Blogs > All About Milford and Orange

If you live, work, or simply just care about Milford and Orange, this is the site for you. We'll provide you with interesting news about these communities. Most importantly we want to hear from you. Feel free to contact City Editor Helen Bennett Harvey, at hbennettharvey@nhregister.com or Brian McCready, Milford Bureau Chief, at bmccready@nhregister.com

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Silver Sands concerns aired

By Brian McCready
Milford Bureau Chief
MILFORD
— About 50 Silver Sands residents attended a special forum Wednesday night at City Hall to share their concerns about beach erosion, parking and safety issues.
Last week, state House Speaker James Amann, D-Milford, state Sen. Gayle Slossberg, D-Milford, and Mayor James L. Richetelli Jr., along with five neighbors, announced the creation of a task force to address these concerns.
Task force members Tom Rea and Sandra Haley showed photos and a video detailing significant flooding and beach erosion. They said the loss of beachfront next to the inlet to Great Creek is threatening the stability of homes near the park.
Rea presented a video of "Storm Beth" from Dec. 11, 1992. The video illustrated rising floodwaters along with debris and large branches floating through the roadway and onto residents’ properties. A voice on the tape could be heard saying, "We’ve got devastation here."
Rea said "Storm Beth" removed 4 feet of sand from neighbors’ properties.
"It caused homes to sink and be unstable," he said.
One man interjected that he had 30 inches of water in his home as a result of the storm.
Haley, who has lived in Milford since 1961, showed family slides depicting a lengthy beachfront area in her backyard in 1970. By 1983, the beachfront was still significant, but "Storm Beth" accelerated the erosion process significantly. She said a wrong decision was made to dump sand left in front of homes onto the public beach instead of returning it to homeowners’ properties.
The beachfront elevation dropped by 5 feet, 10 inches, she said. "To have a drop of this intensity is not natural."
Danielle Blummer, of Chetwood Street, said she came to the forum to express her concerns about "safety and parking issues." Betty Cooper, also of Chetwood Street, said the lack of parking makes it impossible for residents to park near their homes.
People who use Silver Sands State Park are parking on local streets due to the lack of spaces at the park. Popularity of the park took off in the late 1990s after it was transformed from a landfill.
Amann said the task force will continue to meet in an effort to come up with ways of addressing the residents’ concerns. No future meeting date has been scheduled.
Brian McCready can be reached at 876-3001 or briannhregister@gmail.com.

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Milford going greener

By Pamela McLoughlin
Register Staff
MILFORD
— Contaminated groundwater at a parcel that once housed the Connecticut Aerosols company will be cleaned up using environmentally friendly techniques that involve using microorganisms to destroy the pollutants.
The Health Department is working with the state Department of Environmental Protection and property owner AIG Investments to fix the problem at 65-145 Furniture Row, off New Haven Avenue.
The 12-acre parcel has an industrial warehouse and garage.
An evaluation at the site determined groundwater under the westerly portion of the warehouse is contaminated with chlorinated solvents.
Neighbors, including other businesses, were not affected by the contamination, officials said.
"We do not anticipate any exposure to residents or surrounding properties," health director Dr. CQ A. Dennis McBride said.
"The processes involved here rely on biological processes that appear to offer no threat to human health, wildlife or the environment."
The technology using microorganisms is still considered innovative, McBride said, but has been safely used in the state and around the country.
Mayor James L. Richetelli Jr. stressed that the city and state will take every measure to protect residents and will inspect the site often.

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Monday, January 14, 2008

Part 2 from Ann Berman

A SPECIAL THANK YOU TO ALL OF YOU WHO SUPPORT THE ECC

I do believe it is time to give thanks for the many people who have contributed with their readership, volunteer help, professional expertise and money for the ECC. It is time to list the people who made the ECC what it is today. And, it is also time to give a little of the history.
The ECC got its start in 1990 as Mayor Lisman thought there should be an Earth Day Celebration and called together the local environmentalists: Letty Malone, Barbara Milton, Joan Politi, Richard Roy, Ralph Harrison and a few others to organize the celebration. They discovered they wanted to stay together, so they wrote a mission statement with Richard Roy’s help and Joan’s suggestion for its name and later the ECC logo design by Robert Proto.

ECC’s Mission Statement :
“The Environmental Concerns Coalition (ECC) is the product of citizen involvement in the planning of Milford’s 1990 Earth Day activities, and was formed to focus effort on local environmental issues. In this regard, the ECC is a vehicle for citizen action to address the major themes of the present- day environmental movement in this country, captured in the slogans, “pollution prevention, not control” and “think globally, act locally”. ECC’s overall objective is to research environmental issues that affect
Milford and its residents and educate the public about its findings. As an ad hoc committee of the Mayor’s office, the ECC keeps him informed of its agendas and progress on a

regular basis and, whenever possible, coordinates its activities with those of other agencies of the city government. The ECC also makes proposals to the Mayor’s office concerning executive or legislative initiatives which it believes are in the best interests of the City of Milford.”
Mayor Lisman gave the ECC some legitimacy as an ad hoc group out of the Mayor’s office, a place to meet and postage for the newsletter. Mayor James L. Richetelli, Jr. has continued to support and help expand the ECC’s initiatives, such as the passage of four important Resolutions and help from his staff, John O’Connell, Elinor Gregory and Linda Michel. Add to that most of the city departments, commissions, and schools with special help and thanks to Public Works.
We especially appreciate the help from our local press who have been there for us on all our initiatives and projects: The New Haven Register and their Milford Weekly, The Connecticut Post and last, but not least, The Milford Mirror.
There have been three Chairpersons: Barbara Milton, Betsey Wright and Ann Berman. We have a Treasurer, Kathlyn Kraffmiller, Membership, Barbara Jason, Committee Chairs: Recycling, Diane Vasseur; Freedom Lawn, Dr Laurel Lobovits, Diesel Pollution, Joyce Acebo-Raguskus, Walking Booklet chairs, Deborah Rowe and Susan Mingione. We are

still working at formalizing committees for transportation, communication, trails and Earth Day.
Listed below are people who have contributed in many ways, in the past and present. They are not necessarily in alphabetical order: Margarite Acebo, Carolyn Alling, John Altieri, Kathy Alagno, Speaker James Amann and wife Terri, Helen and Richard Anderson, Denise Arpino, Raymond Baldwin, Linda Ball, Sherry Belden, Rebecca Balentine and Mike Ferrari, Barbara Bell (our energy expert), Dawn Beetham, Allen Berrien, Cheryl & John Blake, Bartley Block, Elizabeth Beiter, Nina and John Barrett, George Benedetti, June Benson, Danielle Bercury, Rev. Paige Besse-Rankin, Jessica Blacketter, Ben Blake, Cheryl and John Blake, Ed Boman, Titus Boggon, Kathryn Bonyai, Stephen Borer, John & Miliam Borgatti, Grace Box, Malcom Boxwell, Linda Brewster, Jim Broatch, Kierran Broatch, Paul Brunner and Diane Lentakis, Nancy Bruno, Scott Bruno, Barbara Burrows, Linda and James Brewster, Denyse Burke, Gail & Harold Burns, Frank Byrne, Carol & Lee Canapetti, Jeff & Julie Carter, Ann Carter, Jeanne Cervin, Fred Cotter, Peter Crabtree, Amy & Anna Cecere, Andy Charland, Tim and Sharon Chaucer, Barbara Clark, Donna & Fred Michael Collins, Mike & Arlene Cohen, Michael Coppola, Susan Cossette, Mike Costen, Donna & Fred Cotter, Peter Crabtree, Fran Crowley, Ann & Leigh Danenberg, Paul Davis, Victoria DePalma, Dorothy Denning, Jeanette Dias, Jill Dion, Donna & Mike DiMassa, John Dockendoff, Carol Dunn, Gail Dymling, Mary Lou Evans, Carol Faruolo, Victor Ferrante, Alex Fox, Philip Fulco, Kathy Gage, Bebe Gallipoli, Mark Garrett, Betty Geller, Barbara Genovese, Carmela & Michael Giacobbe, June Granger, Elinor & Bob Gregory, Isabelle Gingras, Helen Bennett Harvey, Lynne & Ralph Harrison, Mary Heerema, Barbara M. Hilli, Nancy Helfant, Albert Henderson, Lois Hoory, Carolyn Hughes, Linda Hoza, Bob Hurley, Len & Freda L’Anson, Tom & Marcia Ivers, Carolyn & Thomas Jackson, Alan Jepson, Paul & Tammy Jorgensen, Nancy & Frank Juliano, Verena Karsten, Elizabeth Kennard, Ilan & Laurel Kinori Mary Lou Kecko, Kathy & Steve Kraffmiller, (our engineer expert) Michele Kramer, Barbara Lambert, Ann & Scott Lapham, Irwin Langewisch, Michelle & Bill Laslett, Helen LaPlant, Brother Larry Lessier, Candace & Kurtis Law, Mary Ellen LeMay, Jeanne Scranton Lloyd, Leslie & Mark Lofthouse, Ada Lucke, Mary and Michael Ludwig, Edna Luysterborghs, Marie & Andy Macri, Laurel Macaluso, Elizabeth Madden, Peggy Magdon, Mary Mahieu, Chester Malinowski, Letty Malone, Suzanne Manning, Elizabeth & Frank Markisello, Tessa Marquis & Michael Brown, Carolyn Martin, Dr. Dennis & Valerie McBride, Robin McAllister, Deeanna McLenithan, Bill Meddick, Barbara Milton, Marion Morra, Melinda & Wayne James Morse, Carolyn Murphy, Karen Myers, Eleanor Myers-Turkington, Mary Neschke, Katherine Neville, Jerry Nichols & Christina Swanke, Karen & John O’Neil, Kate Orecchio, MaryRose Palumbo, Ann Pandya, Linda Parnoff, Alex Pazsak, Joanne Perini, Tanya Petruff, Beth Pimentl, Bill Poutray, Rose Palumbo, Joanne Perini, Tanya Petruff,
Terry & Harold Pitt, Dawn Portoff, Ralph Piselli, Vincent & Michelle Piselli, Jane & Richard Platt, Robert Proto, Mary Quirion, Lorraine Rahgo, Rainbow Gardens, Donna Ramirez, Lynn Ramos, Chris Randolph, Ann Rath, Marti Reed, Natasha Rennie, Pat Rogers, Spence Rogers, Lori Romick, Anelle Ross, Ann Rossi, Nancy & Dana Rotman, Richard & Pat Roy, Alice Renzoni, Joseph
Simoncek, Bill Sahlmann, Oden Seaholm, Josepha, Sherman, Susan & David Slattery, Lisa & Doug Sorensen, Joseph Simoncek,
Gayle Slossberg, Charla & Steven Spector, Bonnie & Win Smith, Roger Smith, Ruth and Herschel Smith, Ross Spiegel, Rosalie Spinelli, Pam Staneski, Beverly Streit-Kefalas, Phyllis Swebilius, Erica & Max Thomas, Lauretta Toomey, John Vanacore, Tammy Vermette, Gregory Vetter, Regina Vitale, Sarah Vinci, Barbara Wagner, Marilyn Wardell, Pat Watson, Michael Yeargan & Larry King, Tammy Vermette, Gloria Wehle, Wendy Werthmann, John Westermann, Judy & Charles Weyant, Steve & Gunvor Wing, Marjorie & Jim Winkleman, Marcia Winter, Connie Wood, Emily Wood, Sheila Woodlock, Chris Wrinn, Betsey & Will Wright, Susan Chris Wrinn, Susan Wydra, Dee-Dee Zimmerman.
We thank you one and all and we hope that with this New Year it will bring on more participation, more funds and more members.
This list does not cover all the names of the public school students, St. Mary’s students, Girl and Boy Scouts, Cub Scouts and their parents, Alternative Education Students (for great job at Walkers Pond). Apologies for names missing that belong on the list. If you know of any missing, please call me and they will be published in our next newsletter-878-0910.
We have over 400 names on our mailing list, which means the rest of you, who are not listed, are our readers. We do appreciate that many of you are very busy, but do want to keep up with what the ECC is trying to do for the community and the environment. This being said, it would be helpful if you would call or write occasionally to give us suggestions or information that would be helpful for you and the rest of us.
If anyone wants to be off our list, please call Barbara Jason at 877-9540.

SEE QUESTIONNAIRE:
Please return, and a $10 contribution will also be appreciated. Any additional monies will be put into a fund to go towards our new edition of Milford’s Favorite Walking Booklet.

Thank you,
Ann Berman, Chair

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From the Desk of Ann Berman

The following is a newsletter created by Environmental Concerns Coalition President Ann Berman

ECC NEWSLETTER
JANUARY 2008
ECC Meeting January 17th, Parsons Complex, Conference Room B at 7:30 PM

All the best wishes for the New Year!
The weather is jumping all over the place; issues and activities are popping up as fast as dandelions in the spring. Our ECC meeting on January 17 will be in Conference Room B, (please note the change, it will be in B just this month, which is upstairs on the City Clerk side, and in Conference Room C the rest of the year) in the Parsons Complex at 7:30 pm.
This meeting should be very exciting, as we have never seen a product scanned for toxicity and have the results emerge in seconds. We are fortunate to have Sarah Uhl, from Clean Water Action speak with us and demonstrate this new $35,000 gadget that can detect toxic substances.
The recent recalls of millions of toys with dangerous lead levels are highlighting the fact that toxic chemicals are in consumer products, including those marketed for children. Consumer products are increasingly made of a complex array of materials, using processes that can involve many different chemicals. X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF) can be used to accurately measure the atomic composition of a material, including the components of children’s toys and other household products.
You are invited to bring up to three products for on-site testing with a hand-held XRF analyzer. Suggested items include:
Anything made of vinyl such as children's toys, shoes, raincoats, lunch bags, handbags, backpacks, painted toys
children's jewelry, pillows, foam cushions, stuffed animals, children's PJ's, and ceramics such as flowerpots, dishes, or coffee mugs.
Bring your friends and family to test those things that may set your mind at ease as being safe.
The news about toxic substances is spreading like wildfire, and the more it spreads it seems to be touching everything we know and use in our homes and work places, not just children’s toys. Oh yes, also be sure to bring in packaging material also as that may contain these harmful chemicals. Diane Vasseur said, “If you buy bones for your dog, bring in its packaging if it is vinyl, for a test.”
Really close to home is my computer keyboard on which I am typing this very moment. The latest news is telling me that it is “100% sure of containing a brominated flame retardant (which is on all keyboards). This category of chemical is a neuotoxin and it is also
bioaccumulative, meaning that multiple low-level exposures add up over time and the chemical builds up in a living body. No one is sure how much exposure is safe. The good news is that manufacturers are taking a


look now at ways to meet fire hazard standards without using such toxic chemicals.”
Another would you believe fact, “that besides the “toxic” effect, that is in the manufacturing processes and measuring the contents of their materials, the results shows that it takes nearly 600 pounds of fossil fuel and 6400 megajoules of energy to make a single Pentium III computer with monitor. This tells us that typical information technology equipment is approximately ten times as “dense”, in terms of the relative amounts of material to make it, than an automobile.”
According to a forum we attended at Yale, there are now more companies seeking advice about how to go green. They want their product to be green. and to make the manufacturing process more efficient and to measure up to green standards, thus to reduce their carbon foot print. However, we still must be vigilant about how transparent they are about some of their practices. For instance if a company says their cotton is green, it just so happens only about 10% of cotton is grown organically, that is without the use of pesticides.
It is interesting that more companies are touting the green tag and it would appear that green is becoming cool and more desirable. Let’s hope this will continue.
On Saturday, January 26th there will be an Energy Fair at the Library, from 10:00 to 2:00. It is being sponsored by the Library, Clean Energy Task Force, Connecticut Clean Energy Fund and the ECC. Special guest, Sarah Uhl will be there to test items for toxicity. The other exhibitors will be Clean Energy Providers; Electric & Gas Utilities; Solar Energy Companies: representatives; Green Building Specialists and Loan and Grant Program; Energy Efficient Appliance vendors; Clean Energy Advocacy Groups; Environmental Education Resources and Energy Conservation Advisors.
Jean Tsang will bring out all the library books and newly ordered books that pertain to energy efficiency, green construction and how tos for recycling. This is a wonderful opportunity to meet with companies that are dealing with saving energy, conservation and why and how we must do a better job of recycling. Not only can we save money, we can help our environment and cut our carbon footprint.
Diane Vasseur reports from the Recycling committee:
We are creating a newsletter promoting green business and recognizing businesses that are making improvements. We want to encourage and support businesses that are working towards more sustainable practices. We would like access to products manufactured in the U.S. that conform to the REACH standards. REACH means Registration, Evaluation, and Authorization of Chemicals. The Europeans passed these standards on June 1, 2007. U.S. companies must meet REACH standards to sell their products in Europe. In many cases they have two manufacturing processes, one for Europe and another for the U.S. market, ours being less protected.
We want to be the ZAGAT of green business with our Green Shoppers guide and green shopping tours. Volunteers are needed, contact ddmiddens@gmail.com
Our Waste Reduction & Recycling Committee believes XRF screening is an intelligent investment of time and money. Perhaps health departments, schools, warehouses, incoming ports and businesses might consider renting or sharing a Portable XRF analyzer and periodically test incoming goods for safety. XRF scanners appear to be able to be taken to almost any location. The XRF has rapid measurement times, is said to be a non-destructive test method with low detection limits. I predict in the future that XRF analysis of all consumer products will be done. It takes very little time and will help insure safer products, packaging and Garbage. Being green is good for business.
Future Savers: Soon to be more affordable, will be systems to let people configure lights, security and entertainment devices from single control points. They are not new but as the demand increases, the price will become more affordable. The purpose is to increase efficiency and help energy conservation. The Home-automation maker Control 4 Corporation is testing ways for electricity providers to subsidize “smart” meters that help people recognize expensive peak power times when electricity reductions are most beneficial.
Another idea being tested is to give people a “utility channel” on their TVs that shows their homes real-time energy consumption and how the monthly electric bill would be trimmed by certain tweaks—like turning up the fridge a few degrees.
Listening to all the candidates, one wonders where does our Earth rank among all those issues? It doesn’t seem to be ranking very high on their radar screens. Like in Ellen Goodman’s editorial title, “War between mankind and Earth heats up, but gets scant attention”. The environment was twelfth on the Democrats list and fifteenth on the Republican’s. All the issues are issues to be discussed, but none of the magnitude of what must be faced with our environmental issues. Just take WATER and not OIL (which has peaked in supply in 2007), which is very high on the scarcity list. Water is our very basic necessity for survival and look at how much is needed not just for us to drink, but for producing our food and manufacturing necessities. Some of these figures are mind boggling, taken from the book, When the Rivers Run Dry, “We drink approximately no more than one-half gallon of water a day, for washing and flushing, and we use about forty gallons a day. Suburban Australia, per capita uses ninety gallons, while the US uses about one hundred gallons. We can easily control this amount when necessary, but when we consider the amount used for food and drink that we buy; the numbers are mind-boggling. For instance, it takes 250 and 650 gallons of water to grow a pound of rice. It takes 130 gallons to grow a pound of wheat and 65 gallons for a pound of potatoes. Looking at the wheat going to livestock and it rises, to 3000 gal to grow feed for a cow to produce a quarter-pound of hamburger and between 500 and 1,000 gallons to fill a cow’s udder to produce one quart of milk. It takes 650 gallons to produce a pound of cheddar, brie or Camembert.
With rivers being damned and siphoned off for agriculture, these are reasons why many of our large rivers are running dry, the Rio Grande for one.
Put on your Calendar: There will be a showing of a thirty minute film, “Connecticut’s Plan to Fight Global Warming” February 23 at the Milford Library Program Room at 10:30 am with a Q & A and another showing at 11:30 am. It is being sponsored by the Library, the Connecticut Fund for the Environment and the ECC. Here is the link to the film, which you can access on your computer: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6774024632432221429
The ECC’s goal is to improve our recycling and save Milford money. Diane Vasseur is working very hard on the Recycling Committee; we think we can make a big difference; we have the support of the DEP and we have state mandates, but we need more volunteers. In addition we need better public communication, all of which is very necessary to make this successful.
The ECC wants to get more volunteers to support these committees for transportation, trails and communication. It wants to be involved with legislative issues and after consulting with our Representative Richard Roy, he tells us of some of the items he will be needing assistance for passage in this short legislative session--Global Warming and emissions and a bill that will be designed to increase recyclables. Volunteers are needed to participate in this process.
On Wednesday, January 19 at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford, there will be a forum on how to guide bills successfully through the legislative process. Please call 878-0910 so we can register you and car pool. Those interested in Climate Action, please contact Diane Lentakis: deerspirit@sbcglobal.net and ask about the 2% Solution showing with reactive TV on January 30.

PLEASE FILL OUT OUR QUESTIONNAIRE AND
send your $10 fee contribution. If you want to add an extra gift, we will put it towards publishing our new edition of Milford’s Favorite Walking Book, due to come out this spring.

THANK YOU.
Ann Berman, Chair of ECC

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