Posts

Showing posts with the label New Haven

Elm City Market Reopens 7-11, Smaller but Mightier

Image
For years, I was a fan of Elm City Market, conveniently located for the train commuter (i.e. me) on State and Elm in New Haven across from the Metro station. When I found out it was closing but moving after Christmas (January originally, but now finally set on the day after tomorrow) I was thrilled but worried. For when one has their favorite places, they include not only products but sense memories - the first coffee on a cold morning, the taste tests before holidays, learning to pronounce 'quinoa' correctly (this really happened, but I cannot remember whether I taught myself or just heard a fellow shopper pronounce it.) Elm City Market reopens 7-11 at 275 S. Orange in New Haven, with a PR blitz - giveaways, 'meet the vendors', New Haven Mayor Justin Elicker and might I add air conditioning. I spoke to the CEO, Kurt Luttecke yesterday about the new digs. "So it's been really hot, I'm not embarrassed to say I'll be coming for the AC." (chuckles) ...

Connecticut so so for sustainable development but number one in urban tree cover

Image
If you have ever taken a stroll around New Haven, you may have been treated to one of our dozens of green spaces. I was so struck over Christmas when I wandered blocks from the Yale campus to find the Farmington Canal Greenway. It is part of the East Coast Greenway, a 3,000-mile bike and pedestrian route that aims to connect Maine to Florida. Visit Milford, for example, and you can bike along part of it as it skirts by Gulf Beach. Elsewhere, find Edgewood Park , for example, with its bocce court ensconced by buttonbushes and dogwoods, which help guard against erosion. The park also showcases shagbark hickory, black birch, kousa dogwood, and weeping blue spruce. These are but two examples of our embarassment of riches in the Constitution State, where green spaces in a city are not a one-off but a way of life, lifting spirits while promoting a healthier lifestyle: from running and rollerblading to simply walking alone or with a loved one. It turns out, Connecticut has a special place...

Quit overlooking ‘the homeless’

Image
One of the most disheartening sights of (near) winter is seeing homeless individuals treated like garbage. At Union Station, New Haven security is tasked with ensuring folks do not fall asleep on the benches. You heard that right. Sleep is critical to sustain life, and by forcing humans to stay awake the City is promoting an unhealthy, even deadly alternative to a humane solution. I proposed sleep pods recently, an idea long overdue. I now propose providing sections of Union Station for homeless persons to sit and sleep, and not fear being kicked out from 1 to 4 when the station closes. (And if they fall asleep lying down on benches, so be it.) I understand the objections. I heard that an infestation of bed bugs resulted in a sanitization of the waiting area. It is perfectly reasonable to want paying travellers to feel safe from such peril. That is why a section makes sense, a section that would be sanitized at multiple times during the day. Sadly, an overwhelming percentage of friend...

A day in the life of a pandemic substitute teacher

Image
This morning I coughed up some phlegm. Is this the detritus of my Covid that ostensibly ended a couple weeks ago? Or did I catch something this week? I don't feel safe in New Haven schools because I am not. Before I get hate mail: I know what the rules are. It's who-gives-a-hoot in terms of masking in America. Young Americans have decided the pandemic is over, so those of us over 50 can just grin and bear it and hopefully not end up in hospitals gasping for air. Yesterday, a teen was coughing. I put on a second mask as I sat at the desk, nervously wondering if she were ill. I decided to call Admin and ask that a mask be sent up. The teen agreed to wear one, then as she became more and more lethargic, soon asked if she could go to the nurse. Of course, I said, of course. I heard a few coughs from the other side of the room, an animated boy "working" in a close group. Did he have Covid? I counted: maybe three masks in class. It should be noted, often I see more kids t...

Farmers' Markets Brim With Fresh Fruits, Vegetables, Jams, Plants, Music and Laughter

Image
Full disclosure: I had to leave Connecticut in May for a job in the D.C. area, and I'm pleased with my decision. But that doesn't mean there isn't a tug at my heart from Milford, where I spent over a dozen summers, when farmers' market season rolls around. So let's start with the Downtown Milford Farmers Market . It is held every Saturday, June 17 through Oct. 14, except on Oyster Fest Saturday (Aug. 19), from 9 AM to 1 PM. Get there early, right as they open, and you'll gobble up the best squash, cucumbers, and (my favorite) peaches. Also remember to pluck jams or fresh flowers and plants from the myriad vendors who come in from all points throughout the Nutmeg State. Kids can devour popsicles, Mom can get her pierogie-on-wheels fix, Dad can rock out to any number of musical acts who grace the space - located at 58 River Street, right by the train station, in the parking lot behind Corner Convenience and Scratch Baking. Of course, Milford isn't the on...

Five West Haven, Conn. Students Honored by White House and EPA for Environmental Project

Image
Five students and their teacher from West Haven, Conn., have been recognized as winners of the 2016 President’s Environmental Youth Award (PEYA). The program recognizes outstanding environmental stewardship projects by K-12 youth. These students demonstrate the initiative, creativity, and applied problem-solving skills needed to tackle environmental problems and find sustainable solutions, according to an EPA press release issued June 8. The students – Arya Bairat, James Rodrigues, Eran Avni-Singer, Sebastian-Morelli Peyton, and Jonathan Yun – started a team at the Engineering and Science University Magnet School (part of New Haven Public School District) in West Haven. They conducted their project with the support and guidance of their biology teacher, Ginger Meetze, and parent sponsor, Dhanahree Bairat. Their project addressed the problem of excessive plastics in the waste stream and air pollution, and their impact on the environment. “Today, we are pleased to honor these imp...

Six Earth-friendly alternatives to your auto

Image
Connecticut consistently ranks as one of the nation's most educated states. From Yalies to proud UConn alums, we've an embarrassment of intellectuals here. So why is the state so dumb when it comes to tapping public transportation? Although Hartford ranks pretty decently -- in 2010 an estimated 21.1 percent of its residents regularly chose public transportation -- the state pales overall. On the same annual ranking, a city that has no excuse not to be on the bus or the train, a dismal 13.3 percent were onboard. In 2012, the U.S. Department of Transportation reported that over 78 percent of our residents drive alone in their cars to work. This examiner wholly believes that the greatest impediment to getting more folks to share a ride, or get on the bus or train is reversing a stigma. Being a bus rider is even fodder for comic effect in movies. Women walking to the bus in the 'burbs sometimes get propositioned as ladies of the evening! It's the bus, people, not a meth d...