People/Business
A Well-Lived Life of Service and Adventure
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On March 1, Suffield sadly lost Joanne Sullivan but her indelible mark on this town will leave a positive and lasting legacy for many years to come.
The Suffield Observer (https://thesuffieldobserver.com/page/238/)
The DeSimone Family Trust, established by long time past Suffield residents Jerry and RoseMarie DeSimone have donated $2.5 million dollars to support a neonatology intensive care facility and services in the newly built tower at Connecticut Children’s.
On March 1, Suffield sadly lost Joanne Sullivan but her indelible mark on this town will leave a positive and lasting legacy for many years to come.
There’s no question that the last two years have been rough on everyone.
This winter my wife and I have had major cellar flooding issues because our sump pump wasn’t working.
In the minds of many Suffield residents, sewage from their homes is simply piped to the sewage treatment plant where it is passed through some filters and then discharged into the Connecticut River. But like most things in life, nothing is ever that simple.
Almost 20 years ago, we bought our house from a family who had lived in Suffield for about 50 years and raised five kids.
When the Stonegate subdivision on North Main Street was approved by Planning & Zoning, the three existing homes on the property were to be preserved, and it was thought by many that the several farm buildings behind them, all within the Main Street Historic District, would survive as well.
Richard Brown arrived in Suffield in 1996, beginning his long and successful career as a police officer here. Why Suffield?