Deadline to Receive Questions for Possible Inclusion in Region 18’s Board of Education ‘Meet the Candidates’ Event is Tonight

Attorney John A. Collins III will be the Event Moderator at the ‘Meet The Candidates for Board of Education Night’ slated for Oct. 29.

LYME-OLD LYME — Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB) and the Lyme-Old Lyme Chamber of Commerce are hosting a ‘Meet the Candidates for Board of Education’ event on Tuesday, Oct. 29, starting at 7 p.m. at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School.  The six candidates running for the Region 18 Board of Education will answer questions posed by Event Moderator, Attorney John A. Collins III of Suisman Shapiro.

Readers are invited to submit questions for possible inclusion in the event by one of these options:

  • emailing them to Editor@LymeLine.com with the subject line, “Questions for the BOE Debate
  • mailing them (snail-mail) to: Questions for the BOE Debate, PO Box 589, Old Lyme, CT 06371.

All questions will be treated anonymously in terms of the name of the sender and also maintained confidential, i.e., they will not be shared with the candidates in advance. The deadline for receiving questions is midnight on Friday, Oct. 25.

Three incumbents, the current chair Michelle ‘Mimi’ Roche, Erick Cushman and Stacey Winchell, have chosen not to seek re-election. The six candidates running for the three open Old Lyme seats are:

Democrats: Sarah Bowman, Lorianne Panzara Griswold, and Jason Kemp

Republicans: Jennifer Miller, Suzanne Thompson, and Steve Wilson

Incumbent Mary Powell St. Louis (R) is running uncontested for the open Lyme seat.

The event planning committee will be solely responsible for selecting the questions asked at the event.  There will not be any questions taken from the floor.

This event will be taped for broadcast on Comcast Public Access Channel 14 at 7:30 p.m. on Nov. 1, 2, 3, and 4. 

Light refreshments will be served after the event when there will be an opportunity to mingle informally with the candidates.

Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 5.

LymeLine.com is proud to sponsor this event.

For further information, contact Mary Seidner at mseidner@lysb.org or 869-434-7208.

SECWAC Presents Jonathan Starr Speaking in Old Lyme on ‘It Takes a School,’ Tonight

Jonathan Starr, founder of the Abaarso School of Science and Technology in Somaliland, who will speak at the SECWAC meeting scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 24.

OLD LYME — The Southeast Connecticut World Affairs Council (SECWAC) announced today that Jonathan Starr is to speak on his founding of the Abaarso School of Science and Technology in Somaliland at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 24, at the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme at 2 Ferry Road, Old Lyme, CT 06371. Members and guests are encouraged to RSVP via online registration, but walk-ins will be accepted.

Starr will present on the seemingly impossible success of Abaarso School, whose accomplishments have been featured on CBS’s 60 Minutes and in the New York Times, and show that its “against all odds” triumphs were neither due to great luck nor great talent. In addition to shedding light on the fields of international development and education, the talk has implications for career choice and maximizing one’s own success.

A reception will begin at 5:30 p.m., the presentation will follow SECWAC’s Annual General Meeting with announcements from the Board of Directors at 5:45 p.m., with the main event beginning at 6 p.m. The presentation is a part of the SECWAC 2019-2020 Speaker Series.

For non-members, tickets ($20) may be purchased at the door; ticket cost can subsequently be applied towards a SECWAC membership.  Attendance is free for SECWAC members (and their guests). Membership September 2019 through June 2020 is $85 per person; $25 for young professionals under 35; free for educators and area college and high school students; a corporate rate of $1,000 is also available, with unlimited access for employees.

Immediately following the presentation, SECWAC meeting attendees have the option for $40 to attend a dinner with the speaker at the Old Lyme Country Club.  A reservation for dinner is required in advance by the morning of Thursday, Oct. 24. Pre-register and pay securely online, call 860-912-5718, or email info@secwac.org to make your reservation (vegetarian option available if reserved in advance). Checks payable to SECWAC or credit card payment are accepted before the meeting by Courtney Assad.

Starr is Managing Director, Headmaster, and Founder of Abaarso School of Science and Technology in Somaliland, Africa. From 2004 – 2008, he founded and led Flagg Street Capital, a private investment firm that managed $170 million of assets. Prior to Flagg Street, he worked as an Analyst at SAB Capital and at Blavin and Company. His career started as a Research Associate within the Taxable Bond Division at Fidelity Investments.

In addition to his full-time responsibilities, Starr sat on the Board of Directors of Pomeroy IT Solutions, a publicly-traded IT company generating $500 million of annual sales. His board responsibilities included acting as a member of the Audit Committee, the Advisory Committee, and the Special Committee (strategic alternatives) of Pomeroy.

Starr graduated from Emory University, with a B.A. Summa Cum Laude in Economics and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa.  He is the author of “It Takes A School: The Extraordinary Story of an American School in the #1 Failed State“, a story of David and Goliath proportions that describes how Starr created a unique school in Somaliland whose students, against all odds, have come to achieve success beyond anyone’s wildest dreams.

SECWAC is a regional, nonprofit, membership organization affiliated with the World Affairs Councils of America (WACA). The organization dates back to 1999, and has continued to arrange 8-10 Speaker Series meetings annually, between September and June. The meetings range in foreign affairs topics, and are hosted at venues along the I-95 corridor, welcoming members and guests from Stonington to Old Saybrook, and beyond.

SECWAC’s mission is “to foster an understanding of issues of foreign policy and international affairs through study, debate, and educational programming.” It provides a forum for nonpartisan, non-advocacy dialogue between members and speakers, who can be U.S. policymakers, educators, authors, and other experts on foreign relations. Learn more at http://secwac.org.

Wildcat Boys Draw 1-1 with Bacon Academy

Old Lyme tied Bacon Academy tWednesday at Lyme-Old Lyme High School 1-1.

Jesper Silberberg scored for the Wildcats and Matt Volland equalized for Bacon.

Ryan Tetreault was in goal for Old Lyme with 11 saves and Ryan Claffey and Mike Whipple were in goal for Bacon with a combined four saves.

Old Lyme is now 6-3-4 overall and 4-3-3 in the shoreline.

Chamber Hosts Candidate’s Debate Tonight for Old Lyme Board of Selectmen

Old Lyme First Selectwoman Bonnie Reemsnyder (D) who is running again for the position in November.

Former Old Lyme First Selectman and 2019 First Selectman Republican challenger, Tim Griswold.

OLD LYME — The Lyme-Old Lyme Chamber of Commerce will host a debate between the candidates for the Old Lyme Board of Selectmen on Wednesday, Oct. 23, at 7 p.m. at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School Auditorium, 53 Lyme St., Old Lyme.

First Selectman candidates Bonnie A. Reemsnyder (D, incumbent) and Timothy C. Griswold (R), and Selectmen candidates Mary Jo Nosal (D, incumbent) and Chris Kerr (R, incumbent) have been invited to offer prepared remarks and answer questions posed by Elizabeth Hamilton, Executive Editor for CT Mirror, the event moderator.

Light refreshments will be served following the formal discussion.

The event is sponsored by LymeLine.com.

For further information about the event or other activities of the Chamber, contact Chamber President Rich Shriver at (203) 510-5721 or  rshriver@lymeoldlymechamber.com

Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 5. Polls at Cross Lane Firehouse in Old Lyme will be open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Absentee ballots are available through the Town Clerk.

Duck River Garden Club Hosts Talk on Native Plants Tonight; All Welcome

Margery Winters of the Roaring Brook Nature Center will discuss the ecological benefits of native plants on Tuesday evening at the next DRGC meeting.

The Duck River Garden Club (DRGC) of Old Lyme hosts a free program Tuesday, Oct. 22, on ‘Native Plants in the Garden,’ which is open to the public.

Margery Winters of the Roaring Brook Nature Center will discuss the beauty and ecological benefits of our native plants and how we can recapture native habitats in our own yards in the Old Lyme Town Hall Meeting Room at 7 p.m.
There will be a social in the foyer starting at 6:30 p.m. followed by the free program at 7 p.m.
The DRGC will hosts a business meeting after the presentation.