Stamford Advocate

Walter G. Lambert

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Walter Graham Lambert, 81, a lifelong Stamford resident, passed away on Saturday, March 13, 2021, at Greenwich Hospital after battling a brief illness. Walter was born in Stamford, CT on May 23, 1939 to the late Louis Peter Lambert and Gladys May Billingham Lambert.

Walter was educated in the Stamford Public Schools and graduated from Stamford High School in 1957. Walter’s lifelong career in the Stamford banking industry began in 1967 and was full of achievemen­ts and recognitio­n. Walter was second in command of the Mortgage Department Originatio­ns at Fidelity (Shawmut) and Officer in Charge of Compliance at Cornerston­e Bank. During Walter’s time in the banking Industry, he was also involved in building magnificen­t floats, starting with the Bicentenni­al Parade and continuing through Stamford’s Thanksgivi­ng Day parades. He shared a true sense of community with those he loved and worked with.

Walter lived a fulfilling life after his retirement. He enjoyed traveling, getting together with friends for coffee, writing letters, gardening and of course, holiday decorating. Walter was most proud of his country and his patriotism shined.

Walter Lambert is survived by his nephew, Scott L. Edwards and his wife Lisa of Stamford, his niece, Chris Edwards Kelly of Lake View Terrace, CA and his great-niece, Sarah Ann Edwards and her fiancé, Stephen Frycz, both of Stamford. In addition to his parents, he was also predecease­d by his sisters, Alice May Edwards and Lois R. Lambert.

Family and friends may call at the Nicholas F. Cognetta Funeral Home & Crematory, 104 Myrtle Avenue, Stamford on Friday, March 19, 2021 from 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., with a funeral service to be celebrated at 11:30 a.m. Interment will follow at Fairfield Memorial Park, Oaklawn Avenue, Stamford.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made in Walter’s memory to the American Heart Associatio­n/ American Stroke Associatio­n, 300 5th Avenue, Suite 6, Waldham, MA 02451.

We would like to thank Dr. Antonios Katsigiann­is for his compassion and guidance throughout this difficult time.

To leave online condolence­s, please visit www.cognetta.com

The pandemic offers an invaluable math lesson in Connecticu­t.

It’s not surprising that the numbers for public school enrollment in 2020 do not look like the numbers for the previous year.

CT Mirror reporter Jacqueline Rabe Thomas did the math. Public schools lost one of every 33 students; private schools dropped one in 16. Our cities, home to the most vulnerable population­s, have been the hardest hit, with Hartford noting a loss of one in 13 students and Bridgeport one in 17.

Numbers don’t lie, but they can fib. This data is somewhat distorted because many parents of the youngest future students opted to delay introducin­g them to the world of academia because of COVID-19. School officials say this accounts for about 44 percent of the missing students.

They attribute another 17 percent to parents who joined to the ranks of home school educators.

Do the math and we’re still left with 6,981 absent students. Stronger state policies would make it easier to do the calculatio­ns. But the Connecticu­t Department of Education no longer tracks student transiency, nor does it require parents to inform districts if they transition to home schooling. If ever there was a time to lock down policies to better track student welfare, this is it.

Two years ago, pre-pandemic, Gov. Ned Lamont proposed legislatio­n that would mandate registrati­on of homeschool­ers every year. The initiative was in response to a study that revealed 36 percent of families that opted for education at home had been reported for suspected neglect or abuse to the Department of Children and Families.

That can cast a shadow of suspicion on any family that home-schools. The objection from protesters in Hartford was loud, and the registrati­on requiremen­t was abandoned.

“One of our biggest concerns is how much of the declines in enrollment are attributab­le to students leaving the education system altogether and not receiving any education. Right now, it’s very difficult to identify that group of students that has fallen through the cracks in the system,” said Michael Morton, the deputy executive director of the School and State Finance Project, which lobbies for school reforms.

If it’s hard to count the students, it’s even harder to tally those cracks.

While our neighborin­g states, including New York and Massachuse­tts, have much stricter regulation­s, Connecticu­t tilts more toward the likes of Oklahoma and Idaho when it comes to monitoring home schooling.

If there is a lesson from the pandemic that applies, it’s that people working from home need the kind of access to services afforded to their counterpar­ts in the traditiona­l workplace. The same needs apply to the home classroom, including access to state support.

Fuzzy math about missing students means the enrollment numbers could be even worse than suspected. A flood of late preschoole­rs in the fall could skew the next round of informatio­n as well.

We need better data. Any educator knows that guesses, even educated ones, seldom lead to the right answers.

Numbers don’t lie, but they can fib. This data is somewhat distorted because many parents of the youngest future students opted to delay introducin­g them to the world of academia because of COVID-19. School officials say this accounts for about 44 percent of the missing students.

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