PUTNAM — Quiet Corner Cares has been awarded a $10,000 Connecticut Recovery Oriented Support System for Youth (CROSS) funding through the Wheeler Clinic to establish a SMART Recovery program in the community.
Quiet Corner Cares will use the funding to help establish ongoing education, training and support for individuals seeking recovery and their families.
“Quiet Corner Cares will work with members of the recovery community, treatment, intervention and prevention partners, that will contribute to the overall wellness of the communities that we serve,” according to Romeo Blackmar of Quiet Corner Cares.
By establishing a support group for family and friends, who have a loved one with a substance use disorder, the group is giving back to the community that has supported the establishment of the first women’s recovery home in the area, he added.
“We will continue to support those members of the community who are seeking SMART Recovery by establishing a meeting for those young adults ages 18-24 in need of guidance and support in their recovery from a substance use disorder and other addictive behaviors,” Blackmar said.
The funding for establishing SMART Recovery groups comes at a critical time with the number of drug related overdose deaths having increased almost 20% over the past year (September 2019-2020) according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).
The Quiet Corner Cares mission is, “to save lives by providing homes where sobriety, education and resources to produce healthy outcomes and community awareness.
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On dean’s list
BOSTON — Three local students were named to the spring semester dean’s list at Simmons University in Boston: Haley Tiffany of Brooklyn, Emma Strandson of Brooklyn, and Madison Dean of Pomfret.
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caption, page 7:
Lining Up
The Woodstock Academy girls’ lacrosse team lines up for opening announcements prior to its game with Stonington. Stella Brin (11) carries the ball down field against Stonington. Photos by Madison Millar.
Centaurs girls
post 1st victory
of the season
It was a collective sigh of relief for the Woodstock Academy girls’ lacrosse team.
After failing to get a victory in its first six games, the Centaurs got into the win column with a 20-10 victory over Griswold.
“We really needed this,” said junior forward Shannon Gagnon. “It was our first win of the season and we all played so well together. It feels really good.”
First-year head coach Mikayla Jones knew the season might not be as successful as when the Centaurs captured the ECC tournament championship when they last played the sport in 2019.
A high school team can look mighty different over the course of two years.
Plus, the girls’ lacrosse team is one of only three Woodstock Academy programs this spring (boys’ lacrosse and girls’ golf being the others) who are playing a largely similar schedule to the one played pre-pandemic against the larger Southeastern Connecticut schools.
Add to that the pandemic itself which has reduced the numbers out for athletic teams.
“I think a lot of kids aren’t playing this year due to COVID. If they are not fully in school, they can’t play. There are a lot of factors that are going against us,” Jones said. “We’re in northern Connecticut, lacrosse isn’t too big up here, it’s hard to find feeder programs for us so a lot of times we have to start from scratch. That’s what we’ve done this year and I knew that coming in.” Jones said.
Jones felt like the team was in a bit of a mental funk after losing the first six matches.
“I keep telling them, remember, three of our four defenders are brand new this year. It’s a rebuilding year for us but I think this is a turning point. We’re connecting better as a team, passing much better in the middle, taking more shots and are just more confident than we were two weeks ago,” Jones added.
The Centaurs got the confidence boost early against the Wolverines. Gagnon scored off a free position call just 1 minute, 31 seconds into the match. Griswold tied the game four minutes later but the Centaurs followed with seven unanswered tallies.
Gagnon got three of her five goals in the rally. The junior now has 11 goals on the season.
Rachel Canedy (seven goals this year) added two of her four goals against the Wolverines in the run.
Griswold called a time out when it fell behind the Centaurs, 8-1, with 13:29 left in the first half. Griswold, playing without a substitute on its sideline, came back in the second half.
The Wolverines scored the next five goals and the Woodstock Academy lead was down to two.
Fortunately, Gagnon scored her fifth goal of the game with 42 seconds left to give the Centaurs some of the momentum back going into the break.
The Centaurs came out of halftime with the same type of attack that they began the game with and scored the first three goals to regain a six-goal advantage.
Griswold never got closer than four the remainder of the way.
Gagnon had a highlight moment of her own late in the game when she passed to her older sister, Kileigh, for the last Centaurs goal of the match with 58 seconds to play.
“It was really good. She said it was her dream,” Shannon Gagnon said with a laugh of the sister-sister combo goal.
The girls took on a good Stonington team May 6 and even though they fell, 11-1, to fall to 1-7 and 0-7 in ECC Division 1, Jones was happy to see her team stick with the talented Bears (6-2, 5-2). Peyton Saracina scored the only goal for the Centaurs, her sixth of the season, in the loss.
Marc Allard
Director of Sports Information
The Woodstock Academy
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Clockwise from top: Magnolia at Palmer Arboretum. Nectarine blossom. Scilla. Hillstar daffodils.
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