Seven Non-Profits to Launch Center for Housing Equity & Opportunity (CHEO) in Eastern CT

Goal of CHEO is to Expand Equitable Access to Housing 

NEW LONDON, CT – A new Center for Housing Equity & Opportunity (CHEO) in Eastern CT will officially launch on March 16, 2023, to facilitate a coordinated, regional response to address housing affordability in Eastern Connecticut including throughout New London, Windham, and  part of Tolland Counties.

Modeled after similar efforts in other parts of the state, the new Center will work collaboratively with housing practitioners, residents, municipalities, and  policymakers throughout the region to develop a regional housing affordability strategy, and to  align, grow, and deliver critical resources including dedicated staff, regional data capacity, and  technical assistance to support the preservation, production, and protection of housing  affordability regionwide. 

The CHEO will be a strategic  partnership between seven nonprofits brought together by the Community Foundation of Eastern Connecticut. Other founding partners in the Center include Connecticut College,  Eastern Connecticut State University, The Housing Collective, Partnership for Strong  Communities, Regional Plan Association, and United Way of Southeastern Connecticut. 

Maryam Elahi is President and CEO of the Community Foundation of Eastern Connecticut.

“Simply put, we are stronger together,” says the Community Foundation of Eastern  Connecticut’s President and CEO Maryam Elahi, “and together, we intend to lean into the  significant housing challenges facing thousands of households in our region and to work in collaboration with those communities most impacted by these challenges to identify solutions  and recalibrate our housing system so that it works for everyone in our region.”

The  Foundation’s mission is to collaborate with partners to put philanthropy into action to address the needs, rights and interests of the community in Eastern Connecticut. 

“Connecticut College is proud to be part of this exciting initiative,” said President Katherine Bergeron, who graduated from Lyme-Old Lyme High School in 1976. She added, “Our Holleran Center for Community Action and Public Policy’s faculty, students and staff will play an important role in this collaborative partnership to make safe and affordable housing more available.”

Connecticut College was the first regional partner to commit funding  to this initiative.

Each of the Center’s partner organizations has made a commitment to ensuring equitable access to housing opportunities for every household in Eastern Connecticut. Leveraging the  collective strengths and areas of expertise across all seven partners, the work of the new Center will include:  

● Convening the region in thought partnership around its housing challenges and  solutions 

● Providing capacity for regional research, data collection and analysis that can inform and improve housing practices and policies going forward 

● Connecting a diverse coalition of partner organizations who can promote the production and preservation of affordable housing to reduce the number of cost burdened  households throughout the region 

● Participate in advocacy at the local, regional, and statewide levels to increase public and private resources for housing 

● Build power among and elevate the voices of those most impacted by the region’s housing challenges in developing housing solutions 

● Support municipalities and Councils of Government (COGs) in the implementation of newly-adopted town housing plans 

Eastern Connecticut native, Beth Sabilia, will take the helm as CHEO’s Director. A long-time  attorney in the region and a former Mayor of New London, Sabilia says “I am excited by this  opportunity to work with our neighbors throughout the region to address the pressing need that workers and families face when seeking affordable and accessible housing. I am looking forward to working with stakeholders throughout Eastern Connecticut to make a real impact and improve the lives of all of our neighbors.” 

Funding to launch CHEO comes from an array of philanthropic partners including Berkshire Bank Foundation, Centreville Bank Charitable Foundation, Chelsea Groton Foundation,  Community Foundation of Eastern Connecticut, Connecticut College, The Connecticut Project,  Dime Bank Foundation, The Housing Collective, Liberty Bank Foundation, Melville Charitable Trust, Ossen Fund for Windham, United Way of Southeastern Connecticut, and the William Caspar Graustein Memorial Fund. 

Editor’s Notes: i) The Center for Housing Equity and Opportunity in Eastern CT (CHEO) is a strategic partnership between the Community  Foundation of Eastern Connecticut, Connecticut College, Eastern Connecticut State University, The Housing Collective, Partnership for Strong Communities, Regional Plan Association, and United Way of  Southeastern Connecticut. The mission of CHEO is to align a diverse coalition of practitioners,  policymakers, residents, and community organizations to collectively identify and build upon community-driven and data-informed solutions that preserve, protect, and produce safe and affordable housing for  all. CHEO envisions a future where every resident of Eastern CT, regardless of income, race, or ethnicity, has access to a safe and affordable home as the foundation from which to pursue their goals, achieve their dreams, and sustain a stable, fulfilling, and healthy life.

ii) This article is based on a press release issued by the Community  Foundation of Eastern Connecticut.

Death Announced of Andrew L. “Drew” Montanaro Jr., Former Manager of Cherrystones, Ocean Spray Café in Old Lyme

OLD LYME — Andrew L. “Drew” Montanaro Jr., 75, of Old Lyme, and Highland Beach, Fla., loving husband of Janice (Litke) Montanaro for 53 years, passed away peacefully, Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2023, at his home in Florida …

Formerly of Wethersfield, Drew managed a number of restaurants and bars in Connecticut, including the infamous Cherrystones Restaurant and Ocean Spray Café in Old Lyme where friends and family gathered regularly …

He is survived by his mother Virginia; his wife Janice; and also leaves behind his children, Andrew “Monty” Montanaro and wife Mary Jo of Old Lyme, Marc Montanaro and wife Kelli of Fairfield, Michael Montanaro and wife Beth of Old Lyme; his eight grandchildren …

A Mass of Christian Burial to celebrate Drew’s life will be held on a date to be determined later this spring in Old Lyme …

Visit this link to read the full obituary published by The Day on Feb. 5, 2023.

Op-Ed: Give Some ‘Power to the Palette,” Old Lyme Zoning Should Approve Proposed Arts Overlay District

Editor’s Note: This op-ed was submitted by Old Lyme residents Christina J. and Thomas D. Gotowka.

We are writing to express our strong support for the arts overlay district on Lyme Street that has been proposed by the Lyme Academy of Fine Arts; and which would amend Old Lyme’s zoning regulations and create “a more flexible arts and social district or districts”. Note that their site at 84 Lyme Street is zoned residential”, although the Academy, with its extensive studios and classrooms, has operated on that site as an educational institution for decades; and has really become an anchor for Lyme Street and may often be a visitor’s first impression of our town.

Clearly, Old Lyme recognizes and celebrates its long-standing community relationship with and support for the arts; which began in 1899, when Miss Florence Griswold opened her family home to artists. This “Old Lyme Art Colony” became influential in the development of American Impressionism; and produced many important works illustrating their Old Lyme environs; — e.g. “The Church at Old Lyme”, by Childe Hassam, an early resident of the Colony. 

The Hartford Courant reported in 1907 that: “the most talked about art colony in America today is at Old Lyme, Connecticut”.

The Lyme Art Association, which was incorporated in 1914, is an early “offspring” of the Colony and began its exhibitions of impressionist paintings in 1902, held at the Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library every summer until 1921; when the original Lyme Art Association gallery opened at 90 Lyme Street.

The Lyme Academy of Fine Arts was founded in 1976 by Elisabeth Gordon Chandler “for the teaching of sculpture, figure drawing, Illustration and painting dedicated to the fine arts”. In 2021, after severing a relationship with the University of New Haven, the Academy made the strategic decision to restructure in accordance with their founding principles; as an academy, not a college. “We want to re-activate our campus as a center of fine arts education and a community hub”.

The Connecticut Audubon Society’s Roger Tory Peterson Estuary Center at 100 Lyme Street, appropriately named for the renowned artist, naturalist, author, environmentalist, and of course, Old Lyme resident; is dedicated to the conservation and preservation of the Connecticut River Estuary ecosystem and watershed, through science-based research, education and advocacy. The Center is located along the Lieutenant River at the former Bee and Thistle property.

Michael Duffy, Chairman of the Academy’s Board of Trustees, has stated that they seek “a predictable set of guidelines so they can plan, knowing that their activities are “in conformance with the regulations”.

The Town’s Planning Commission determined in October, by unanimous vote, that the proposed overlay district is consistent with the Town’s “Plan of Conservation and Development”, which was adopted in February, 2021. They referred the proposal to the Zoning Commission, and it was on that Commission’s November 14 agenda; continuing through December and January. 

The proposal raised concerns with the Town’s Historic District Commission. 

The primary driver of this proposal has been the Lyme Academy; but previously, Rebekah Beaulieu, then-executive director of the Florence Griswold Museum, stated, “the Museum and the Lyme Art Association remain committed allies to our peers at the Lyme Academy of Fine Arts and the Roger Tory Peterson Estuary Center in their petition. We aim to support current and future mission-oriented non-profit organizations in our shared goal to build sustainable operating models while serving the Old Lyme community.” 

Claudia Weicker, chair of the board of directors of the Estuary Center, said, “I view the cultural overlay district as something which would be beneficial to the town” and that would establish parameters and the ground rules under which we all could operate,” 

We feel that approval would place the Zoning Commission in closer step with Town administration, who has regularly provided some financial support to these four organizations; both as budgeted “211 Grants” or additional awards this past year from the American Rescue Plan. The latter includes a grant to the Academy for “the improvement of walkways, stairs, ramps, and doors to provide unfettered access to individuals with mobility issues; and also, to the Roger Tory Peterson Estuary Center to support “the creation of an accessible science discovery and environmental learning center for children”.

Approval would also provide the Academy with the tools that would assist them in their programmatic planning and enable thoughtful and sustainable growth in the arts district that maintains the “look and feel” of our historic district.

Old Lyme’s Zoning Commission must bring its courage and skill to bear on to this proposal and create a cultural/arts district that should probably extend from the Academy grounds through the Estuary Center.  

We acknowledge the words of our Greater Library Lane neighbor, Bill Folland, who recently wrote with some passion that “Residents of Old Lyme must reject the hysteria surrounding necessary survival plans for the art academy as well as objections put forth by our Historic Commission.”

In closing, we reminisce of the 1960s, and with some gratitude for Old Lyme’s history and arts culture, say “Provide a little Power to the Palette”.

Lyme-Old Lyme Girls Indoor Track & Field are 2023 Shoreline Conference Champions!

The Lyme-Old Lyme Girls Indoor Track & Field team proudly hold the Shoreline Championship Cup after gaining first place in the Shoreline Conference Championship held in New Haven on Friday.

NEW HAVEN — On Friday, the Lyme-Old Lyme Girls Indoor Track & Field team pulled off a spectacular result finishing in the top spot in the Shoreline Conference Championship held at the Floyd Little Athletic Center in New Haven.

The official results have not yet been posted but a selection of the unofficial girls’ and boys’ results includes the following:

The Lyme-Old Lyme Girls 4×800 team (pictured above) of Maddy Morgado, Aggie Hunt, Gesa Vazquez, and Chase Gilbert (second from left) took first place in the Shoreline Championship race. Photo by H.Heck.

Boys 4×800 2nd place: Harry Whitten, Eric Dagher, Gabriel Tooker, Dylan Hoovey

Zoe Eastman-Grossel took 1st place in the Girls’ 55 meter hurdles.

Girls 600m 1st place: Lyla Powers

Girls 1600m Sprint Medley 1st place: Alexis Fenton, Serena Mazzi, Lyla Powers, Maddy Morgado

Girls 1600m & 3200m 1st place: Chase Gilbert

Girls 4×400 1st place: Aggie Hunt, Beatrice Hunt, Bronwyn Kyle, Lyla Powers

Girls shotput 2nd place: Emma Bayor

Boys shotput 2nd place: Dylan Sheehan

Girls long jump 2nd place: Zoe Eastman-Grossel

Hearty congratulations from LymeLine to all the Lyme-Old Lyme indoor track and field participants!

Letter to the Editor: Support the Academy, Approve the New Overlay Zone, Reject the Hysteria

To the Editor:

Regarding the application by Lyme Art Academy for a new planning overlay zone, the loss will come if the art academy is not allowed to make the necessary changes now before the zoning commission. If these changes are not granted and the academy is forced not to exist, then the character of the town will change. This change will result when the property is converted into rental space, either affordable housing or non-affordable units. We all know that the state of Connecticut is forcing affordable housing on municipalities, Old Lyme being no exception. Yes, we need affordable housing in Old Lyme but as important is the town’s support for an institution that is a centerpiece of the Historic District and our arts community.

Residents of Old Lyme must reject the hysteria surrounding necessary survival plans for the art academy as well as objections put forth by our Historic Commission.

Sincerely,

William Folland, Old Lyme.