legals pg 2 10-20-22


Town of Putnam
Inland Wetland Commission
Legal Notice

The Town of Putnam Inland Wetland Commission held a hybrid meeting on October 12, 2022. The following action was taken:

Application # 2022-10  Town of Putnam – Danco Road – Bridge Replacement – APPROVED

Adam Paquin, Chairman

Oct. 20, 2022

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menus pg 2 10-20-22



Woodstock public schools
Everyday: Fruit. Monday: Hot dogs. Tuesday: Mozzarella sticks, marinara sauce. Wednesday: Chicken nuggets, mashed potatoes, carrots. Thursday: Beef and bean burrito, black beans. Friday: Pizza, zucchini.
Putnam Elementary/Middle
Monday: Cheese-filled twisted bread, carrots. Tuesday: Orange popcorn chicken rice bowl. Wednesday: Beef soft tacos, corn. Thursday - 2-hour delay: Chicken sandwiches, fruit. Friday: Pizza, salad.
Putnam High
Monday: Pasta bar or spicy chicken sandwiches. Tuesday: General Tsos Chicken or bacon cheeseburgers. Wednesday: Clipper Burgers or chicken and cheese quesadilla. Thursday - two hour delay: Cheesy beef tots or blazin' chicken wings. Friday: Stuffed-crust pizza or mozzarella sticks with marinara sauce.
Pomfret Community
Everyday: Fresh fruits and veggies, Alt cheeseburgers. Monday: Rainbow rice bowl with chicken, broccoli. Tuesday: Macaroni and cheese, carrots. Wednesday: Popcorn chicken and waffles. Thursday: Beef and cheese taco salad, black beans. Friday: Pizza.

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monument pg 3 10-20-22


caption:

Thomas Heydecker  is pictured with all the volunteers who worked on the refurbishment of the Grove Street Soldiers Monument.


By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM — Rescue for the Grove Street Soldiers Monument came in the form of an Eagle Scout project.
Thomas Jerome Heydecker said: “This monument is a very visible part of our community and one of the first things you see as you come off I-395 and head into town. It has significance as well to the community as it shows respect to the soldiers and sailors that were lost by the Union in the Civil War.”
The Grove Street Soldiers Monument was dedicated over 110 years ago in 1912, in honor of those from the town who served in the Civil War. The cannon balls were in need of repair and repainting and the monument itself needed a deep cleaning of the granite and bronze plaque.  The town donated the materials needed to complete this project.  
The project was completed recently for the Town of Putnam and its Recreation Department.
As his project Heydecker, a senior at Putnam High School, decided to repair and refresh the Grove Street monument.
Putnam Parks and Recreation Director Willie Bousquet, who helped Heydecker plan the project, said, “The Town of Putnam is very happy with the updates that were completed at the monument.  We are always happy to work with Troop 25 in Putnam to support them and they are always happy to support the town.”
Since moving to Putnam in 2018 Thomas has been an active member of Boy Scout Troop 25 performing more than 30 hours of community service with his troop.
He is looking to fulfill a legacy of becoming an Eagle Scout.  His grandfather Robert Mackerer achieved his Eagle Rank in 1957 and has been an integral part of helping him drive towards this great achievement.  
Heydecker started his scouting career in 2011 as a Tiger Cub Scout in Walpole Mass., and has been active ever since.
In 2010 the late Don Steinbrick was distributing flags for veterans at the Grove Street Cemetery in Putnam when he came across a half-buried flag marker with the inscription “WRC 1888.”  After researching, the restoration and  rededication of the Grove Street Soldiers’ Monument on its 100th birthday, May 2012, was born.
In 1912 the Woman’s Relief Corps Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic, had raised the funds to erect the monument on May 30, 1912. It rained that day. It honors those locals who served in the Civil War, more than 50 years after the war ended.   
Steinbrick, who grew up in the neighborhood of Grove Street, gathered some old childhood friends and launched preliminary plans to refurbish the bronze figure and granite pedestal.  The project turned into a local Civil War history lesson for the group and led to some unexpected discoveries.
In 2012 Steinbrick and his committee rededicated the monument, just before to the annual Putnam Memorial Day parade. Putnam parades step off in the vicinity of the monument.     
The brief ceremony closely followed the original dedication program with a re-presentation of the restored monument to the City of Putnam, reflections of the occasion by John T. McDonald, whose grandfather delivered a similar response as mayor in 1912, and appropriate music from the Civil War period.
The committee replaced the stack of cannon balls that had once been part of the memorial but disappeared in the 1940s.    And while bowling balls will serve as replacement ammunition, the structure was being designed to hopefully eliminate the fate of the originals, which some old timers remember as being rolled down the neighboring streets.
It is also believed that the cannon  balls were part of the scrap metal collection efforts of 1942 to aid the war effort.   In the process of preparing to lay a slab for the new cannonball structure, the original slab was discovered about 10 inches below the surface. The bronze figure and granite pedestal were cleaned and flag-holding markers graced each of the four corners.

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psa pg 3 10-20-22


PSA basketball player commits
Yes, Sophia, it is real. Sophia Fontaine, a versatile 6-foot, 2-inch power forward on the Putnam Science Academy girls’ basketball team, committed last week to Stetson University, and the feeling was a little … unreal.
“I didn’t really know how to feel,” she said. “I’ve been wanting to commit for a while. That’s always the end goal. I was shocked actually. When I said it, I was like, ‘Wow. I’m really committed, I’m really going here.’ The recruiting process is really hard sometimes, so it was just a great feeling.”
Stetson, located in central Florida about 40 miles north of Orlando, checked off a lot of boxes for the 18-year-old postgrad student. Head coach Lynn Brian showed a high level of commitment to her from the start. The Hatters, who play in the Atlantic Sun Conference, have an all-women coaching staff. The school is not too big, but not too small. It’s an excellent academic school with plenty of academic support. It was just the right place for her, Fontaine said.
The Boston native has dealt with a lot to get to this point, both physical and mental. Knee issues, a broken finger, a foot injury, all of which caused her to miss time on the court. She is also dealing with anxiety that she believes stemmed from the recruitment process.
“It was probably because I felt a lot of pressure,” she said. “I’ve bottled up my emotions and feelings before and I’ve realized that digs a deeper hole for myself. I’m not afraid to share what’s going on. Maybe not all the details all the time but I’m OK to talk about stuff. I’m not putting up a wall.”
Playing basketball helps. It’s a chance to just go play and learn.
“I love basketball,” Fontaine said. “It’s fun. Winning is fun. Yeah, you take your losses but you learn from them and then you just get better. It can be hard, you’re going to be tired and sore. You have to go to school and be on top of that and go to practice and meetings and lift weights and 6 a.m. workouts.
“I’ve been doing this since I was in the third grade. And now, at the end of the day, I’m going to go to a school where I’m a priority. Stetson stayed with me through all of this. I’m so happy and excited to get started.”
Fontaine and the Mustangs opened their season last week at a showcase event in Ontario, Canada, going 2-1.
Fontaine had six points, five rebounds, four steals and three blocks in the first game, a 93-54 win. KC Cedano added 23 points and eight rebounds while Ines Goryanova had 20 points and seven assists. PSA lost its second game, 93-82, despite 13 points, seven rebounds, six assists, and five steals from Cedano and 15 from Janeya Grant. The Mustangs bounced back well in game three, getting 26 points and six boards from Grant and 17 points from Jada Mills in a 103-62 win.
Stephen Nalbandian
Sports Information Director
Putnam Science Academy

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