James Bairaktaris James Bairaktaris

Blues on Beachside

Blue skies met blue waters along Beachside Avenue this afternoon.

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James Bairaktaris James Bairaktaris

Moon Rise over Sherwood Island

Tonight’s waning moon rose slowly over Sherwood Island as temperatures plummeted into the teens.

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J.C. Martin J.C. Martin

Big Week For Staples Swim & Dive Team

Junior standout Joshua Tanksley 4 individual victories and 4 relay victories in 2 meets against Darien and Fairfield.

The Staples boys High School Swim & Dive team had a very good week with convincing wins over Darien and Fairfield Ludlow/Warde teams.  Staples bested Darien 106-80 at the Staples pool on Wednesday, then went on the road to Fairfield, Friday, and came home victorious, 102-83.

Peter Meehan - junior, double winner vs Fairfield Ludlow/Warde, with two personal best times in 200 IM and 100 breaststroke.  Riley Twiss - junior sensation won 4 individual events, and 4 relay victories in the 2 meets against Darien and Fairfield this week.  Riley Twiss - junior sensation won 4 individual events, and 4 relay victories in the 2 meets against Darien and Fairfield this week.  Sophomore Andrew Berkowitz - double winner in 50 Free and 100 Free against Fairfield on this Friday.  Junior diver Derek Amlicke led the dive squad this week with 1st place vs. Darien and 3rd vs. Fairfield.

Juniors Riley Twiss and Joshua Tanksley led the way against Darien with 4 total victories each.  Twiss had individual wins in the 200 IM, where his time earned him 2nd place all time on the Staples record board, and in the 100 backstroke.  Tanksley won the 200 and 400 freestyles,  then teamed with Twiss, Richard Cambell, and Andrew Berkowitz for a victory in the 200 freestyle relay, and again with Twiss, Berkowitz, and tri-captain Jacob Lee to seal the team win with a 1st in the 400 freestyle relay.  Lee had a key individual win as well with a strong performance in the 100 butterfly, and Berkowtiz pitched in with second place finishes in the 50 and 100 freestyle.    Captain Brendan McGinley showed amazing versatility taking a 2nd place in the 100 butterfly, and 4th in the 200 freestyle;  McGinley's butterfly performance was particularly noteworthy because it was a 3 second drop from the time he swam the previous Friday vs. Ridgefield, and by far a lifetime best for him.  Junior diver Derek Amlicke had one of his best performances of the year with a victory in the 1 meter diving, narrowly eclipsing Darien's Matthew Magnotta, who has been a top ten finisher in the state championships multiple times.

Against Fairfield, junior Peter Meehand led the way with individual wins in the 200 Meter Individual Medley, and the 100 Meter Breaststroke.  His times in both events were personal bests, but even more startling was how much faster his Friday swims against Fairfield were vs. his swims against Darien on Wednesday.  Meehan's IM was 9 seconds faster!, and his breaststroke was 3 seconds better.  Overall Staples won 11 out of the 13 events contested, missing the full sweep by taking a 2nd in the 200 Medley Relay by a scant .13 seconds, and 3rd and 4th in the diving.  Other double winners included Riley Twiss in the 100 fly and 100 backstroke, Andrew Berkowitz in the 50 and 100 freestyles, and Josh Tanksley in the 200 and 400 freestyles.    Captain Jacob Lee pitched in with 2nd place in the 100 free, and 3rd in the 200 IM, and Captain Brendan McGinley had strong 3rd place swims in the 200 free, and the 100 breaststroke.

Commenting on this weeks results Coach Todd Gordon said: "We couldn't be happier with the outcomes this week against two solid opponents.  Coming off missed school and practices because of the snow, and two weeks of midterms necessarily distracting the swimmers, it wasn't clear how we would perform, but the whole team came through with some very impressive swims.  High School swimming is truly a team event - winning all the individual events isn't enough to win a meet.  2nds, 3rds, 4ths, and even 5th places can matter in the total result, and it was great to see so many swimmers stepping up to score points for us. Besides the top performers who won their events,  Michael Belpedio, Matt Lott, Richard Campbell, Brennan Herold, and Max Tanksley each scored points in several events that swung the Darien meet in our favor, and clinched the win at Fairfield for us."

Staples gets a much needed break next week but returns to competition the following week.

Photos by J.C. Martin for WestportLocal.com     Click on an image to enlarge and open gallery

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J.C. Martin J.C. Martin

UPDATE: Hiawatha Lane Lawsuit Progress

Artistic rendering of the courtyard at the center of the three buildings by The Monroe Partnership Architects.

Lawsuit by Saugatuck residents to block Summit’s development plans moves through the court.

As most of Westport is aware and certainly the residents of the Saugatuck neighborhood are aware, a developer, Summit Saugatuck, LLC has been trying to build a large multi-unit housing complex on land they purchased on Hiawatha Lane Extension for many, many years battling with the town during that time.  Court records indicate multiple lawsuits against the Town of Westport including Planning & Zoning and also the town's Water Pollution Control Authority, the loss of which was appealed to the Connecticut Appellate Court which also ruled against Westport's WPCA. The loss in the Appellate Court was further appealed to the State Supreme Court.

Suits were also filed against the Conservation Commission/Inland Wetlands Agency of the City of Norwalk, as a portion of the property at issue is located in Norwalk.

The details on this issue were reported in WestportLocalPress.com on June 8, 2021. On May 13, 2021 we reported that the Planning & Zoning Commission had voted 5-0 to settle the dispute allowing for the construction of a 157 unit housing complex, a reduction from the 187 units originally planned by Summit. We wrote that the P&Z decision ended a long chapter in the Westport housing development book. Or so we thought.

On September 28, 2021 three Hiawatha Lane Extension homeowners filed their own suit against Summit Saugatuck in Bridgeport Superior Court the jurisdiction for the town of Westport. Shortly thereafter, the suit was transferred to the the land use litigation docket in the judicial district of Hartford.

The Plaintiff-homeowner’s Complaint alleges that their properties "comprise part of a plan for a residential development…" which "is recorded in the Land Records in the Town of Westport as Map No. 3802…" Some of the lots are in Norwalk and others are in Westport. The Complaint further alleges that all the Westport lots were "conveyed subject to the covenant, condition and restriction that only a one-family house shall be erected on each of said Lots…"

They reference the settlement between Westport P&Z and Summit allowing the development to proceed. They allege that were the project to go forward that "the Proposed Development shall irreparably harm and inconvenience" them in several ways, including flooding from runoff, risk to health and safety from increased traffic volume and congestion, a reduction in available on street parking and also noise, light and air pollution. They specifically allege that the project will reduce their property values and "shall destroy one of the few existing working class neighborhoods in the Town of Westport" and that they will suffer irreparable harm "for which they have no remedy at law" unless the "Proposed Development is enjoined and restrained".

Summit has responded to the suit alleging five issues, known as Special Defenses. They are for the most part technical defenses. The first cites the Doctrine of Laches which holds that due to the delay in asserting it's rights, a claimant is no longer entitled to "equitable relief" which Connecticut Courts are empowered to grant. The second defense alleges "res judicata" stating that the Plaintiff's allegations were "previously litigated and resolved" The third is an allegation that their claim is barred by the Statute of Limitations. The fourth Special Defense alleges that the Plaintiff's action is barred as "it is an impermissible collateral attack on a Stipulated Judgment" referencing the Stipulation, or agreement between the Town P&Z Commission and Summit which was entered by the Court on July 19, 2021 after the RTM decision allowing the project to proceed. Their fifth Special Defense alleges that they are barred from litigating their claim of irreparable harm as a further result of that same Stipulation.

The case has advanced this week. The defendants filed A Motion for Summary Judgment on November 11, 2021 on certain of it's Special Defenses. Summary Judgment is a technical procedure in which the moving party alleges that their claims are "undisputed material facts", essentially that they are right and the other party is wrong and it is clear beyond question and the relief the moving party is seeking should be granted. The Plaintiff's objected in a 36 page memorandum with another twenty pages of exhibits. In addition, the parties filed a joint stipulation of facts. That Stipulation in part says that the motion, objection and supporting memoranda may be considered by the Court after oral argument by the parties but without the need for further evidence and that upon entering it's ruling the Court will determine whether "a uniform common plan and a right of any of the Plaintiff's to enforce a one-family house restriction" in fact does exist and is legally viable. If the court makes that finding then further proceedings shall ensue on the claim for injunctive relief. If, on the other hand, the Court makes the determination that the claim is not legally sufficient to bring this case to trial, then the Plaintiffs have no further right to challenge Summit's development. The agreement further provides that Summit withdraw it's defense of a statute of limitations and that Connecticut General Statute Section 8-30 which is the Affordable Housing statute used so effectively against many towns seeking to prevent certain developments does not prevent the Plaintiffs from enforcing their alleged one-family house restriction.

An evidentiary hearing is required when a motion for summary judgment is filed and that hearing was scheduled for Tuesday, January 18, 2022. At the eleventh hour, the remote hearing was cancelled as the parties and the Court work through certain procedural issues that have arisen.

Any ruling by the Court and will be detailed in WestportLocalPress.com when it is handed down.

Story by J.C. Martin For WestportLocal.com

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