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AARP alert

I try to be distinctly non-political, but AARP sent me this recently and in my mind it hits all of us in our community and well beyond. I just signed the AARP petition requesting the government, while attempting to fix our budget crisis, to leave Social Secutiry alone. This is what I wrote:

Social Security is based on a promise that if you pay in, you can rely upon an income when you stop working. I “Paid in” for forty-six years and my wife has paid in for forty-four years. I would like to remind our government that FDR did not envision this entitlement to be touched by any decision of Congress, that it would be a means for older people who had reached a certain age to help maintain their quality of lifeafter their active earning years were over.Americans count on Social Security being there when they need it.

Deal with the federal budget deficit in other ways. Make those who should be paying into the system pay their fair share. Don’t dilute the strength of America’s seniors. We have entrusted you younger people with the care of our CITIZENS.

Entitlement means that we are entitled. It is akin to a right, not a privilege.

I want our government to keep Social Security strong for us, our children and grandchildren.

Dick Benton

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Halloween Comes Early to MIlton

The леглаMilton Hall annualHalloween Party will be held on

Oct 24, 2009 at 5:30PM.

$5.00/Adult  and Children under 12 are free

Hot dogs, chips and nonalcoholic drinks will be provided.

COSTUMES ARE REQUIRED!

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Bear Facts

We had a young bear who took down our feeders on July 4th. After the horse was out of the barn, we started taking in the feeders at night and it worked to our advantage at least once, as on Sunday, the 12th, a really big one strolled down our front sidewalk, startling Holly so much she stuttered, “Bear…bear…bear…bear…” which got my attention away from the CSI crime TV show. We tracked the bear around the house and garage twice before he/she headed toward Tony Caretta’s and disappeared. Haven’t seen one since. I still maintain that they look very healthy, but no way can something that size be considered cute.

Dick Benton

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Your Milton website

A website is like a beautiful plant. If it is nurtured, it will grow. If not, it will die. I do not write on the website often, but I check it often and I could hope to see others using the site. This is Milton, Connecticut and it is a window to our world. We are, most of us, friends and all of us neighbors. I am your newsletter editor and I hope you are all pleased with the content of your newsletter. I am also a proponent of this newfangled electronic wonder. Let us all contribute. It is my belief that we all have much to say. This is a wonderful forum for the saying.

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Why We Oppose the Gun Club

The Litchfield Enquirer (January 16, 2009) carried an Op Ed by Webb Jansssen and a letter to the Editor from Stanley Cohen that described Milton’s Oppositon to the Gun Club proposed by the Cropsey family.
The Litchfield Zoning Board of Appeal is expected to render its decisionon in the matter on February 3, 2009.

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Jan 6, 2009 Hearing on Cropsey Gun Club

The Litchfield Zoning Board of Appeals on next Tuesday, January 6th at 6:30 PM , will continue
its public hearing on whether a commercial gun club will be allowed to operate in a
residential neighborhood in Litchfield.
The hearing will be at the main fire house on Route 202, West Street.

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Judge Rules in Neighbors’ Favor; Cropseys Must Comply With Subpoenas

LITCHFIELD – Litchfield Superior Court Judge Vincent Roche has ruled in favor of the neighbors challenging the commercialization of their residential neighborhood by the White Oak Gun Club in the Milton section of Litchfield. He has ordered that the subpoenas issued to the White Oak Gun Club are valid and that those who were subpoenaed must appear before the Litchfield Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) with documents relevant to the proceedings.

Judge Roche’s ruling was the result of legal arguments between lawyers for the neighbors and for the Cropsey family, which owns the White Oak Gun Club, as well as for Nick Boyden, manager of the White Oak Gun Club. Atty. Pearly Grimes, representing the Cropseys, Boyden and the White Oak Gun Club, had refused to allow his clients to testify at an Oct. 7 ZBA public hearing in response to the subpoenas issued by the neighbors’ lawyers. This forced the neighbors to ask a Superior Court judge to settle the issue of the validity of the subpoenas.

In a decision handed down Monday, Nov. 24, Judge Roche ruled that the seven subpoenas the neighbors’ lawyers issued are valid and that the Cropseys and Boyden must appear before the ZBA as long as the questions they are asked and the documents requested are relevant to the claim that the White Oak Gun Club is a commercial organization operating illegally in a residential neighborhood. Likewise, he ruled that the 44 documents about the White Oak Gun Club and the Cropsey property that the neighbors are seeking must be produced to the extent that they are relevant. The judge held that it will be up to the chairman of the ZBA to decide on an item-by-item basis whether the testimony and the 44 documents subpoenaed are relevant to any issue before the ZBA.

“This is good news,” said Earle Taylor, one of the neighbors challenging the White Oak Gun Club. “This means we will finally be able to prove to the ZBA that the White Oak Gun Club is not a continuation of the limited shooting activity that the late Buck Cropsey enjoyed; that it’s a commercial enterprise operating illegally and ruining the tranquility of our otherwise quiet, residential neighborhood here in Milton.”

The ZBA will decide when to schedule the continuation of the Oct. 7 public hearing, but speculation is that it will likely be sometime in mid-December.

The issue stems from the creation of the White Oak Gun Club in 2004. Gunshots can frequently be heard, resulting in many neighbors comparing it to the sounds of a war zone.

Matt Speck, Litchfield’s zoning enforcement officer, wrote a report about the issue earlier this year, claiming that the club was a non-conforming use because the late Buck Cropsey, the original owner of the property at 116 Blue Swamp Road, used to shoot skeet and trap there before the adoption of zoning in 1970. However, the neighbors testified at the Oct. 7 ZBA hearing that the activity at the White Oak Gun Club is not the same as when Buck Cropsey used to shoot skeet. Instead of just a couple of hours on Sunday mornings, the paid membership-driven White Oak Gun Club has significantly intensified the activity with gunshots heard on any day of the week and any time of day.

The Litchfield Planning & Zoning Commission accepted Speck’s report this past summer, essentially allowing the illegal establishment of a commercial operation in a residential zone.

The neighbors subsequently appealed that action to the ZBA, leading to the expected continuation of the ZBA hearing sometime in December

ProtectLitchfield.org consists of a group of neighbors in Litchfield who are concerned that the establishment of a commercial development in a residential neighborhood could set a precedent and open the way for other commercial businesses locating in other residential neighborhoods in town.

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