In Remarkable Achievement, Four Lyme-Old Lyme Boys Gain Scouting’s Top Honor

From left to right, the four members of Boy Scout Troop 26 who will be honored Sunday at ceremony in Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School are Norman Main, Matt Miller, Danny Reid and Connor Carberry.

From left to right, the four members of Boy Scout Troop 26 who will be honored Sunday at ceremony in Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School are Norman Main, Matt Miller, Danny Reid and Connor Carberry.

Boy Scout Troop 26, sponsored by the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme, hosted a very special event Sunday, June 5, as they honored four young men who have achieved Scouting’s Highest Rank, Eagle Scout. Connor Carberry, Norman Main, Matt Miller, and Danny Reid , all have completed the rigorous requirements and will be presented
their awards at a quadruple Eagle Scout Court of Honor to be held at 1 p.m. in the Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School auditorium.

The fact that a young man is an Eagle Scout has always carried with it a special significance, not only in Scouting, but also as he enters higher education, business or industry, and community service. Achieving the rank requires perseverance to complete the extensive requirements list over a scouting career, culminating in a significant Service Project that the Scout must design and lead and requires a substantial amount of planning and coordination. Only about five percent of all Boy Scouts earn the rank of Eagle Scout. To have four young men achieve this high honor at the same time is a special event for this community.

Connor’s service project was to replace a portion of the spectator seating overlooking the pulling ring at Hamburg Fairgrounds. During the project he led the installation of eight benches constructed from 20 ft. long 2” x 10” boards anchored into the ground with 4 ft. 6” x 6” piers. Connor is a senior at Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) where he has focused on technology courses and is a member of the band and lacrosse team. Connor will be graduating later this month and will be studying Mechanical Engineering Technology in the fall.

Norman’s project focused on extending a previous Eagle project on Old Lyme Land Trust property off of Four Mile River Rd. The previous project created access for hikers to get down a steep hill, and Norman’s project extended that to get across a swampy area. This huge undertaking included driving pilings to secure the walkway that was over 94 feet long. From the design phase, to the material gathering, to coordinating with all the volunteer help, the project has helped him gain confidence and public speaking skills. Norman is Junior at LOLHS who likes to bike, skateboard and Jet Ski. His future plans revolve around building and designing airplane engines, with the possibility of going into the Air Force.

Matt’s project also benefited the Lyme Grange Hamburg Fairgrounds. The horse and oxen ring on the fairgrounds property had fallen into disrepair. Matt’s project refurbished the entire ring with new fence rails; fence posts; repaired and built new gates; replaced gate hardware; and put two coats of stain on the ring and ancillary buildings. The project required supervision of many small teams of workers and required two days to complete. Matt is a senior at LOLHS who loves playing his guitars and with his dog Gunner. He will attend Central Connecticut State University in the fall where he has already declared a major in history and is planning to earn his teacher’s certificate.

Danny will be the fourth generation of his family to earn the Eagle Scout award. His project also benefitted the Lyme Grange, and was to construct a ramp to connect the upper and lower parts of the grounds. The 40 ft. ramp was designed to assist people with strollers, heavy equipment and to make it a little easier for elderly fair-goers to navigate the grounds. This project helped Danny gain an understanding of management in the world, planning and the satisfaction of completing such a time-consuming project. Danny is a junior at LOLHS, where he is a member of the soccer and track teams, and a member of the Select Singers choral group. His future plans include going to college and majoring in either business or marine biology.

All are welcome at the Court of Honor being held Sunday at 1 p.m. in the Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School auditorium.

Our hearty congratulations to these four, fine young men!

Wildcats Battle Past Top Seeds Oxford in Class S Baseball to Advance to Semis

Coach Randy St. Germain strides out towards his team after their victory Saturday afternoon over top-seeded Oxford HS. Photo by Kristen St. Germain.

Coach Randy St. Germain strides out towards his team after their victory Saturday afternoon over top-seeded Oxford HS. Photo by Kristen St. Germain.

Randy St. Germain’s Wildcats seeded #24 pulled off an amazing 4-3 win against top seeded Oxford High School Saturday afternoon, and moreover on the opponents home field.  Old Lyme will now meet #4 St. Paul in the semifinals at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at New Britain’s Beehive Field.

Click to read a more detailed report of the game published Saturday evening on theday.com.

Go Wildcats!

Talking Transportation: Big Brother Comes Along for the Ride

Big_BrotherHere in my car, I feel safest of all.  I can lock all my doors.  It’s the only way to live, in cars.*
* Quote from Gary Numan, “Cars”, 1979

You may feel that your car is your last private refuge in this busy world.  But there’s someone along for the ride:  Big Brother.  And you’d be surprised what he knows about you, thanks to modern technology.

Cell Phones:
Your cell phone is constantly transmitting its location, and services like Google Dashboard’s location history can show exactly where you were at any date in time.  Don’t want to be tracked?  Turn off your cellphone.

E-Z Pass:
Even when you are nowhere near a toll booth, E-ZPass detectors can monitor your location.   Want to stay anonymous? Keep your E-ZPass wrapped in aluminum foil in your glove box.

Highway Cameras: 
The extensive network of traffic cameras on our interstates and parkways is used mostly to monitor accidents.  But State Police can also watch individual vehicles. The cameras are even available to the public online.  But state law specifically forbids using these cameras to write speeding tickets.

License Plate Readers (LPRs): 
This is the newest and most powerful tracking tech, as I saw in a ride-along a few years ago with my local PD.  These cameras mounted on police cars can scan up to 1,800 license plates a minute as cars drive by at speed.

As the plate number is recognized, it is transmitted to a national crime computer and compared against a list of wanted vehicles and scofflaws.  If it gets a “hit,” a dashboard screen in the cop car flashes a red signal and beeps, detailing the plate number and infraction.  In just one hour driving through my town, we made stops for outstanding warrants, lack of insurance and stolen plates.  (Some towns also use LPR’s for parking enforcement in train station parking lots, forgoing the need for hang-tags or stickers.)

While this may lead to very efficient law enforcement, LPRs also have a potentially darker side: the data about plate number, location and time can be stored forever.

Faced with a string of unsolved burglaries, Darien police used their LPR to track every car entering the targeted neighborhood and looked for patterns of out-of-town cars driving through at the time of the burglaries and made an arrest.

But the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is concerned about how long cops can store this data and how it should be used.  They laud the Connecticut State Police policy of only storing data for 90 days.

In the early days of LPRs in 2012, an ACLU staffer filed an FOI request for his car’s plate number and found it had been tracked four times by 10 police departments in a database that had 3 million scan records.

So enjoy your car.  But realize that none of us have any privacy.

Jim Cameron

Jim Cameron

About the author: Jim Cameron is founder of The Commuter Action Group, and a member of the Darien RTM.  The opinions expressed in this column are only his own.  You can reach him at CommuterActionGroup@gmail.com  

For a full collection of “Talking Transportation” columns, see www.talkingtransportation.blogspot.com

Wildcat Lax Girls Storm Into State Semis

Old Lyme on their way to victory against Ellington High School Thursday.

Old Lyme on their way to victory against Ellington High School Thursday.

Playing at home in unseasonably cool temperatures under cloudy skies, the Old Lyme girls took control of their CIAC Class S state quarterfinal game against Ellington High School Thursday afternoon and ultimately claimed a 17-11 victory.

Coach Emily Macione had nothing but praise for her team “across the board,” saying, “I’m really, really proud of the girls from beginning to end.” She noted that each team member had excelled in every way, “from winning draws and taking care of the ball on offense, to pressuring on the ride and in the midfield, and finally making some clutch defensive stops on the other end.”

Macione pointed out that Ellington was “an opponent we didn’t know” since they do not play in the same conference as Lyme-Old Lyme, so “You never know what’s going to happen … but we did know it was going to be a tough game”

After the final whistle, Wildcat goalie Hannah Guenther shares a group with two fellow team members.

After the final whistle, Wildcat goalie Hannah Guenther shares a group with two fellow team members.

Adding, “Our goalie Hannah Guenther made some incredible saves today, and I just felt like from one end of the other, the girls hustled,” Macione concluded, “Their collective hustle made the difference in who earned the victory.”

Asked about the flow of the game, Macione responded, “In the first half, it was back and forth, but in the second half, we were able to pull away a little more because of that commitment, and how the girls were supporting each other in all aspects of play on the field.”

The Wildcats will now meet Canton, who defeated Weston 12-6 today, on Tuesday, June 7, at a time and place to be announced. This is the third year in a row that Old Lyme have reached the semifinals — they were defeated in the previous two and so Macione and her girls must certainly be hoping the ‘third time’s a charm!’

Op-Ed: Malloy in the Middle

Susan Bigelow

Susan Bigelow

Last week, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders tried to force the Democratic National Convention into a shape more to his liking by demanding that Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a supporter of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, be booted from a high-profile chairmanship. He failed, but the fact that he tried says something about both Malloy and the dangerous state of our politics today.

Sanders’ argument is that Malloy and fellow co-chair former U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., were unreasonably hostile to Sanders, and that they were “aggressive attack surrogates” for Clinton. As evidence, Sanders pointed to interviews the two men had given slamming Sanders, suggesting that Frank and Malloy would be “unsympathetic” to the views of Bernie voters.

Oh boy.

An eye-rolling DNC rejected …

Continue reading Susan Bigelow’s column published June 3 on CTNewsJunkie.com by clicking here.

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