TOP STORY-UPDATED: First Day of School Unchanged Amid Lyme-Old Lyme Renovation Project

This photo taken Friday, Aug. 15, shows the new base coat on the driveway at Mile Creek School that was applied on Wednesday. LymeLine photo.

LYME/OLD LYME–UPDATED 8/16 with new photo of driveway (above.) Superintendent of Lyme-Old Lyme Schools Ian Neviaser on Thursday said he’s more confident than ever that schools will reopen on time now that an intensive summertime push is winding down on the $57.5 million renovation project affecting four of the district’s five buildings. 

Neviaser in a phone interview said crews overseen by Downes Construction were working double shifts this summer to ensure Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School, Mile Creek School, Lyme Consolidated School and Center School would be ready for the first day of school on Aug. 27. 

Work at three of the schools will shift to the night once school starts, he said. For Mile Creek, where the most extensive upgrades are occurring, daytime work will continue. 

Last week, Neviaser during a regular meeting of the Region 18 Board of Education acknowledged concerns around Lyme and Old Lyme that the district wouldn’t be able to welcome students as scheduled. 

Superintendent of Lyme-Old Lyme Schools Ian Neviaser said Mile Creek School, which was unpaved when this photo was taken earlier this week, was paved Wednesday with a base coat that will provide a functional surface until the final coat is applied after site work is complete. Photo credit: LymeLine.

“I know there’s been some questions out there about whether or not we’ll be able to open school on time, especially if you drive by Mile Creek and you see that they have not paved the new parking lot or entranceway yet,” Neviaser told school board members. 

But he reported being assured by project officials that the schools would be ready. 

The prediction was bolstered by the completion of paving at Mile Creek this week, the superintendent said over the phone.

“As we get closer, I’m even more confident,” he said.  

Center, Mile Creek and Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School closed June 23, with Lyme-Old Lyme High School absorbing displaced staff members as well as campers in the Old Lyme Park and Recreation Department’s summer program. At Lyme Consolidated, staff members were relocated within the building. 

HVAC on Track

The renovation project involves Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning (HVAC) and security upgrades in the four buildings, plus an addition and an expanded parking area at Mile Creek School. Voters in late 2022 authorized spending up to $57.5 million on the project, though the district will save about $17 million due to grant funding and lower than expected interest rates.

Neviaser said the buildings will be ready for teachers when they arrive for three days of professional development on Aug. 22. The majority of security upgrades to the building’s front vestibules should be done by the time students get there at the end of the month. 

He said work on the HVAC system will shift to the nighttime at Center, Lyme Consolidated and Lyme-Old Lyme Middle Schools, with “substantial completion” expected by the end of this year.

“When we walk into school on August 27th, there will still be ceiling tiles down,” he said. “There will still be ductwork going on.”

Mile Creek Construction

While students will be welcomed on schedule at Mile Creek, Neviaser described the overall timeline there as “a little bit of a different story.” That’s because six classrooms are being added currently, with the pickup and dropoff area to be reconfigured next summer.

“While the majority of that project, too, was focused on HVAC – and they have continued to work on that – their intent this summer was to really try to get a lot done on the addition,” he said.  

He estimated the new classrooms could be ready by January, giving administrators the space to move some other classrooms around while work on the heating and cooling system continues in the rest of the building. 

The Mile Creek project likely won’t be complete until midway through the 2026-27 school year, he said. 

Neviaser expressed gratitude to the neighbors of the four buildings for their patience over the summer. 

He noted some construction crews this summer had to come out on Saturdays to keep the project on track at Mile Creek as they removed rock from the site.

“I know there was a lot of noise coming from the construction sites, and people were very understanding of the noise,” he said. “And we, like them, hope that it will be done soon.”

TOP STORY: ‘Dream, Dream, Dream’: Syrian Family Finds Safety in Education From Home in Lyme

The Hamou family celebrates the graduation of Kamber Hamou from the University of Connecticut in May. From left to right: Mohamad, Yaldiz, Kamber, Darin and Hani Hamou. Photo courtesy of the family.

LYME, CT–Nine years ago, Syrian refugees Hani and Yaldiz Hamou arrived in Lyme after chasing an education for their three children from war-torn Aleppo to the cold, unwelcoming streets of Turkey.

This spring, Kamber Hamou, 25, became the first member of the family to earn a college diploma. His degree in computer science from the University of Connecticut led immediately to a full-time job in the digital department at Pfizer Inc.  

“Dream, dream, dream,” Hani said in his slightly broken English in a July interview from the family’s living room overlooking the fields and silos of Tiffany Farm. “You need dream. Everybody needs to have dream.”

Hani called it “chance” when an application and multiple interviews with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees program landed the family in the United States. 

But Lyme-Old Lyme Schools and the state university system have proven to be the family’s winning ticket, according to Hani. 

“This is my big lotto,” he said. 

Hani, a US citizen with his wife and three children since 2021, acknowledged the importance of material things in his new country. But for the father who arrived with nothing but his family, the priorities are different. 

“Everybody like money, like car,” Hani said. “No, I like to see my children’s graduation. Everybody safe for future. Safe.” 

He recalled flying from Istanbul to New York City in 2016. The family was soon greeted by members of the New Haven-based Integrated Refugee and Immigration Services (IRIS) and the Old Lyme Refugee Resettlement Committee.

“No English, no job, no anything,” he said. “Now, I have three children in college.”

Eldest daughter Darin, 26, is a certified nursing assistant at the Essex Meadows senior living facility who this fall will begin studying to become a registered nurse at Three Rivers Community College in Norwich. Mohamad, 20, is pursuing a business management degree at UCONN.

Importance of Education

Kamber said forging a life in a new country was challenging. But he gave credit to his family – the one he came over with as well as the people who became honorary members of the Hamou clan – for making it possible for him to succeed. 

“I mean, it’s really not easy, but still, you do get through it,” he said. “You know that tomorrow is going to be different. And working hard pays off, always.” 

Hani is employed as a custodian at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School while Yaldiz holds a position in the laundry room at the same senior living facility where her daughter works. 

Hani, one of six children born to an illiterate mother and a father who worked all the time, traced his unmet need for higher education back to his childhood.

“Nobody care about my dream,” he said of his roots in Syria. “I’m coming here, I promise myself: My children need to go to college. This is number one for me.”

For Darin, it was the family’s long waking hours after fleeing bombings in Aleppo, Syria, that made her brother’s graduation all the more powerful. 

She recalled flashing back during the ceremony to the winter nights spent as refugees in Turkey. That’s when Kamber, then 12-years-old, would fall asleep in clothes soaking wet from his dishwashing job while she cried into a pillow after her own 16-hour shifts at a garment factory. 

“There was a lot of nights that we didn’t have money to buy a small bread to eat,” she said. 

Back then, the children were not allowed an education in Turkey due to their refugee status. Yaldiz, speaking in translation through Kamber, remembered the tears she’d shed when she watched her children walking to work while others the same age passed by on their way to school. 

Hani pointed out that Mohamad only went to school in Syria for one year before the war broke out. But that didn’t stop the pre-teen from learning enough during his inaugural summer in the United States to enter school as a fifth grader.

“I cry,” Hani said of taking his youngest child to Lyme Consolidated School for the first time. “Mohamad (had) just one year in school, just one year. Now, Mohamad in college.”

Bombs Everywhere

Hani and Yaldiz Hamou returned to Syria for the first time earlier this summer. Their trip included a visit to the Aleppo Citadel. Photo submitted.

Hani said the civil war in Syria had been going on for a few years when fighting came to their hometown of Aleppo. The family escaped one night after missiles began to fly. 

Kamber remembered the chaos. 

“There was bombs everywhere, like, literally. People crying on the streets. People calling for help,” he said. 

There was no question they needed to get out, according to Hani. 

“It’s not safe. It’s not safe,” he said. “It’s not safe for my family.” 

The Hamous retreated to northern Syria before fleeing to Turkey. It was there, during two years and six months that felt to the children like forever, that a friend told them about the United Nations program for refugees. 

Hani said he didn’t know what the United Nations was, but that didn’t matter. His friend told him to fill out an application anyway.

“Go,” he recalled the man saying. “Go sign. It’s just paper.”

Hani was 43-years-old when that plane out of Istanbul – it was his first flight ever – took the family to their new home.

Yaldiz remembered the fear.

“Who’s going to take us?” she said. “Who’s going to take care of us?”

‘Missed Opportunity’

The same resettlement process that welcomed the Hamous has helped families from The Congo, Puerto Rico, Iraq and Afghanistan build a foundation in Lyme and Old Lyme since the Old Lyme Resettlement Committee began eight years ago as a tri-church initiative in partnership with IRIS. 

Kamber cited a community of supporters that included the volunteers who brought the family to countless medical appointments and soccer games. It also included the first teacher to introduce him and Darin to the English language and to fractions.

The Hamou children now refer to two of those volunteers as grandmothers. The same teacher attended Kamber’s graduation as an honored guest.

“I had that dream in me,” Kamber said. “I knew that I would graduate. The amount of support I got is what I did not expect.”

But the volunteer committee disbanded earlier this year, according to a former member. The news came after an executive order from President Donald Trump suspended the nation’s refugee admissions program — a move that, according to the CT Mirror, led IRIS to shutter its main office space in New Haven and reduce its 100-person staff by half.

Affected refugees along with nonprofit aid groups continue to fight the move in federal court. 

Kamber described the suspension as a “missed opportunity” for the country to make a difference in the lives of refugees, and for refugees to make a difference in the United States. 

“I always promise myself that I’m going to give back to this community, even if I move out of the town,” he said. “I’m gonna be still connected. I’m gonna help when help is needed. And I’m gonna do my best to be remembered here.” 

The Hamous said they are not unique. 

“There are a lot of people, a lot of people, who are like us,” Kamber said. “So, I just feel like it’s going to be really hard on both sides: A missed opportunity for the United States itself to lose these people, and these people to lose their dreams.”

Hani, asked about his own plans for the future, said it doesn’t matter.

“Maybe I live here,” he said. “Maybe I’m going, after I’m retired, back to my country. Small house, me and my wife. I don’t know.”

The most important thing is his children, and the guarantees that only education can make against an uncertain future.

“Tomorrow you don’t know,” he said. “War coming, war happening. Nobody knows.”

Lyme-Old Lyme Schools Announce Quarter 4 Honor Rolls

Lyme-Old Lyme High School
2024-25 Quarter 4 Honor Roll

HIGH HONORS

Grade 12: Ella Austin, Micah Bass, Gavin Biega, Molly Boardman, Nathaniel Bradley, Mark Burnham, Chase Calderon, Dylan Carnaroli, Andrew Clougherty, Tabitha Colwell, Andrea DeBernardo, Zoe Eastman-Grossel, Caeli Edmed, Anna Eichholz, Davis Fallon, Grace Ferman, Benedict Frazier, Hoshena Gemme, Manu Geronimo, Elias Goldberg, Nicolas Hatch, Yucheng Hou, Shyla Jones, Thomas Kabel, Simon Karpinski, Ella Kiem, Skylar Kobelia, Peter Kuhn, Ada LaConti, Brenden Landry, Andrew Liu, Lana Lopes, Elizabeth Lopez, Colette Marchant, Tirill Mundal, Kayla Navarro, Abigail O’Brien, Kanon Oharu, Sophie Pennie, Ysabel Rodriguez, Madelin Salazar Cajamarca, Josephine Small, Andrew Sprankle, Madeline Supersano, Charlotte Tinniswood, Nicholas Turtoro, Giovanni Winters, Ava Wood-Muller, Wenyao Zhang, Gabriella Ziegler

Grade 11: Trevor Buydos, Caden Camarra, Tyler Cann, Julia Clark, Maya Cook, Annabelle Coppola, Colman Curtiss-Reardon, Christopher Dagher, Sophia D’Angelo, Rose Dimmock, Alexa Donovan, Chase Gilbert, Alexander Glaras, Elizaveta Gregoire, Oliver Hatchel, Anne-Marie Hinckley, Christopher Kachur, Thomas Kelly, Jayden Livesey, Emily Looney, Poveda Lucas, Daniela Marin Yanza, Nayeli Marin Yanza, Serena Mazzi, Carter McGlinchey, Samuel McKenzie, Rowen Meisner, Ryan Miller, Madeline Murphy, Isabella Presti, Jacob Prokopets, Lance Sanford, Sophia Shaposhnikova, Luca Signora, Addison Spooner, Carson St. Louis, Andrew Taylor, Meredith Thompson, Madeleine Trepanier, Connor Vautrain, Oliver Wyman, Stella Young, Carl Zapatka

Grade 10: Addison Arndt, Phineas Barrett, Ceciley Buckley, Morgan Buerger, Brooke Burgess, William Burgess, Anna Bussmann, Lillian Calabrese, Aidan Carpentino, Isaac Chartier, Johanna Coker, Brady Donovan, Samson Edmed, Lauren Fulara, Angeline Gencarella, Antonio Gencarella, Gavin Goulis, Harrison Goulis, Skylar Graybill, Tessa Grethel, Owen Holth, Josephine Kiem, Allisondra Krol, Autumn Newbury, Ainsley Rinoski, Cameron Russell, Owen Shapiro, Kevork Shegirian, Milo Stiles, Carli Teixeira, Magdalena Tooker, Ethan Trepanier, Kaylyn Vernon, Caterina Wilson, Brody Ziolkovski

Grade 9: Lillian Acosta, Lauren Belval, Scarlett Blatter, Vivian Boller, Lana Brunza, Trevor Camarra, Naomi Cameron, Gabrielle Clark, Katharine Ferman, Jonah Filardi, Cortland Forbes, Avery Goiangos, Gavin Gray, Sawyer Graybill, Kinsley Grenier, Maia Guisti, Colleen Harrington, Reese Holland, Sophia Huang, Henrik Hummervoll, Fiona Judge, Jillian Kleefeld, Kaedyn Koproski, Treyton LaConti, Holden Leonardo, Alice Li, Graham Macadam, Benjamin Mattox, Menzi Mbele, Charles McEwen, William McKeever, Addyson Morosky, Grace Morrissette, Marielle Munster, Theodore Neary, Gwenevere Osborne, Mila Pacelli, Mattea Parnoff, Remi Patz, Nicholas Porto, Jonah Scheckwitz, Audrey Sheehan, Avery Spooner, Hailey Suisman, Charlotte Thuma, Ashlynn Ward, Ella Ziolkovski

HONORS

Grade 12: Emma Arelt, Hannah Bonilla, Dominic Clark, Hunter Coffey, Christopher Gibbons, Janna Graves, Abigail Greene, Kaela Hoss, Gage Kaulfuss, Olivia Kelly, Bronwyn Kyle, Elise Leonardo, Amahle Mdluli, Nathan Morgan, Max Novak, Ryan Shapiro, Nola Slubowski, Spencer Spezio, Erika Teixeira, Kathleen Walsh

Grade 11: Charlotte Antonino, Sienna Bari, Zoe Brunza, Makayla Calderon, Braden Dawson, Michael DeFiore, Claire Engdall, Benjamin Goulding, Quinn Hadarik, William Landon, Sebastian Lopez-Bravo, Ian Maeby, Sybil Neary, Ryan Ortoleva, Quenten Patz, Marleigh Piacenza, Tanner Snurkowski, Sydney St. Pierre, Margaret Thuma, Eve Videll, Elisabeth Viera

Grade 10: Mohammed Ali, Zachary Belval, Mia Bonatti, Logan Buckingham, Kacey Cajamarca, Evan Coffee, Amirah D’Lizarraga, Elliot Dunn-Sims, Edward Fiske, Elsa Jungkeit, Callahan Lacourciere, Logan Landry, Olivia Lovendale, Kaylee McCarthy, Sean Olsen, Alexandria Sanford, Allegra Schaedler

Grade 9: Noah Brant, John Comstock, Nathaniel Condon, Colin Discordia, Frederick Goss, Morgan Harris, Ryan Hill, David McAdams, Rowan McCormick, Ava Novak, Delilah Tooker, Renee Viera, Charles Zapatka, Avery Zbierski

Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School
2024-25 Quarter 4 Honor Roll

HIGH HONORS

Grade 8: Josie Arndt, Anna Block, Emily Bonatti, Cassidy Buckley, Ewan Cabell, Emily Campbell, Finnegan Choisnet, Reagan Christopher, Eliana Cicchiello, Emerson Coker, Miles Coppola, Ezekiel Daily, Maya Desai, Parker Fedorich, Jackson Fiske, Parker Forbes, Samantha Fulara, Ava Fuller, Olivia Gerardo, Victoria Glaras, Kylie Grethel, Olivia Griffith, Cole Haslam, Charles Holth, Quinn Hoss, Griffin Karpinski, Collin Langley, Zoey Langley, Ellison Lodge, Isabel Martel, Harland McKenna, Maxwell Mooney, Sofia Noti, Thomas O’Connor, Kanato Oharu, Giovanni Orlando, Jack Ouellette, Adrian Raby, Benson Reis, Tristan Reyes, Lillian Reynolds, Beatrix Rubino, Addison Sapia, Juliette Small, Mia Stokes, Natalie Suisman, Olive Vautrain, Benson Wang, Reagan Weinstein, Samuel Zelek, Lily Zerkowski

Grade 7: Charlotte Anton, Jack Antonino, Annalisa Archbald, Miella Bard, Sawyer Barreto, Cole Barris, Jackson Basham, Zakary Benedetto, Braydon Boisseau, Conor Buckeridge, Thomas Calabrese, Rowan Cantner, Mason Catalano, Jackson Chapps, Ainsley Conroy, Oliver Constantine, Brennon Coyle, Ella Davis, Amy Diaz, Daphne Eisensmith, Hunter Emma, Kate Ewers, Camryn Fedorich, Estelle Filardi, Beckett Goss, Delana Green-Oldfield, Aibhlinn Hall, Julia Haslam, Sean Hunter, August Jungkeit, Devon Kiem, Rowan Kilfoil, Eva Levonick, Yago Lobo, Jamie Maloney, Mary McAdams, Ariana McEwen, Finn McLaughlin, Henry Miller, Ryann Montesanto, Broderick Morris, Isla Morrissette, Maya Munster, Maura Murphy, Avery Olson, Gunnar Palmer, Juul Parrott, Quin Parrott, Quinn Quarto, Caliana Rand, Charlotte Reynolds, Olivia Rozanski-Rose, Linden Sarnoski, Ari Shegirian, Maya Smith, Reed Snurkowski, Grace Strekel, Molly Supersano, Weston Taylor, Liam Ward, John Young

Grade 6: Mylo Awwa, Ella Boudo, Cecelia Bradley, Brody Burr, Luz Cajamarca, Finn Celic, Andrew Chonka, Maizie Curtiss-Reardon, Croix Demars, Lucia D’Onofrio, Catherine Fisher, Maxwell Garvin, Natalie Gibbons, Walter Glenn, Gabriella Gonzalez, Niall Hallahan, Joy Haney, Gerald Holland, Emma Hoxha, Ofelia Karsten, Aiden Lapinski, Parker Lee, Benjamin Lott, Roosevelt Lowry, Siena Maguire, Emma Morales, Loretta Newbury, Nico Orlando, Alexander Reid, Jack Reiter, Connor Rice, Taylor Rooney, Magnolia Sahl, Reid Sapia, Kate Scheckwitz, Colton Schroder, Madison Seckla, Piper Spiegel, Leif Sullivan, Audrey Thuma, Tobias Tooker, Carina Vakili, Henry Whalen, Charlotte Zeng

HONORS

Grade 8: Trent Cameron, Colin Farrell, Curran Livesey, Oliver Newbury, Jack Parker, Nikolas Reid, Cooper Thomas, Teya Vernon

Grade 7: Liam Carpentino, Daniel Crisp, Jaxson Glantz, Ekaterina Gregoire, Thomas Hayes, Callen Hill, Camden Novak, Emily Randak, Roman Schlachter, Jackson Staab, Lucius Stebbins-Wallen

Grade 6: David Acosta, Finn Cabell, Ryan Campbell, Liang Chang, John Hornyak, Callie Kelo, Colton Lodge, Linnea McLachlan, Gabriella Norris, Mason Polski, EmmaLeigh Reed, Brandon Reyes, Graycie Riquelme, Michael Soriano

Local Students Achieve Academic Success

LYME/OLD LYME—We are pleased to publish news about local students who have achieved academic honors or reached important milestones.  These announcements are sent to us by the various colleges and in no way are intended to represent a comprehensive list.

Please feel free to submit additional college news of local students to editor@LymeLine.com.

Congratulations to these local college students who graduated in May: 

Eastern Connecticut State University

Marley Elmoznino, Lyme, received a Bachelor of Science degree in environmental earth science 

Francette Donato, Old Lyme, received a Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology and a Bachelor of Science degree in early childhood education

Ciara Klimaszewski, Old Lyme, received a Bachelor of Arts degree in criminology 

Fairfield University, Connecticut

Benjamin Kelly

Plymouth State University, New Hampshire

Emma McCulloch, Old Lyme

Congratulations to these students who made the spring 2025 Dean’s List:

Salve Regina University, Rhode Island

Corah Engdall, Old Lyme

Tufts University, Massachusetts

Ella Halsey, Old Lyme

Eli Ryan, Old Lyme

University of Scranton, Pennsylvania

Michael S. O’Donnell, Old Lyme 

Old Lyme Historical Society Awards Carol Noyes Winters Scholarships to Two LOL High School Seniors

The Old Lyme Historical Society Inc.’s scholarship presentation was held at the Society’s building on Lyme Street.

OLD LYME—The Old Lyme Historical Society Inc. this week announced the recipients of two Carol Noyes Winters Scholarships. The scholarships are given to outstanding students from Lyme and Old Lyme, who intend to study history in college.

The society in a press release said scholarships were presented to Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS) seniors Chloe Datum and Simon Karpinski.  

Both students were involved with the National High School Mock Trial competition as “major players” in the LOLHS team’s two state championships, according to the historical society.

Chloe Datum, center, with parents Jennifer and Michael Datum. Photo courtesy of James Meehan.

Chloe Datum is the daughter of Jennifer and Michael Datum. She hopes that her study of history will guide her toward a career in the the area of policy and law. Datum will attend George Washington University in Washington, D.C.

Simon Karpinski, center, with parents Sarah and Ben Karpinski. Photo courtesy of James Meehan.

Simon Karpinski is the son of Sarah and Ben Karpinski.  He was the Valedictorian of the LOLHS Class of 2025 and hopes that his study of history will help him to attend law school and eventually practice law. He hopes to one day serve in public office. Karpinski will attend Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass.