Legal Notice
Tax Collector’s Office
TOWN & FIRE
DISTRICT OF POMFRET
Legal Notice is hereby given to the taxpayers of the Town and Fire District of Pomfret that the Supplemental Motor Vehicle and second installment of Real Estate and Personal Property tax bills on the Grand List of October 1, 2021 are DUE AND PAYABLE January 1, 2023.
The last day to pay without penalty is February 1, 2023. Per State Statute, interest will be charged at 18% annually (1.5% per month), with a minimum charge of $2.00 per entity (the Town and Fire District are separate entities) on all delinquent payments postmarked February 2, 2023 or later.
Make all checks payable to Pomfret Tax Collector and mail to: Pomfret Tax Collector, 5 Haven Road, Pomfret Center, CT 06259. If a receipt is desired, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. For more information or to pay online, go to www.pomfretct.gov.
Tax Office Hours are: Monday, Tuesday and Thursday 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Wednesday 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. The Town Hall is closed on Fridays. If you have any questions, please call 860-974-0394.
Pamela N. Gaumond, CCMC Tax Collector
Town & Fire District of Pomfret
Dec. 22, 2022
Jan. 5, 2023
Jan. 26, 2023
Legal Notice
Town of Putnam
Putnam Special Services District
COLLECTOR OF REVENUE
(860) 963-6800
The second installment of taxes, due to the Town of Putnam and Special Service District on the Grand List of October 1, 2021, is due and payable on January 1, 2023, through February 1, 2023.
Payments made after February 1, 2023 will be subject to an interest charge of 3 percent (1½ percent per month) or $2.00 minimum per Town and $2.00 minimum per District (where applicable), whichever is higher, according to Connecticut State Statute, SEC. 12-146.
Mail must be postmarked no later than
February 1, 2023, to avoid interest charges.
Bills may be paid online at www.putnamct.us or at our outside drop box
Supplemental Motor Vehicle bills will be due in full during January.
Supplemental Motor Vehicle bills are for vehicles registered between October 2, 2021 and July 31, 2022.
If anyone is having financial problems, please contact our office anytime. We will be glad to work with you on a payment arrangement.
Tax Window Office hours
8:30am – 4:15pm Monday through Wednesday
8am-5:45pm Thursday
8am-12:45pm Friday
New Address:
Town of Putnam Municipal Complex
200 School Street
Putnam CT 06260
Dec. 29, 2022
Jan. 5, 2023
Jan. 26, 2023
Legal Notice
Town of Pomfret
Notice is hereby given that a certified copy of the audit of the Town of Pomfret for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022, prepared by King, King & Associates, P.C., 170 Holabird Avenue, Winsted, Connecticut 06098, was filed in the Office of the Town Clerk of Pomfret on January 17, 2023. In compliance with the requirements of section 7-394 of the Connecticut Statutes, said audit is on file for public inspection in said office at Five Haven Road, Pomfret Center, Connecticut.
Dated at Pomfret,
Connecticut
This 17th day
of January 2023
Sandy A. Arcayan,
Assistant Town Clerk
Town of Pomfret
Jan. 26, 2023
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In the past week, the Northeast District Department of Health (NDDH) has approved one abatement plan for the ongoing lead hazard at The Lofts at Cargill Falls Mill in Putnam, done more inspections and has received more results from past lead inspections.
NDDH received an abatement plan from the property owner for the first unit identified with lead and the NDDH abatement plan approval was issued to the lead abatement contractor and copied to the property owner. An additional order will be issued for the presence of lead identified in other units and areas.
The agency has done comprehensive inspections of nine residential units with children under 6, plus common interior and exterior areas.
NDDH is responsible per regulations to provide environmental test results to the property owner and DPH. While there is no regulatory responsibility or requirement for NDDH to inform tenants, the NDDH is notifying them directly of test results.
NDDH was invited to attend a tenants’ meeting last week to respond to tenant questions and about 25 residents attended. NDDH addressed questions related to the role of the health department, health concerns, the abatement process, timelines for compliance, cleaning techniques, and occasions during abatement where relocation should be considered.
For more info: Visit https://www.nddh.org/services/environment-building/lead-poisoning-prevention/ for additional information and resources.
Test Results as of Jan. 19:
Comprehensive Inspections (included dust wipes, water, soil samples and XRF testing)
Dust wipe results received on 8 of 9 units. — 5 units had levels detected above dust lead hazard standards, 3 units had levels detected below dust lead hazard standards.
Water samples – Results received on 9 out of 9 units, all within acceptable limits
XRF Testing – Results received on 8 of 9 units. Toxic levels of lead were detected in some of the samples taken from 6 units. Toxic levels of lead were not detected in samples taken from two units. NDDH is in the process of notifying tenants of these results.
• Exterior soil samples – Results pending on soil samples taken Jan. 5 from the river embankment area near the parking lot and gazebo area.
3 Risk Assessments (included dust wipe sampling, visual inspections, and a water sample taken from one business suite): Dust wipe results received on 2 out of 3 locations assessed; Residential unit had levels detected above dust lead hazard standards; Business suite had levels detected below dust lead hazard standards. Water sample from business suite within acceptable limits
In addition, 15 visual inspections completed as of Jan. 19 including interior common areas – hallways, entry ways: Dust wipe results received for first floor of building #2 indicated levels below dust lead hazard standards.
Definitions/Notes:
*Dust wipe samples – Positive results do not necessarily mean that lead paint is present in the unit, only that there is lead detected in the dust. This is an important distinction because that dust could have come from repair activities, been tracked in from contaminated outdoor soil, or even brought in from lead dust on clothing worn at a job site. Settled lead dust can re-enter the air when the areas are vacuumed or swept, or people walk through it.
• EPA Dust-Lead Hazard Standards – These are standards for lead in dust on floors and windowsills to protect children from the harmful effects of lead exposure. The lead hazard standards help property owners, lead paint professionals, and government agencies identify lead hazards in residential paint, dust and soil.
• EPA Dust-Lead Clearance Levels - Clearance levels are defined as values that indicate the amount of lead in dust on a surface following completion of an abatement activity. EPA’s clearance levels are 10 micrograms (?g) of lead in dust per square foot (ft2) for floor dust and 100 ?g/ft2 for windowsill dust, significantly lower than the previous levels of 40 ?g/ft2 for floor dust and 250 ?g/ft2 for windowsill dust.
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**What is X-ray Fluorescence (XRF)?
• XRF is a method of determining the elemental composition of materials. When it comes to housing and environmental safety, professionals use XRF analyzers specifically to measure the concentration of elemental lead in old paint.
• This method fires x-ray beams at a paint sample to “knock” electrons out of orbit. When this happens, a certain amount of energy is released — this energy is unique to each element. The XRF analyzer detects these individual bursts of energy to calculate how much of each element is present within the sample.
• XRF is the only reliable, non-destructive technique for testing lead-based paint. Because x-rays easily penetrate the surface of paint samples, XRF analysis can detect traces of lead even when buried under multiple layers of paint.
• That means it doesn’t require removing samples in order to take measurements, nor does it require marking or damaging the surface (which can potentially release dangerous lead dust).
• With handheld XRF analyzers, each measurement only takes a matter of seconds and allows lead inspectors to quickly and safely test a large number of paint surfaces in a relatively short amount of time.
X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) results –Any lead reading equal to or greater than 1.0 milligrams of lead per square centimeter (1.0mg/cm²) is considered positive for toxic levels of lead.
CT Department of Health Lead Poisoning Prevention and Control Regulations can be found at https://portal.ct.gov/-/media/SOTS/regulations/Title_19a/111pdf.pdf.
***Toxic level of lead - The full definition can be found in Sec. 19a-111-1, definition #59. It reads, in part:
“Toxic level of lead” means a level of lead that: (B) when present in a dried paint, plaster or other accessible surface on or in a residential dwelling contains equal to or greater than 1.0 milligrams lead per square centimeter of surface as measured on site by an X-ray fluorescence analyzer or another accurate and precise testing method that has been approved by the commissioner.”
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Woodstock public schools
Everyday: Fruit. Monday: Baked potatoes with cheese and bacon, broccoli. Tuesday: French toast sticks, sausages, hash browns. Wednesday: Chicken tenders, mashed potatoes, carrots. Thursday: Beef nachos with cheese, refried beans. Friday: Pizza, green beans.
Putnam Elementary/Middle
Monday: Chicken sandwiches, fruit. Tuesday: Beef soft tacos, corn. Wednesday: Cheese-filled twisted bread, marinara sauce, broccoli, fruit. Thursday: Popcorn chicken potato bowls, corn, fruit. Friday: Primo cheese pizza, salad.
Putnam High
Monday: Spicy chicken sandwiches or another offering. Tuesday: Bacon cheeseburgers or another offering. Wednesday: Cheese beef tot chos or chicken Caesar wrap. Thursday: Roasted turkey, mashed potatoes or calzone pizza boli. Friday: Stuffed-crust pizza or homemade meatball stromboli.
Pomfret Community
Everyday: Fresh fruit and veggies. Alt: Chicken patties. Monday: Macaroni and cheese, carrots. Tuesday: Sloppy Joes, cole slaw. Wednesday: Chicken patty waffle sandwiches. Thursday: Beef and cheese tater-tot casserole. Friday: pizza, salad.
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State Visitor
National Chromium’s John Miller, right, gives a tour to Sean Scanlon, state comptroller Jan. 20. Supervisor Fred Aptley, left, explains the process to Scanlon. Linda Lemmon photo.
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A ‘perfect
fit’ for small
businesses
Putnam business was
one of the first to sign on
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM — For small businesses, to say that competition for employees — especially after COVID-19— is stiff would be an understatement.
The state, recognizing this, created a retirement savings program called MYCT savings plan which gives small employers one more weapon in the hiring wars. And the push is on to open the program to even smaller businesses.
State Comptroller Sean Scanlon visited one of the first companies to sign on to the program, local business National Chromium in Putnam.
In September 2021, business owner John P. Miller was contacted about joining the program, at that point a pilot program. He researched it and signed on to the program at the end of 2021. Miller said that 401K and IRA plans are expensive, even through payroll providers.
Miller said the program is invaluable to small companies. All costs, especially after COVID-19, are up for businesses. To keep employees pay had to go up, and medical benefits. That left little for retirement plans for employees. And having a retirement plan to help keep/appeal to potential employees is important. The pool of potential employees shrunk — some employees, after COVID-19m just stayed retired.
Scanlon agreed that MYCT savings plan is an excellent benefit that can be offered in hiring.
This program, Miller said, takes about five minutes to set up, is easy, paperless and employee driven. Five of his nine employees enrolled in the plan. Four of them make a 3 percent contribution through payroll deduction and one contributes 5 percent. Employees can change their contribution anytime they want.
If an employee goes elsewhere, Scanlon said, they can take their plan with them.
Scanlon said his mother was a small business owner so this challenge for Connecticut businesses “resonated with me.” He said 50 percent of Connecticut businesses don’t offer retirement plans. The program is divided into three tiers: More than 100 employees, 25 to 100 employees and five to 25 employees. He said there are 22,000 businesses in the program.
Scanlon said his office is working to allow even smaller businesses, with fewer than 5 employees to enroll in the program. “We’re working on that,” said Scanlon.
National Chromium was founded in 1940 by Norman Trudeau and made phonograph needles. The company then plated torpedo shafts. After WWI the company did textile parts and then pivoted to tool and die, mold makers and machine shops. Because many of their customers were then outsourcing some work, the company pivoted again and since 2002, concentrates on hard chrome and electroless nickel.
Miller said the program is excellent and “a perfect fit.”
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