TOP STORY: With State Support and Local Giving, LYSB Renovates Headquarters

Federal Prevention Education Funding Remains on Shaky Ground

LYSB Board Chairwoman Shay Cantner, LYSB Executive Director Mary Seidner and Counselor Kelly Lydiksen on Wednesday showed off their newly renovated home on Lyme Street.

OLD LYME—Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB) this week unveiled renovations to its Lyme Street headquarters, creating a more welcoming space for staff and families at the same time the nonprofit organization adapts to reduced federal funding.

The 1850 building at 59 Lyme Street, which anchors the small campus, was updated with a streamlined layout and new features through a state grant and donations, according to LYSB Executive Director Mary Seidner.

The organization received $400,256 grant through the Connecticut’s Nonprofit Grant Program. Donations made up the remaining 25% of the project budget, or about $133,000.

“What I find so amazing about the whole project is the community partnership,” she said.

She credited general contractor Steve Wood of Steve Wood Design Build of Lyme, architect Christopher DeFiore of Old Lyme, Project Manager Bob Cope and Project Advisor Steve Hallahan, both of Lyme, with making the renovation possible.

Former LYSB Board member Hallahan helped Seidner write the original grant to apply for the funds and he, along with Cope and DeFiore, donated their services pro bono. Seidner said, “They were all so generous with their time. It’s because of them that we were able to complete the project ahead of time and under budget.”

She added, “Our architect lives in town … Our designer lives in town. Our project manager is on our board, and he practically lived here,” she said. “It’s just beautiful.”

Meanwhile, a desk for the full-time, grant-funded LYSB Prevention Coordinator sits empty after The White House late last month announced its Drug Free Communities grant program has been put on hold. Seidner said the loss of $125,0000 in federal funds annually required her to lay off the coordinator while the grant award process remains in limbo. 

Staff from LYSB greeted members of the public at Wednesday’s open house to show off the renovated space that included upgrades and a reconfigured floor plan to allow confidential workspaces and to ensure the space is accessible to everyone who enters. 

The renovation, which gutted the interior of the 1,836-square-foot building, also adddressed crumbling plaster ceilings, walls with newspaper insulation, aging wiring and plumbing, a lack of ventilation, the dirt floor in a portion of the basement, inefficient and inoperative windows, and a stone foundation in need of repair. 

“The building before needed a lot of help,” Seidner said. “Our staff spent a lot of time fixing things and dealing with stuff that didn’t work.”

Improvements include kid-friendly spaces for counselor Kelly Lydiksen to meet with young clients and their families. The licensed marriage and family therapist associate said the renovation had been completed for some six weeks when she joined LYSB about two weeks ago. 

“There was a lot of ability to make it exactly what I needed it to be, which is great,” Lydiksen said. “I’ve been able to get a lot of resources and tools for kids specifically.”

In addition to Lydiksen’s second-floor office, there’s a room across the hall outfitted with a magnetic easel, books, crafts and seating that can be used as additional meeting space or a waiting area when needed. 

Seidner cited privacy as a key concern in the renovation. Moving the staircase from the back of the house to the front has helped to accomplish that. 

“Clients who are coming here for counseling can go right up the stairs,” she said. “They don’t have to walk through my staff break-room, which is what they used to have to do.”

LYSB uses a sliding scale based on the client’s ability to pay for each counseling session. The fees are subsidized through donations. 

“About half of our clients are paying us $5, or zero,” she said. 

Shay Cantner, who serves as LYSB Board of Directors Chairwoman, said board members had no difficulty getting behind the renovation project for the old house purchased in 1978 as the burgeoning organization’s headquarters. 

Cantner, who is in her fifth year on the board, cited inconveniences like broken chairs in Seidner’s office and temperatures that always seemed too hot or too cold. 

“I think all the staff work so hard and they deserve to be in a place that is at least updated, so they can focus on the work, and serving the children and families. That’s where their focus should be,” she said. 

The youth center and early childhood center, located in the property’s former garage and barn, were not affected by the renovation.

Seidner recalled three of the organization’s four full-time staff members worked out of an eight foot-wide trailer on the site during the renovation.

“We were very close together, but it was an adventure,” she said. “That’s the way we looked at it.”

Federal Funding Delay Results in Staffing Cut

LYSB Executive Director Mary Seidner stands at the entrance to her renovated office.

Seidner on Wednesday said she laid off prevention coordinator Antoinette Thuillier, who holds a master’s degree in public health and had been in the position for 11 months, after the grant funding to renew the position did not come through by the end of the federal fiscal year on Sept. 29. 

The renewal would have extended the five-year Drug Free Communities grant to 10 years. LYSB was finishing its fifth year in the program, which provided $125,000 annually. 

Seidner said LYSB had received pre-approval and was awaiting final confirmation when The White House on Sept. 26 announced it would “recompete” the award process, essentially canceling existing proposals and reopening a new round. The surprise decision affected six prevention coalitions in Connecticut, according to Seidner. 

The federal grant program supports work to reduce drug, alcohol and tobacco use among children. 

The White House in its announcement said the move was necessary to ensure applicants are in compliance with recent executive orders from President Donald Trump. 

“Our team is working aggressively to put safeguards in place towards advancing President Trump’s America-First policy agenda and mission,” the announcement said. “We are performing due diligence to ensure that absolutely no taxpayer dollars go to furthering the radical left’s agenda.” 

LYSB’s prevention coordinator runs the Lyme-Old Lyme Prevention Coalition and the high school Youth Prevention Coalition. Other responsibilities included working with the Old Lyme Police Department DARE program as well as participating in driver’s education and health classes at the high school, Seidner said. 

Seidner emphasized LYSB’s prevention work will continue in a modified way as the remaining staff members take on additional duties. 

“I don’t want to give anyone the impression that we’re in trouble, because we’re not in trouble,” she said. “But it hurts.” 

She said spending would get “very tight” with the loss of funding amounting to a quarter of the overall budget. She said it’s unclear when the government will resume awarding grants. 

“That’s why I’m saying national politics have hit Lyme Street,” she said. “The children of Lyme and Old Lyme are being affected by this decision.”

LYSB Kicks Off Halloween Festivities with Party for Little Ones, Friday

This adorable youngster all ready for Halloween was spotted on Lyme Street a few years ago. LymeLine file photo.

OLD LYME—It’s Halloween tonight and ghouls and ghosts, angels and amphibians, pirates and primadonnas to name but a few will be out in force on Lyme Street – and many other places in Lyme and Old Lyme!

To kick things off, Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau at 59 Lyme St. will host a Halloween Party for little ghosts and goblins from 5 to 5:30 p.m., which is a free, fun, family event featuring games, crafts, storytelling, face-painting and more. This event is appropriate for children age 12 months through 2nd grade.

All little “goblins” must be accompanied by an adult. Come dressed in costume.

Editor’s Note: Remember that our youngest trick or treaters begin arriving on Lyme Street around 4 p.m. on Halloween, so please take extra caution when driving on Lyme Street on Friday late afternoon and early evening.

This Afternoon, LYSB Unveils its Newly Renovated Home on Lyme Street with Open House, Wednesday

Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau has undergone a major interior renovation. The public is invited to an Open House on Oct. 29 to view the numerous improvements. Photo by LYSB.

OLD LYME–On Wednesday, Oct. 29, from 2:30 to 4 p.m., the Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB) will introduce its newly renovated facility at an open house. 

The LYSB website explains that the renovations to the 1850 building at 59 Lyme Street were necessary to address crumbling plaster ceilings, walls with newspaper insulation, aging wiring and plumbing, a dirt floor in a portion of the basement, inefficient and inoperative windows, and a stone foundation in need of repair. 

A majority of the project was funded by a $400,256 grant from the state’s Nonprofit Grant Program, with the remaining 25% covered by community donations. 

The public is invited to stop by to see a building that staff members say now is as “inspiring as the work that happens inside it.”

Candy Drive Donation Deadline for Halloween ‘Trick or Treating’ on Lyme Street is Oct. 27

OLD LYME — Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB) and Old Lyme Town Hall are again collecting donations of Halloween candy for their neighbors in the Old Lyme Village.

For years, children and families have enjoyed the tradition of trick or treating on Lyme Street and surrounding streets. In recent years, more than 750 children went door-to-door in the village area.

If your children plan to trick-or treat in the village this Halloween, but you live in a different neighborhood—or if you just feel like helping the cause—you are invited to consider donating candy.

Wrapped candy donations can be dropped off at Town Hall or LYSB by Monday, Oct. 27, so the candy can be distributed in time for Halloween.

If you prefer to make a donation and let LYSB buy candy on your behalf, then visit this link: www.lysb.org/donate

LYSB is at 59 Lyme St. and Old Lyme Town Hall is at 52 Lyme St., both in Old Lyme.

Call LYSB at 860-434-7208 with any questions.

It’s National ‘Drug Take Back Day’ Saturday

OLD LYME–On Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., National Drug Take Back Day comes to the Lyme Street Fire House.

The Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB) invites the public to stop by the fire station to dispose of unwanted drugs and get your children’s car seats checked. 

As part of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) National Drug Take Back Day, the event provides a safe, convenient way to dispose of unused or expired prescription and over the counter medicines. The DEA reminds everyone to scratch out all personal information on pill bottle labels and medicine packaging. All medications dropped off at the take-back locations will be destroyed.

At the same time, LYSB will host a Child Car Seat Install and Safety Check event with the Old Lyme Police Department (OLPD).

Certified police technicians will be available by appointment to let drivers know whether their children’s car seats are installed correctly. Sign up by calling LYSB at 860-434-7208 or visiting lysb.org/carseat/, then bring your vehicle, child and carseat to the fire station for the check.