Board decides against discussing BOE lawsuit

WINSTED — On the agenda for the Board of Selectmen’s Monday, March 21, meeting was a discussion of pending litigation against the Board of Education.

However, at the beginning of the meeting, the board unanimously voted to drop the item from the agenda.

Mayor Candy Perez said that Town Manager Robert Geiger made the request to drop the agenda item.

“The reason why I did that is because I had some pretty good discussions today and they are continuing on,” Geiger said. “I thought it was inappropriate to approach this at this stage right now.”

Perez said that the pending litigation concerns the Winchester School District’s deficit in the current fiscal year of 2015-2016.

At a selectmen’s meeting in November, Travaglini said that the school district started the 2014-2015 fiscal year with a $1.3 million deficit, but that the deficit had been reduced to $750,000.

However, at the March 7 selectmen’s meeting, the deficit was projected to be $1,069,261.

At the same meeting, School District Receiver Robert Travaglini told the Board of Selectmen that the town would have to pay at least some of the school district’s operating deficit.

Latest News

P&Z approves Victorian bed and breakfast

KENT — Following a public hearing and discussion, the Planning and Zoning Commission (P&Z) at its meeting Thursday, March 14, unanimously approved a special permit application from 81 Victorian Kent for a change of use from boarding house to bed and breakfast.

Wesley Wyrick, P&Z chairman, indicated that the application applied only to the front building, the gingerbread Victorian dating to the 1880s, not to the apartment building in the rear.

Keep ReadingShow less
Stay Informed

Each week The Lakeville Journal and The Millerton News publish a series of newsletters designed to help you stay informed, entertained and engaged with your community.

To subscribe, simply click the button below and select the newsletters you would like to receive. And then, keep an eye on your inbox.

Keep ReadingShow less
Graceful stitching at the altar

An assortment of kneelers and pillows in needlepoint’ there are some done in crewel as well. Note the symbols used throughout the items.

Judith O'Hara Balfe

So much of what we know about religion comes from the written word, but much can be found in paintings, sculptures — and needlework.

Famous tapestries hang in castles and museums around the world, but some of the most beautiful pieces can be found on altars, on kneelers, and in the vestments and hangings found in great cathedrals and in some small country churches.

Keep ReadingShow less
Spanish sonatas and serenades for Easter

José Manuel Gil de Gálvez, left, took a bow with members of the Málaga Chamber Orchestra at The Hotchkiss School Music Center.

Alexander Wilburn

Adding some international vigor to Easter Weekend — or Semana Santa, “The Holy Week,” as it’s known in Spain — The Hotchkiss School held a performance by the Spanish string ensemble the Málaga Chamber Orchestra in the Esther Eastman Music Center on Saturday evening, March 30. Featuring six violins, two violas, two cellos, and a double bass, the chamber music orchestra, which has performed across Europe and the U.S., is led by violinist and Grammy-nominated music producer José Manuel Gil de Gálvez. He has shared the stage with renowned musicians like classical and flamenco guitarist Pepe Romero and South Korean classical cellist Hee-Young Lim and performed at locations like The Berlin Philharmonie, The Laeiszhalle in Hamburg, and The Seoul Arts Center.

With a flamboyant head of long ringlet curls and a mustache/goatee combination reminiscent of Colin Firth’s Elizabethan lord in “Shakespeare in Love,” Gil de Gálvez is a theatrical violinist to take in live, infusing his playing with a passionate performance that heats up lively numbers like the opening Spanish serenade, “Impresiones de España” by 19th-century composer Joaquín Malats. Gil de Gálvez was in full command during his captivating violin solo, “Adiós a la Alhambra” by composer Jesús de Monasterio, who served as honorary violinist of the Capilla Real de Madrid. “Adiós” is an example of de Monasterio’s Alhambrism style, the 19th-century nationalist romantic movement, which, like the contemporary Málaga Chamber Orchestra, was keenly interested in the restoration of music from the Spanish popular heritage.

Keep ReadingShow less