Monday, February 1, 2016

Eddy's Bake Shop in Ansonia to hold annual paczki eating contest


Cassetti congratulates Coppers, Chargers in ceremony at Ansonia High School

Ansonia Mayor David S. Cassetti poses with Aliah DePina, 9, one of the 39 Copper cheerleaders who are national champions in their age divisions. They were celebrated Monday along with the 2015 NVL champion football Chargers during a ceremony at Ansonia High School. 

Congratulations to all the outstanding athletes! You did your city proud.

Shelton bookstore to host Chinese New Year celebration


SHELTON - Kids ages 5-10 are invited to celebrate Chinese New Year from 1-2:30 p.m. Saturday at Written Words Bookstore, 415 Howe Ave. (in the Conti Building).

Chinese New Year is Feb. 8.


The program will include stories, crafts, and snacks! 
Learn about Chinese New Year customs and help welcome the Year of the Monkey. 

The event will feature special guest storyteller Evelyn North of Derby, creator of The Shapels.

Cost is $15 per child. Registration and pre-payment are required. 

Group size is limited. 
Call the store at 203-944-0400, or stop in to register.

Seymour Legion Post to hold memorial service Wednesday in Beacon Falls


BEACON FALLS - Members of Emil Senger Post 10, American Legion of Seymour will hold a Saga of the Four Chaplains memorial service at 7 p.m. Wednesday at St. Michael's Church, 25 Maple Ave.

The service will honor these four heroic men of God who gave their lives on the USAT Dorchester on Feb. 3, 1943. Without regard for themselves they all gave away their life jackets to save others on deck that frigid night. 

Light refreshments will be served afterward in the church hall.

For information contact Commander Michael Kearney at 203-888-7813.


Wesley Village in Shelton celebrates Lifestyle Transitions' first anniversary


Staff and residents of Lifestyle Transitions at Wesley Heights celebrated the community’s first anniversary.
Pictured from left: resident Lucy Dodge, Graciela Lopez, CNA; resident, William Sihau; Sheila Franko, RN; resident Evelyn Healy; and Lisa Kelleher, program director./Contributed photo
SHELTON - Residents, family members, and staff are celebrating the first anniversary of Wesley Village’s newest addition to their Shelton senior living campus: Lifestyle Transitions at Wesley Heights.  
Located in the newly renovated Northwest Wing of the Wesley Heights community, Lifestyle Transitions provides specialized assisted living and memory support options for aging adults. 
The community celebrated the first anniversary milestone with a family brunch, special activities, and other caregiver events throughout the month.
Lifestyle Transitions program director Lisa Kelleher reflected on her experience throughout the past year. 
“One of my favorite memories from our first year was celebrating the 100th birthday of our very first Lifestyle Transitions resident, Christina Sudol,” Kelleher said. “We threw a huge party and invited everyone to send birthday cards so we could present Christina with 100 cards. She was delighted.”
Sudol, who passed away this month, was well known and loved throughout the community. Her daughter, Patricia Day, expressed thanks for the care her mom received: “If the Lifestyle Transitions neighborhood had not been opened when it was, my mother would have had to go into a nursing home … it was there for her just in time.”
Unique to Wesley Village, the Lifestyle Transitions program is designed to support residents with cognitive impairment and increased social needs by engaging them in life and activities within the Lifestyle Transitions neighborhood as well as the larger Wesley Heights community.  
The program also focuses on developing daily routines for successfully managing individualized physical, social, and cognitive challenges.
“The Lifestyle Transitions program has greatly enhanced the quality of life of the residents in the entire Wesley Heights community,” said Faith Wajdowicz, Vice President of Clinical Services at Wesley Village. “By integrating residents from the Lifestyle Transitions neighborhood and the extended Wesley Heights buildings, it has taken the stigma of being on a ‘specialty unit’ off of these individuals, affording them specialized care that promotes independence as much as possible.”
Along with a mission-based, relationship-centered approach to care, the program offers: affordable pricing, a wander-protection system, 24-hour staffing with caregivers trained by the Alzheimer’s Association, on-site physician services, engaging activities, a variety of apartment styles for individuals or couples, and education and support services for residents and families. 
“The success of the program truly relies on the commitment of our great interdisciplinary team of staff, who is so supportive of the residents we serve,” Wajdowicz said.
This past summer, the Lifestyle Transitions neighborhood proudly implemented the Music & Memory program on the campus, making Wesley Village the first Music & Memory Certified Care Facility in the Valley, and one of only a few in the state. Also introduced during the past year was an Alzheimer’s & Dementia support group for caregivers, which the public is invited to attend every third Thursday of the month at 2 p.m.
“I am proud to be a part of an organization that has built a community dedicated to meeting the changing needs of residents, especially during difficult times of transition. To provide support for those with memory impairment and offer family members peace of mind is truly rewarding,” Kelleher said.
For more information about Lifestyle Transitions or to inquire about upcoming caregiver events, contact Lisa Bisson, 203-225-5024 or visit www.wesleyvillage-ct.org.

Wesley Village is located at 580 Long Hill Ave. and is owned and operated by United Methodist Homes, a local not-for-profit organization. 
In addition to specialized assisted living and memory support, the campus also offers traditional assisted and independent living, skilled nursing, short-term rehab, and outpatient therapy and fitness services.



This is a press release from United Methodist Homes.

Job seekers: career coach to visit Derby Public Library

DERBY - The American Job Search Career Coach returns to the Derby Public Library from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Feb. 19.

During both the morning session, 10 a.m.-noon, and the afternoon session, 1-3 p.m., instructors will be offering
Job Search Assistance.  

Learn where to look for jobs, how to get the job you want, and how to search for jobs on the Internet.

The workshop is free and open to the public.  
Registration is requested but walk-ins will be welcomed on a first come, first served basis.

The American Job Search Career Coach is operated by Career Resources.

For more information, stop by the Library, 313 Elizabeth St., call 203-736-1482 or visit www.derbypubliclibrary.org.


This is a press release from Cathy Williams, Director, Derby Public Library.

Slavery is topic of talk at Plumb Memorial Library in Shelton


SHELTON - In recognition of Black History Month the Shelton Historical Society will hold a program about slavery and its impact on local life during Colonial times.
February is Black History Month.

Society President Marty Coughlin will present Perspectives on Slavery in Connecticut and Shelton at 1 p.m. Feb. 21 at Plumb Memorial Library, 65 Wooster St. 
Plumb Memorial Library./Patricia Villers photo 

Find out who the largest slave owner was in Shelton, and learn about Elnathan Curtis and what he did for Shelton during the American Revolution.

Refreshments will be served.

A $5 donation is requested to support the historical society.