Church pg 1 4-24-14

 
caption:
Demolition
Crews removed the remainder of the First Congregational Church of Pomfret Monday. The church plans to rebuild. More photos on page 6. Linda Lemmon photo.
 
 
caption, page 6:
The remainder of the First Congregational Church of Pomfret was razed April 21. The congregation intends to rebuild the church building that was destroyed by fire in December. 
 
 
 
 
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
POMFRET --- The day after Easter the First Congregational Church of Pomfret began its rebirth. 
Demotion of the church building, which was destroyed by fire in December, took just a day. 
While the building was insured, rebuilding something in modern times usually requires more money than the insurance company covers. 
The church is also raising money but has been proactive on the rebuilding process. 
An architect has been hired. 
Call 860-928-7381 for information on donating.
Peter Lange, spokesman for the church and its efforts to rebuild, said that the congregational would like to see a new church building finished by the church's 300th anniversary, October 2015. "But I think the time might be too short," he said.
He added that the town of Pomfret, led by First Selectwoman Maureen Nicholson, and officials at the Pomfret School across the street from the church's property, have been "incredibly helpful." 
Pomfret School allows the congregation to worship in its Clark Chapel. 
The church was founded in 1715 and the church building that burned was built in 1850. 

First pg 1 4-24-14

 
 
caption:
 
 
New Room
Marie Gauvin, project manager, shows off one of the new private patient rooms in the now-open first phase of the Day Kimball Emergency Department. Linda Lemmon photo.
 
 
 
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM --- The Department of Public Health April 21 approved the first section of the Day Kimball Hospital's new Emergency Department. The department will be open April 23 in the new space.
Day Kimball Healthcare officials celebrated the finish of the first section last week. Phase One of the construction includes a new ambulance entrance, one of two nurses stations, the resuscitation room with two beds and eight private patient rooms. According to Marie Gauvin, project manager, 2015 will see the second phase open, adding eight more exam rooms. Reconfiguring walls and halls will merge the current emergency department space with the new space.  The entire project is 23,066 square feet and renovation of the current space.  Heathcare officials said that the state-of-the-art Emergency Department will allow registration at patient's bedsides to accelerate care and make the ED process more efficient. They said the establishment of all-private treatment rooms "perhaps the most significant improvement." It will offer privacy, confidentiality and dignity for individuals. The number of patient rooms will double. 
Gauvin said that several new technologies will allow faster, better care. A "point of care" testing area will allow 10 minutes for cardiac blood testing rather than 45 minutes. Pregnancy tests that must be performed before a woman is x-rayed, can be done very quickly. Some tests, she said, can be done in three minutes rather than 45.
Decontamination is now possible. In addition a separate covered ambulance entrance has been constructed that will be equipped to easily convert to a hazardous decontamination zone or to receive mass casualties.
Gauvin said all patient service rooms now have all the equipment they need in them. No "carts" with equipment will have to be wheeled from one room to another. In addition, she said that because the population is, unfortunately, getting larger, the ER now has a bariatrics room with a lift that can handle up to 700 pounds and a scale that can also weigh more overweight people. 
 

Then and Now pg 2 4-24-14

 
 
Then
This is what the First Congregational Church of Pomfret looked like almost a year ago.
 
& Now
This is the church on April 21 when crews were demolishing what was left of the building after a fire in December.

Citizens pg 3 4-24-14

 
 
‘TEEG Ambassador’
Board President Chris Burke presented Citizens National Bank President David Conrad with the  plaque commemorating winners. Courtesy photo.
 
 
 
 
Citizens wins
'ambassador' 
honor at TEEG
THOMPSON — With a generous $5,000 bid at the annual TEEG Have a Heart charity auction, Citizens National Bank won this year’s title as the honorary “TEEG Ambassador.”
The annual “ambassadorship” is auctioned off at the agency’s annual fund-raising event and winners’ names are placed on an honorary plaque displayed in the TEEG lobby.
TEEG Executive Director Donna Grant said, “We are grateful for their continued generous support and their steadfast commitment as a community partner. This annual ambassadorship, for which donors get nothing in return, continues to humble me and rest of the staff, and shows how lucky we are to work amongst such a supportive and caring community”.
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