Governor orders flags lowered for interment of 26-year-old officer killed in Iraq

December 11, 2008 Areawide Comments Off
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Gov. M. Jodi Rell ordered U.S. and State of Connecticut flags lowered to half-staff on Thursday, Dec. 11 in honor of U.S. Army 1st Lieutenant Thomas J. Brown of Shelton.

The 26-year-old Lt Brown was killed Sept. 23 while leading his soldiers on a patrol in Salman Pak, Iraq. Funeral services were held in early October. He was to be buried Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery.

“All across the state, our hearts and minds are with Lieutenant Brown’s family on this difficult day,” Gov. Rell said. “We pause to remember the valiant men and women who make sacrifices every day to protect our freedoms and serve our nation.”

Posted Dec. 11, 2008

For more information see: http://mansfield.htnp.com/areawide/1186.html

High School sports score wrap-up for Dec. 12, 2008

December 11, 2008 Local Schedules, Sports Comments Off
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Update on scores for girls basketball.

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E.O. Smith Freshman Girls Basketball

12/10/08 vs. Windsor – W 50-40

E.O. Smith Junior Varsity Girls Basketball

12/10/08 vs. Windsor – L 29-41

E.O. Smith Varsity Girls Basketball schedule

12/10/08 vs. Windsor – L 35-39

For more information see: http://mansfield.htnp.com/sports/sports_schedules/
highschool_sports_score_wrapup_dec_11_2008.html

Approach hazards of the underwater world with respect, says UConn’s director of scientific diving

December 11, 2008 Areawide Comments Off
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Dives take place in locations around the world including Japan, Antarctica, Australia, the Caribbean, the Gulf of California and even Long Island Sound.

His job has a simple bottom line. Everyone who goes down must come up.

And getting to the bottom and safely back up again requires planning, planning, and more planning. Training and more training. Testing and re-testing of equipment. And even calling the dive off when things don’t look exactly right, said Jeffrey Godfrey, who is director of scientific diving for the University of Connecticut ’s marine sciences programs in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.

Hazards to divers include running out of air, diving too deeply or too long for the equipment, encounters with wildlife- and especially, boats, which may not heed the red-and-white flag that warns of divers below.

Safety is the first order of business on any of the 400 to 500 scientific dives undertaken each year by UConn faculty, graduate students and undergraduates.

Dives take place in locations around the world including Japan,  Antarctica,  Australia, the Caribbean, the Gulf of California and even Long Island Sound.

“Anywhere there’s water,” Godfrey said.

The kinds of hazards to prepare for vary with location.

Training dives that take place off Avery Point face hazards from murky water, boats and potentially even planes from the nearby Groton-New London Airport .

“It’s easy to get separated in the water in Long Island Sound,” Godfrey noted. “It’s not like diving in the Caribbean where there’s 100 feet of visibility.”

Scientific divers must be certified, and the regulations are more stringent than those for recreational divers.

Certification requires 100 hours of training, one open-water snorkel dive, and four deep-water dives to ensure safety.

Godfrey is president of the American Academy of Underwater Sciences, which sets the standards for university diving programs. He teaches two courses in scientific diving, open to both graduate students and undergraduates. And he often accompanies UConn faculty on dives.

Although practice dives are often in only seven feet of water, many go deeper.

One of Godfrey’s dives involved going down 240 feet to help revise the site map of the U.S.S. Monitor. The wreck of this armored turret gunboat, which sank in a storm in 1862 off Cape Hatteras in North Carolina, is now a marine sanctuary.

During another of his dives off the East Coast, a syphonophore – the world’s longest animal – swam by. Closely related to a jellyfish, the one he saw was 70 or 80 feet long, he said.

A dive off Deception Island in the Antarctic revealed piles of whale bones sitting on the bottom, left over from the days of a whaling station there.

Survival instinct

Was he ever afraid? Not exactly, he said, “but there are times when your survival gene kicks in.”

For example, once at Montauk Point, Long Island – where records show the largest great white shark was caught – he watched the stripers and blues running as hard as they could, instead of following their normal pattern of circling and pausing.

“I just put my head down and kept working,” Godfrey says. “I wondered what was on the other end of the school, but figured it was something I didn’t need to see.”

Associate Professor of Marine Sciences Peter Auster says he occasionally sees and interacts with dolphins, large sea turtles, sea lions and whales underwater. “We’re down there studying the marine life,” he said, “and they are sometimes studying us.”

Auster says he brings Godfrey along on expeditions that are technically challenging.

“His job is to make sure that the same number of people who go underwater come back,” he said. “But he’s a scientist as well, and aids in the success of our work.”

Godfrey noted that planning is critically important. “We’ve never had an incident,” he said.

“It’s a hazardous environment, so we go out of the way to do training and dive planning. Our goal is to be very safe, as well as efficient. And if something’s not right – the water is rough or something isn’t going according to plan – we call the dive off and come back another day.”

Godfrey joined UConn nine years ago from the Utah State University Fish and Wildlife Cooperative Research Unit where he was a research diver.

Posted Dec. 11, 2008

For more information see: http://mansfield.htnp.com/areawide/uconn_scientific_diver_stresses_safety.html

[update] CL&P project application delayed

December 11, 2008 Local News Comments Off
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CL&P postpones application to Connecticut Siting Council for a controversial expansion project.

Northeast Utilities has postponed submitting an application to the Connecticut Siting Council for what’s known as the Interstate Reliability Project until sometime “early next year,” according to NU Senior Communications Specialist Frank J. Poirot.

CL&P originally planned to submit the application in December, as part of a larger project being developed by Northeast Utilities and The National Grid.

“The application is a five-volume document and we need to ensure that the data is correct,” Poirot said in a phone interview on Dec. 10. “We need to verify the accuracy of everything in it because it’s the beginning of an official record for the Connecticut Siting Council.”

He also noted that only one part of the three-part project is located in Connecticut, while others are planned for Massachusetts and Rhode Island. “So, there’s a bit of coordination [with National Grid] that needs to be done,” Poirot said.

“And with the holidays coming up, we decided to take the time [so] we can comb through the entire document,” he said.

Once the applicatin is filed, the Connecticut Siting Council will host a series of public hearings in local towns. “The hearing schedule will likely start in the second quarter of the year,” Poirot said in a Dec. 8, 2008 e-mail to Mansfield Today.

“The Siting Council is required by law to reach a decision on any application within 12 months from the date it is filed with their office,” he said.

The Town Council at its Nov. 24 meeting went on record as opposed to the project. At the council’s Dec. 8 meeting, Town Manager Matt Hart announced this latest development.

Posted Dec. 8, 2008, updated Dec. 11, 2008

[Editor's Note: for more about the project, see these stories previously published in Mansfield Today:

For more information see: http://mansfield.htnp.com/news/clandp_delays_application_for_expansion.html

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Courtney, students at Capitol to testify on student loan interest rates

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Rep. Courtney introduced the Student Loan Relief Act (H.R. 1595) to lock in the lower rate for two years, which would allow the Congress the time it needs to craft a long-term solution to the student loan debt crisis.

Neighbor to Neighbor Energy Challenge nets town more than $4,500

NEIGHBOR TO NEIGHBOR ENERGY CHALLENGE logo

Mansfield’s check will be awarded at the Town Council meeting at 7:15 p.m. on Monday, June 24.

Statewide property tax pitched for funding CT schools

Economist Stan McMillen Hugh McQuaid copyright CTNewsJunkie.com

“Property can’t get up and move so easily. So you know the tax base is going to stay there and you can be pretty certain about the revenue that you’re going to raise.”

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