FAIRFIELD COUNTY
BUSINESS JOURNAL YOUR ONLY SOURCE FOR REGIONAL BUSINESS NEWS | westfaironline.com
May 13, 2013 | VOL. 49, No. 19
JOINT Pride of INITIATIVE Shelton
FCBJ this week cHildren’s clotHinG retailer Carter’s will lay off 100 staff in Shelton as it shifts jobs to Atlanta … 2
mediCal pot reGulationS await approval
a new YorK citY financial firm is establishing a credit advisory business in Danbury, where it expects to hire 100 workers … 3
the Company behind one of ameriCa’S moSt iConiC baCkyard paStimeS markS itS 60th anniverSary thiS year ... PAGE 2
tHe citY oF stamFord is updating its master plan for the first time in more than a decade … 7 constrUction on a $102 million pavilion and an expanded emergency department and cancer center is under way at Norwalk Hospital … 11
MEDIA PARTNER
An eye on design Samantha knapp determined to enSure tiGer lily’S ContinueS to bloom BY MARY SHUSTACK mshustack@westfairinc.com
tiGer lilY’s is a mainstay in Greenwich’s home-décor circles. But Samantha Knapp has aspirations that go far beyond the stylish 3,700 square feet the home-design studio and custom workshop her family’s longtime business calls home. “We’re just trying to go from local to a little broader customer base,” she said. A snapshot of the past couple of months
gives a telling glimpse into Knapp’s efforts. In late March, she had a booth at the Architectural Digest Home Design Show in Manhattan, a prestigious showcase for the latest in the field. There, Tiger Lily’s booth was filled with one-of-a-kind designs ranging from a geometric-shaped ottoman covered in Mongolian sheepskins to a classic slipper chair boasting hot-pink tufting. In April, she was hosting yet another design lecture at the National Arts Club in » design, page 6
BY JENNIFER BISSELL jbissell@westfairinc.com
C
onnecticut regulators are moving forward with plans to implement final rules that will govern the production, distribution and use of medical marijuana. The Connecticut General Assembly passed a bill legalizing the palliative use of marijuana one year ago this month, requiring state officials to submit proposed regulations for approval by July 1. Under Commissioner William M. Rubenstein, the Department of Consumer Protection has led the regulatory drafting process and is currently modifying its recommendations based on a recent public hearing in April. “We have gotten a lot of good reception,” Rubenstein said. “I think we’ve done a good job of designing a system where the product is used only for medical purposes.” If the legislature approves the draft regulations, medical marijuana dispensaries could be up and running in as little as six months, but Rubenstein said it is more likely that distributors would open by the second or third quarter of 2014. If the regulations aren’t approved, the process could take longer. Roughly 550 patients have applied for a registration card with the state. To receive a card, patients must have a doctor’s recommendation, be at least 18 years old, a Connecticut resident and have a debilitating condition such as cancer, glaucoma, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy or one of several other illnesses. » Joint, page 6
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17 Breaking
new ground