Past Issues of the Putnam Town Crier



POMFRET CENTER — Weiss, Hale & Zahansky Strategic Wealth Advisors (WHZ) added three new members to its team.
Hailey Costa has been hired as senior associate, Client Service and Operations; Matt Allen has been hired as associate, Client Service and Operations; and Jillian Smick has joined the team as an associate client experience concierge.
Matt Allen is beginning his career at WHZ, having recently graduated from Central Connecticut State University with a bachelor’s in mathematics and a minor in computer science.
In their new roles at WHZ, both Costa and Allen will provide administrative and client service support for the firm’s operations, from fulfilling client requests to facilitating operational communications and workflow.
Jillian Smick is also a recent graduate, with a bachelor’s in hospitality and tourism management from the University of Massachusetts’ Amherst Isenberg School of Management.
She has worked in customer experience roles for two premium hotels and also has customer experience training in the Forbes 5-Star standards. In her new role as Client Experience Concierge, Smick will support the firm’s commitment to providing an exceptional client experience at every touch point.
“We are so thrilled to add Hailey, Matt and Jillian to our team,” said WHZ Managing Partner, Co-Founder and Chief Investment Officer Laurence Hale, AAMS, CRPS®. “Our Plan Well, Invest Well, Live Well strategic process continues to provide our clients with superior service, and that in turn has fueled the growth of our firm. It’s extremely rewarding to see the hard work, dedicated commitment and great partnerships that WHZ was founded on leading to great things not only for our business, but for our team and our clients as well.”
WHZ Managing Partner and Chief Goal Strategist James Zahansky, AWMA® says the addition of Costa, Allen and Smick was particularly focused on further strengthening and enhancing client service.
“Our mission at WHZ is to deliver the best wealth management experience for every client, every time, at every touchpoint. It’s our commitment to that mission that earns the trust and partnership of our clients, and as our firm grows so too do the resources we put behind fulfilling that promise,” Zahansky said.


.



Legal Notice
Town of Putnam
Zoning Board
of Appeals
The Town of Putnam Zoning Board of Appeals will hold a meeting on October 19, 2021, at 7:00 P.M. VIA ZOOM.  A public hearing will be held on the following:
Appeal # 2021-006; 53 Prospect Street LLC for a variance to reduce the side yard setback from 20’ to 3’ and front yard setback from 25’ to 4’ in accordance with Section 401 Schedule of Dimensional Requirements to allow each house on the subject property to be located on a separate lot.  Property located at 53-55 Prospect Street, Town Assessor’s Map 16, Lot 41. Zoned R-10.

Joseph Nash,
Chairman
Meeting information will be available on the Town of Putnam website prior to the meeting.

Oct. 7, 2021
Oct. 14, 2021

.



Legal Notice
Public Hearing
Notice
Town of Pomfret
PLANNING AND
ZONING
COMMISSION
The Pomfret Planningtac & Zoning Commission will hold the following Public Hearings at its in-person meeting on October 20, 2021, starting at 7:00 PM.
1. Town of Pomfret Planning & Zoning Commission, 5 Haven Road, text amendment to the regulations regarding Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), with possible action
A copy of the application is on file in the office of the Planning and Zoning Commission, 5 Haven Road, Pomfret Center, Connecticut. A copy of the file will be posted with the agenda on the Town website.

Town of Pomfret
Dated this 4th day
of October 2021

Lynn L. Krajewski,
Clerk
Planning & Zoning Commission

Oct. 6, 2021
Oct. 13, 2021

.



DAYVILLE — Cindy-Jo Youssef, RN is Westview Health Care Center’s September 2021 Employee of the Month.
A registered nurse, she has worked as a first-shift supervising nurse at Westview since January 2021.  Previously she had worked at Westview as a Licensed Practical Nurse.
She earned her associate’s degree in nursing from Three Rivers Community College in 2019.  She is currently pursuing a bachelor’s degree in the nursing field and, in addition to valuing academic pursuits for her medical knowledge; Cindy cites her experience working in the field as an equally essential piece of her professional understanding.
She is especially passionate about addressing and healing wound sites with her patients.  
She and her husband Hany Youssef are the proud parents of their sons Randy and Tyler and their daughter Nevaeh and grandparents of Cole.
She enjoys time spent with family and sandy beachfronts, kayaking, and skiing. She also enjoys craft projects, including creating flower arrangements
David T. Panteleakos, administrator of Westview Health Care Center, said Cindy combines compassion for her patients with devotion to coworkers. “Cindy is an incredible health care professional here at Westview, bringing great energy and enthusiasm to our care setting every day.  She makes individual impacts in the lives of Westview patients and impacts the whole nursing department by displaying her desire to go above and beyond; leading by example for others to follow.”

.



Choosing a bathroom stall to use in a public restroom is no easy task.  This is true if you are a man or a woman and care about toilet cleanliness. It is not as if I expect that a public bathroom is going to maintain the same standard of cleaning that I perform in my own home, but I at least want to think that in some small way, cleaning happens rather than have it be ULTRA OBVIOUS, that it does not.
I would make this assumption if all the stalls from which I must choose, are, simply put, gross.  However, more often than not, there are isolated stalls which are gross and some which are not, indicating that either cleaning happens with some regularity and select individuals are just gross, or cleaning happens infrequently, and most individuals tidy up after themselves.  I’d like to think that it is a combination of both.
For example, consider an airport bathroom in the United States. Although I have not visited all of the airport bathroom across all of the airports in all of the USA, the public bathrooms in Boston will suffice as a generalized example.  Given that I may consider my theory correct in that the bathroom is cleaned on a regular basis and there are a certain number of bathroom users who are tidy and a certain number who are not, when facing a long row of stalls, I often consider, how many doors do I have to try before finding the stall which was either just cleaned or just used by a tidy person?
Do I try the first stall and work my way down or do I start with the last stall and work my way up? I am a tidy bathroom goer so then I think, which one would I naturally be inclined to use; one in the middle? Unfortunately, I have not yet found the magic formula of bathroom stall selection which results in the fewest door tries.  Perhaps, this is because when I find that one end of the row of stalls is consistently cleaner than the other end, there seem to be shortages of toilet paper in these stalls, rendering use of them, tricky for another set of reasons…
Since I cannot control the cleaning frequency of public bathrooms, I would rather use this space as a forum to make a plea to untidy bathroom goers so that they may become tidier. Please, I would implore you to remember that this is a public bathroom. If you want to have a dirty bathroom, do it at home. Aim for the toilet and don’t throw your trash in it.  When you are finished, maybe consider wiping up after yourself, or at a minimum, press the flush button. Or wave your hand in front of it. Or simply pull the lever! Whatever and however it is, try to leave no trace of evidence that you were there because I don’t like having to try 6 or 8 stall doors before I find one that I can use!
Ugh! Ugh!
Kathy Naumann, possessor of NATURALLY curly hair and the understanding that you can’t control everything!

.

RocketTheme Joomla Templates