went to Nature’s Classroom – Although it was unknown to the school at the time, one of the students had been diagnosed (using the quick test) with a “flu” and was placed on a short course of anti-viral medication. The student then reported to the school on Monday, not exhibiting any symptoms and boarded the bus for the trip. The District was unaware of any of the student’s status until Thursday, May 21, 2009.

* The decision to cancel the remainder of the Nature’s Classroom trip was made using the following considerations:


- distance from home if more students became ill
- the severity of illness in some of the sick students
- the higher probability of infection given the living situations (multiple students in bed/bunk rooms)
- amount of activity required of students
- ability to dedicate staff to students who were ill
- national attention about the spread of H1N1

UPDATE:

The Latest From The Greenwich Time:

Western to stay open despite flu

By Lisa Chamoff

Staff Writer


Posted: 05/26/2009 10:04:39 PM EDT

Despite a mounting number of swine flu cases in town and an unknown number affecting the student body, Greenwich Public School officials kept Western Middle School open Tuesday.


The state Department of Public Health confirmed 16 new cases of the H1N1 flu strain in Greenwich on Tuesday afternoon, on top of the 11 students who are already confirmed to have the virus. It did not say whether the cases were at the school.


Schools Superintendent Betty Sternberg did not return several messages left on her cell phone seeking comment Tuesday. District spokeswoman Kim Eves said she would get back to Greenwich Time Tuesday afternoon with additional information but never did.....

First Selectman Peter Tesi Shows Leadership

And Talks To The Press:

.....First Selectman Peter Tesei said he was briefed Tuesday afternoon about the situation by town Health Director Caroline Calderone Baisley and was confident in the steps taken by her department in conjunction with the schools.


Tesei said he could not speak directly for the schools. He is planning to attend tonight's meeting.....

Betty Sternberg's Silence Is Causing Confussion In Town:

......While many parents said they understood the decision whether to stay open or close was a tough one, they questioned the cancellation of Western's eighth-grade class trip to Washington, D.C., this week.


"You don't think it's safe enough for my child to go to Washington, D.C., but you think it's safe enough for them to go to school?" said Jan Kach, whose daughter Alison was supposed to leave for the trip Tuesday......

....Maria Popp said when she dropped her daughter off at Western on Tuesday, the crowd was 20 percent of the size she usually sees at the school in the morning.


Popp, a member of the Representative Town Meeting who works as a pharmacist, compared the current situation to the mold scare that cancelled classes for Hamilton Avenue School students for a week in March 2008. Those students already have to end the school year two days later this year because of a state mandate that they make up the lost days from that closure.


"I really, truly question the decision to keep the school open when supposedly our children's well-being are their main concern," Popp said.

Related:


Swine Flu outbreak


State confirms more

The state Department of Public Health Tuesday reported 29 new cases of swine flu in 14 Connecticut towns, including Stamford, Norwalk and Greenwich.


One person was hospitalized but then recovered, according to a statement from the health department.


The state now has a total of 141 confirmed cases of H1N1 infection. Most of the cases, 99, were in Fairfield County.


So far Stamford has had four confirmed cases, Norwalk has had five and Greenwich has had 16......

PLEASE ALSO SEE:

05/25/09 - Last Minute WMS Health Update

05/24/09 Sternberg Has Time To Give Greenwich Time Cub Reporter Colin Gustafson An Interview, But She Doesn't Have Time To Update The Schools Website


5/23/09: WMS Update - 8th Grade Trip to Washington D.C. Canceled Click here for links to the State Department of Health and Center for Disease Control - Information on H1n1 (Swine Flu) Virus

05/23/09 One Sided Hearst Newspaper Reporting Fails To Seek Out Vilified Parent And Doctor

05/23/09 Online Readers Express Anger As The Greenwich Time Only Publishes Today's Swine Flu Story On The Front Page Of The Greenwich Time

05/22/09 SWINE FLU UPDATE: Inauguaral Ball dance at Western Middle School has been cancelled due to Swine Flu

05/22/08 BOE is seriously considering postponing and/or canceling the Western Middle School 8th grade trip to Washington, D.C

05/20/09 In A story Reported First In Greenwich Roundup - Swine Flu Fears Hit Greenwich After 19 Middle-School Students Became Ill With Fevers

05/22/09 The Raw Greenwich News Feed: Overnight Edition

An electron microscope image shows an A H1N1 "swine flu" virus culture obtained from a patient suffering from the international flu outbreak

Top Story Greenwich Is Ground Zero For Swine Flu In Connecticut:

05/21/09 The Greenwich Board Of Education And The Local Lamestream Media Won't Tell You The Truth, But The Wwstern Middle School Mothers Will


05/21/09 Greenwich Post Is Next To Last With This Breaking News: Where's The Greenwich Citizen?


05/21/09 Better Late Than Never: The Greenwich Time Reports On The Confirmed Swine Flu Case At Western Middle School


05/21/09 Parents say Greenwich Swine Flu outbreak was handled all wrong by the BOE and the town Health Department


05/21/09 This Is What The Western Middle School Parents Were Given Today When They Picked Up There Sick Children


05/21/09 Greenwich Public School's Issues A Western Middle School Swine Flu Update


05/21/09 Breaking News: Greenwich Roundup Exclusive>>>>> One more Greenwich child has been confirmed with Swine Flu


05/21/09 A Mother Reports From Western Middle School


05/20/09 In A story Reported First In Greenwich Roundup - Swine Flu Fears Hit Greenwich After 19 Middle-School Students Became Ill With Fevers


05/20/09 Greenwich Public Schools Press Release: 19 Western Middle School Students Come Down With Fevers On Class Trip

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Please send your comments, news tips and press releases to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

05/26/09 The Raw Greenwich News Feed: Swine Flu Update

The Latest Greenwich Swine Flu News Brief:

Department of Public Health reports another 29 confirmed cases ...
Stamford Plus Magazine

The Connecticut Department of Public Health (DPH) today reported 29 new cases of novel H1N1 influenza (swine flu) among Connecticut residents of the following towns: Bridgeport, Granby, Greenwich, Manchester, New Haven, Norwalk, Prospect, Ridgefield, South Windsor, Southport, Stamford, Waterbury, Westport, and Wilton.One Connecticut resident with confirmed novel H1N1 infection has been hospitalized. This patient was discharged from the hospital and has fully recovered.

A total of 141 confirmed cases have now been identified among Connecticut residents. Among the 141 cases, ages range from 3 to 56 (average 17 years); 64 are female and 77 are male. Cases are from the following counties:

Fairfield, 99; Hartford, 14; Litchfield, 1; Middlesex, 2; New Haven, 21; New London, 2; and Tolland, 2.

Laboratory-confirmed cases represent only a fraction of the likely number of cases in the state because many persons with mild symptoms do not seek care from a doctor or hospital but recover at home.

Cases have been confirmed in the following towns: Bolton (1), Bridgeport (2), Danbury (2), Darien (13), Derby (1), Easton (9), Fairfield (12), Glastonbury (1), Granby (3), Greenwich (16), Hamden (1), Hartford (1), Manchester (5), Middlefield (1), New Haven (2), North Branford (1), North Granby (1), Norwalk (4), Old Saybrook (2), Pawcatuck (1), Prospect (1), Redding (3), Ridgefield (18), Seymour (1), South Norwalk (1), South Windsor (1), Southbury (2), Southport (1), Stamford (4), Stratford (1), Tolland (1), Trumbull (1), Wallingford (1), Waterbury (11), West Hartford (1), Westport (3), Wethersfield (1), Wilton (9) and Woodbury (1).

DPH continues to ask residents to take precautions to prevent getting the flu or spreading it by staying home from work or school if they are sick, washing their hands frequently, and coughing or sneezing into their sleeve or a tissue.For more information on swine flu:

• Connecticut Flu Watch: www.ct.gov/ctfluwatch/swineflu• Connecticut Department of Public Health: www.ct.gov/dph

• Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: http://www.cdc.gov/

• Call 211

The Connecticut Department of Public Health is the state’s leader in public health policy and advocacy with a mission to protect and promote the health and safety of the people of our state.To contact the department, please visit its website at www.ct.gov/dph

or call (860) 509-7270.



Please send your comments, news tips and press releases to
GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

05/26/09 Reader Submitted Comments: The way of the future is a version of iTunes for the Hearst Corp. Just charge 25 cents a Greenwich Time story.

Comment:


Are you kidding me?


Are these Greenwich Time stories worth $2.75 ????

NYPD investigates explosion at Starbucks
NEW YORK -- Police combed surveillance footage Tuesday and hunted for additional video that might have captured a small explosion near a Starbucks on Manhattan's Upper East Side.

Girl in fiery wreck that killed 4 was pregnant
FELTS MILLS, N.Y. -- The sense of loss cut deep for firefighters in this tiny northern New York hamlet on Tuesday as they prepared to bury a fellow volunteer, an 18-year-old who was nearly eight

OSHA cites Wal-Mart in N.Y. worker's death
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. -- The death of a temporary employee who was crushed in a stampede of post-Thanksgiving shoppers at a Wal-Mart store could have been prevented, federal officials said Tuesday as

Police blotter
Jesus Bojorquez, 22, of 411 Greenwich Ave., was charged Friday with driving under the influence and failure to drive to the right. He was released on $250 bond.

Senate passes open-container bill
HARTFORD -- The Senate on Tuesday approved a watered-down version of a bill that would ban open containers of alcohol in moving vehicles. But the law, an attempt to create legislation that could

Accused Greenwich 'sugar daddy' blackmailers due back in courtAn Ohio couple charged with extorting a Greenwich "sugar daddy" out of $100,000 by threatening to expose his online trysts will make their second appearance in state Superior Court in Stamford

Fallen soldiers honored at Greenwich events
In a solemn ceremony at Indian Harbor Yacht Club, the military men and women who died serving the country were remembered in the annual Greenwich American Legion Post 29 Dock Side Memorial Day

Greenwich pension fund entwined with its financial health
As the town's pension fund goes, so goes the town financially. That's the undeniable link that the architects of the town's budget are grappling with from opening bell to closing bell on a daily

Teen survives fiery backcountry Greenwich crash
A teenager walked away with only minor injuries Saturday night after the vehicle he was driving on King Street near Bedford Road crashed into several trees and caught fire, according to police.

Stamford student with impaired vision learns Braille
STAMFORD -- Before math tutoring sessions began, eighth-grader Gabriela Oliva picked a seat in the front corner of the Turn of River Middle School classroom and turned sideways, with her back facing

In town
Council to honor new Eagle scouts The Greenwich Council of the Boy Scouts of America will host a recognition dinner to honor the 2008-09 class of new Eagle Scouts and reunite Eagle Scouts of all....


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Please send your comments, news tips and press releases to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

05/26/09 The Greenwich News Feed: Evening Edition

The Latest Greenwich News Briefs:

Greenwich school officials put Western closure on hold
Greenwich Time - Greenwich,CT,USA
By Frank MacEachern Greenwich Public School officials were waiting until late Monday to see if enough staff planned on coming to work today before deciding ...
Greenwich pension fund entwined with its financial health
Connecticut Post - Bridgeport,CT
Greenwich town finances did not have an exposure to Madoff investments. With a traditional pension, town employees are guaranteed a set payout each year for ...
Mailing system used by mariners of old links Greenwich residents
Norwalk Advocate
By Lisa Chamoff GREENWICH -- During the Burch family's trip to the Galapagos Islands in March, the Greenwich residents wrote a few postcards to send to ...
Greenwich High School teams hoping to peak in postseason
Greenwich Time
By Jesse Quinlan Although the Greenwich High School girls and boys lacrosse teams ended their regular seasons on winning streaks, neither has peaked to this ...
Hideous Greenwich Eyesore Must Be Seen To Completion
DealBreaker.Com - New York
Above, an artist's rendering of Valery and Olga Kogan's would-be Greenwich manse. Dealbreaker readers know the place for its role in ToiletGate, ...

The Latest Greenwich Blog Post:

Greenwich Properties Bought at a Discount My Greenwich Properties
By James Martin
Hello, Here is the % breakdown for Great Discounts for Buyers in Greenwich
,
My Greenwich Properties - http://www.mygreenwichproperties.com/



Please send your comments, news tips and press releases to
GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

05/26/09 Press Release: June 4 "Give In-Style" Event in Greenwich Benefits Kids in Appalachia

Dear Greenwich Roundup – I hope you can use the following news about an exciting event to “Give In-Style” being held on June 4 to help families-in-need here in the U.S. This event is being held in Old Greenwich and is open to the public (by advance reservation). Thanks.

Jenifer
--
Jenifer Howard
J. Howard Public Relations
203-273-4246
Email: jhoward1@optonline.net
Twitter: jhowardpr

R.A.M.P.
Rockin’ Appalachian Mom Project


Prepared by: R.A.M.P.
Rockin’ Appalachian Mom Project
187 Sound Beach Avenue
Old Greenwich, CT 06870
www.RAMPAmerica.org
<http://www.RAMPAmerica.org>

Contact: Jenifer Howard
For Immediate Release
Jhoward1@optonline.net
mailto:Jhoward1@optonline.net
203-273-4246

“GIVE IN-STYLE” EVENT
TO HELP CHILDREN AND FAMILIES IN APPALACHIA
Benefit Luncheon Held in Old Greenwich – Thursday, June 4, 2009


(OLD GREENWICH, Conn., May 26, 2009) – A special benefit to “Give In-Syle” is being held Thursday, June 4, 2009, from 12:00 – 2:00 p.m., at a beautiful private home along the shore of Old Greenwich, Conn., to held children in need. The event, which is open to the public, is organized by R.A.M.P. – the Rockin’ Appalachian Mom Project – founded by Old Greenwich, Conn., resident, mom, and entrepreneur, Amy Guerrieri. Tickets for the luncheon, which go to directly support children and families-in-need in the Appalachian area of eastern Kentucky, are $40 per person, plus a package of diapers. Tickets can be reserved in advance by emailing RAMPinCT@gmail.com mailto:RAMPinCT@gmail.com or calling 203-940-1152.

The R.A.M.P. “Give In-Style” Benefit will feature special presentations by Katrina Bischoff with A-Dress the Issue, Yana Mayerman of Pastiche, Inc., of Old Greenwich, and Marcia Tucker, Interior Designer. Katrina Bischoff is an image consultant who will provide tips on how to make the most out of your closet and the clothes you own, and provide you with a brand new style! Bischoff has worked in the Chicago Apparel Center, as public relations director with Neiman Marcus Beverly Hills, and with On the Scene Productions, where Bischoff worked side-by-side with celebrities, producers, directors and set designers, arranging wardrobes for print, film and celebrity talent. Yana Mayerman, proprietor of Pastiche Inc., a hip and fun women’s clothing store in Old Greenwich, Conn., will present fashion basic must-haves and accessories, and will illustrate how to include these stapes into your wardrobe. Marcia Tucker, interior designer, will discuss great ways to update your house easily and within budget. She will showcase how to stage your home like a pro, for daily living or for resale, and how to accessorize your home to bring out its best assets.

LexZee Catering of Old Greenwich will provide light fare at the event. A silent auction will feature great items such as: two Tickets to the Wine Spectator 2009 New York Wine Experience - A weekend of wine, including evening tastings featuring more than 200 wineries from around the world, daytime tasting seminars, lunches, the black-tie Grand Award banquet, and more: October 22-24 in New York. Gift certificates from Pastiche, Inc., Abigail DeG. Fox Designs, Maria Livesay Salon, and consultations for the Ultimate Closet, Packing for a Trip or a Vacation, and Interior Design Consultation. Event photography and media sponsorship are provided by Fairfield County Look (
http://www.fairfieldcountylook.com)./

Why does R.A.M.P. support Appalachia? It is easy to associate extreme poverty with other countries, far away from America, forgetting the fact that poverty is very much a reality for some children and their families, here in the United States. Recent news reports on Appalachia illustrated the difficult life in the Appalachian Mountain areas of eastern Kentucky. The news stories instilled an immediate need to help these children and their families who live in unthinkable conditions, going without many items that Americans take for granted, like clean water, food, proper medical care, education, school supplies and personal hygiene items. Residents of Appalachia live in an area of the U.S. with three times the national poverty rate, and the shortest life span in the nation. While you may think times are tough here in your own community, life in Appalachia is even more of a daily struggle, just to survive.

Amy Guerrieri, an Old Greenwich resident, business owner, and mom of four young children, has committed herself and R.A.M.P. - the Rockin' Appalachian Mom Project - to finding a way to help these families-in-need through monetary and item donations that go specifically toward improving their overall nutrition, health, and quality of life -- working community to community, family to family, to make a difference.

Mrs. Guerrieri was recently profiled for her efforts to help families in the Appalachian region of Kentucky on a NBC Nightly News story on “making a difference.” (For the NBC Nightly News story, see:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/29963717#29963717). Since that time, Mrs. Guerrieri has taken several truckloads of donated items to Kentucky and traveled to the area personally to oversee the distribution of goods. It is her goal to make several trips to the impoverished area of Martin County, Kentucky, a couple times a year, working individually with families to make a real difference in their lives. The funds raised from the June 4th benefit event will go towards making repairs on some families’ homes and purchasing some specific household items and furniture for the many families of the Appalachian region that were recently devastated by the extreme flooding in the area that happened in early May. Many of the families lost everything in the floods – their furniture, clothing, and personal items. The sad part is that while the flood waters have receded, the impact of the flooding will be felt in the area for many years to come, as families are hesitant to part with beds and furniture that were ruined in the flood because they cannot afford to replace them. Instead, some may live with the waterlogged and mold-infested items, and in turn, suffer health issues from the mold that has developed in and around their homes.

“The poverty in the Appalachian area is astounding,” said Amy Guerrieri, founder of R.A.M.P. “It is like nothing I had ever experienced before. It is different than poverty in an inner city. In most of the U.S., people have infrastructure and services in place to help them. In Appalachia, there are very few industries and even fewer social services. Things we take for granted, like garbage pick-up are non-existent in the area. Because of this, the residents don’t have access to get help like people do in other parts of the country.” Guerrieri also noted that the mountain remoteness of the area is also a factor; however, getting to the Appalachian region of eastern Kentucky is only a ten-hour drive from Connecticut. “Not so far,” said Guerrieri. She also said, “The Appalachian region stretches from southern New York to northern Mississippi – 205,000 square miles, with 42 percent of the region’s population in rural areas. While we know we can’t take on all of it, we do know that if we focus our efforts on a region at a time, with a couple families at a time, we know we can make a difference in their lives.”

Guerrieri has already motivated others in her community and beyond to donate items to help families in Appalachia. So far, she has donated more than two full semi tractor trailer truckloads of clothes, baby products, books, school supplies, personal hygiene items, and Rockin’ Water, a product Guerrieri developed that is a vitamin enhanced water for kids.

For more information or to order a ticket to the R.A.M.P. “Give In-Style” benefit, call 203-940-1152 or email RAMPinCT@gmail.com. To learn more about R.A.M.P., visit
http://www.rampamerica.org./

# # #

05/26/09 Press Release: Junior Golf Clinic

Subject Junior Golf Clinic

(See attached file: Press Release-Junior Golf Clinic 2009.doc)

Lenore Caserta-McClester
Administrative Assistant, Director's Office
Department of Parks and Recreation
Town of Greenwich, Connecticut
Phone: 203-622-6472
Fax: 203-629-6979
Town Website:
www.greenwichct.org


Department of PARKS & recreation
101 Field Point Road
Greenwich, CT 06836-2540
Phone 622-7830


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


May 22, 2009


For additional information contact:
Joe Felder: 531-7261

Press Release
20TH ANNUAL JUNIOR GOLF CLINIC


The Department of Parks and Recreation announces registration is taking place for the 20th Annual Junior Golf Clinic. Sessions will be held on May 28th, 29th and June 4th, 5th for ages
5-9 (4:00-5:00 pm) and ages 10-14 (5:15-6:15 pm). The fee is $60.00 for all 4 lessons. Sign up in the Golf Shop Today!


For more information please contact the Joe Felder: 531-7261


cc: Greenwich Time, Greenwich Post, Community Answers, WGCH, Recreation Staff

===================================

Please send your comments and press releases to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

02/26/09 Press Release: Kamp Kairphree Registration 2009

Subject :Kamp Kairphree Registration 2009

I am attaching a News Release on Kamp Kairphree registration. I
would appreciate it if you could advertise this as much as possible.

(See attached file: PR Kamp Kairphree Registration 2009.doc)

Thank you,

Lenore Caserta-McClester
Administrative Assistant, Director's Office
Department of Parks and Recreation
Town of Greenwich, Connecticut
Phone: 203-622-6472
Fax: 203-629-6979
Town Website:
www.greenwichct.org

=================================


Department of PARKS & recreation
Recreation Division
101 Field Point Road
Greenwich, CT 06836-2540
Phone 622-7830


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


May 5, 2009


For additional information contact:
Billie Schock,
Director, Eastern Greenwich Civic Center
637-4583

Press Release
KAMP KAIRPHREE REGISTRATION


The Department of Parks and Recreation announces that in person registration for Kamp Kairphree begins Monday, May 11, 2009, at the Greenwich Civic Center, 90 Harding Road, Old Greenwich CT 06870.


There are four, two-week sessions beginning June 29th. The camp is open to 5 through 12 year olds (age as of first day of camp) copy of birth certificate required for 5 year olds. Campers must be Greenwich residents. Cost per two-week session is $210.00 and $200.00 for a second child in the same family, in the same session. Space is limited.


Kamp Kairphree runs from 9:00 am until 4:00 pm, Monday through Friday and is headquartered at the Eastern Greenwich Civic Center in Old Greenwich. Activities are also scheduled at Greenwich Point.


An authorized medical examination form is required for all campers attending Kamp Kairphree, one dated September 1, 2007 or after is acceptable.


For more information please call the civic center at 637-4583.


cc: Greenwich Time, Greenwich Post, Community Answers, WGCH, Recreation Staff

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05/26/09 The Raw Greenwich Blog Feed: Update

The Latest From The Raw Greenwich Blog Feed:

Stewart Acuff: Take Action to Support Bakery Workers at Stella D'oro!
By Stewart Acuff
They have taken their struggle to the luxurious offices of Brynwood Partners in Greenwich, CT and to the home of Brynwood Partner and Stella D'oro chairman Hendrik Hartong III, son of former Pittston coal CEO and Brynwood founder Henk ...
The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raw_feed_index.rdf


Please send your comments and Greenwich blog posts to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

05/26/09 What Ever Happened To Cabin Fever Entertainment In Greenwich, CT?

Levon Helm singing "When I Get My Reward" with The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, from "The Making of Will The Circle Be Unbroken, Volume Two," Produced by Joanne Gardner & Rosanne Cash, ACME Pictures, Inc, Nashville, TN, 37212, for Cabin Fever Entertainment, Inc., PO Box 2650, Greenwich, CT, 06830. All rights reserved by Cabin Fever Entertainment, Inc.

This "making of" video - one of the best I've ever seen - sadly appears to be out of print. In fact, I cannot find current contact information for Cabin Fever Entertainment. Used VHS copies (it seems it was never released in DVD) are available on eBay and Amazon as of this writing (5/26/09). The CD is still in print, though - and is highly recommended. Check out its track list, personnel, and reviews at Amazon: http://bit.ly/yKKIy

Monday, May 25, 2009

05/25/09 - Last Minute WMS Health Update

WESTERN MIDDLE SCHOOL



From: Stacey_gross@greenwich.k12.ct.us

Hello, this is Stacey Gross, Principal of Western Middle School, with an update on the health situation at Western Middle School - school will remain open tomorrow, Tuesday, May 26th. If you are well and are not exhibiting any flu-like symptoms, please come to school.

If you are experiencing any flu-like symptoms, based on the Greenwich Department of Health's Attendance Guidance Memo posted on the web site, please remain at home for a minimum of seven days. We would also encourage you to see your healthcare provider. Please continue to check the web site for the most up to date and accurate information.

Thank you and if you have any questions please feel free to call school on Tuesday.


PLEASE ALSO SEE:
H1N1 Flu Virus Updates
Most Current Updates on H1N1 Flu Virus:
ATTENTION ALL SCHOOLS:
Please follow the following "Interim Guidance for School Attendance" issues by the Town of Greenwich Department of Health. The information is consistent with CDC and CT Department of Public Health guidelines and was reviewed by the Greenwich Department of Health, Dr. James R. Sabetta, Director of Infectious Diseases at Greenwich Hospital, and Dr. Toni Salvatore, School Medical Advisor.
• Students, faculty and staff who experience influenza-like illness (ILI) should stay home and not attend school for a minimum of 7 days even if symptoms resolve sooner
• Students, faculty and staff who are still sick after 7 days from the onset of symptoms should continue to stay home from school until at least 24 hours after all symptoms have resolved Symptoms of Influenza-like illness - Fever (100°F or 37.7°C) with cough or sore throat - Other symptoms may include – headache, runny or stuffy nose, body aches or chills, nausea, vomiting or diarrhea
• Students, faculty and staff should follow stringent infection control measures to reduce the spread of influenza, including but not limited to:
- Cover your cough or sneeze with a tissue or the crook of your elbow
- Wash your hands often with soap and water; use alcohol based hand sanitizer if water is not available
- Try not to touch your mouth, nose or eyes
- Avoid close contact with people who are sick
- Stay home from school, work and other group activities if you are sick
Parents should be advised to consult with their health care providers if children are experiencing symptoms of the flu. Guidance for assessment and treatment of influenza-like illness has been provided to the local medical community and the physicians are aware of these recommendations for school attendance. (Download: Greenwich Dept. of Health School Attendance Guidance )
Previous Notices:

5/23/09:
Update on Student Health Situation at Western Middle School
5/23/09:
Update for Glenville Students at Western Middle School
5/23/09:
Interim Guidance for School Attendance Relative to H1N1
5/22/09:
Update on Student Health Situation at Western Middle School
5/21/09: Update on Student Health Situation at Western Middle School (En Espanol)
5/20/09:
Western Middle School Cancels Nature's Classroom Trip
ALSO:

Information on Swine Influenza Links to Periodic Updates from CDC and State Department of Health

Please send your comments, news tips and press releases to GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

5/25/09 H1N1 Update - Final








FYI - latest on WMS and H1N1

Kim Eves
Director of Communications
Greenwich Board of Education
290 Greenwich Avenue
Greenwich, CT 06830

http://www.greenwichschools.org/

Phone: 203-625-7415
e mail:
kim_eves@greenwich.k12.ct.us
Fax: 203-869-8003


GREENWICH PUBLIC SCHOOLS HEALTH UPDATE – May 25, 2009

Please check the Greenwich Public Schools Web Site regularly
for the most up to date and accurate information: http://www.greenwichschools.org/page.cfm?p=6651



School Opening Status - Western Middle School and Glenville classes at Western Middle School will remain open and on schedule, tomorrow, Tuesday, May 26, 2009.
H1N1 Cases - There have been no additional confirmed cases of the H1N1 flu virus since the last update. However, we do expect to hear from the State Department of Health on additional testing by the end of the day, on Tuesday, May 26, 2009. To date, there have been 11 confirmed cases of the H1N1 flu virus.


Activities/Sports - Regarding interschool activities and sports: Generally, if students and staff are not exhibiting symptoms and are in school – then activities and sports will continue as scheduled. There may be exceptions made on a case-by-case basis. The following are exceptions that have been made primarily due to the fact that either the teacher running the program and/or a number of students participating are ill and are at home:


- 5th grade Orientation at Western Middle School for Glenville School, Parkway School and Hamilton Avenue School students has been postponed
- Glenville’s Spring Concert at Western Middle School has been postponed.


- Adventure Racing for Western Middle School and Eastern Middle School students scheduled for 5/27/09 has been canceled.


GDoH Attendance Guidance - The Greenwich Department of Health has issued an important notice with School Attendance Guidance for ALL schools. It has been posted to the web site – all parents and staff are urged to read the memo and to adhere to the guidelines. In summary, the guidance states that anyone exhibiting flu-like symptoms should remain at home for a minimum of seven days.


Meeting with Health Professionals – The Greenwich Department of Health is setting up a meeting with area health professionals for parents and staff, to provide information and to answer questions – Please check the web site regularly for notice of the meeting.


WMS Washington D.C. Trip - District and school professionals are working with WorldStrides, the company organizing the Washington, D.C. trip, to reschedule the trip for some time in June, if possible. There are no guarantees that this will be possible.


The District is aware that the cancellation and/or postponement of this trip will result in a negative financial impact on families that did not elect to take out insurance for the trip. We will make every effort to explore options for these families.


RECAP OF EVENTS/DECISIONS:


* On May 23, 2009, after consultation with and as recommended by State and Local Departments of Health and physicians, Superintendent of Schools, Dr. Betty J. Sternberg, canceled the Western Middle School 8th Grade trip to Washington, D.C planned for May 26-29, 2009. Dr. Sternberg said, “While this was a very difficult decision, after a thorough review of all of the facts, consultation with several health professionals at the State and local level, and two meetings with Western Middle School parents, we have decided that it is in the best interest of our students to cancel the trip.”


* Given the information available by May 23, 2009, regarding the rate and severity of student illnesses, the school medical advisor and Greenwich Hospital infectious disease physician recommended that the district cancel or postpone the Washington trip.


* By May 23, 2009, Nineteen (19), 6th grade, WMS students had experienced flu-like symptoms, were tested by a healthcare provider using the quick flu test and received negative results – these students are sick but not with a flu.


* By May 23, 2009, Fourteen (14), 6th grade, WMS students have experienced flu-like symptoms, were tested by a healthcare provider using the quick flu test and received positive results – these students are sick with a flu but at this time we do not know if it is H1N1 – the State Department of Health is conducting additional tests to determine if their flu is the H1N1 flu virus.


* On By May 23, 2009, The District did not expect to have the results of these H1N1 tests until mid to late week the following week.


* By May 23, 2009, additional cases of students with flu like symptoms at WMS have not been reported to the school or Town Dept of Health.


* On May 22, 2009, there were an uncommonly high number of absences at WMS, however, most did not appear to be due to student illnesses.


* By Wednesday, May 20, 2009, approximately 55 students had been to the infirmary at Nature’s Classroom and 19 were sick enough (multiple symptoms, fever) to send home, the other students were experiencing a range of symptoms but were not sick enough to have parents called to pick them up.


* On Monday, May 18, 2009, 130, WMS 6th graders went to Nature’s Classroom – Although it was unknown to the school at the time, one of the students had been diagnosed (using the quick test) with a “flu” and was placed on a short course of anti-viral medication. The student then reported to the school on Monday, not exhibiting any symptoms and boarded the bus for the trip. The District was unaware of any of the student’s status until Thursday, May 21, 2009.


* The decision to cancel the remainder of the Nature’s Classroom trip was made using the following considerations:


- distance from home if more students became ill
- the severity of illness in some of the sick students
- the higher probability of infection given the living situations (multiple students in bed/bunk rooms)
- amount of activity required of students
- ability to dedicate staff to students who were ill
- national attention about the spread of H1N1


For more information contact:


Caroline Calderone Baisley, MPH, RS:
Town of Greenwich, Director of Health at Tel [203] 622-7836
Betty J. Sternberg: Superintendent of Schools at Tel [203] 625-7486
State of Connecticut at Tel [860] 509-7729


For more information on H1N1 flu:


* Greenwich Department of Health:

www.greenwichct.org
* Connecticut Flu Watch:
www.ct.gov/ctfluwatch/swineflu
* Connecticut Department of Public Health:
www.ct.gov/health
* Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:
www.cdc.gov
* Centers for Disease Control and Prevention School Guidance:
www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/k12_dismissal.htm


# # #


www.greenwichschools.org

PLEASE SEE:

Sunday's Posting

0524/09 Sternberg Has Time To Give Greenwich Time Cub Reporter Colin Gustafson An Interview, But She Doesn't Have Time To Update The Schools Website


Betty Sternbrg's Failure To Keep The Public School's Web Site Updated With Press Releases Is Causing Frustrated And Scared WMS Mothers To Panic


Mothers Wamt To Know If It Is Safe To Send Thier Children To Western Middle School On Tuesday


Fridat Over 150 Mothers Kept Thier Children Home From WMS.

==================================

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05/25/09 News: Swim Across America Greenwich to Stamford Swim June 27

Hi – following and attached is a news release and photo for the upcoming SWIM ACROSS AMERICA GREENWICH TO STAMFORD SWIM, scheduled for Saturday, June 27. It would be great if you could help get the news out on this important event that raises funds for cancer research. It is really important to let people know about this swim in advance, so they can prepare, train, gather their teams, and get ready for this terrific event. I hope you can use this information. Thanks so much.

Sincerely,

Jenifer Howard
203-273-4246
jhoward1@optonline.net



Prepared By:
Swim Across America
www.SwimAcrossAmerica.org
<http://www.SwimAcrossAmerica.org>

Contact: Jenifer Howard For Immediate Release
203-273-4246
jhoward1@optonline.net
mailto:jhoward1@optonline.net

ANNUAL SWIM ACROSS AMERICA
GREENWICH TO STAMFORD SWIM SCHEDULED FOR JUNE 27
Swimmers (Recreational, Professional & Olympic) Unite to Raise Funds and Awareness for Cancer Research, Prevention and Treatment

(GREENWICH, Conn., May 22, 2009) – The third annual SWIM ACROSS AMERICA GREENWICH TO STAMFORD SWIM is ready to make a big splash in the area for cancer research, prevention and treatment. The Swim, held Saturday, June 27, 2009, will start at the beach at Greenwich (Tod’s) Point with participants swimming along the shore of Long Island Sound in either a rigorous 1.5 mile swim or a half-mile swim (geared for swimmers ages 12 and older) to Dolphin Cove in Stamford, Conn. The Swim Across America event raises funds for the Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy (ACGT), the nation’s only non-profit organization dedicated exclusively to funding cancer gene therapy research. ACGT is based in Stamford and its headquarters are the finish line for the swim. Swimmers dive in at 8:00 a.m., Saturday, June 27, and all participants must register at www.swimacrossamerica.org <http://www.swimacrossamerica.org> by clicking on the Greenwich Swim link.

“Swim Across America is making waves to fight cancer,” noted Matt Vossler, chairman of the board of Swim Across America. “We are proud of the fact than this will be Swim Across America’s 23rd year of raising funds for cancer research and the events have grown to hold dozens of swims all over the country, each with its own distinct personality. You can swim under the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, or swim with NESCAC conference swimmers at Nantasket Beach, or even with Olympians in Greenwich and Boston Harbor. Swim Across America began as a grassroots organization with events developing organically. Now, those events each raise hundreds of thousands of dollars; money raised is given to local beneficiaries, which happen to be some of the best in the world. Now, we are bringing Swim Across America events to the whole country, from coast to coast.”

Swim Across America was founded in 1987 by Connecticut natives Matt Vossler and his lifelong friend and Boston College roommate, Jeff Keith, and was the first swim in the area dedicated to raising funds for cancer research. Swim Across America is a national organization that rallies fundraising efforts for cancer research, prevention and treatment through open-water and pool swim events in cities such as Greenwich, Boston, Chicago, New York, San Francisco, and other areas.

In the past two years, Swim Across America’s Greenwich/Stamford Swim has raised more than $400,000 for the Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy (ACGT) Young Investigator Award Grant program for treating brain cancer. The lead researcher and three year grant recipient on the project is Dr. Khalid Shah, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. Dr. Shah is instrumental in exploring gene therapy alternatives for the treatment of brain tumors. With so much attention in the news about brain cancer recently, his work takes on a special urgency and there is great optimism that gene therapy will soon revolutionize treatment.

“Swim Across America is so pleased to be able to support the Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy (ACGT) and its unique and promising approach to treating and curing cancer,” noted Janel Jorgensen, executive director of Swim Across America, and a former Olympic swimmer and Silver Medalist. Jorgensen grew up in Ridgefield, Conn., and spent her summers swimming in the water of Long Island Sound near Greenwich and Stamford. Jorgensen, like many of the participants, also has a personal connection to wanting to help find a cure for cancer, as she has had family members affected by the disease. “All of us have a personal drive to help find a cure for cancer; whether it is swimming for a parent, a child, a grandparent or a friend, everyone swims for a reason and that reason is life,” noted Jorgensen.

Returning this year as honorary co-chairs for the Greenwich/Stamford Swim are Cindy and John Sites of Greenwich. The Sites have supported the Greenwich/Stamford Swim since its inception. Additionally, Greenwich residents Donna de Varona, former Olympic Gold Medalist swimmer and world record holder, and her husband John Pinto, will also be co-chairing the event. Donna was also the first female network television sportscaster in the U.S.

Some of last year’s swimmers included cancer survivors or those currently battling cancer, such as Old Greenwich resident and triathlete Karen Newman, who is undergoing treatment for breast cancer; Carolina Fernandez of Ridgefield and five of her family members who swam for her son Nick who was treated for leukemia; and Roberta Bass, 58, of Greenwich, who in 2006 grappled with uterine cancer. Other swimmers are inspirations to everyone, such as Caroline Conrod of Greenwich, who at age seven last summer, was the event’s youngest participant; and Swim Across America co-founder Matt Vossler of Darien who lost a family member to the disease.

Swim Across America has raised more than $25 million for some of the top cancer institutions in the country, including Memorial Sloan-Kettering, Dana Farber Cancer Institute, UCSF Children’s Hospital, the Loyola Cancer Center, and the Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy (ACGT). With the help of hundreds of volunteers nationwide and many past and current Olympians, Swim Across America is helping find a cure for cancer through athleticism, community outreach and direct service.

The Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy (ACGT) is the recipient of funds raised by Swim Across America. ACGT was founded by Greenwich residents Barbara and Edward Netter. ACGT believes that cancer gene therapy has the greatest potential to not only improve the quality of life of cancer patients, but to ultimately realize a cure for cancer.

The June 27 Greenwich/Stamford Swim Across America event will begin at 8:00 a.m. at Greenwich (Tod’s) Point and head north toward Dolphin Cove in Stamford. Each participant is required to raise a minimum of $500. For more information, visit www.swimacrossamerica.org <http://www.swimacrossamerica.org> or email Jacque Lang at Jacque@swimacrossamerica.org mailto:Jacque@swimacrossamerica.org .

# # #

05/25/09 The Raw Greenwich News Feed:

The Latest Greenwich News Briefs:

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The most ostentatious mansion in Greenwich history managed to survive the outrage. Now, will it survive the bust? By Michael Idov Find the spot in quietest ...
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Please send your comments, news tips and press releases to
GreenwichRoundup@gmail.com

05/25/09 Reader Submitted Comments: RTM Member And Cable Channel 79's Paul Curtis On Memorial Day

I dedicate this to all those who have served our country. This is what
we enjoy because of their sacrifices.

05/22/09 The most ostentatious mansion in Greenwich history managed to survive the outrage. Now, will it survive the bust?



Haunted CT Mansion
New York Magazine

Find the spot in quietest backcountry Greenwich, Connecticut, where Simmons Lane branches off Lake Avenue, and you’ll pass by a flagstone gate, a no trespassing sign, and a row of green mailboxes—one for each house on the street. These identical mailboxes are the last sign of equality you will see for a while. Beyond the gate, set deep into their land parcels along the gently curving boulevard that seems designed as much for strolling as driving, sit six houses of varying sizes and architectural styles. One of them is slated for demolition, though you wouldn’t be able to tell from its perfectly manicured grounds and the gardener snipping away at the odd weed around the gazebo. This plot of land, as it happens, is the most notorious in town. For here is scheduled to rise one of the largest single-family residences in Greenwich history: the hulking, 39,000-square-foot, bepillared country seat of a secretive Russian airport mogul named Valery Kogan. When plans for the home were first announced, in early 2008, they triggered a nimby fight the likes of which staid, patrician Greenwich has rarely witnessed. The home was seen as a garish (and possibly even illegal) affront to the town’s good taste, its owner a walking nouveau riche caricature. In March, after a legal battle and a minor dialing back of the plans, construction on the home was reluctantly approved. Only now, given the current economic climate, there are questions of whether Kogan can afford to build the place after all. Where the project was once the epitome of the boom, it may well now serve as its gilded tombstone...


....A broker reportedly took her to see the Leona Helmsley estate, which would hit the market at $125 million three years later; Olga’s associate said they didn’t want the publicity brought on by the Helmsley name. The Kogans finally zeroed in on 18 Simmons Lane, a 25,400-square-foot megamansion spread out on a seven-acre lot. The house, hidden beyond a front gate that looked remarkably like the gate from the first shot of Citizen Kane, was built in a whimsical and eclectic style, with a large dome and fairy-tale turrets; the inside was paneled in historic wood the owner had flown in from Flanders. In May 2005, the Kogans bought it, in Olga’s name, for $18.5 million.......



.....The full scope of the Kogans’ desires, however, revealed itself only gradually. By June of the next year, Olga had obtained an interior-demolition permit and began stripping the house bare. A dealer from New York bought the wood paneling; neighbors reported architectural details being taken away by truck. It was becoming clear that the Kogans were not interested in a mere gut renovation—they were going to raze and build from scratch. Exactly what the Kogans were going to erect wasn’t revealed until two years later. When the plans appeared, it wouldn’t be too much of an exaggeration to say Greenwich gasped.....

.....Simmons Lane may yet get to keep its serenity anyway. It’s still not known when, or if, the stately dome of Koganadu, with its retractable cover, will rise over the flagstone fence. The Lees have filed a suit against both the commission and Olga Kogan, seeking to stop the project.

Even if the suit doesn’t succeed, the project may yet stall for a very different reason. One of the strangest things the Kogans did with their purchase was leverage the living daylights out of it. In August 2005, they took a $10 million loan from Eastern Savings Bank against the house. Less than year after that, they used the same property as collateral in a $15 million loan from the same bank to Kogan’s Kvoda Group. The house cost $18.5 million in 2005; its price, considering it has been stripped, has at best stayed level or, much more likely, hovers around $10 million to $11 million. It’s hard to say whether Valery Kogan’s oft-changing fortunes are at fault, but the would-be oligarch pleasure pad is currently leveraged two to one. Both loans mature on June 1. Much like the bubble itself, the would-be bane of Simmons Lane is now a castle in the sky, in hock to a hope for a brighter tomorrow.

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05/25/09 Citizen Journalists Like Bill Clark Tell It Like It Is While Cub Reporters Like Colin Gusafson Regurgitate Board Of Education Press Releases

Flashback: Hamilton Avenue School Building Committee Chairman Frank Mazza Begins His Construction Management Career

Hamilton Avenue: The Boondoggle Continues...
By Bill Clark

Having heard some glowing reports of the (finally!) finished (supposedly) Hamilton Avenue School, your scribe was much looking forward to the community open house yesterday evening. But what a disappointment awaited him!

Long, soulless corridors. A senseless U-shaped design that meant one has to walk around three sides of a square to get from one arm of the U to the other. Insufficient parking space. Narrow traffic lanes with high concrete curbs that allow of no misjudgment. And a final sharp drop onto St. Roch Avenue that is sure to snag your tailpipe unless you are driving a high-suspension SUV.

And that's just for starters. The media center is probably the smallest of any in Greenwich. And the air in it is stale, hot, and unbreatheable. Do you want your children to learn how to read, too, dear reader? Then make sure not to send them here.

Of course, the media center was like the North Pole compared to the art room. It was stifling. How can children learn anything in such a torrid and stuffy environment?

But the administrative areas are heremtically sealed, so presumably the administrators can do whatever it is they do (or don't do) in comfort. And the long, soulless corridors, that would make a state prison guard proud, are also nice and cool. But turn off into a classroom, and all bets are off.

The "new" Ham Ave is probably the only school in Greenwich, if not all of Connecticut, that does not have a gymnasium, or a cafeteria, or an auditorium. Instead, it has all three functions jammed together into a single space. Whose brainstorm was this? Just the labor costs alone to transform it from one function into another are mind-boggling. And how pleasant to be eating your lunch right after the sweaty morning PE class. What insanity!

Your scribe ran into Leslie Tarkington of the BET who said, breathlessly, "Isn't it wonderful?" Your scribe replied, equally breathlessly, "Wait till you get to the media center and the art room" - having just come from them, of course.

This morning he ran into Dean Goss of the RTM, who said that the Ham Ave Building Committee was "aware" of a "problem" with the ventilation system. Well, hallelujah! Their awareness that there continue to be problems with the boondoggle that ate Greenwich will surely make everything all right. Perhaps they'll even be able to persuade the Board of Health or the Town's Building Inspector, or whatever State of Connecticut oversight bodies may also have jusrisdiction, that their "awareness" means that this years-late, untold millions over budget nightmare of a train wreck is somehow actually on track. But your scribe, for one, doesn't think so.

The only positive aspect of your scribe's self-guided tour (the format for the evening) was the happy faces of the young children, who are glad (at last!) to be out of the wretched modulars in which most of them have spent the bulk of their elementary educational years. Most of them had no idea what a media center or an art room was. Well, unfortunately, perhaps they still don't.

And so, dear reader, if you want to see your tax dollars at work, be sure to visit the architectural marvel that is the "new" Hamilton Avenue School. Be sure to admire the lovely cornerstone, that gives a date of 2008 (apparently it had to be retro-engineered to accomodate the passage of time as the project lurched from pillar to post, but whoever was in charge of the redating process had his bifocals askew). And, of course, be sure to thank your local administrators and building committee members who made this great Wonder of the World possible.

MORE FROM BILL CLARK:

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