City Notes
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Back by popular demand! West Haven’s Acoustic Sunday Morning Concert Series kicks off June 1

WEST HAVEN, May 30, 2025 — The Acoustic Sunday Morning Concert Series is back by popular demand and kicks off the city’s summer music series June 1.

On Sunday, grab a coffee and a beach chair and chill out to classic and modern rock music played by one of West Haven’s finest duos — Sweeter Than Wine.

For the complete Acoustic Sunday lineup, as well as the complete Summer Concert Series and Movie Night lineups, check out the Summerfest 2025 brochure or the Special Events page on the city website.

Acoustic Sunday Morning
Borer signs purchase and sale agreement for Stiles School apartment development

Borer signs purchase and sale agreement for Stiles School apartment development

WEST HAVEN, May 30, 2025 — (Pictured): Mayor Dorinda Borer on Wednesday signs a purchase and sale agreement for the development of the former Edgar C. Stiles Elementary School at 561 Main St.

Joining Borer and showing a rendering of the apartment development are, from left, Ideal Group principal Florjan Shehaj, SEEDnh principal Fernando Pastor and city Economic Development Director Steve Fontana.

Ideal Group, a Stamford-based developer, is working with its primary contractor, Hamden-based SEEDnh, to convert the former school building into about 30 market-rate apartments.

The Stiles building, constructed in 1930, is located in the heart of the transit-oriented development district around West Haven Station, the nearby Metro-North Railroad commuter hub.

The building has been vacant since the school closed in 2004, with no concrete plans for development — until now.

(City Photo/Mike Ajello)

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Dog license renewals in West Haven due June 30

Dog license renewals due June 30

WEST HAVEN, May 30, 2025 — June is Dog Licensing Month, and residents who own dogs at least 6 months old must renew their licenses by June 30 or face a $1 monthly fine, City Clerk John W. Lewis said.

State law requires dog owners to submit a current rabies vaccination certificate when applying for the new dog tags. Expired certificates are not accepted.

The fee for the two licenses, which are available in the city clerk’s office of City Hall, 355 Main St., is $8 for neutered or spayed dogs and $19 for other dogs.

Residents can also send vaccination records and checks in a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Office of the City Clerk, 355 Main St., West Haven, CT 06516.

For dogs that have last year’s tag number, license renewals are available online: https://searchiqs.com/iqsdogrenewal/?CC=CTWHA.

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Parade

Colleen St. Clair Weatherspoon, a Navy veteran of the Grenada/Panama era, leads West Haven’s Memorial Day parade as grand marshal, guiding the more than 40-unit procession of veterans, bands and dignitaries, including Mayor Dorinda Borer, front left, and Lt. Gov. Susan Bysiewicz, front right, along Campbell Avenue on Monday morning. (City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)

Parade memorializes America’s fallen heroes

WEST HAVEN, May 28, 2025 — Colleen St. Clair Weatherspoon, a Navy veteran of the Grenada/Panama era, led the city’s Memorial Day parade as grand marshal, guiding the more than 40-unit procession of veterans, bands and dignitaries, including Mayor Dorinda Borer and Lt. Gov. Susan Bysiewicz, along Campbell Avenue on Monday morning.

On a picture-perfect day, with blue skies and temperatures in the upper 60s, the procession stepped from Captain Thomas Boulevard north to Center Street, where hundreds of revelers thronged the 1 ½-mile route, American flags waving, for the annual patriotic march.


Read the full story and see the photo gallery here.

Brick Ceremony

During the Phase 17 dedication of the brick Veterans Walk of Honor in West Haven’s Bradley Point Park on Saturday, the West Haven Fire Department Honor Guard leads city and state leaders, including Mayor Dorinda Borer, Rep. Bill Heffernan and 1st District Councilwoman Anne Heffernan, while carrying the American flag to the William A. Soderman Memorial Flagpole for the ceremonial raising. The honor guard is composed of members of the West Haven Fire Department, the West Shore Fire Department and the City of West Haven Fire Department Allingtown. (City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)

72 bricks dedicated at Vets Walk of Honor ceremony

WEST HAVEN, May 28, 2025 — Dozens of veterans and their families from across Connecticut, joined by city and state leaders and members of West Haven’s Veterans Council and three fire departments, came out late Saturday afternoon to help dedicate 72 bricks as part of Phase 17 of the Veterans Walk of Honor in Bradley Point Park.

The patriotic crowd, many wearing red, white and blue, gathered along the Walk of Honor on Long Island Sound as Mayor Dorinda Borer thanked veterans for their service and delivered poignant remarks dedicating the new bricks, along with two new memorials and a plaque.


Read the full story and see the photo gallery here.

Presser

An emotional West Haven Mayor Dorinda Borer hugs Emergency Management Director Rick Fontana at City Hall after the city was released from financial oversight by the state Municipal Accountability Review Board on May 15. (City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)

‘West Haven, we did it!’: City exits state financial oversight after nearly 8 years

WEST HAVEN, May 16, 2025 — After nearly eight long years, the state Municipal Accountability Review Board on May 15 voted to end its financial oversight of the city.

Mayor Dorinda Borer, who joined the Hartford MARB meeting remotely from her City Hall office, sat glued to her desktop computer as members of the bipartisan board commended her for “changing the culture” and “restoring long-term fiscal survival” in West Haven.


A floor down from the mayor’s office, more than 100 city employees, including City Council members, Board of Education leaders, and police and fire officials, gathered and watched the momentous meeting unfold on two large monitors in the Harriet C. North Community Room. Residents also witnessed the meeting via a livestream on Facebook.

Before motioning for the final vote, MARB Chairman Jeffrey R. Beckham, the secretary of the state Office of Policy and Management, complimented Borer and declared, “The city has met the criteria to be released.”

The mayor then spoke and thanked the MARB members for their guidance and support. She concluded her remarks by saying, “I am respectfully asking you to vote us out.”

And the members did just that, voting unanimously to release the city from state oversight and setting off rousing applause at City Hall.

Many employees reacted to the historic decision by exclaiming words of joy, including “Finally!” and “It’s about time!”

Once the meeting ended, Borer scampered down to the second floor and hosted a news conference to share the “exciting” news with the rest of the city and state. As she walked into the room to thunderous applause and cheers, the visibly emotional mayor was met with hugs from co-workers amid bursts of confetti.

Taking the stage for the press conference, Borer, who was a West Haven state representative when MARB oversight began in late 2017, proclaimed: “West Haven, we did it! The future of West Haven is bright!”

The mayor then thanked West Haven’s “incredibly talented” employees and the city’s “resilient” residents for staying the course during the oversight process.

Borer also thanked Gov. Ned Lamont for “being there every step of the way.”

Although the city’s $18 million bond deficit triggered MARB oversight under the former administration, Borer touted the city’s posting of three straight credit rating upgrades and balanced budgets since taking office in December 2023.

The board applauded Borer and her crack finance team for turning the city around faster than expected.

Borer then lauded and introduced Finance Director Michael Gormany, who thanked the mayor, her team and his staff, saying, “This has been a long journey, and this is a great day!”

During the half-hour MARB meeting, members also praised Borer’s corporation counsel, Paul J. Dorsi, and her chief of staff, Rick Spreyer, for helping to right the ship.

The board determined that the city was eligible for oversight release based on satisfying its audit results, bond ratings, and financial plan and practices.

In 2022, the MARB escalated its oversight to Tier IV, the board’s highest level of oversight, requiring the financially distressed city to present all budgets to the MARB and its West Haven subcommittee for approval.

Since taking office 17 months ago, Borer has fostered a more collaborative relationship with the board, making it a top priority of her administration.

She said that one of her main goals for running for mayor was to “lift the city out of a negative cloud that had hung for too long.”

Under Borer’s leadership, the city has taken extraordinary steps to tackle the many issues that led to an increase in MARB oversight, including internal control issues, staffing shortages in the Finance Department and audit delays.

The Borer administration has worked closely with the board and a third-party consultant to improve its financial management practices and internal control functions, such as the hiring of several key financial management positions that had been vacant, including a finance director, internal auditor, payroll manager, risk manager, and senior and junior accountants.

West Haven has also hired two third-party consulting firms to help identify and address its internal control issues, leading the city to make changes in its procedures and to institute new policies, including bank reconciliation, audit trail reporting and payroll segregation of duties.

According to the MARB, the city has satisfied the completion of no audited operating deficits in the general fund for the two most current consecutive fiscal year audits and has satisfied the completion of a general fund balance of at least 5% in the two most current consecutive fiscal audits.

In fiscal 2024, the city posted a general fund surplus of $6.44 million, increasing its fund balance to 11.02%, and a general fund surplus of $6.77 million in fiscal 2023, increasing its fund balance to 7.93%.

The city has also satisfied that it has received an investment-grade or higher long-term bond rating from at least one rating agency and that the rating has improved or remained unchanged since its most current designation.

In its MARB-approved financial plan, the city has projected a fund balance in each of the plan’s three consecutive fiscal years by meeting operating result criteria and fund balance criteria in its fiscal 2024 audit.

In each of the plan’s three fiscal years, the city has met its projections based on recurring revenues and expenditures with no one-time revenue found in its approved five-year plan. In the plan’s third year, the city has also met a positive fund balance projection of at least 5%, projecting an 11.29% fund balance.

Blind support group, ‘Our Journey of Sight,’ welcomes Borer

Blind support group, ‘Our Journey of Sight,’ welcomes Mayor Dorinda Borer

WEST HAVEN, May 16, 2025 — (Pictured): Mayor Dorinda Borer, back center, joins members of “Our Journey of Sight,” a low-vision and blind support group for area residents, at their monthly meeting May 16 at the West Haven Public Library’s main branch.

The support group, led by Richard Howard, a member of the National Federation of the Blind of Connecticut, features informational speakers, organizes activities and meets from 10 a.m.-noon on the third Friday of each month in the lower level of the library at 300 Elm St.

This month’s speakers included Borer and Beth Rival, a former board member of the federation’s Manchester-based Connecticut chapter who is a prominent advocate for the rights and equality of blind and visually impaired individuals. Rival lost her sight at age 19 and has been involved with the NFB for many years.

Also speaking was Michelle Puzzo, who in 2019 co-founded UR Community Cares, a Manchester-based nonprofit that offers vision resources, including assistive technology devices.

To join the support group or for more information, call Howard at 203-214-7631.

(City Photo/Michael P. Walsh)

Set the Pace
Coraly

Program supports kids with siblings with disabilities

WEST HAVEN, April 25, 2025 — West Haven Youth and Family Services is excited to launch a new program at WHINC in collaboration with Southern Connecticut SIBshop at Southern Connecticut State University.

The program, SIBshop, is designed to support children in West Haven who have siblings with disabilities.

SIBshops provide a unique space where children can connect with peers, enjoy recreational activities and build emotional resilience. While many children express positive experiences growing up alongside a sibling with a disability, they often face unique challenges, such as emotional stress, a heightened sense of responsibility or a drive to “compensate” through high achievement.

While the primary focus is on Spanish-speaking families, all are welcome. The program is limited to eight spots.

For more information, contact youth services coordinator Coraly Colon at 203-943-8802 or ccolon@westhaven-ct.gov.

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