Monday, July 27, 2015

Master's Table to offer dinner, movie in Ansonia


25th anniversary of Americans with Disabilities Act celebrated in West Haven

West Haven Mayor Edward M. O'Brien, standing fourth from left, celebrated the 25th anniversary of the ADA Thursday with staff and members of the Center for Disability Rights and the West Haven Community House. The event at Savin Rock Conference Center featured a picnic, adaptive bicycle demonstrations, and live entertainment. 

Improv classes slated today in Derby

Sharing from Sterling Lion Theater Company's Facebook page:


DERBY - The Sterling Lion Theater Company kicks off its inaugural season at 7 p.m. today with free improvisation classes at the Valley Arts Council's Valley Center of the Arts, 119 Caroline St.


Did you know improvisation classes are used by many corporations to promote quick and creative thinking? Did you also know that improv is a lot of fun?


Come and sharpen your skills, learn some new techniques, or just have a few laughs with the Valley’s newest theater group! (Recommended age 16+) 

For more information, please e-mail: Info@Sterlinglion.org.


Teens get taste of police work in Seymour

Contributed photo
Local teens took part in a Youth Academy last week at Seymour Police headquarters. The department's newly trained canine, Sage, a German shepherd, is in the front row with her handler, Police Officer John Oczkowski. 

Wesley Village in Shelton offers family-oriented environment

Pictured from left, Jackie Santagata (Kelly’s mom), Karly Coppola (Kelly’s daughter) with a photo of Claire Byle (Kelly’s late grandmother), and Kelly Coppola./ Contributed photo

SHELTON - Walk in the doors of any community at Wesley Village and after a few conversations, you can easily uncover dozens of unique stories about how residents, family members, staff, and volunteers became connected with the senior care campus.  
Wesley Village, at 580 Long Hill Ave., has been connecting families with high quality senior living options and healthcare services for over 125 years. 

Through each decade, those connections have grown in many ways, beyond simply finding mom or dad a place to live when they can’t live alone anymore. A current employee recently shared her story of how Wesley Village connected her family.

Kelly Coppola works as a receptionist at Crosby Commons, the award-winning independent and assisted living community at Wesley Village. Before taking the full-time receptionist position at Crosby, Kelly was a familiar face around the campus and worked as a Recreation Director at the neighboring community of Wesley Heights. Her career took her on a few different paths since then, but she is thrilled to be back at the campus, now working at Crosby. 
After seven months in this position, Kelly has not only made many helpful changes to the reception area, but was also recently recognized with the Outstanding Resident Service award from the Connecticut Assisted Living Association. 
A great asset to the community, she is also surprisingly part of four generations with connections to Wesley Village.

Kelly’s grandmother was Claire Byle, a New Jersey native who moved to Connecticut to be closer to her family when her health began to fail. Not wanting to be a “burden” to her family, she chose not to move in with her children and fell in love with the senior living options at Wesley Village, moving in to their Wesley Heights community in 2003. Claire loved the community and continued to enjoy life as a resident for about two years, before moving to Bishop Wicke Health and Rehabilitation Center (at Wesley Village) for more skilled care. Sadly, Claire passed away in February of 2005, but left quite an impression on the community and the many friends she left behind.

Kelly’s mom, Jackie Santagata, was thrilled to have found a community close to home where her mom, Claire, could live in safety and security and continue to enjoy things that were important to her. Jackie loved being able to maintain a mother-daughter relationship with her mom, without having to feel overwhelmed by caregiving responsibilities. She was also so impressed with the campus that she chose to become a registered volunteer. Jackie now actively volunteers with the Wesley Village Prayer Shawl Ministry and the new Music and Memory program, which the campus will be piloting at its Lifestyle Transitions Memory Care neighborhood this summer.

In addition to her mom and grandmother, Kelly’s daughter, Karly also joined the Wesley Village team in 2008 as a registered volunteer.  
Karly is a sophomore Psychology Major at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, studying Special Education. For the past seven years, Karly has volunteered in a variety of capacities at Wesley Village, serving residents and supporting staff by providing clerical and computer support, and assistance in our Recreation and Dining Services departments. 

To learn more about the many ways Wesley Village is connecting with families like Kelly’s to provide a continuum of award-winning care and services for their loved one(s), visit www.wesleyvillage-ct.org

The Wesley Village Campus includes: Crosby Commons Assisted and Independent Living Community, Wesley Heights Assisted and Independent Living Apartments and Cottages, Lifestyle Transitions Memory Care, and Bishop Wicke Health and Rehabilitation Center. The campus is owned and operated by UMH, a local, mission-based, not-for-profit organization serving all members of the community. 


To schedule a tour at any of their communities, contact Lisa Bisson, 203-225-5024. 

For more information about volunteer opportunities at Wesley Village, contact Barbara Quinn, 203-944-8292.  


This is a press release from United Methodist Homes.