Tuesday, June 30, 2009

DUI checkpoint snares 6 suspects


Tuesday, June 30, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

NORTH BRANFORD — Police made six arrests last weekend in the second of three planned drunken-driving checkpoints during the summer.

The Police Department recently received a $12,200 federal grant, administered by the state Department of Transportation, to put toward overtime pay to combat driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

The department has a checkpoint planned for late summer, Lt. David D’Ancicco said.

The checkpoint took place between 7 p.m. Saturday and 3 a.m. Sunday on Foxon Road between Cedar Lake and Twin Lakes roads.

“We had the DUI checkpoint on Saturday night to Sunday morning and we made some really good arrests here,” D’Ancicco said.

Most of the arrests, D’Ancicco said, were on drug charges, not for driving under the influence. Of the one DUI arrest made, he said, the blood alcohol level of the person arrested was allegedly more than twice the legal limit of 0.08.

Bryan Tulski, 27, of East Hartford, was charged with operating a vehicle while under the influence of drugs or alcohol, D’Ancicco said.

The others arrested were:

- Alicia Colavolpe, 21, of East Haven. She was charged with possession of narcotics, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and failure to keep drugs in the original container.

- Steven Godiksen, 20, of Madison. He was charged with operating with a suspended license, possession of narcotics, use of drug paraphernalia and possession of alcohol by a minor.

- Wayne Kopylec, 20, of North Branford, who was charged with possession of alcohol by a minor.

- John Pierlioni, 20, of Wallingford, who also was charged with possession of alcohol by a minor.

- Jennifer Napolitano, 24, of New Haven. She faces charges of possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Madison, Guilford officials seek probate court merger


Saturday, June 27, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

GUILFORD — Officials in Guilford and Madison are recommending that a planned reorganization of the state probate court system merge the two towns’ courts.

The Guilford Board of Selectmen Thursday unanimously approved a recommendation to the state probate judge assembly to combine the Guilford and Madison probate courts. The new court would be located in the current site of the Guilford Probate Court, in Town Hall.

Madison’s Board of Selectmen approved a similar recommendation earlier this week.

The votes came in the wake of newly enacted legislation that would reduce the total number of probate courts in the state to between 44 and 50, from the current level of 117. The move is projected to save the financially insolvent probate court system millions of dollars a year.

The assembly of all probate court judges has been meeting to draw up recommendations for a special redistricting commission that will redraw the lines for probate court districts.

Each district must now cover at least 40,000 people; Madison and Guilford have a combined population of about 41,000, according to the U.S. Census.

The recommendation from the two boards of selectmen, however, does not guarantee that the final reorganization will result in a combined Guilford and Madison probate court.

“This is our recommendation to the (state Probate Court) administrator, but they in fact could do something different,” Guilford Selectman Sal Catardi said Thursday.

The redistricting commission is due to make recommendations to the state legislature by September, and the reorganized districts would go into effect in 2011.

Guilford First Selectman Carl Balestracci said Thursday that Guilford was chosen for the location of the recommended combined district because it has more available space than the current site of the Madison Probate Court.

“We want to keep the districts as small as possible to give the most personal service to the citizens,” he said. “Guilford and Madison seem like a perfect fit.”

Remodeling some areas of the Guilford court to handle the larger caseload and create chambers for the probate judge is expected to cost about $10,000, Balestracci said.

Probate courts handle issues ranging from trusts and estates, to appointing guardians for children or the mentally retarded, terminating parental rights and granting adoptions. Many people appear in probate court without legal representation, and most towns currently have their own court.

The redistricting has raised concerns among some officials that town residents will lose the local service they have had in the past.

Also at Thursday’s meeting, selectmen voted to amend the minutes of their Feb. 9 meeting in order to resolve a Freedom of Information complaint brought by the New Haven Register.

The complaint alleged that the board had violated the Freedom of Information Act by declaring the first few minutes of the meeting, at which members discussed the Board of Education’s budget request, “off the record” and not keeping minutes for that portion. The addition to the minutes approved Thursday reflects the content of the entire meeting, indicating that members of the Board of Selectmen said that they thought the Board of Education’s budget request was too high.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

‘This was not the year’ for sick-leave bill


Saturday, June 20, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

When a bill requiring employers to provide paid sick leave to workers passed the state House of Representatives in late May, supporters were optimistic it would become law.

In 2007 and 2008, similar legislation had passed the state Senate, but the House failed to take it up. After speaking with senators, members of the Working Families Party, which was backing the bill, thought they had lined up the 19 votes necessary for passage.

But in the final days of the regular session, House Bill 6187 did not make it to the Senate floor. It died when the session ended at midnight June 3.

State Sen. Edward Meyer, D-Guilford, said he decided not to support the bill because of the economic climate. Meyer voted in favor of paid sick leave in 2007 and 2008.

“To some of us, this was not the year to put another cost on business,” he said. “I felt that this year, when we have more than 4,000 businesses closing in Connecticut and 65,000 people have lost their jobs, that the last thing we should do is impose an additional cost on our Connecticut employers.”

Proponents of the bill — which would have allowed employees to accrue paid sick days for every 40 hours worked — argued it could save employers money by avoiding the costs of “presenteeism,” a term for employees coming to work sick. The bill would have applied to companies with more than 50 employees, who would have to be 18 years or older and work at least 10 hours a week.

Jon Green, the executive director of Working Families Party, said that after speaking with Meyer about the bill he thought the senator would support it. But, when the Senate Democrats caucused the last week of the session, it became apparent Meyer would vote no.

“He said he thought it was a good bill and something he supported in the past, and wanted to talk about pushing the implementation date back and that was something he thought could get him back on board with it,” Green said. “We met in the Capitol and talked about a mechanism to do that.”

Green said the House’s amended version of the bill had the effect of pushing back the implementation date because no one would be able to use the sick days until they had clocked 1,040 hours of work after Jan. 1. With those amendments, Green said he believed Meyer would vote for the bill.

“That’s what we talked about, and he said that he thought that sounds good and gave every indication that based on that change that he felt he would support the policy,” Green said.

Green noted Sens. Bob Duff, D-25, and Jonathan Harris, D-5, also voted for the bill in the past, but were not supporting it this year. He said the Working Families Party knew in advance not to count on those votes. Last year, the bill passed the Senate by a 20-16 vote.

Meyer pointed out he voted against the bill in the Judiciary Committee in April. He added he did not say he would vote for the bill, and that he thought the effective date should have been in fall 2010.

“I don’t think we got specific enough when we talked with (the Working Families Party),” he said. “I did meet with a representative of that party and we did talk about getting the postponement of the effective date, but we didn’t get into the specifics unfortunately because I was looking, again, at the fall of next year and not at the beginning of the year.”

The original bill would have allowed employees to earn 52 hours, or 6 1/2 days, of paid sick leave at a rate of one hour for each for 40 hours worked, effective Jan. 1 for people who had already been employed for at least six months. The House amended the legislation to limit the amount of sick leave to 32 hours in 2010 and 40 hours in 2011 and subsequent years, and to start the clock for accruing leave Jan. 1 for all employees.

“The outcome of that would be to say that no employee could use their paid sick time until July of 2010,” Green said.

Meyer said he spoke with a number of employers in his district, particularly restaurant owners, who said the bill would hurt them because they would have to pay both the sick employee and a replacement. State Department of Labor statistics show restaurant workers are among the least likely to receive paid sick leave.

NOT ENOUGH VOTES

When it became apparent to supporters and opponents of the legislation that it did not have the votes to pass, it was not called for discussion in the Senate.

Kia Murrell, associate counsel for the Connecticut Business and Industry Association, said she was pleased with the results. The CBIA had lobbied against the bill.

“The bill ultimately was not called because it would have died on a vote of 18-18,” she said.

Murrell said the bill would have put state businesses at a disadvantage because Connecticut would be the only state with the requirement.

“The current state economy doesn’t lend itself to enacting new legislative mandates on business at a time when so many are struggling,” she said.

Bruce Deegan, a U.S. Postal Service worker from North Branford who supported the bill, said he was disappointed with the outcome. Deegan said he spoke to Meyer at a meeting in Killingworth in May and believed Meyer would vote in favor of paid sick leave.

“Based on things he said at the meeting and then the fact that it did end up having a later starting date, like he said he favored, I expected that we would have his support and I was extremely disappointed,” Deegan said.

He added that he became an advocate for paid sick leave after seeing a family member go to work while sick.

“I’ve known people with everything from the flu to Lyme disease who have gone into work when they would have been better staying home, so I think it really is about human decency,” he said.

Meyer said he expects to support paid sick leave legislation again in the future.

“When we get back to a reasonable economic time I will be taking a very different look at this bill indeed,” Meyer said.

Friday, June 19, 2009

N. Branford council shelves blight ordinance


Friday, June 19, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

NORTH BRANFORD — After discussing the possibility of implementing a blight ordinance in town at several recent meetings, the Town Council decided this week not to pursue the issue.

Council members raised the issue some months ago, and asked Town Manager Richard Branigan and Town Attorney Timothy Yolen to report on the town’s current response to properties with potential health and safety issues, and other aspects of implementing a blight ordinance.

Right now, Branigan said, the town’s zoning enforcement officer will send notices, work with property owners and issue a cease-and-desist order if necessary. If the violation continues, the town could take a property owner to court, Branigan said.

He added that situations involving the court system are infrequent.

“It’s not common — we’re talking about less than a dozen cases a year, hopefully,” he said. “Most people are responsive on the first instance or the second instance.”

Branigan said that complaints about properties with overgrown grass or other aesthetic issues tend to rise in the spring and summer. But he added that he does not think there are many areas that pose a problem.

“You really have to stretch the definition to find blight here in North Branford, and that’s not a bad thing at all,” he said.

After discussing the ways that nearby towns deal with blighted properties, Town Council members decided to stick with North Branford’s current system for now.

Monday, June 15, 2009

‘Green’ heating system gains in No. Branford


Monday, June 15, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

NORTH BRANFORD — The plans for the renovation and expansion of the Atwater Memorial Library are set to include a geothermal heating and cooling system.

Town officials have been discussing the possibility of installing a “green” heating system at the library for months. Town Manager Richard Branigan said it initially appeared that the system would be too expensive for the project’s budget, but a new design could allow the town to recoup the additional costs in about five years.

The current construction estimate for the project, which will nearly double the library ’s size to 12,500 square feet, is about $2.9 million. The town is planning to go out to bid for construction on Friday, and officials hope that work will begin in early August.

The total budget for the renovation of Atwater and the Edward Smith Library, which reopened in February after a year of construction, is $9.5 million.

The Smith library does not include alternative energy sources.

Branigan said that a test well at the Atwater library, at 1720 Foxon Rd., showed that the site can support a geothermal heating and cooling system.

The system would include some electric pumps and other parts, but most of the energy would be provided by a series of wells.

The total cost of the geothermal system is estimated at about $550,000, Branigan said, $150,000 more than electric heating and cooling.

“Five to seven years from now we would have paid back the differential cost in construction, and then after that we have no costs, which is just amazing,” he said, adding that a state energy efficiency grant of $66,000 could cut the payback time to one or two years.

Estimates for the entire cost of construction also came in about $200,000 under budget, Branigan told the Town Council last week, allowing officials to pursue geothermal heating and air-conditioning.

An early design for the geothermal system included one main well providing energy for the entire system, Branigan said. With a new design utilizing about a dozen wells, the architects were able to reduce the cost.

“When they looked at this alternate approach and then we started looking at the cost of this versus traditional sources, it made a lot of sense,” Branigan said.

Atwater is currently closed in preparation for the start of construction.

Mazza to seek Guilford’s top seat


Monday, June 15, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

GUILFORD — Selectman Joseph Mazza has announced he plans to run for first selectman, potentially setting the stage for a primary this fall.

Republican Kenneth Wilson, who ran unsuccessfully for first selectman in 2007, announced last month he wants to run again.

Mazza, a Republican who has been a selectman for six years, said people have asked him for several years about running for first selectman, and this year he decided that it was the “right time.”

An accountant with his own practice in Guilford, Mazza, 64, served on the Board of Finance for 10 years before being elected to the Board of Selectmen.

“I think if you take the experience I’ve had as an elected official from the Board of Finance and being on the Board of Selectmen, take my professional experience as an accountant, I think I can really kind of steer the town government in a new direction,” he said.

“I think I have a lot to offer in being more creative in the way we do things, look for more efficiencies, bring in technologies.”

Mazza said he thought the town government had lost some community trust during the most recent budget cycle, when voters first rejected a 2009-10 budget proposal before approving a reduced package. He said he would initiate a “top-to-bottom review” of town finances to look for areas of potential savings.

“Basically, I’ve been, I believe, a fiscal conservative, fiscally responsible selectman,” he said.

He pointed to the creation of the Elderly Tax Relief Program and the Public Works Commission as two important accomplishments as a selectman.

Mazza was chairman of the Elderly Tax Abatement Commission, which came up with a plan for the program.

“I’m eager to continue to serve the town of Guilford — I’ve said all along that my first concern is the town and its citizens, and party politics is second,” he said. “I think some of the things that I’ve done show my experience and my determination to help people.”

Wilson said Mazza has “served the community well,” as a selectman, but all the encouragement he receives from residents who want a change in administration “validates my desire to run for first selectman.”

Wilson said he gets correspondence daily from people in town looking for significant change and Mazza may be perceived by voters as being “more of the same.”

The Republican Town Committee is currently interviewing candidates for all elected positions, Chairman Jim O’Keefe said.

The Town Committee caucus, at which members will approve a slate of candidates for the fall election, is scheduled for July 28, O’Keefe said. Any necessary primary elections would take place Sept. 15, he said.

Incumbent First Selectman Carl Balestracci did not return a call for comment about whether he plans to seek re-election. He said when questioned by a member of the public at a Board of Selectmen meeting last week that he was not ready to make an announcement.

The November election will mark the first time that members of the Board of Selectmen are elected to four-year terms, following a charter revision last year.

The first selectman is the only full-time employee on the five-member Board of Selectmen. The position pays about $95,000 a year.

Mazza, who is originally from the Bronx, N.Y., has lived in Guilford for 22 years. He served with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from 1968 to 1970. He is married, and he and his wife have five adult sons from previous marriages.

School door buzzer system a hit


Monday, June 15, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

GUILFORD — A door buzzer system of the type tried at Abraham Baldwin Middle School may be used at other schools, school officials said recently.

The school district just completed a pilot program using the buzzers at Baldwin. Superintendent of Schools Thomas Forcella told the Board of Education last week that school officials had received positive feedback from parents and staff at Baldwin since installing the buzzers earlier this spring. The system will stay in place at the middle school, Forcella said.

The buzzer system requires visitors to ring a bell at the front door and front-office employees to allow them to enter the building. It is part of an overall upgrade of security technology at the district’s schools, including multiple security cameras in place at each school.

Forcella said the buzzer system could be useful at Elisabeth C. Adams Middle School or Guilford High School, where officials have long said they were concerned about the main doors not being visible from the front offices. Adams now has nearly 20 security cameras in place, Forcella said.

“One of the schools we’re most concerned about is Adams, because there’s absolutely no visibility at the entrance,” he said. “Anyone could walk in and be anywhere in the building without being noticed.”

Voters recently approved spending $998,750 on various health and safety improvements at Adams, money that could be used for security upgrades, Forcella said. The previous work had been paid for with $50,000 in the 2008-09 budget and a $12,000 state grant.

Security concerns came to the forefront this school year when six laptops were stolen from three district schools. A parent has been charged with the crime.

“It really gave us cause to think about how easy it is to access some of our buildings,” Forcella said.

While the system at Baldwin required a few adjustments on the part of front-office staff at first, Forcella said it proved “quite simple.” He said that the school had also asked parents to fill out responses, which were mainly positive.

“It is about keeping our students safe,” he said.

Overhaul of probate to slash court sites


Monday, June 15, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

One of the last vestiges of Connecticut’s Colonial government — the Probate Court system — is due for a major overhaul in the coming months and years.

Last week, Gov. M. Jodi Rell signed legislation reforming the probate courts, the family courts that handle estates, trusts, conservatorships, child custody and name changes, among other matters. The most prominent feature of the act, which was introduced as House Bill 6385, is a provision to reduce the number of courts from 117 to between 44 and 50.

Many communities have their own probate courts, often located in town hall.

The legislation creates a commission charged with developing a plan to consolidate the Probate Court districts. The statewide assembly of Probate Court judges held a meeting recently to begin making recommendations to the commission for the redistricting process, and it is still unclear where the new consolidated districts will be located.

But with more than half of the courts set to merge, some probate judges are worried that their constituents will lose the local service they have known.

Probate Court Administrator Paul Knierim said that the legislation is a long-term solution for a fiscal crisis the probate system has been facing for years. The courts, which have been operating in a deficit since 2005, would have run out of money by December, he said.

The state Probate Court system operates on a budget of about $40 million a year, Knierim said, 92 percent of which comes from fees. Since 2005, the courts have been running on surplus funds from previous years, but that source is projected to dry up in a few months.

Officials estimate that consolidating the courts will save at least $3.5 million a year, he said. The system would most likely still have to depend on state support, but at a lower level.

“Our caseload has been changing over the years, and in the past, probate fee revenue, which comes mostly from the fees on decedents’ estates, was adequate for the operation because most of our work was in that area,” Knierim said. “Over the years, though, the caseload of the courts has been increasingly in the area of social service cases, such as mental health issues and children’s matters. There is not a significant revenue stream from those cases, but they are expensive.”

Probate judges handle a variety of cases, from the traditional trusts and estates to appointing guardians for children or the developmentally disabled, terminating parental rights and granting adoptions. Many people appear in Probate Court without legal representation.

With the redistricting, some local officials are concerned that residents used to handling probate issues in their neighborhoods might have to travel out of town to the consolidated courts. At a North Branford Town Council meeting last week, council member Joseph Faughnan, a lawyer, raised the possibility that the 15,000-resident town could lose its Probate Court.

With the consolidation, each court district must contain a minimum of 40,000 people.

“The impact on North Branford, I don’t want to say it’s traumatic, but being a smaller town in the region I do think we would suffer if we’re not alert to the process,” Faughnan said.

Frank Forgione, probate judge for North Branford, said he has spoken with members of the Town Council about their concerns. Even if the court is located in another town, Forgione said he hoped that the probate judge for the district would continue to hold some hearings in North Branford.

“Frankly, I think that 50 (probate districts) is too few, however that’s what the legislation calls for, so we are bound by what the legislation calls for,” he said. “I’m always concerned that as something gets larger, the hands-on approach, the local service, the local flavor, is diminished. However, I would like to believe that whether it is myself or someone else that’s serving as the probate judge in a combined district, that we’ll continue to provide the service that we’ve striven to provide.”

East Haven Probate Judge Michael Albis agreed, saying he “would have liked to see more than 50 approved.” But he said he supported other reforms in the bill, such as the centralization of court finances.

“I personally feel that the community-based nature of the courts is one of its strongest aspects and I am concerned that going down from 117 courts to 50, it’s quite a challenge for the judges to come up with a redistricting plan that will still be as user-based and community-friendly as what we have now,” he said.

Albis said that the probate assembly is looking at which towns could combine easily with enough existing court space for the larger districts.

The assembly will have the first opportunity to present a redistricting plan to the commission.

Although it is still unclear where the new consolidated courts will be located, State Rep. Bob Godfrey (D-Danbury), who introduced the legislation, said it is likely that many will remain in local town halls. He added that he does not think there will be a need for construction or rental of additional space.

New plan would start in 2011

Godfrey said the probate redistricting commission is scheduled to present its recommendations to the legislature by September. Prior to that, he said, there will be a public hearing process for community input. The new districts would go into effect in 2011.

The current economic recession and budget crisis at the state level created the impetus for reforming the probate system, Godfrey said.

“The system pretty well was working, it was just going to run out of money and it is antique. These are kind of leftover districts from before the American Revolution,” he said. “We’re dragging the state into the 21st century.”

Guilford Probate Judge Joel Helander said he did not think there would be any benefits to local residents from the system reforms.

“I believe that it had far less to do with cost savings than it did with centralizing power and authority,” Helander said. “I think that time will only tell, but I don’t really believe that there’s going to be any substantial cost savings to the state.”

He described the Guilford Probate Court as a “people’s court,” where 50 percent of the users do not have attorneys.

“The fear of the consolidation had always been of making the courts, turning them into mega-districts that would not be user-friendly and would be relatively inaccessible like the superior courts,” he said. “Now that the bill has gone through, we’re working with it.”

In addition to the redistricting plan, the legislation includes several other reforms of the probate system as a whole. It requires probate judges to work 20 hours a week, and probate court offices to be open 40 hours a week. It sets standard compensation for judges as a percentage of what a Superior Court judge earns, based on the size of the probate court district. Judges must now be members of the Connecticut Bar Association, although the provision does not apply to judges currently in office.

The new act also states that any annual surplus funds in the Probate Court Administration Fund will be transferred to the state General Fund.

Knierim, the probate court administrator, said he believed the act would solve the system’s financial problems, while reducing its dependence on the state in the future.

Another move could be to raise the $12,500 cap on fees from an estate, which has not been increased since 1998.

The current reform is a “long-term solution for the system,” Knierim said, that is “not at all a Band-Aid.”

“Not only is it a fix for the financial issues, but it maintains a system of probate courts that is community-based and people-oriented,” he said. “We wanted to preserve what’s best about the system while at the same time making it more efficient.”

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Grandson saved from prison in $1M theft


Published: Saturday, June 13, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

NEW HAVEN — An East Haven man who stole up to $1 million in lottery winnings from his grandfather avoided jail time Friday through an agreement in which he will repay $175,000 to the victim.

Raffaele Iuliano Jr., 20, described himself as “young and stupid” when he committed the crime. Iuliano pleaded no contest to the charge of first-degree larceny and received a suspended sentence of five years, with five years of probation and the payment of $175,000 in restitution.

Police arrested Iuliano, along with his father, Raffaele Iuliano Sr., and friend Joseph Bernardo in February 2008 on charges they stole up to $1 million from Giuseppe Diglio, the grandfather and father-in-law of Iuliano Jr. and Iuliano Sr., respectively. Diglio, a North Branford resident, won the lottery in 1986 and kept his winnings in cash in a safe in his home, police said.

It was later revealed in court that it was difficult to verify the total amount of the money, as it was held in cash, and Diglio could definitely account for only $350,000.

At the time of the arrest, police said they had already recovered about $218,000. Under the conditions of Iuliano Jr.’s sentence, he will repay at least $125 a week to his grandfather, and his attorney said Iuliano Jr. would return the entire amount within 10 years.

Bernardo, 25, pleaded no contest to a charge of first-degree larceny in March. He also received a five-year suspended sentence and also paid restitution of $175,000.

Iuliano Sr., 45, in February pleaded guilty to fourth-degree conspiracy to commit larceny and received a nine-month suspended sentence.

The Iulianos’ attorney, Frank Antollino, said Iuliano Jr. will “carry the Judas mark in the family.”

“But for the kindness of his grandfather, my client would be going in that door (to prison) instead of out the other door,” Antollino told Superior Court Judge Richard A. Damiani.

Police said the theft took place Nov. 5 and Thanksgiving Day 2007, both dates when family members were gathered elsewhere. Diglio noticed and reported the missing money Jan. 15, 2008.

Damiani told Iuliano Jr., “I don’t know how you’re going to be able to sit at your family table and look your grandfather in the eye.” He added that the defendant could have faced several years in prison.

“Family is all you have — without it you’re a vagabond,” Damiani said. “Beside being a common thief, you stole from your grandfather.”

Iuliano Jr. said he was “deeply sorry.”

“I brought shame to my family (and) my grandfather,” he said. “This is something I have to live with the rest of my life.”

Saltwater fishing license on hold until bill gets OK


Saturday, June 13, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

The new requirement for a marine fishing license will not go into effect unless Gov. M. Jodi Rell signs the legislation creating the license.

According to the legislation, House Bill 5875, people would need a license for fishing in coastal waters starting Monday. But the bill has not yet reached Rell’s desk, according to her office.

If Rell does not sign the legislation prior to its effective date of Monday, it would go into effect as soon as she approves it, said Dennis Schain, spokesman for the state Department of Environmental Protection.

“The bill did say an effective date of June 15, but it does not become law until the governor signs it,” he said. “So there’s no requirement right now and probably not Monday or early next week to have a marine fishing license.”

The state Senate unanimously approved the bill June 3, following approval by the House of Representatives in May.

The legislation, which also deals with water quality, establishes a license for saltwater fishing that includes a fee of $10 for residents and $15 for out-of-state residents. The bill applies to people 16 years and older; those older than 65 do not have to pay the fee.

State fishermen have had to obtain a license for freshwater fishing for years, but have traditionally been able to cast a line in Long Island Sound for free. The new requirement comes about because of a federal marine fishing registry is set to go into effect Jan. 1. By creating its own saltwater registry system, Connecticut will be able to keep the fees associated with the license.

Schain said that the license was available for purchase through the DEP’s online system, but the feature has been deactivated pending the passage of the legislation.

If Rell did veto the bill, the DEP would refund fees for any licenses people have already purchased, he said.

“We know that the system can handle this new license and will be ready to get it up and running if we get the green light from the governor,” he said.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Guilford High fields press box to bear announcer’s name


Wednesday, June 10, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

GUILFORD — School officials are planning to name the press box at the Guilford High School fields after longtime football announcer Bo Mooradian.

The Board of Education this week voted to honor Mooradian after a group of community members sent a letter to Athletic Director Chip Dorwin, suggesting the move. Dorwin made a presentation to the Board of Education in April and then set up a committee to go over the naming, a standard procedure under board policies.

After the committee unanimously recommended naming the press box for Mooradian, Dorwin made another presentation to the Board of Education this week, and board members approved the naming.

Mooradian has been the school’s only football announcer since the early 1970s, when the football program was resurrected, Dorwin said.

“He has been the one and only P.A. announcer at our football games from day one,” Dorwin told the board Monday. He added that Mooradian may have missed “a handful” of games in that time.

Mooradian was part of a group that helped restart the Guilford High School football program, which had been dormant since the 1950s, Dorwin said. The athletic director at the time then asked him to do the announcing at the games, a volunteer position that he continues to hold.

This year, the school inducted Mooradian into its Athletic Hall of Fame.

Dorwin said there will be a ceremony to name the press box, which is about 10 years old, at a later date.

Board of Education members expressed their support for the move at Monday’s meeting.

“It seems highly appropriate for the press box to be named after Mr. Mooradian, who’s given so much,” board member Barbara Dudley said.

Board Chairman William Bloss described the move as “the least we can do.”

“It’s a small effort really for the amount of time and amount of energy he’s put in,” Bloss said.

Also at Monday’s meeting, board members thanked the two high school seniors who have served as student representatives and attended every board meeting this school year. Marissa Mohrer and Elizabeth Savrann received plaques commemorating their work and thanks from the board.

Two other graduating seniors, Lauren Trotta and Gabe Shore, received Student Leadership Awards from the Connecticut Association of Boards of Education. The students were also honored at this week’s meeting.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Hook, Line and Stinker: Anglers don't like new fishing fee


Published: Sunday, June 7, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

For years, Connecticut residents who enjoyed fishing in Long Island Sound could just stroll down to the shore, cast a line and wait for the fish to bite.

But with the recent passage of legislation requiring a license for saltwater recreational fishing for the first time, that informal process could change. And some local enthusiasts and fishing-supply store owners say they are worried about the effects on Connecticut saltwater fishing.

The new license, which would create an annual $10 fee for Connecticut residents, and $15 for out-of-state visitors to fish in saltwater bodies, recently passed the state House and Senate as part of a bill dealing with water quality. After the act, House Bill 5875, passed the Senate by a unanimous vote on June 2, it advanced to Gov. M. Jodi Rell’s office, where it is awaiting her signature.

If approved, the new requirement goes into effect June 15.

The bill requires anyone age 16 or older to obtain a marine fishing license in order to “take, attempt to take or assist in taking any fish or bait species in the marine district.” People 65 years and older do not have to pay the fee. Anglers on “party and charter” boats will not be required to have personal licenses, according to the DEP.

Commercial fishing is governed by a different set of regulations.

The state has required licenses for

recreational fishing in freshwater lakes and rivers for years. The DEP issues about 145,000 freshwater licences a year, earing $2.7 milion in fees.

The new marine license has been in the works since 2007 and came about because of a move by the National Marine Fisheries Service to create a marine fishing registry, said Dennis Schain, spokesman for the state Department of Environmental Protection.

Schain said that implementing its own license system will allow Connecticut to collect the fees, rather than having them go to the federal government. The federal registry is due to go into effect Jan. 1.

“If there is a state program, it preempts the federal program, so if you have a state program, you can do the registry and the state can keep those fees,” he said.

Schain said the DEP is projecting the new license could raise $1 million a year for the state. Eventually, he said, the DEP is hoping to create combination licenses, like it currently has for freshwater fishing and hunting, but right now fishermen would have to purchase two separate licenses.

The new rule would be enforced by DEP officers performing spot checks of shoreline fishing areas.

The goal of the registry, apart from raising revenues, is to improve state and federal management of fishing resources, he said. The state spends $2 million a year on marine fisheries monitoring and management.

“The whole effort, whether we do it or what the feds are doing, is really to be able to better manage fisheries, to have an understanding of how many people are fishing and be able to make better decisions about conservation of species and resources,” he said.

But Dave Gay, of Waterbury, who was fishing with his son Jeff at the West Haven beaches Friday, said he did not think the coastal fisheries are well managed now, pointing to examples such as poorly maintained breakwaters. He said he is not in favor of the marine fishing license.

“It isn’t like they’re putting fish in the ocean and they’re paying for fish,” Gay said. “I think they should be doing a lot more prevention and maintenance in the state. If they were doing that, at least you could say, ‘Well, the license is worth it,’ but they’re not doing nothing.”

Gay said the new license could lead him to fish in Rhode Island instead of Connecticut. He said he would be more willing to pay a fee in Rhode Island because he prefers the fishing there.

New York’s requirement for a recreational marine fishing license is due to go into effect Oct. 1, although pending legislation could delay it until Jan. 1, according to the Web site for the New York Department of Environmental Conservation. Rhode Island is in the process of studying a license system, according to its Department of Environmental Management. Of the country’s 21 coastal states, the only ones without marine fishing license requirements are Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Maine and New Jersey.

Fees elsewhere range from $38.85 in California to $4 in Mississippi.

The Connecticut legislation includes provisions for reciprocal licensing with New York and the New England states if they implement the licenses.

Pat Abate, the owner of River’s End Tackle in Old Saybrook, said he thought the new license could decrease the number of people coming from other areas to fish in Connecticut.

“I think primarily it’s going to really discourage people coming from out of state to go fishing here because there’s no three-day license or anything like that, so anyone over 16, it’s 15 bucks a head,” he said. “So where you get the visiting relatives and you’d like to take them out fishing on your boat, I think it will discourage you from doing that.”

The state has also changed the system for purchasing licenses, eliminating the paper forms and going to an online process through its Web site, www.ct.gov/dep. Retailers and town offices can obtain dedicated computer terminals for the licenses, although stores must pay $1,850 for the terminals, Schain said. The retail outlets earn $1 for each hunting or fishing license sold.

Abate said he decided not to buy one of the terminals. He said some customers have come in not knowing about either the change in purchasing licenses in general or the new marine fishing license.

“Most people I tell about this are surprised and they say, ‘When does this take effect?’ and I tell them June 15 and then their jaw drops in disbelief,” he said. “I don’t think anyone is happy about having it implemented so fast.”

At Frenchy’s Bait & Tackle in West Haven, Paul French had put up a sign advising customers of the change taking place June 15.

John Zaluski of Meriden said he was not aware of the requirement until visiting the bait shop Friday.

“It’s just not right,” he said. “There’s a lot of people that fish out there that just do it for the kids and the family. The way the economy’s going,” the new license could be too expensive, he said.

French described himself as “disgusted.”

“People are actually fishing to eat because of the economy,” he said. “Now they’re going to think twice about it.”

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Treasure hunt’s priceless for students


Published: Saturday, June 6, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

GUILFORD — Residents will have the chance to explore the town in what the Guilford Fund for Education is calling a “staycation” activity lasting throughout the summer.

The organization provides grants to support education and is kicking off its Discover the Treasures of Guilford event this morning.

The townwide hunt will allow participants to search for “treasure boxes” using written clues or with a handheld GPS device, an activity known as geocaching.

Organizers Lorrie Shaw and Pam Kelly told the Board of Selectmen this week that the event includes 31 boxes hidden around town.

They are all hidden in “beautiful or historic places,” Shaw said. The hunt will run from today until Aug. 30, and people can play at their own pace.

“I think it will be fun and I think people will find some not only beautiful spots, but will learn a little bit of history,” Shaw said. Members of the fund’s organization will periodically place special coins in the boxes that will make participants eligible for certain prizes.

Shaw said that she is also hoping to continue adding boxes throughout the summer.

A booklet to get people started on the treasure hunt costs $20. All the proceeds will go toward supporting the educational grants the fund provides, Kelly said.

“One hundred percent of all the donations, the $20 here, goes to fund those grants,” Kelly said, noting that $100,000 has been given out in grants since the organization started about three years ago.

The kickoff event takes place at 9:30 a.m. this morning at the Fire Department headquarters at 390 Church St.

Participants can also buy the clue booklets throughout the summer.

For more information visit www.gffe.org or contact discoverguilford@gffe.org.

“You can buy them all summer long and you can play all summer long,” Shaw said.

Festival organizers still seek sponsors


Published: Saturday, June 6, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

NORTH BRANFORD — Organizers of the annual Potato and Corn Festival are still looking for sponsors and other donations as they gear up for the event, set for Aug. 7 to 9.

Recreation Director Pamela Gery told the Town Council Tuesday that she has already raised about $12,500 in sponsorships toward the estimated $50,000 to $60,000 cost of the event. She hopes to cover the rest of the expenses with more sponsors, water sales inside the festival and a raffle.

Last year was the first the festival expanded to cover three days, and about 13,000 people visited the fairgrounds at the Augur Farm property, according to the Parks and Recreation Department.

Gery said the department has been planning the festival for about nine months, and already has 17 food and 20 craft vendors lined up.

New events this year are set to include a tractor pull put on by the Agricultural Commission, a cross-country road race and a business exposition.

The town also plans to expand the free shuttle service it offered last year, so people will not have to wait in long traffic lines to access the festival.

“We struggled with (parking) last year, although it seemed to work,” Gery said.

The North Branford Touchdown Club is sponsoring a raffle to raise money for the festival. The $20 tickets, which are on sale at the Parks and Recreation Department at 1599 Foxon Road, enter participants in a raffle with a top prize of $5,000. Gery said she hopes to sell 3,000 tickets through the raffle.

She added that the fireworks display is again scheduled for Saturday night.

Admission to the festival is free.

It is scheduled to run from 4 to 11 p.m. Aug. 7; 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. Aug. 8; and 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Aug. 9. For more information, visit www.nbpotatofest.org or nbparkrec.com.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Time running out for sick-leave bill


Published: Wednesday, June 3, 2009
By Rachael Scarborough King, Register Staff

It has come down to the wire for a bill that would require many employers to provide paid sick leave for workers, as the state Senate has until the end of the day to consider the legislation.

The House of Representatives passed the bill, HB6187, with some amendments by a vote of 88-58 after nine hours of debate last week. The measure was forwarded to the Senate, but it may die there if the body does not take up the bill by midnight, the close of the session.

A special session for legislators to focus on crafting a budget is scheduled to begin at 12:01 a.m Thursday.

The paid sick days bill, in its amended form, would allow hourly employees to accrue one hour of paid sick leave for every 40 hours they work, up to 32 hours in 2010, and 40 hours in 2011 and thereafter. The legislation would apply to companies with 50 or more employees, and companies that already provide equivalent paid leave, such as vacation or personal days, would be in compliance with the law.

The law would take effect Jan. 1 and make Connecticut the first state in the country to require employers to provide paid leave. The sick days could be used by employees to take care of their own or a child’s health, or to deal with issues arising from being the victim of sexual assault or domestic violence. Employees must be 18 or older and have worked at least 520 hours in the past year to qualify for the leave.

Connecticut Working Families, the coalition party that has been backing the sick leave bill, called the amended version that passed the House last week a “compromise” that would “create a basic labor standard for paid sick days.”

Joe Dinkin, communications director for Connecticut Working Families, said that with the economic crisis and concerns about swine flu, the need for the legislation “has never been clearer.”

“But in politics, nothing is as clear as it seems,” Dinkin said. “The Senate passed paid sick days last year. I hope they can muster the courage to do it again this year when it matters more than ever.”

Last year, the Senate approved a similar bill requiring paid sick leave, but the House did not take up the legislation.

The Connecticut Business and Industry Association is opposing the bill, saying it would put an undue burden on employers. The legislation’s passage in the House is “yet another example of the sharp disconnect between state lawmakers and the realities of today’s poor economy,” the group said in a statement on its Web site.

“The reality is that the only way many employers can accommodate this additional unbudgeted cost is by reducing other employee benefits, wages and, in some cases, the jobs themselves,” according to the statement. “What’s more, the bill will create a huge administrative burden on employers, especially smaller ones, in managing varying amounts of time off for their employees.”

One local business owner, Blanca Gonzalez, who owns B&M Homemaking and Companion Service in West Haven, traveled to Hartford this week to speak against the bill.

Officials from Connecticut Working Families and other business owners have said they believe the bill would save businesses money by avoiding the costs of “presenteeism,” a term for the phenomenon of sick people reporting to work.

If the Senate passes the legislation today, it would then go to Gov. M. Jodi Rell.