Collecting Plymouth's History, Past and Present
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(Gregg Hunt - continued from page 3) Dedication Award Gregg has coached collegiate summer baseball in the New England Collegiate Baseball League for the Torrington Twisters and Manchester Silkworms. He has also coached the Torrington Titans in both the Atlantic Collegiate Baseball Paul R. Hoey League and Futures Collegiate Baseball League. His teams made six appearances in the league finals over 15 years. He currently has the most career wins of any Associate Executive Director, CIAC manager in NECBL history. Gregg now serves as a deputy commissioner of the NECBL. Gregg has been a member of the Western Connecticut Soccer Officials Paul Hoey, long-time principal of Newington Association for 33 years, officiating at several state finals. He has two children, High School, joined the CIAC central office David, a second year law student at Boston College, and Katie, a junior at the staff in 2004 as associate executive director University of South Carolina. for the CIAC after a thirty-five year career as a teacher, coach, assistant principal, and principal. Paul is the liaison to the CIAC eligibility committee and the CIAC Eligibility Review Board. As such, he is responsible for processing and monitoring all appeals of Jackie DiNardo - Coach Eligibility Committee decisions. He also serves as a consultant and recording secretary to the CIAC Board of Control and to Coach Jackie DiNardo is an exceptional woman who has been able to Presents The combine her love of sports and people to experience many happy and rewarding general CIAC committees including the Seasons Limitations, Eligibility events. She has been involved in playing and coaching basketball for most of her life. -
The Prevalence and Impact of School Resource Officers in Connecticut Appendix A
Policing Connecticut’s Hallways: The Prevalence and Impact of School Resource Officers in Connecticut Appendix A In this appendix, we describe in greater detail the statistical analyses and results used in our report. Data Sources The data used in this report come from three sources: the 2015-2016 and 2013-2014 United States Department of Education Office of Civil Rights Data Collection (CRDC), the 2015-2016 school year reporting from the Connecticut State Department of Education data reporting tool “EdSight,”1 and District Reference Groups (DRG) designations that group school districts according to similar community characteristics and resources. We used the 2015 SDE DRG designations.2 Our data set included data from charter schools where possible, but we should note that charter schools are their own district so any analyses where we look at District Reference Groups do not include charter schools. The CRDC is a federally mandated reporting of school-level data regarding educational access for protected classes of students (gender, race/ethnicity, nationality, disability status, etc.). All public schools (PreK-12) in the country are required to report to the federal government on issues such as the use of exclusionary discipline, teacher experience, and enrollment in advanced courses. EdSight is a state repository of school-, state-, and district-level education data taken from all school districts in Connecticut. The authors of this paper acknowledge that the data in this study are now two years out of date. Because there is no central public reporting of the presence of SROs in CT, data on which schools employ SROs are most available and accessible through the CRDC website, but the last available year of data available through this data set is School Year (SY) 2015-2016. -
Regional Recreational Trail Map
Northwest Hills Council of Governments Regional Recreational Trail Map 03_J 01_F 02_A 02_A 02_A North Canaan 01_C 05_A 03_C 05_C Norfolk 04_C Hartland 02_B 03_B 03_A Colebrook 05_B 06_C 04_A 01_F Salisbury 03_I 01_D 04_B 03_H 01_B Canaan 03_G 03_D 06_A 07_E 08_B 07_F 08_A Barkhamsted 08_C 01_A 06_B 07_A Winchester 09_E 11_I 07_C 09_H 09_D 07_B 09_H 11_F 10_C 11_B 07_H 09_G 10_D 07_G 09_E 09_E 12_G 12_B 09_B 10_E 10_B 12_A 13_C 10_G 13_B Sharon 09_E 10_A Goshen 09_E 11_J Cornwall 13_G 12_F 09_I 13_E 11_C New Hartford 09_K 12_H 09_E 10_F 09_C Torrington 11_D 13_A 11_G 11_E 13_F 12_C 13_D 09_E 11_A 11_H 09_A 09_E 09_J 11_G 10_H 18_E 17_E 14_E 14_J Burlington 16_A 14_G 14_I 17_C 17_D 17_B 14_F 16_F 18_A 18_B Litchfield Harwinton 15_A 18_A 14_C Warren 18_F 16_H 16_E 17_G 14_L 17_A 16_C 16_H 17_F 15_C 16_H 17_H 15_B Kent 16_K 18_D 15_E 14_K 15_D 16_G 16_J 16_I 18_C 14_M 16_B 19_B 14_A 20_D 20_D 14_B 16_D 14_O 20_D 19_E 20_A 14_P 19_A Morris 14_N 20_B 20_C 19_D Town Index Code Trail System Town Index Code Trail System Cornwall 10_A Ballyhack Warren 15_A Mattatuck Trail Cornwall 10_B Gold's Pines/Day Preserve Warren 15_B Above All State Park Cornwall 10_C Hart Farm/Cherry Hill Warren 15_C Dorothy Maier Preserve Washington Town Index Code Trail System Cornwall 10_D Rattlesnake Preserve Warren 15_D Wyantenock State Forest Salisbury 01_A Sycamore Field Warren 15_E Coords Preserve Cornwall 10_E Welles Preserve Salisbury 01_B Dark Hollow Litchfield 16_A Stillman-Danaher Preserve Cornwall 10_F Mohawk Mountain Salisbury 01_C Schlesinger Bird Preserve -
Naugatuck River Greenway Routing Study: Watertown
Regional Naugatuck River Greenway Routing Study Table of Contents 1. Overview ............................................................................................... 3 2. Mission and Goals ..................................................................................... 5 3. Study Methodology .................................................................................... 6 4. Study Area .............................................................................................. 7 5. Potential Greenway Routing Analysis .............................................................. 8 6. Obstacles to Access and Connectivity (Gap Analysis) ......................................... 11 7. Affected Property Data ............................................................................ 12 8. General Construction Feasibility and Cost ...................................................... 12 9. Brownfields and Environmental Constraints .................................................... 13 10. Safety and Security ................................................................................ 14 11. Permitting Issues .................................................................................. 15 12. Coordination with Other Studies ................................................................ 18 13. Community Input .................................................................................. 19 14. Opportunities and Challenges ................................................................... 20 15. Recommended -
Open Space Plan April 28, 2002
Abstract of the New Hartford Open Space Plan April 28, 2002 New Hartford Open Space Planning Committee Open space is land preserved in its natural state or for farming or forestry. The State has set a goal of preserving 21% of Connecticut land as open space by 2023. Of New Hartford’s 24,362 acres, only 3,335, or 13.7%, are permanently protected as open space. Large scale residential development is under way. In the past decade, 300 new homes have been build, and the town has lost approximately 1,937 acres of farmland alone to residential development. The population has doubled in forty years. Open space protects quality of life, the environment, agriculture, archaeological sites, and the tax base. Residential development costs the town $1.58 in services for every tax dollar generated, vs. $0.05 per dollar for open space. The town should seek multiple sources of funding, including bonding, state grants and private grants, to preserve high-priority lands as open space. A wide variety of protection mechanisms exist aside from actually purchasing land, and many of them involve keeping the land under private ownership and control. The town should take steps to prevent haphazard development and preserve high priority lands as open space in perpetuity. High priority lands are those that protect agriculture, the rural character of the town, water quality, wildlife, passive recreation, and archaeological sites, especially if they are large tracts of land in residential zones. Once the Open Space Plan is approved, a commission will be assigned the task of implementing the plan. -
03/24/2021 Broderick, Thomas-Support
To: CT General Assembly Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee From: Thomas Broderick, Trumbull Re: SB 887 Date: March 20, 2021 Dear Finance, Revenue, and Bonding Committee, Over the past year of the covid-19 pandemic, Connecticut’s trails, open spaces, and parks have been my constant companion; indeed, it’s not too far to say that they kept me sane. When our local town parks shut down in March 2020, my wife and I immediately began to explore at all the state parks. We spent time together seeing the state and going to places we’d never been despite living here for years: the Tunxis Trail and Indian Council Caves, the Narragansett Trail and Lantern Hill, the Natchaug Trail and its river system, James L. Goodwin State Forest, Naugatuck State Forest—and so many more. Even in non-pandemic times, though, our open spaces make Connecticut great. Residents can go from the beaches of Hammonasset to the grand views at Chaugham overlook in the People’s State Forest. As a Trumbull resident, I live a half mile from the Pequonnock River Trail and see first-hand how it’s not just a greenway but a gathering place. On any given day there are seniors out for a stroll, children learning to ride their bikes, dog walkers of all ages and runners out for exercise. This same dynamic is repeated in our parks, greenways, and trails across the state. Our open spaces are central to building healthy, vibrant communities, and I want to ensure the General Assembly protects places like the Pequonnock River Trail for future generations, too. -
Where-To-Go Fifth Edition Buckskin Lodge #412 Order of the Arrow, WWW Theodore Roosevelt Council Boy Scouts of America 2002
Where-to-Go Fifth Edition Buckskin Lodge #412 Order of the Arrow, WWW Theodore Roosevelt Council Boy Scouts of America 2002 0 The "Where to Go" is published by the Where-to-Go Committee of the Buckskin Lodge #412 Order of the Arrow, WWW, of the Theodore Roosevelt Council, #386, Boy Scouts of America. FIFTH EDITION September, 1991 Updated (2nd printing) September, 1993 Third printing December, 1998 Fourth printing July, 2002 Published under the 2001-2002 administration: Michael Gherlone, Lodge Chief John Gherlone, Lodge Adviser Marc Ryan, Lodge Staff Adviser Edward A. McLaughlin III, Scout Executive Where-to-Go Committee Adviser Stephen V. Sassi Chairman Thomas Liddy Original Word Processing Andrew Jennings Michael Nold Original Research Jeffrey Karz Stephen Sassi Text written by Stephen Sassi 1 This guide is dedicated to the Scouts and volunteers of the Theodore Roosevelt Council Boy Scouts of America And the people it is intended to serve. Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one less traveled by, And that made all the difference...... - R.Frost 2 To: All Scoutmasters From: Stephen V. Sassi Buckskin Lodge Where to Go Adviser Date: 27 June 2002 Re: Where to Go Updates Enclosed in this program packet are updates to the Order of Arrow Where to Go book. Only specific portions of the book were updated and the remainder is unchanged. The list of updated pages appears below. Simply remove the old pages from the book and discard them, replacing the old pages with the new pages provided. First two pages Table of Contents - pages 1,2 Chapter 3 - pages 12,14 Chapter 4 - pages 15-19,25,26 Chapter 5 - All except page 35 (pages 27-34,36) Chapter 6 - pages 37-39, 41,42 Chapter 8 - pages 44-47 Chapter 9 - pages 51,52,54 Chapter 10 - pages 58,59,60 Chapter 11 - pages 62,63 Appendix - pages 64,65,66 We hope that this book will provide you with many new places to hike and camp. -
'02 CT HS Scholar Pgs. W/Blurbs
recipients The Connecticut High School Scholar Athlete Awards Program honors annually two outstanding seniors, one male and one female, from each of the CAS/CIAC member schools in the state: • whose academic and Lindsey Milkowski John Scaife Barbara Talbot athletic careers have Ansonia High School Ansonia High School Emmett O’Brien been truly exemplary Tennis, 4 years; Volleyball, 2 Baseball Captain 02, Connecticut Technical HS, Ansonia years; National Honor Society; Post All State, All Naugatuck Basketball, 3 yrs, Captain; (A minimum Spanish Honor Society; Vice Valley League Team;Yale Book Softball, 4 yrs, All Academic cumulative grade President - Class of 2002; Make- Award; West Point Award; Team; Volleyball, 4 yrs, All average of 3.5 or the A-Difference Club Member; Most President of National Honor Academic Team; National Honor equivalent.), Promising Freshman Award - Society; President of Spanish Society, Vice President; All- Tennis Honor Society American Scholar Award; Baush & Lomb Honorary Science Award • whose personal standards and achievements are a model to others, • who have exhibited outstanding school and community service, • who possess high levels of integrity, self- discipline and courage, and Andrew Butkus Stacy Orf Max Podell • who have participated Emmett O’Brien Avon High School Avon High School Technical High School, Field Hockey, 4 yr Varsity Starter, National Honor Society; Varsity in interscholastic Ansonia Senior All Star Team, First Team Soccer; National Forensic League; athletics. (A minimum Golf Team, 4 yrs; -
President's Message
PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE th Our 30 Anniversary Annual Meeting and Dinner Forty-six people attended our Connecticut Section Annual Dinner and Meeting at the Cheshire Grange on March 20. Thanks to everyone who attended, and to Ken Williamson for arranging to make the dinner a success. The Grange's roast beef and vegetarian lasagna were excellent once again. During the annual meeting, Jack Sanga was elected as Treasurer, replacing John Bensenhaver, who performed admirably for 5 years. We thanked John, and outgoing director George Andrews, now living in Boynton Beach, Florida, for their service. Connecticut Section Service Awards, recognizing members who serve as activity leaders and officers, went to Arlene Rivard, Bob Schoff, and Ken Williamson. After the meeting, Marjorie Nichols of Lebanon gave a great slide presentation of her trip to the Swiss and Italian Alps. Thanks to Marge Hackbarth for securing Marjorie's services on short notice. Trail Maintenance VP for Trails and Shelters Dick Krompegal has scheduled the first trip to Kid Gore Shelter on the Long Trail for the weekend of May 21-23. This is a great opportunity to hike into the heart of our Long Trail section and get the trail ready for the summer season. The first work trip to Story Spring Shelter, just 0.7 miles from the road, is planned for June 18-20. Participating in a Long Trail work weekend has multiple benefits. In addition to the satisfaction of giving time and energy back to the trail system, and the camaraderie of other GMC members , every hour of volunteer labor on the Long/Appalachian Trail adds to the level of federal government funding for the A.T. -
CENTRAL CONNECTICUT METROPOLITAN PLANNING ORGANIZATION 241 Main St, Hartford, CT 06106
ADOPTED APRIL 21, 2015 CENTRAL CONNECTICUT METROPOLITAN PLANNING ORGANIZATION 241 Main St, Hartford, CT 06106 Disclaimer This report has been prepared by the Central ConnecticutMetropolitan Planning Organizationin cooperation with the U.S. Department of Transportation, including its participating agencies, and the Connecticut Department of Transportation. The opinions, findings, and conclusions expressed in this publication are those of the Central Connecticut Metropolitan Planning Organization and do not neces- sarily reflect the official views or policies of the State of Connecticut. 2015 Minor Update 2 of 212 Contents CONTENTS ................................................................................... 3 SYSTEMS .................................................................................. 101 FOREWORD ................................................................................. 4 Pedestrians and cyclists.................................................................. 102 2015 Minor Update ............................................................................ 5 Public transit .................................................................................. 118 VISION ......................................................................................... 7 Private vehicles .............................................................................. 149 National performance oalsg ............................................................... 9 Freight ........................................................................................... -
Lower Farmington and Salmon Brook Study Report
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Lower Farmington River and Salmon Brook Wild and Scenic River Study Study Report and Environmental Assessment November 2011 Photo: Wanda Colman Front Cover Photos: Tom Cameron, Wanda Colman, Bill Duncan, Joyce Kennedy Raymes Back Cover Photo: Tom Cameron Lower Farmington River and Salmon Brook Wild and Scenic River Study Study Report and Environmental Assessment November 2011 Department of the Interior National Park Service Northeast Region 15 State Street Boston, MA 02109-3572 Tel: 617-223-5191 National Park Service Northeast Region 200 Chestnut Street, 3FL Philadelphia, PA 19106 Tel: 215-597-6482 For more information and color version visit http://www.lowerfarmingtonriver.org or contact: Lower Farmington and Salmon Brook Wild and Scenic Study Committee C/o FRWA 749 Hopmeadow Street Simsbury, CT 06070 860 658 4442 The National Park Service is deeply indebted to the Farmington River and Salmon Brook Wild and Scenic Study Committee for their long-term service and for guiding this study to completion. Thanks also to the support of many additional volunteers and partners, including citizens, and town, state and federal officials whose support, assistance and commitment made this study possible. Please see the Farmington River and Salmon Brook Management Plan for a more complete listing of the many groups and individuals that contributed to the study. Chuck Barscz, National Wild and Scenic Rivers Program Division Chief, National Park Service Jamie Fosburgh, Northeast Region Rivers Program, New England Team Leader, National Park Service Joyce Kennedy Raymes, Wild and Scenic Study Coordinator Jeff Bolton, FRWA GIS Specialist Linda Goldsmith Design, Harwinton, CT, Graphic Design National Park Service i Photo: Tom Cameron ii Lower Farmington and Salmon Brook Wild and Scenic Study Report and Environmental Assessment November 2011 Contents Summary—Principal Findings ..........V 3.C. -
Addresses / Directions for Har-Bur Away Games
ADDRESSES / DIRECTIONS FOR HAR-BUR AWAY GAMES Avon High School (track & field): 510 West Avon Road, Avon Avon Middle School (field hockey): 375 West Avon Rd, Avon Fischer Meadow - Avon (cross country) Route 4 towards Farmington. Left onto Town Farm Road near golf course. Straight to Fisher Meadow. Canton Middle/High School (cross country, field hockey, track & field): 76 Simonds Avenue, Canton Terryville High School (track & field): 33 North Harwinton Avenue, Terryville Eli Terry Jr. Middle School (basketball): 21 North Main Street, Terryville Fisher Elementary School (soccer, softball, cross country): 79 North Main Street, Terryville (Baseball): Continue on North Main St. another 1/4 mile and take a right onto Hillside Ave. The field is 1/4 mile up on the left. Granby Memorial Middle School (basketball): 321 Salmon Brook Street, Granby The Gilbert School (cross country, baseball): 200 Williams Avenue, Winsted The Pearson School (basketball): 2 Wetmore Avenue, Winsted Rowley / Walker Fields - Winsted (softball and soccer) Route 8 to Winsted. At the last exit, take a right. Go about 1/2 mile and take a left at Dairy Queen. The softball field is down the road on the left and the baseball field is on the right. Soccer field is on the right or left. Irving Robbins School (field hockey): 20 Wolf Pit Road, Farmington Kingswood Oxford (soccer, basketball, baseball): 170 Kingswood Road, West Hartford Litchfield Middle School (all sports): 14 Plumb Hill Road, Litchfield Northwest Regional #7 (all sports): 100 Battistoni Drive, Winchester Shepaug Valley Middle/High School (soccer, field hockey, cross country): 159 South Street, Washington Washington Primary School-Shepaug (basketball): 11 School Street, Washington St.