Are Things Moving Along A Little Too Fast or What?

Whoa! I couldn’t believe what I read recently that a referendum on the $41.9 million plan to refurbish local schools and construct a new police station and fire stations could come as early as September.

I’ve talked with individuals, wise in town issues, who have expressed to me that if the bond issue was placed before voters this early in the game, it would go down with defeat.

That thinking is understandable to me. People that favor the proposal have expressed the thought that the plan should be split with three votes, first the schools, and then the police department and then the fire stations.

Tossing a figure like this, $41.9 million, before taxpayers in this community doesn’t sound too good, when presented with estimates for the cost.

This is not to say that my thinking follows that thinking, but you know what, it does.

I may have offered the thought that if approved the proposal would only cost taxpayers two mills a year for several years. Many figure that two mills would be the annual increase but, of course, there would be other areas which come into the annual picture, like teacher contracts, and other town union commitments.

There is little doubt that most taxpayers would approve the proposal as presented, but there are those in favor that feel to offer the entire package in one sitting would be disastrous. And, of course, there are many who feel that the figure presented would live up to the final cost.

Too often, as time goes by in situations such as this, the first estimates just don’t hold up. Hidden costs suddenly appear which were lacking in the first round.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m aware that our schools need renovations, and our police station, especially, needs more room, and then, of course, there is our volunteer fire department, made up of individuals to whom we owe who knows what.

This comment is not to question the work of the individuals who made the presentation as I’m sure there were many hours of research involved. It is the haste of passage which bothers me.

Shouldn’t taxpayers be informed of the scope of work in the schools, or the location of a new police department, or what is planned for the fire stations? I think so.

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On the lighter side: It was recently reported that there is one “cobbler� remaining in business in Litchfield. I always refer to these individuals as “shoemakers,� the name they carried many years ago.

Times sure have changed. According to an 1891 Winsted-Torrington directory, Winsted had 12 boot and shoe dealers, eight boot and shoe makers and repairers and one boot and shoe manufacturer.

Our neighbor to the south claimed six “boots and shoes� businesses and six “boot and shoe makers and repairers...� Torrington, that is.

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One but not the other: That’s the situation as it now appears, involving the immense housing and golf course development in Winsted. Early approval has been granted by the Wetlands Commission for construction of the 456 age-restricted detached and condo-style homes to be built, with an 18-hole golf course, east of Highland Lake.

The project could be stalled, however, as developers are seeking approval to build 364 dwellings next to the age-restricted site.

It figures that a plan to build 364 dwellings, unrestricted, could cause a delay because there is concern that such a project would burden the town’s school system.

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“Patronage Jobs Still Plum,â€� caught my eye just the other day. It reported that the Rell administration (the governor) had finally found a promised state job for former state representative  and Naugatuck Mayor Ronald S. San Angelo. The headline appeared in the Waterbury Republican.

The report stated, “San Angelo, a Republican, had sought appointment as a commissioner or deputy-commissioner of a state department.�

He settled for a $70,000-a-year-job as an executive in the Department of Information Technology.

The report informed us that there are 174 political appointees in the executive branch of state government.

They are collecting $13.3 million in salaries. What a story. It went on to list the salaries of state commissioners, all over $150,000 with all state benefits.

Maybe our leaders should watch a movie seen recently on television entitled, “Mr. Smith Goes To Washington.�

I don’t know whether I read the Republican before I saw the movie or vice versa. But they do connect.

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For an August 1980 Calendar: Aug. 2, 1858: First election of officers of new Borough of Winsted. 1926: Strand Theater opens.

Aug. 4, 1893: As firemen wash city’s fire engine in the Still River, fire erupts at Empire Knife Factory. Damage, $25,000.

Aug. 18, 1955: Start of the Great Flood. Seven killed. $11,000,000 damage.

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