Fire co. officers
EASTFORD — The Eastford Independent Fire Company recently elected fire company officers for 2021-2023: Chief Doug Beaudoin, Deputy Chief James Roy, Captain Nate Fabian, Captain Matt Yakis, EMS Lt. Steven Kitson.
Officers included: President James Roy, Vice President Jeannine Spink, Secretary Marcia Williams, Members-at-large: Dave Jakubowski, Zach Bertram and Colton Garrison.
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Legal Notice
PUTNAM BOARD
OF SELECTMEN
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
June 21, 2021 @ 7:30 PM
Putnam High School
Board of Education Conference Room #12
152 Woodstock Avenue, Putnam, CT
Hearing is also available via Zoom:
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88147843303
Meeting ID: 881 4784 3303
+1 646 558 8656
The Putnam Board of Selectmen will hold a Public Hearing on Monday, June 21, 2021, at 7:30 PM. The purpose of said hearing will be to receive public comment on the proposed.
Amendment of the Rehabilitation Area Program Ordinance
The Rehabilitation Area Program Ordinance (the “Ordinance”) originally adopted on February 4, 2002, is hereby amended as follows:
1. The list of properties set forth on Exhibit A attached to the Ordinance is herby deleted and the following is inserted in lieu thereof: “All of those pieces or parcels of real property located within the territorial limits of the City of Putnam, as heretofore constituted, also known as the Putnam Special Services District.”
This Amendment shall become effective twenty-one days after the date of publication.
Town of Putnam
Dated this 27th day
of May 27, 2021.
Delpha M. Very, Director
Economic & Community Development
June 10, 2021
June 17, 2021
Legal Notice
LIQUOR PERMIT
Notice of Application
This is to give notice that I,
KAYLA TRANT
13 PALMER CT
CENTRAL VILLAGE, CT 06332-3227
Have filed an application placarded
06/07/2021 with the
Department of Consumer Protection
for a RESTAURANT LIQUOR PERMIT for the sale of
alcoholic liquor on the premises at
75 MAIN ST
PUTNAM CT 06260-1967
The business will be owned by: BEAR HANDS BREWING COMPANY, INC.
Entertainment will consist of: Acoustics (not amplified), Comedians, Concerts, Disc Jockeys, Karaoke, Live Bands, Magicians, Plays/Shows, Sporting Events
Objections must be filed by: 07-19-2021
BEAR HANDS BREWING
COMPANY INC
June 10, 2021
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caption:
One of five wavy wooden ceiling panels in the new library. More complex photos in June 3 Putnam Town Crier & Northeast Ledger FB post. Linda Lemmon photo.
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM — As the clock ticks down on the end-of-summer finish date, the work ramps up on every level at the new Municipal Complex.
Elaine Sistare said that the project is still under budget. Ed Ladd, Downes Construction Company project manager, said that the project is on time. The official date for the town to begin moving in is mid- to late August but Ladd said they hope to give the town the opportunity to move in in early August. Sistare said after getting settled in, the town would like to open to the public in early September.
Ladd said work is coming along. Many offices have carpet “planks” installed (if a section of rug is damaged or stained, that “plank” can be replaced). Painting is progressing. Most of the window framing is installed and stained. The window shades should be in in two weeks. Cabinetry is going in. The prep kitchen has most of its cabinetry installed and the fiberglass-reinforced plastic walls, which are easy to clean and disinfect, are up in the kitchen.
Against that progress is, this month, a speed bump Downes is “working through” — defective glass. Ladd said a fair number of windows and glass installations had to be rejected — sometimes twice — because of scratches in the glass. Two soaring glass installations, the two-story front entrance and a tall wall of glass in the library, are waiting for replacement glass sections.
With humidity arriving this week, Ladd said they are putting up plastic barriers to keep the humidity from affecting the millwork. He told the building committee and town officials touring the property June 3 that he expects most of the glass to be in by the end of June. The glass that will grace the grand staircase at the main entrance is coming from a different manufacturer and once it’s installed it will be encased with millwork.
In the library, the ceiling was painted white in the adult section and one of five wooden wavy ceiling panels is installed. In the reception and children/teen half of the library, the ceiling will be painted light gray.
The tiling in the bathrooms is finished and Ladd said the week of June 13th the bathroom partitions will come in.
The 115 doors will be shipped for prepping on June 20 and will then be installed. In an effort to allow the Aspinock Historical Society to move all its records and collections currently stored in a trailer, Downes installed a temporary door on one of Aspinock’s storage rooms. If that gets the OK from the building inspector, the society can move its records.
Outside the concrete walkways and sidewalks are finished. The rain garden is mulched and planted as are some of the plant beds in front of the Municipal Complex. Many trees are also planted.
Ladd anticipates a July 6 date, weather permitting, for paving. The two entrances and one exit to the complex off School Street, as well as the roadway through the complex will be finished.
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Rawson
Materials moving
main office
PUTNAM — Unprecedented growth over the years inspired Rawson Materials to both consolidate and increase its office footprint.
The company will move its main office from 6 Kennedy Drive to Cargill Falls Mill, Suite 4101 by fall. The building permit for RCA Construction for the interior build-out project was approved June 1 and work has already begun, according to Rawson Materials President Jeffrey Rawson.
“During the pandemic when other corporations were embracing telecommuting for its employees, Rawson was planning for a shared space in which its entire leadership team could collaborate,” Rawson said.
He added: “We are beyond excited to work with RCA Construction to expand our presence in the heart of downtown Putnam. This new office space will complement our goal of continued growth and development and will allow our team members to be even more accessible to one another, our customers, and our community.”
Rawson will continue to operate plant locations in Canterbury, Plainfield, Putnam, Thompson and Westerly, R.I.
Rawson Materials is an aggregate producer that has served Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island for more than 70 years.
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