Waveny Care Launches Info Site on CCRC
Waveny Care unveils a discrete site for information about the retirement community they hope to build.
Waveny Care Network has launched an informational Web site about its proposed Continuing Care Retirement Community (CCRC). The elder care organization hopes the new site will prevent the spread of misinformation about the CCRC, which has already proved controversial as they've worked to identify the best possible location for the project.
Waveny Care Marketing Director Kristin Sinatra says the most important resource now available on CCRCforNC.org is the Powerpoint presentation that Chairman Harry Rein and former chairman Ted O'Hanlon delivered to the Waveny Care Network Board of Directors in June explaining the organization's determination of the need for a CCRC and the selection of a section of Waveny Park on the west side of Lapham Road as the proposed site.
The choice of the Lapham Road location has arguably been the biggest point of contention thus far, with some in the community questioning if the project is aimed only at the wealthiest seniors and profiting off town land, and whether or not a CCRC is a permitted use under the provisions of the Waveny deed.
"I'm not a developer here. I'm not trying to do something that is profitable," said Chairman Harry Rein, "but respond to a need (for senior living options) in the town."
Currently there are no independent market studies posted to CCRCforNC.org, but Rein says Waveny Care would have to procure such a study in order to get investors for the project.
The June Powerpoint argues that a CCRC is needed to prevent elder flight and address the growing senior population in the area. The document also says the Lapham Road site would be used through a lease arrangement with the town, that the entrance fee for a spot in the CCRC would be priced to match New Canaan's demographics, and that the project is consistent with the deed restrictions on the property.
Rein hopes the new info site will help educate the community about what a community care retirement is in general and prompt discussion about whether New Canaan needs one.
"I'd rather have someone get the information from the horse's mouth, than by the telephone method. The information gets garbled in that situation," Rein said. "This is something that needs to be very open. This is not some kind of nefarious thing being done under the covers."
Most of the information currently on CCRCforNC.org, including the June Powerpoint, was previously accessible on the Waveny Care Network's Web site by clicking on a button labeled "A CCRC for New Canaan"; that button now redirects to the new info site. Waveny Care plans to post more documents and information as the project develops.
Marketing Director Kristin Sinatra says creating a discrete site made sense because the information about the CCRC proposal serves a different audience than the one seeking out details about and updates to Waveny Care's existing services.
"There's just information overload, and people might be legitimately confused about what's planned versus what exists," Sinatra said about the previous hosting of information about the CCRC proposal on the Waveny Care Network's main site.
And instead of inquiries going to the management team for Waveny Care's current services, the new site directs visitors to the primary contacts and supporters of the retirement community project, including Elder Care Council Chairman Penny Young, Health and Human Services Commission Chairman Jim Lisher and commission member Tom Ferguson, and Rein himself.
Rein expects it will take two years for Waveny Care to obtain all the necessary approvals and clearances so that they can start marketing the project to prospective residents. Since the proposed location is on park land, the Park and Recreation Commission will be the first stop. An official presentation of the CCRC proposal is not yet on the commission's agenda.
Park and Recreation Commissioner Liz Livingston says that when she clicked on the button from Waveny Care's main Web site recently to see if any new information had been posted about the project, she didn't realize she'd been redirected to another site. Still she says the more information Waveny Care makes available to the public the better, "I think it's all to the good." And she hopes the community will be given plenty of notice the next time the project comes up for a hearing.
Sue Ann Jeffries
1:18 pm on Thursday, September 24, 2009
Very informative and fairly presented.
New Canaan Family
12:13 am on Saturday, October 10, 2009
I don't know yet about the need for a CCRC. But I do know that what its proponents are calling the "undeveloped" land "on Lapham Road" is actually Waveny Park itself, and I simply do not believe we should be turning ANY part of our best public park into a private enclave. I hope all candidates for local office this November will tell us how they feel on this issue.
Toddy Turrentine
12:25 pm on Tuesday, October 13, 2009
What does Harry Rein mean by 'investors'? Investors usually expect to be paid back, with a profit on their investment. I thought WCN was a non-profit, and their proposed CCRC would be as well.
Assuming he mispoke, I still have two main questions:
1) How, when our open space is so very limited, can we justify putting buildings and parking lots on public parkland?
2) Surely not every one of the 169 towns in Connecticut needs an assisted living facility. Waveny has said a CCRC is not financially viable on private land in New Canaan. Doesn't it make more sense for CCRCs to be sited where the price of land is more reasonable, like Norwalk?
Jon S.
2:13 pm on Tuesday, October 13, 2009
I'm finding as I read through the CCRC proposal powerpoint that it is full of distortions. For example, on page 30, it states: "As cited repeatedly in past studies, reports and assessments, a CCRC at Lapham Road would be consistent with deed restrictions...."
This is completely wrong, and ignores a key fact that the public should be aware of. That is, the last time they tried to build such a facility in Waveny Park, the Town Attorney researched the matter and found that such a use could not in fact be classified as a "health" use (as stated in the deed), since the health component was incidental to the primary, RESIDENTIAL, use.
They can't make it legal just because they say so. And they shouldn't be citing their own studies to make it seem true.
The CCRC proposal is NOT CONSISTENT with the deed restrictions both Mrs. Lloyd and the Town of New Canaan agreed to when the town acquired the land!
That one omission by the CCRC folks should cast doubt upon nearly all of their grandiose claims.
Waveny Park is not free land for the taking!
NC4Life
1:20 am on Friday, January 8, 2010
The most infuriating part of the ccrcfornc.org's preferential and at times highly questionable statements is this one: "This steady and dependable boost to the Town’s annual revenue could help launch yet-unfunded special town projects, maintain and improve park grounds, or even fund the purchase of additional land for Open Space use."
They actually suggest we let them destroy our park for the sake of revenue which we can use to buy another park with.
(truth be told, there are lies on that website which most certainly makes this look like we're being setup for a fleecing.)