Byram Roundup

Byram Roundup Byram Roundup delivers the latest breaking Byram, CT news and information from the by the B Media Network.

Comprehensive up-to-date Byram, news coverage, aggregated from sources all over the world.

04/30/2018

By number of sales, Greenwich's January housing market appeared disappointingly slow. Yet it wasn't a bad month for luxury sales, with two homes closing well above $10 million and another four sold for more than $4 million. In total, Greenwich had 30 single-family home sales last month, down from 42...

04/29/2018

MILFORD - Humans are worried about losing their privacy, and it looks like ospreys should have the same concerns. An ongoing citizen conservation effort of Connecticut Audubon called Osprey Nation has just completed its 2017 report, one that reveals the population of the fish-hunting birds continues...

04/28/2018

GREENWICH - A memorial service is planned for Saturday for Robert Jennings, a longtime Greenwich police officer and World War II veteran. He died at Greenwich Hospital this week at the age of 90. A lifelong Greenwich resident, Jennings joined the department in 1953. He retired in 1978 after achievin...

04/27/2018

Ronald Jasensky Sr. R: Nobody knows what it was like in the '50s in Greenwich, or the '60s. There might be a few people, but not too many people. I'll be 68 in a couple weeks - I still have a sharp memory of everything. I worked in Greenwich Hospital, I worked at Chicken Delight in Cos Cob, I worked...

04/26/2018

GREENWICH - Gov. Dannel Malloy's postponement of hundreds of transportation projects throughout the state of Connecticut will affect Greenwich. But First Selectman Peter Tesei said critical local projects will continue. And lawmakers from Greenwich said the governor's action proves the need for an a...

FAILURE CONTINUES: Byram Resident And Greenwich Police Chief James Heavey Has Failed To Drain The GPD Swamp Of Incompete...
12/27/2017

FAILURE CONTINUES: Byram Resident And Greenwich Police Chief James Heavey Has Failed To Drain The GPD Swamp Of Incompetence

GREENWICH TAX DOLLARS AT WORK: The Many Failures Of Greenwich Police Chief James Heavey Cost Greenwich Taxpayers Dearly

GREENWICH, CT: A federal judge has added Greenwich Police Capt. Mark Kordick as an individual defendant in a lawsuit filed last year by Greenwich’s first female police captain, alleging gender and sexual discrimination and the creation of a hostile work environment.

U.S. District Court Senior Judge Charles Haight in late September ruled that Capt. Pamela Gustovich’s allegations against Kordick met the legal standard of extreme and outrageous physical threats that were intended to inflict emotional distress.

Gustovich also filed a motion to add Police Chief James Heavey and Capt. Robert Berry as individual defendants.

A 28-year-veteran of the force and a 2011 graduate of the FBI National Academy in Quantico, Va., Gustovich became captain of patrol in January 2012, joining Heavey and Kordick on the department’s senior command staff. Gustovich was promoted over Berry, the only other finalist for the higher rank.

Most of the events described in the lawsuit occurred after Gustovich became captain.

The alleged incidents cited in the 25-page ruling paint a picture of unprofessional, offensive and physically intimidating behavior toward Gustovich, sometimes committed by her command staff colleagues.

At a January, 2014 staff meeting, Kordick became enraged at Gustovich, repeatedly banged his hands and cellphone on the table, grabbed the bottom of his chair and began to jump up and down while grunting like an animal, according to the suit.

Further, no one at the meeting, including Chief Heavey, attempted to stop him.

Finally he pushed his chair so hard it hit a wall and he began to yell directly at his female colleague.

At that point, according to the suit, Heavey said, “Enough,” but Kordick continued his abusive behavior.

At a January, 2014 staff meeting, Kordick became enraged at Gustovich, repeatedly banged his hands and cellphone on the table, grabbed the bottom of his chair and began to jump up and down while grunting like an animal, according to the suit.

Further, no one at the meeting, including Chief Heavey, attempted to stop him. Finally he pushed his chair so hard it hit a wall and he began to yell directly at his female colleague. At that point, according to the suit,

Heavey said, “Enough,” but Kordick continued his abusive behavior.

After that meeting, Gustovich told Deputy Chief Mark Marino that she felt threatened by Kordick’s behavior, and when Marino mentioned Gustovich’s reaction to Kordick, he overturned a table.

A month later, Kordick walked around the third floor of the Public Safety Complex, where Gustovich has an office, wearing plain clothes and carrying a patrol rifle. She again complained to Marino that she felt threatened.

In that same time frame, Gustovich passed Captain Kordick in the hallway, and he made a “full body gesture by putting his arms up and out to the side while lunging towards the plaintiff,” the suit says.

Senior Judge Haight cited those three acts when he ruled that Kordick should be added as a defendant to the year-old suit.

The senior judge wrote, “Kordick’s conduct differs from that of Heavey and Berry because Kordick’s conduct alone was accompanied and complicated by acts and declarations sufficient to create in Plaintiff’s mind a reasonable concern that Kordick posed a threat to her physical safety.”

Gustovich also alleges that Chief Heavey on at least two different occasions “undercut the authority of her command and communicated to officers in the Greenwich Police Department that gender bias would be tolerated.”

The captain of patrol job has traditionally included specific oversight of the Community Impact Section.

However, when Gustovich took over as captain, the community unit’s leader, Sergeant Michael Reynolds, told her he would not take orders from a “female officer,” according to the lawsuit.

A month later, also according to the suit, Heavey moved the Community Impact Section out of the captain of patrol’s supervision.

Then, in April 2013, members of the Silver Shield Association, the police officer’s union, “attacked Gustovich’s competence and integrity in a meeting with Chief Heavey, and told Heavey that the association members would hold a no confidence against him unless he removed Gustovich for the position of Patrol Captain,” the suit said.

One month later, in May 2013, Heavey did just that. He and Marino told Gustovich, according to the suit, that “for the good of the department” she was being removed from the position of Patrol Captain and reassigned to the operations captain.

So, just 15 months after being promoted and praised for excellence for a career that spanned more than 25 years, Gustovich was effectively demoted, and given a job with fewer responsibilities. Kordick was given Gustovich’s post. Plus, the Information Technology Section, which had been part of the operations captain’s responsibilities, was moved to the captain of patrol.

As for Berry, he led the investigation into a sexual harassment charge brought by Gustovich after an incident at an “after action response meeting” on Dec. 3, 2014.

Gustovich’s amended complaint claimed that Daniel Hendrie, a traffic officer, “made an obscene gesture with his hand, mouth and tongue, implying that plaintiff (Gustovich) was performing fe****io on a fellow officer.”

Berry’s investigation found that Hendrie’s gesture was “shocking and prejudicial to good order and discipline,” but was “mere insubordination” and “not illegal or forbidden harassment.”

First Selectman Peter Tesei — also ordered an investigation into an incident in which Kordick sent emails monitoring a local education activist to the schools superintendent

“The chief and the deputy chief placed Capt. Kordick on paid administrative leave pending an investigation into a personnel matter,” Tesei said. He would not disclose details of the actions that put Kordick on leave.

The First Selectman said the administrative move was not related to a lawsuit filed by Capt. Pamela Gustovich alleging gender and sexual discrimination, now working its way through the courts.

Kordick has also been under scrutiny for monitoring a local political activist, Arthur “Cort” Wrotnowski, and sending out e-mails to the school administration about a meeting that Wrotonowski held on educational policy.

Tesei said that matter had concluded with a counseling session and a recommendation he take a class, “as a way to better judge circumstances.”

As to the matter leading to the recent suspension from duty, Tesei, who serves as police commissioner, said it would not be done in-house by police administrators.

“It will be reviewed by an outside investigator,” Tesei said.

“It’s the first step in an investigation, being removed from the workplace,” the First Selectman said. There are a range of possible outcomes, if it is determined that departmental codes or regulations were violated.

Tesei said he was expecting a report to wrap-up in a few weeks, maybe two. At that point, Chief James Heavey would make a determination. There is also an appeals process to the police commissioner — a position filled by Tesei — if warranted.

As to the Wrotnowksi matter, Tesei said the matter was set to be settled without a major disciplinary action.

“The deputy chief (Mark Marino) and the chief (Heavey) reviewed the matter and found he was not in violation of the manual. They did counsel and advise that he was over-zealous.” said Tesei.

Gustovich filed her first formal complaint against the town on August 27, 2014 and has filed complaints beforehand with the town human resource department.

She alleged that she was disobeyed by subordinate officers when she was promoted to captain in 2012 and was subject to verbal harassment and vulgar conduct as part of a campaign to remove her from the position due to her gender and sexual orientation, according to a summary of the settlement.

The lawsuit, charging discrimination against the town and the police department, is proceeding through the Connecticut Commission of Human Rights and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The Police Commissioner, First Selectman Peter Tesei and Chief James Heavey plan to secure the services of a consultant to conduct an independent organizational assessment of the department.

The Board of Selectman voted 3-0 to approve a settlement to resolve complaints brought by Police Capt. Pamela Gustovich.

Gustovich will receive a lump sum payment of $143,000 to cover salary and legal fees and the town will purchase an annuity of no more than $135,000 to equal the amount of retirement payments that she would have received if she remained with the town.

The Board’s vote follows a unanimous vote by the Claims Committee of the Representative Town Meeting to approve this settlement.

The Town’s counsels have opined that given the nature of some of the charges, airing them in public could seriously hurt not just the Greenwich Police Department but the Town of Greenwich as well.

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?id=145382108836439&story_fbid=972675886107053

[...] the one-page notice did catch the eye of Greenwich Police Captain Mark Kordick, head of the Detective Division and an almost three-decade veteran of the force. In an email sent over his signature as Captain of Detectives, Kordick told McKersie about Wrotnowski’s plan to hold a public forum in…

Woman Charged with Assault and Disorderly after Fight in ByramAlison L Dominguez, 28, of 15 Goodwin Street in Stamford w...
12/27/2017

Woman Charged with Assault and Disorderly after Fight in Byram

Alison L Dominguez, 28, of 15 Goodwin Street in Stamford was arrested by Greenwich Police on Halloween around 8:00pm after Greenwich Police responded to on a report of a fight between two people. Upon arrival officers observed the victim to have a laceration above his eyebrow. The victim ...

https://greenwichfreepress.com/police-fire/woman-charged-with-assault-and-disorderly-after-fight-in-byram-97296/

Greenwich Police responded to a report of a fight between two people on Halloween night.

Pills, illegal weapon seized in Byram drug bust: copsPolice obtained a search-and-seizure warrant and served it on Gaspa...
12/27/2017

Pills, illegal weapon seized in Byram drug bust: cops

Police obtained a search-and-seizure warrant and served it on Gaspar at his second-floor apartment in the section of town, which is located near a day care facility. A digital scale and packaging material was also found at the site, according to the arrest report. He was also charged with illegal sale of ...

http://www.greenwichtime.com/policereports/article/Pills-illegal-weapon-seized-in-Byram-drug-bust-12255855.php

GREENWICH - The arrest of an accused drug dealer from Greenwich, following a six-month investigation yielded scores of prescription pills and an illegal firearm, police said. Marvin Gaspar, 27, of North Water Street, was charged with a felony count of operating a drug factory and possession of a saw...

Man charged with strangulation in Byram incidentKevin Ramos-Mendoza, 20, of Lockwood Ave., New Rochelle, turned himself ...
12/27/2017

Man charged with strangulation in Byram incident

Kevin Ramos-Mendoza, 20, of Lockwood Ave., New Rochelle, turned himself into police headquarters for an incident in the section of town in May to face an arrest warrant. Ramos-Mendoza was charged strangulation, disorderly conduct, assault and unlawful restraint. He was also charged with....

http://www.greenwichtime.com/policereports/article/Man-charged-with-strangulation-in-Byram-incident-12249907.php

GREENWICH - A Westchester County, N.Y., man was charged with multiple felonies for an alleged assault earlier this year on Henry Street. Kevin Ramos-Mendoza, 20, of Lockwood Ave., New Rochelle, turned himself into police headquarters for an incident in the Byram section of town in May to face an arr...

Parking problems in Byram come to a headThe free 8-hour municipal parking lot is completely full in the   section of  , ...
12/27/2017

Parking problems in Byram come to a head

The free 8-hour municipal parking lot is completely full in the section of , Conn.

In recent months the parking problems that have long troubled some businesses and residents in Byram have worsened, according to a group of business owners who say the issues need to be addressed before they lead to notable losses in their bottom lines.

Several merchants along Mill Street representing businesses including an attorney’s office, bar, deli, pizza joint, hair salon and tattoo parlor have banded together to make their concerns known.

They say customer complaints about finding parking are not new, but there’s been a significant uptick......

http://www.greenwichtime.com/business/article/Parking-problems-in-Byram-come-to-a-head-12241214.php.

In recent months the parking problems that have long troubled some businesses and residents in Byram have worsened, according to a group of business owners who say the issues need to be addressed before they lead to notable losses in their bottom lines. Several merchants along Mill Street representi...

 's Raiders show hearts of championsGREENWICH — The Byram   Raiders were known for posting losing seasons in the   Leagu...
12/27/2017

's Raiders show hearts of champions

GREENWICH — The Byram Raiders were known for posting losing seasons in the League.

Three years ago the team didn't win a single game. Even worse, the coaches decided to move on, and membership was dwindling. Raiders football was at ...

http://www.greenwichtime.com/local/article/Byram-s-Raiders-show-hearts-of-champions-12366846.php

GREENWICH - The Byram Archibald Neighborhood Center Raiders were known for posting losing seasons in the Greenwich Youth Football League. Three years ago the team didn't win a single game. Even worse, the coaches decided to move on, and membership was dwindling. Raiders football was at a low point a...

Bob Horton: Give a brick instead of bric-a-brac this yearBut before you scoff at the idea of masonry as Christmas gift, ...
12/27/2017

Bob Horton: Give a brick instead of bric-a-brac this year

But before you scoff at the idea of masonry as Christmas gift, you should know your brick will be part of the main walkway at the Pool in . And you will always know which $500 brick is yours because it will have your name etched in it. (Or whoever's name you want to memorialize)......

https://www.greenwichtime.com/news/article/Bob-Horton-Give-a-brick-instead-of-bric-a-brac-12452414.php

If you are looking for a great last-minute Christmas gift but panicked because you have only a few hours left to shop, the Junior League of Greenwich has just what you need. It is a standard, 4" by 8" paving brick. But before you scoff at the idea of masonry as Christmas gift, you should know your b...

Greenwich Law Department Gives Selectmen Orientation; Parks And Rec Proposes Fees for 2018-19, Includes $250 Fee for Ban...
12/27/2017

Greenwich Law Department Gives Selectmen Orientation; Parks And Rec Proposes Fees for 2018-19, Includes $250 Fee for Banners on Greenwich Ave, Fee Hike for Adult Beach Pass to Include Use of Pool

Siciliano proposed a $2.00 increase in the adult beach card fee to include use of . That would bring the price of a beach/park pass from $33.00 to $35.00. He said the increased fee is only for adults – not for seniors or children – and that the increased fee reflects the ability of beach/park pass.....

https://greenwichfreepress.com/news/government/greenwich-law-department-gives-selectmen-orientation-parks-rec-proposes-fees-for-2018-19-includes-250-fee-for-banners-on-greenwich-ave-fee-hike-for-adult-beach-pass-to-include-use-of-byram-pool-98801/

The Parks & Rec Department is proposing to raise the price of a 2018-19 beach/park pass from $33 to $35 for the new Byram pool.

Site work begins at New Lebanon, blasting coming soon , Byram Shubert Library and neighbors of the property will be give...
12/27/2017

Site work begins at New Lebanon, blasting coming soon

, Byram Shubert Library and neighbors of the property will be given notice of blasting times, said members of the New Lebanon School.....

https://www.greenwichtime.com/local/article/Site-work-begins-at-New-Lebanon-blasting-coming-12427383.php

GREENWICH - Preliminary construction work is under way on a new New Lebanon School. This week, crews are beginning tree and stump removal at the building site located behind the existing school and adjacent to the William Street Ball Field, according to Gilbane Building Company, the firm contracted�...

Residential Burglars Target South Water Street in Byram, Again.Greenwich Police received a report from a resident on Sou...
12/27/2017

Residential Burglars Target South Water Street in Byram, Again.

Greenwich Police received a report from a resident on South Water Street about a suspicious person walking up and down the road. The witness, who noticed the suspicious person from their window, was unable to give a very good description, but police say there.....

https://greenwichfreepress.com/police-fire/residential-burglars-target-south-water-street-in-byram-again-98527/

A witness noticed a suspicious person from their window. A residence in an apartment building was reported to have been burgled.

Greenwich reading group finishes book, seven years laterGREENWICH — Fereshteh Priou shared a story about aliens with the...
12/27/2017

Greenwich reading group finishes book, seven years later

GREENWICH — Fereshteh Priou shared a story about aliens with the group gathered at the Thursday depicting death as part of the human condition. Priou said in the T.V. series “The Neighbors.” aliens live among humans in the suburbs in human form. When an elderly gardener in.....

http://www.greenwichtime.com/local/article/Greenwich-reading-group-finishes-book-seven-12417198.php

GREENWICH - Fereshteh Priou shared a story about aliens with the group gathered at the Byram Shubert Library Thursday depicting death as part of the human condition. Priou said in the T.V. series "The Neighbors." aliens live among humans in the suburbs in human form. When an elderly gardener in the�...

Groundbreaking ceremony kicks off New Lebanon School constructionGREENWICH NEWS: A New School Breaks Ground In ByramPATC...
12/27/2017

Groundbreaking ceremony kicks off New Lebanon School construction

GREENWICH NEWS: A New School Breaks Ground In Byram

PATCH: Byram's New Lebanon School Breaks Ground On New Building

GREENWICH, CT — More than 200 students, parents and state, town and school officials Thursday ushered in a new era at Byram's New Lebanon School with a groundbreaking ceremony for a new elementary school building. Expected to cost almost $40 million, the new International Baccalaureate World ...

https://patch.com/connecticut/greenwich/byrams-new-lebanon-school-breaks-ground-new-building

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