Former resident remembers Millbrook during pandemic
From left, Millbrook Fire Chief Ted Bownas met in the village on Saturday, May 2, with former Millbrook resident Jamie Kennedy, who donated enough concentrated industrial strength sanitizer for the village to fill more than 550 bottles. Kennedy is the owner of Kennedy Property Management (KPM), a professional cleaning and sanitizing business in Saratoga. Photo submitted

Former resident remembers Millbrook during pandemic

MILLBROOK — Jamie Kennedy may have moved from Millbrook years ago, but he recently proved that a piece of his heart has always remained in the quaint village. When younger, Kennedy attended Millbrook schools, but after finishing college he settled in Saratoga, building a family and a business there. He still has relatives living in Millbrook, and he still loves his hometown.

These days, Kennedy has a restoration company, Kennedy Property Management (KPM), headquartered in Saratoga, which deals with water, fire and mold damage and other contaminants that need to be sanitized after natural or man-made disasters. When the coronavirus pandemic hit, former village Trustee and fire department volunteer Brian Hicks remembered that Kennedy was in the business of cleaning and disinfecting. He gave Kennedy a call, who immediately offered to help, and got in touch with Millbrook Fire Chief Ted Bownas and others at the Millbrook fire department, the Millbrook Rescue Squad and the Millbrook Police Department, arranging to make a generous donation of concentrated industrial strength sanitizer, the type used in hospitals and commercial establishments. The four gallons of concentrate will make about 550 bottles of the liquid, which will go a long way in keeping emergency vehicles and the departments’ premises virus-free.

Kennedy delivered the sanitizer himself on Saturday, May 2, also enjoying a reunion with many of his friends from his school days in Millbrook. 

“You can move away and live somewhere else, but Millbrook will always be home,” he said.

Wearing face masks and following social distancing protocol, the men spent some time talking about Millbrook — then and now — and shared their hopes for the future.

Millbrook, like so many other small municipalities, has come together, Millbrook strong, to fight through this unprecedented time as a community. 

“What makes Millbrook special is the people,” said Hicks. “If you’re lucky enough to be born and raised here, you never forget where you came from. 

“Jamie Kennedy has Millbrook in his heart and if we ever need him we just give him a call, because this will always be home,” added Hicks. “We have a lot of sons and daughters that may live in other communities — but home is never lost.”

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