LYSB, Chamber to Host D18 Board of Education Candidate’s Debate, Oct. 22; Questions Invited

Lymes’ Youth Services Bureau (LYSB) and the Lyme-Old Lyme Chamber of Commerce are co-sponsoring a “Meet the Candidates for the Board of Education Night” on Thursday, Oct. 22, at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School.  The Chamber and LYSB have requested that we offer LymeLine.com readers the opportunity to submit questions for possible inclusion in the debate.

Questions for the debate will be selected by representatives from LYSB, the Chamber and the debate moderator.

Send your questions to editor@LymeLine.com with the subject line ‘Questions.‘  The deadline for receiving questions for consideration is Thursday, Oct. 15.

Op-Ed: Valley Warriors Need to Reconsider Outdated, Distressing Mascot

valley regional2I am a proud alum of Lyme-Old Lyme High School, class of 2010. I could not have asked for a better education or community. One of the most important experiences I had as a student there was my involvement in athletics. I enjoyed every moment of cross country that did not involve running, and during basketball games, I ensured that the team’s bench remained warm at all times. I also supported my friends in their athletic pursuits, especially those dedicated enough to travel to another school to play football for the Valley Regional Warriors. Having heard about their growing success, I’ve begun to follow along once more and I’m proud to see that some of the team’s best players are from LOLHS, some of whom I know from my time as a summer camp counselor in town. However, I was saddened to see that the image used for the mascot is an antiquated, stereotypical depiction of Native Americans.

The image used to represent the “warriors” is a red face with black hair and two loosely hanging feathers. It is, in my opinion, a highly problematic image. The image would be problematic anywhere, but it is particularly troubling given the region’s history of violence against native peoples. The Pequot War, the war that ensured colonial hegemony in Connecticut, culminated with the Mystic Massacre of 1637, during which colonists and their native allies attacked a Pequot village and shot or burned to death over 400 hundred men, women, and children. The attackers targeted the village after bypassing a stronghold of warriors, knowing that non-combatants would put up less of a fight. To misappropriate the imagery of that time period is a deeply uninformed way of grappling with our violent history.

This imagery also promotes a racialized view of American life. The idea that there is a race of “red” people is an idea that Euro-Americans constructed in the 18th and 19th centuries to justify campaigns of conquest and displacement. Far from being an ideology of the past, this racism is still very much alive and dangerous. Few people know that police kill Native American men at about the same rate as African American men. It has been encouraging to see the removal of imagery that glorifies the Confederacy and chattel slavery, and we must now remove symbols that trivialize the centuries-old abuses of native peoples. Only then can we begin to combat the caustic racism that continues to permeate our society.

Finally, using Native Americans as mascots promotes the myth of the “vanishing Indian.” This myth, which dates back to the early-19th century, contends that Native Americans died out in the course of American history, unable to adapt to new contexts or hold their lands. The myth could not be more wrong. Native peoples, who represent countless languages, cosmologies, and identities, have displayed remarkable resilience and have been intertwined in American life since the early-colonial period. Native peoples have shaped American politics, contributed to the American ethos, and served in our wars in greater proportion than any other population. And they have fought tenaciously to preserve their lands and cultures. While they lost a great deal under the onslaught of imperialism, and now grapple with the resulting poverty and trauma, they are proud of what they have maintained. I’ve travelled to numerous reservations—I recently returned from a month-long trip to the beautiful Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota—and the people there work tirelessly to elevate their communities without losing sight of their heritage. They continue to fight, every day, to revitalize their languages and resist new forms of encroachment, such as the Keystone XL Pipeline. They’re not a novelty or a relic of the past. They are students and teachers and parents and artists, and they cannot be encapsulated by a picture of a red face and feathers.

I’m being oversensitive, you might say. Perhaps. The mascot debate is by no means our most important. But it’s a good place to start. So can we change the image used by Valley Regional’s football team? The important things—the lines on the field, the minutes in a half, the positive impact of playing on a team—will remain unchanged. This problematic image will be the only thing to go, and when it does, our boys will have even more to be proud of.

Editor’s Note: Michael McLean graduated from Lyme-Old Lyme High School in 2010.  He went on to obtain an undergraduate degree from Trinity College in 2014 and is currently studying for his PhD in American History at Boston College.  He is a contributor to the online history magazine, “We’re History” at http://werehistory.org.

 

RiverCOG Hosts Regional Summit in Haddam, Tuesday

growsmart logo

The Lower Connecticut River Valley Council of Governments (RiverCOG) will host its GrowSMART Regional Summit Tuesday, Sept. 22, at the Riverhouse in Haddam. Drop-in any time between 4 and 8 p.m. to share your vision for the region’s economic future.  This event will include a short presentation on the state of the local regional economy, interactive brainstorming exercises, and the opportunity to network with fellow residents.

Participants will assist in brainstorming big ideas for the region, and help create a strategy that grows and strengthens the economy, yet preserves what makes this region special.

Children’s activities and refreshments will be provided. The Riverhouse at Goodspeed Station is located at 55 Bridge Road, Haddam, CT 06438.

If you are unable to attend the Regional Summit, the same workshop will be taken on the road through early October. Look for the GrowSMART Pop-Up Workshop around the region and stop by to share your input and vision.

  • CONFIRMED – Sept. 28 at the Middlesex Chamber of Commerce Business to Business Expo from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at booth #407. The Expo is held at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Cromwell.
  • CONFIRMED – Sept. 28 at the Regional Planning Committee meeting from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at the RiverCOG Offices, 145 Dennison Rd. in Essex.
  • Tentative – Sept. 30, at the East Haddam Farmer’s Market
  • Tentative – Oct. 3, at the East Hampton Harvest Festival
  • Tentative – Oct. 7, at the Old Saybrook Farmer’s Market
  • Tentative – Oct. 8, at the Middletown South Green Farmer’s Market

The Lower Connecticut River Valley Council of Governments is an association of 17 towns with each represented by its chief elected official. Its mission involves facilitating solutions and planning between the 17 towns, the State of Connecticut, federal agencies, and nonprofits for land use, transportation, agriculture, emergency management, conservation, and economic development.

One of its key goals is to encourage a safe and open venue to discuss shared regional options and projects. Fulfilling this mission had led RiverCOG to launch a new and exciting project titled, GrowSMART. The purpose of GrowSMART is to research how the region can collaborate to attract workers, and retain and grow businesses while also conserving the natural resources that are so vital to the region’s infrastructure, housing values, and tourism industry.

factory_signAs you drive, walk, or bike around the region in September and October, you will start to notice signs, posters and banners around town such as the one shown to the left or see an advertisements while reading a local newspaper or local online news. The signs or advertisements may ask a question, such as: “Why can’t you find qualified help?” or “Who is going to buy your house”?

Why is RiverCOG asking these questions?

The answer is that its Regional Strategic Economic Growth Committee is working with Ninigret Partners to create a regional economic growth strategy and is seeking your input. RiverCOG invites you to visit the project website at www.GrowSMARTregion.org to learn about its travelling mobile workshop and note dates of the upcoming public forums to which all are welcome

There is also an opportunity at the www.GrowSMARTregion.org website to submit your ideas directly and for up-to-date information on Pop-Up Workshop locations and future events.

Assistant Manager Position Available at Local Consignment Store

Saint Ann’s Church has a part-time opportunity at a local consignment store in Old Lyme, Conn.  An Assistant Manager position is available for someone to work one to two days per week (15-16 hrs)

Duties include:
-Team Oriented
-Enjoys working with people
-Able to multitask
-Detail oriented and have computer skills
-Punctual and dependable
Requirements:
-previous retail and/or merchandising experience
Contact by e-mail only at office@saintannsoldlyme.org

CASFY Coalition Launches Third Media Campaign to Reduce Underage Drinking

The new and powerful campaign message from CASFY.

The new and powerful campaign message from CASFY.

Community Action for Substance Free Youth (CASFY), the local prevention coalition for Lyme and Old Lyme, has launched a new media campaign aimed at teens, parents and all adults in the communities of Lyme and Old Lyme. Community members can already see Shoreline Sanitation trucks with the image of hands holding red cups and the message, “Don’t be a party to underage drinking.  It’s against the law.”

Residents will see this message on posters in the community, on social media, at community events and on a Hall’s Road banner before Thanksgiving, a time when underage drinking tends to increase.

“While underage drinking has decreased nationally and in Lyme-Old Lyme among our school age youth according national and local data, it is still our Number One youth drug problem,” reports Karen Fischer, CASFY’s Prevention Coordinator.  “CASFY members chose our new campaign with the objective of informing underage drinkers and their families about the legal and other risks they take by breaking alcohol-related laws.”

Mary Seidner, Director of Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB), notes that residents can take a quiz on alcohol laws on www.lysb.org.  “Select the link to Alcohol Law Quiz.  You will read about the laws and seven scenarios where underage drinking or related violations occur.  You determine what charges may apply in each scenario and then can check your answers.”

Rebecca Griffin was one of the CASFY members who took the quiz at a recent meeting.  She comments, “Believe me, the answers are eye-opening and in some cases jaw-dropping.”

Old Lyme residents will see the campaign message all over town on Shoreline Sanitation trucks.

Old Lyme residents will see the campaign message all over town on Shoreline Sanitation trucks.

CASFY’s campaign is a reminder to parents to discuss alcohol laws and the possible consequences of breaking them, as well as their own family rules.  Resident Trooper Gary Inglis emphasizes, “Few teens and underage young adults realize that breaking underage drinking laws can place their families and themselves in legal and financial jeopardy.”

He adds, “Even an infraction for underage possession of alcohol is not just a ticket.  The underage youth who received the ticket is subject to suspension of a driver’s license for 30-60 days, depending on where the infraction occurred, in addition to a fine. Plus the family’s car insurance will likely significantly increase or could even be cancelled.”

Ellen Maus, the school nurse at Lyme-Old Lyme High School, reminds adults to secure any alcohol and prescription medications to reduce access and prevent any legal or health problems that could occur in their own homes.  “I’m especially thinking about sleepovers or parties where parents might not be aware that teens in their home are taking alcohol or pills from their liquor or medicine cabinets.”

“This campaign is one example of how the whole community has pulled together to work on keeping our youth safe,” stresses Fischer.  “School personnel, police officers, members of the business community, parents, youth—the cooperation and collaboration is outstanding.”

CASFY would especially like to thank Gary Yuknat of Shoreline Sanitation for donating the use of his trucks for displaying CASFY’s campaign graphics.

Local businesses and others wishing to participate in the campaign by displaying campaign images on posters, flyers, websites and Facebook pages or other social media should contact Karen Fischer, 860-434-7208 or email fischerk@childandfamilyagency.org.

Funding for the media campaign is from a federal grant through the Connecticut Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services and Child and Family Agency of Southeastern Connecticut.

The mission of CASFY is to prevent and reduce alcohol and other drug use among youth by collaborating with the community to raise awareness, modify social norms, educate youth and adults, initiate policy change and promote healthy activities.  All youth and adults who live or work in Lyme or Old Lyme are invited to join in their efforts, or their next meeting on the first Tuesday of the month at 7 p.m. at LYSB. 

For more information or to contact CASFY, visit lysb.org or call 860-434-7208.