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The Western Mass Tornado Disaster: What I found walking around my East Forest Park neighborhood

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A walk around the areas hardest hit by last week's tornadoes gives Scott Coen hope.

255899_1818998198057_1333207674_1727738_3577398_o.jpgThis is a corner in East Forest Park where a house stood before Wednesday's Tornado.

This morning a crystal blue sky and bright sunshine greeted residents of Western Massachusetts.

And for most of us this week will begin like every other week as we send our children to school, and head off to work for business as usual.

That's obviously not the case for many of our friends and neighbors all over the Pioneer Valley.

I live in the East Forest Park section of Springfield, mere blocks from some of the hardest hit areas from last Wednesday's tornado.

My family took some time to walk around the hardest hit areas.

In fact on Saturday morning we bought lunch and delivered it to the workers who were clearing trees around the Cathedral High School area.

Just like a lot of our friends and neighbors, we were looking for something, anything we could do to help in the relief effort.

Another friends of mine who owns a national restoration company told me that many people hard hit by the tornado will soon find out that their homeowners insurance may not be adequate to cover the damage to their homes, only adding insult to injury in the long days ahead.

I heard good stories from residents who lost their homes this weekend. The Red Cross was out early Sunday morning delivering hot breakfasts to local residents.

I also got a call from a friend who asked for donations of food that could be dropped off at the Springfield JCC on Dickinson Street.

Rachel's Table was planning to take part in relief efforts. They always do a great job working in the local community.

And in what may turn out to be the biggest early success of the week, the Fredrick Harris School and Dryden Elementary are combining their schools for the remainder of the school year.

Dryden Elementary was destroyed by the tornado, leaving students there with no place to turn. That is until this morning.

Disasters like this bring out the best in people. What I saw in my neighborhood gave us all hope that together we'll all get through this.


2011 Western Mass. high school graduations: Photo gallery roundup

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The Republican was on hand this weekend as dozens of schools held their graduation ceremonies.

2011 Southwick Tolland Regional High GraduationSome of the seniors getting ready for the Southwick-Tolland Regional High School graduation ceremony.

It was a busy weekend for high school students and their families in Western Massachusetts, as dozens of schools held their graduation ceremonies.

Below, you can find links to the 2011 Western Massachusetts high school graduation coverage from The Republican, as the big day is documented in words and images.

Belchertown: Photos

Dean Tech: Photos | Story

East Longmeadow: Photos | Story

Easthampton: Photos | Story

Franklin County Tech: Photos | Story

Frontier: Photos | Story

Granby: Photos

Hampshire: Photos | Story

Holyoke: Photos | Story

Hopkins Academy: Photos | Story

Longmeadow: Photos | Story

MacDuffie: Photos | Story

Mahar: Photos | Story

Minnechaug: Photos | Story

New Leadership: Photos

Northampton: Photos

Palmer: Photos

Pathfinder: Photos | Story

Pioneer Valley: Photos | Story

Quaboag: Photos | Story

Sabis: Photos

Smith Academy: Photos | Story

South Hadley: Photos

Southwick-Tolland: Photos | Story

St. Mary: Photos | Story

Stoneleigh-Burnham: Photos

Tantasqua: Photos | Story

Turners Falls: Photos | Story

Ware: Photos | Story

West Springfield: Photos | Story

Westfield: Photos | Story

Williston Northampton: Photos | Story

Granby, Conn., woman dies in car crash

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A driver who crashed Saturday into a tree off Cooper Hill road, just a few miles south of the Hampden County line, has died, according to the Granby Department of Police Services.

GRANBY, Conn. -- A woman who crashed her car into a tree off Cooper Hill road around 2:11 p.m. Saturday in Granby, just south of the Hampden County border, has died, according to the Granby Department of Police Services.

The crash occurred near the intersection of Peterson Road, just a few miles south of the Southwick town line.

The woman, whom police have declined to identify until her family is notified, had to be extricated from the car. She was rushed to Hartford Hospital, where she initially was listed in critical condition but later succumbed to her injuries, police said.

Firefighters from the Lost Acres Fire Department and Granby Ambulance responded to the incident.

Police said the woman has been tentatively identified, but she wasn't carrying identification at the time of the crash. Investigators are trying to reach her family before making a positive identification and publicly releasing her name.

The woman was eastbound on Copper Hill Road before hitting a tree at the side of the road near the intersection of Peterson Road.

A preliminary police probe indicates the woman was driving at a high rate of speed, which investigators believe contributed to the crash and to the "extent of her injuries."

Granby police are asking anyone who witnessed the crash to contact them at (860) 844-5334.

THE MAP BELOW shows the approximate location of a fatal car crash in Granby, Conn., on Saturday:


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Sarah Palin: I didn't 'mess up' Paul Revere history

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"Part of his ride was to warn the British that were already there," said Palin.

sarah palin paul revereIn this June 2, 2011, file photo former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, holding a booklet depicting Paul Revere, speaks briefly with the media as she tours Boston's North End neighborhood.

WASHINGTON — Sarah Palin insisted Sunday that history was on her side when she claimed that Paul Revere's famous ride was intended to warn both British soldiers and his fellow colonists.

"You realize that you messed up about Paul Revere, don't you?" ''Fox News Sunday" anchor Chris Wallace asked the potential 2012 presidential candidate.

"I didn't mess up about Paul Revere," replied Palin, a paid contributor to the network.

"Part of his ride was to warn the British that were already there. That, hey, you're not going to succeed. You're not going to take American arms. You are not going to beat our own well-armed persons, individual, private militia that we have," she added. "He did warn the British."

Palin, who again said she has not decided whether to run for president, was asked about the Revolutionary War hero during a stop Thursday in Boston on her East Coast bus tour.

"He who warned the British that they weren't gonna be takin' away our arms by ringing those bells, and makin' sure as he's riding his horse through town to send those warning shots and bells that we were going to be sure and we were going to be free, and we were going to be armed."

Palin's brush with the nation's history came toward the end of her "One Nation" bus tour that generated intense interest as she traveled from Washington to New England. Along the way, she steadfastly refused "a million times" to say whether she was running for president.

"I'm publicizing Americana and our foundation and how important it is that we learn about our past and our challenges and victories throughout American history, so that we can successfully proceed forward," Palin said in the broadcast interview. "It's not a campaign tour."

And was she leaning toward or against running, Palin was asked?

"Still right there in the middle," she said.

There's no ambiguity about the interest Palin generates, a point that doesn't sit comfortably in some quarters of a party without a clear front-runner to face President Barack Obama next year.

Palin's closely watched bus trip is a key example. Its camera-ready events competed for coverage in the same week and region as former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's formal entry into the race. His candidacy is perhaps the most formidable of the emerging field.

Asked Sunday whether he could envision supporting Palin for president, Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, a former hopeful, told "Face the Nation" on CBS: "If Barack Obama was the head of the other ticket, I could."

For her part, Palin was contrite.

"I apologize if I stepped on any, any of that PR that Mitt Romney needed or wanted that day," Palin said. "I do sincerely apologize. I didn't mean to step on anybody's toes."

While she continued to insist that she wasn't competing for anything in particular, Palin said she would welcome Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, another Republican with tea party appeal, to the race.

"More competition, the better," Palin said.

For now, Palin is clearly grappling with the downside of celebrity.

Even her otherwise successful media events can leave lingering questions about Palin's grasp of — and interest in — history, public policy and other subjects of substance.

On Sunday, Palin insisted she was right about the purpose of Revere's famous "midnight ride."

"I know my American history," she told Wallace.

The colonists at the time of Revere's ride were British subjects, with American independence still in the future. But Revere's own writing and other historical accounts leave little doubt that secrecy was vital to his mission.

The Paul Revere House's website says that on April 18, 1775, Dr. Joseph Warren, a patriot leader in the Boston area, instructed Revere to ride to Lexington, Mass., to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock that British troops were marching to arrest them.

In an undated letter posted by the Massachusetts Historical Society, Revere later wrote of the need to keep his activities secret and his suspicion that a member of his tight circle of planners had become a British informant. According to the letter, believed to have been written around 1798, Revere did provide some details of the plan to the soldiers that night, but after he had notified other colonists and under questioning by the Redcoats.

Intercepted and surrounded by British soldiers on his way from Lexington to Concord, Revere revealed "there would be five hundred Americans there in a short time, for I had alarmed the country all the way up," he wrote.

Revere was probably bluffing the soldiers about the size of any advancing militia, since he had no way of knowing, according to Joel J. Miller, author of "The Revolutionary Paul Revere." And while he made bells, Revere would never have rung any on that famous night because the Redcoats were under orders to round up people just like him.

"He was riding off as quickly and as quietly as possible," Miller said. "Paul Revere did not want the Redcoats to know of his mission at all."

More downside for Palin: Nothing is private.

Looming in the week ahead is Alaska's release of 24,000 pages of emails sent and received by Palin during her time as governor. They will provide an inside look into her rise from obscurity to a spot on the national stage.

The emails cover a majority of her short term as governor and could provide the most insight into how she governed the nation's largest state. Her only other elected office was as a two-term mayor of her hometown of Wasilla, Alaska, which has a population of about 7,000.

The emails cover the first 21 months of Palin's tenure, ending in September 2008, after GOP presidential nominee John McCain selected her to be his running mate.

Palin resigned partway through her term, in July 2009.

"Every rock in the Palin household that could ever be kicked over and uncovered anything, it's already been kicked over," Palin said, noting that a lot of the emails are between staff and family members and were not meant for public consumption. The letters, she said, "won't distract me."

After weekend Democratic convention, field of potential Scott Brown challengers grows ever larger

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Setti Warren, Alan Khazei, Robert Massie, Thomas Conroy, Marisa DeFranco and Herb Robinson all spoke this weekend.

Herb Robinson, Setti Warren, Tom Conry, Bob Massie, Marisa DeFranco, Alan KhazeiSenatorial hopefuls, from left, Herb Robinson, of Newton, Mass., Newton, Mass. Mayor Setti Warren, State Rep. Tom Conroy of Wayland Mass., Bob Massie of Somerville Mass., Marisa DeFranco of Salem, Mass., and City Year co-founder Alan Khazei gather for photographers during the Democratic Convention, Saturday, June 4, 2011, at the Tsongas Arena in Lowell, Mass. The state convention included addresses by the six hopefuls seeking the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Scott Brown. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)

The biggest name at Massachusetts Democrats' annual state convention this weekend was a Republican's: Scott Brown.

Brown's January 2010 election to the Senate seat formerly held by Ted Kennedy still stings for state Democrats. This weekend, the crowded field of Democratic hopefuls grew even larger, though there is still little consensus on which of the candidates can beat Brown. A recent poll found 52 percent of registered voters say the junior senator deserves to be re-elected.

"You didn't know Deval Patrick. You didn't know Scott Brown. You didn't know Suzanne Bump. When they come and hear these six candidates they'll come away with a few, and it won't be the same for everybody, saying I want to hear more," party Chairman John Walsh told reporters at the convention, according to the State House News Service. "We have a lot of talent and it's going to be on display today."

Brown, for his part, was no where near Lowell, where the convention was held. A spokesman told The Boston Herald he was in Western Mass. helping out with tornado recovery efforts.

Here's a quick survey of the six declared candidates, followed by some other possible contenders:

State Rep. Thomas Conroy, a third-term Democrat from Wayland, who announced his candidacy just last week. Before beating a Republican incumbent and winning his seat in 2006, Conroy worked in the private sector as a risk management consultant.

Marisa DeFranco, an immigration attorney. DeFranco has run her practice out of Salem for 14 years and told state Democrats that conservatives were engaged in a "war" against the middle class.

Alan Khazei, who finished behind Attorney General Martha Coakley and U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano in the 2009 Senate primary, is best known as the co-founder of City Year, an organization that places young people in full-time community service positions 10 months at a time. An early campaign stop brought Khazei out to Western New England College back in April.

Robert Massie, who ran for lieutenant governor in 1994. Massie is best known as an activist and environmentalist, and has come out against the proposal to build a biomass plant in Springfield.

Herb Robinson, a political newcomer who declared just in time to secure a slot at the convention. Robinson's website describes him as an "Engineer with more than 30 years experience solving problems in private industry" and expresses concern about nuclear energy.

Setti Warren, the mayor of Newton, who made an early swing through Western Mass. when he announced his candidacy in May. Warren is a former aide to Sen. John Kerry and President Bill Clinton.

With six candidates already declared, the field could grow ever-larger ahead of the primary. Officials told the State House News Service that Jim King, a Boston-based attorney, will make announcement about his intentions in the next few days. Former state Sen. Warren Tolman, financial executive Robert Pozen and U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano, all named as potential candidates themselves, were seen making the rounds at the convention.

Material from The Associated Press and the State House News Service was used in this post.

'In it to win': Rick Santorum enters White House race

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Santorum is a favorite among GOP social conservatives.

rick santorum, apIn this Feb. 20, 2010, file photo former Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., addresses the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington. Santorum, 53, said Monday, June 6, 2011, that he's entering the Republican presidential race.

SOMERSET, Pa. — Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, once the No. 3 Republican in the Senate, said Monday he's seeking the GOP nomination for president, vowing he's "in it to win."

Santorum, a favorite among his party's social conservatives, chose to confirm his plans during an appearance Monday morning on ABC's "Good Morning America" at the balloon-draped site he chose in the western Pennsylvania coalfields for his formal announcement.

He has enjoyed strong support in the past from the anti-abortion rights bloc in the Republican Party, and he enters the race four days after former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney formally declared his candidacy. Speculation remains strong that former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann will jump into the race along with former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and businessman Herman Cain and, who already are in. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, Gov. Mitch Daniels of Indiana and entrepreneur-entertainer Donald Trump have said they're not running. There also has been speculation that former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who sought the nomination in 2008, is considering making another run.

In the network interview, Santorum accused President Barack Obama of having a weak foreign policy, saying he doesn't feel he has stood up sufficiently to Iran and asserting he has done too little to speak out against Syrian President Bashir Assad for the violence there.

Santorum, whose immigrant grandfather worked in the Pennsylvania coalfields, has already hired a small staff and has made frequent visits to early voting states New Hampshire, Iowa and South Carolina.

The blunt-talking conservative lacks the name recognition and fundraising organization of his better-known rivals, but the two-term senator's advisers are counting on social conservatives who have huge sway in some early nominating states and have yet to settle on a favorite candidate.

So far, those social conservatives are weighing already declared candidates such as Pawlenty and potential contenders Bachmann and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.

Santorum, a lawyer by training, had been laying the groundwork for a presidential bid when he lost a bruising re-election bid to the Senate in 2006. His opposition to abortion, gay marriage and embryonic stem cell research makes him an appealing candidate for conservatives. But his sometimes abrasive style alienated voters in Democratic-leaning Pennsylvania, and they replaced him with Bob Casey, an anti-abortion Democrat.

Santorum's policy positions align with national conservatives who now are looking at many of the expected candidates with skepticism.

Romney's changes of heart on gay rights and abortion do little to help his second presidential effort. Gingrich is twice divorced. Huntsman, who worked for three Republican administrations, nonetheless accepted Obama's offer to be the U.S. ambassador to China.

Santorum, 53, has his own hurdles to overcome: He has been out of elective office since 2007 and lacks the robust fundraising or personal wealth of his likely rivals.

Earlier this year, he established a presidential exploratory committee to start raising money and joined the first — though ill-attended — Republican presidential debate in South Carolina. He is expected at next Monday's debate in New Hampshire, which is likely to include more of the expected field.

Monday tornado resource roundup: Food distribution at 2:30 p.m., Dakin offers animal care and more

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A list of distribution points for food and other items, as well as other resources for victims of last week's tornado.

Below is a list of announcements regarding resources and tornado relief efforts we've received in the newsroom this morning. We'll be updating the list as information comes in.

If you know of a resource that should be added to this list -- or to the map below -- please post a comment or email online@repub.com.

Food distribution in Springfield
The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts and Springfield Partners for Community Action will hold an emergency food distribution today at 2:30 p.m. The distribution will take place at Springfield Partners for Community Action, 721 State Street (distribution will take place in lot behind the building, which is on Monroe Street). According to a press release from the Food Bank, the distribution will include "a few thousand ready-to-eat meals, fruit, bread, peanut butter, snacks, nuts, and other nutritious foods."

Dakin Pioneer Valley Humane Society offers temporary pet care
Dakin Pioneer Valley Humane Society, located at 171 Union Street in Springfield, is offering temporary care for pets owned by residents displaced by the tornado. Dakin will house and provide care for pets for 5 days. Phone: (413) 781-4000.

Thomas J. O’Connor Animal Control & Adoption Center offers services for stray animals, search and rescue
Residents can contact the Thomas J. O’Connor Animal Control & Adoption Center for "field services" (search and rescue) involving animals, or if they find stray cats and dogs. The center is located at 627 Cottage Street. Phone: (413) 781-1484

Clothing, household items available at Hitchock Academy in Brimfield
Sharon Palmer, assistant director of Brimfield's Hitchcock Academy reports this morning that the school's clothing drive was an overwhelming success. Items are now available for pick-up by residents affected by the tornado. The school is located at 2 Brookfield Road, and pick-up hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday.

"Even more amazing than the force of the storms is the generosity, concern, and good nature of so many people in the area who contributed their time and efforts to help others," Palmer said in a press release. The clothing / item drive is now closed to further donations. "We now have more than enough donations and literally cannot handle more," Palmer said.



The map below includes shelter locations, agencies accepting donations, storm assistance centers and other resources.


View Western Massachusetts tornadoes: Resources, damage and road closures in a larger map

Start the week informed: Business Monday from The Republican, June 6, 2011

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What will happen if hospitals need to serve more patients to survive financially?

060611bizmonday.JPGSkip Demerski, of West Springfield, Mass., peers out from a gaping hole in the building that houses his masonry restoration business left by a tornado two days before, in West Springfield, Friday, June 3, 2011.

In this week's Business Monday from The Republican:

Tornado aftermath: Destroyed businesses face tech roadblocks
Help, including temporary office space, is available for tornado-ravaged businesses, but problems with phones, cellular signals and power are keeping businesses from coming forward. Read more »

Cost pressures expected to put squeeze on hospital support staff
In the future, hospitals may receive a lump sum to manage a patient’s care, versus payments for each procedure. This means hospitals will need to serve more patients, not serve up more procedures, to survive financially. Read more »

Boston-based PAID helps musicians make multimedia connection with fans
An acronym for the “Professional Alliance of Innovation and Development,” the company specializes in a wide variety of services ranging from web development, to video production, to marketing and merchandising. Read more »

Pratt & Whitney stands to gain millions as engine supplier for Braathans Aviation
Braathens has placed a firm order for 10 Bombardier Aerospace CSeries jetliners, each powered by two Pratt & Whitney PW1000G series engines. Read more »


More Business Monday:

Voices of the Valley: Marlene Warren, Parsons Sewing Connections, West Springfield

West Brookfield landmark Salem Cross Inn to celebrate 50th anniversary

Ethan's Eden of Hadley takes an organic approach to landscaping

Massachusetts School Building Authority head Katherine Craven moves to rein in spending

Overhaul of unnecessary government regulations could save businesses $1 billion

Commentary: Reigniting Massachusetts jobs-creation engine requires a systematic fine tuning

Securities & Exchange Commission considering release of report critical of Lehman Brothers

President Obama's toughest obstacle to 2012 reelection remains the economy

Decline in gold price has commodity investors, economists nervous

Commentary: Let us pray for the 'Gang of Six' and its bipartisan effort to reduce national debt


Notebooks:

Western Massachusetts Business Calendar for June 6 - 21

Boston Business Journal Business bits: UMass creates Jack Wilson scholarship, Massachusetts tax revenues down 4.3 percent, Fidelity hearts Facebook, and more

Business etc: Hampden Savings Bank Foundation awards $2,500, Charter Oak celebrates 125 years in Springfield, WBOA comedy night raised $9,000 for local organizations, and more

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Massachusetts tornado recovery: Disaster assistance for businesses

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Here are resources for disaster relief for businesses.

060611ferrer.jpgAnthony Ferrer with the Springfield Business Improvement District clean team, uses a chain saw to cut a section of this tree that blew over in Court Square following the tornado.

Businesses damaged or destroyed by a tornado can get help, although some may face technical roadblocks.

As featured in the June 6 edition of Business Monday from The Republican, here are resources for disaster relief for businesses:

SBA Assistance

• SBA provides low-interest business loans of up to $2 million to cover both repair of physical damage and to help a business overcome distaster-related economic injury.

Rates will not exceed 4 percent for businesses with no other credit options and repayment terms of up to 30 years are available.

If your business property secures and existing mortgage, a refinance of that mortgage can be included in the new loan.

For more information, call (800) 659-2955 [TTY (800) 877-8339]

Disaster Unemployment Assistance

• Provides unemployment benefits to individuals who have become unemployed as a result of a presidentially declared major disaster.

• Self-employed persons who cannot work as a result of the disaster can also apply for benefits.

For more information, call (877) 872-5627 [TTY (877) 889-5627]

FEMA Assistance

May be available for sole proprietors who have disaster-related damage to vehicles or tools needed for their jobs.

For more information, call (800) 632-3362 [TTY (800) 462-7585]

IRS Disaster Relief

May allow you to deduct disaster-related losses from your prior year's tax return. Filing an amended return may allow you to receive an immediate tax refund.

Julian Pellegrino of Springfield tries to get blood test thrown out in court case against him

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Pellegrino is awaiting trial for causing serious injury while driving under the influence of drugs.

CHCT_JULIAN_4493791.JPGJulian Pellegrino at previous arraignment

SPRINGFIELD – A city man awaiting trial for causing serious injury while driving under the influence of drugs is now saying his blood was illegally tested by police.

Julian Pellegrino, 41, of 29 Savoy Ave., filed a motion seeking to have results of a blood test thrown out as evidence.

The head-on crash which led to Hampden Superior Court indictment occurred on Dec. 30, 2009, at 2:20 p.m. when Pellegrino, driving a 2004 Ford truck eastbound on Granby Road, crossed the line into the westbound lane.

He hit a 1998 Honda driven by 26-year-old Mark A. Costa, of Chicopee, police said.

Both drivers were taken to Baystate Medical Center with serious injuries. Costa suffered two broken legs.

Raipher D. Pellegrino, Julian Pellegrino’s lawyer as well as his brother, said in the motion filed last month blood was taken and kept by Baystate Medical Center “against the express instructions,” and without the consent of his client.

Julian Pellegrino also wants thrown out of the case any “fruits” resulting from the blood work, including any statements he “allegedly made by him regarding his refusal to consent to the blood draw and the subsequent analysis of the blood sample by State Police.”

He argues police got a warrant 10 days after the blood draw to get the blood from the hospital.

Pellegrino’s case is scheduled for trial July 14. He has been free on his own recognizance.

In November he was arraigned in Springfield District Court for a new charge of driving while under the influence of liquor.

He still faces that charge in District Court.

When he was arrested on the District Court charge he was held without right to bail for about a month because the new charge violated his conditions of pre-trial release on the Superior Court case.

But Pellegrino successfully challenged that District Court decision in Hampden Superior Court and was released on his own recognizance.

Motion to Suppress Evidence

Springfield students displaced by tornado receive warm welcome at new home

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Students at Mary Dryden Memorial School showed no sign of worry at their new location, according to their principal

Dryden school aftermath 6111.jpgThis is what the Mary A. Dryden School in Springfield looked like last Wednesday after a tornado blew through sections of the city.

SPRINGFIELD – The principal of Mary A. Dryden Memorial School said her students and staff, having lost their school for the remainder of this year due to last Wednesday’s tornado, received a warm welcome at their new home.

“The day has gone very smoothly,” Dryden Principal Diane Brouillard said Monday morning. “The transition for my students couldn’t be better.”

Dryden, located at 190 Surrey Road, and its 254 students in Grades K-5, moved to the nearby Frederick Harris School, and will share the building until June 21.

Dryden students will stay until June 23, needing to stay the extra days because they were already displaced this past winter by heavy snow on the roof that had to be removed, officials said.

Harris School Principal Shannon M. Collins, agreed with Brouillard that the first day was going smoothly.

“Everyone has risen to the occasion,” Collins said. “It’s a lesson for the kids on what you do in times of need to help your neighbors. They truly are our school neighbors.”

The school administration sent counselors from other schools to help children with any issues either related to moving to a new school or due to tornado damage that may have occurred at their own homes.

Harris was able to combine some of their own smaller classes, and free up full classrooms to the newly arriving students from Dryden.

Students also had to relocate from Elias Brookings Middle School on Hancock Street due to tornado damage that has closed that school for the remainder of the year. The students in Grades K-2 were transferred to Boland School and students in Grades 3, 4, and 5 were transferred to Rebecca Johnson School.

Collins said there were “lots of hands on deck” at all the entrances at Harris to welcome the Dryden students, and they were all sent initially to the gymnasium. There, Brouillard spoke with them and directed them to their new classrooms after breakfast.

‘I basically told them it would be nothing different — a different room, the rest the same,” Brouillard said. “The kids have not shown any worry at all.”

Both principals said it was not overly crowded Monday. Harris has 565 students in Grades K-5. The pre-schools from both schools has been closed for the year to ease any crowding, they said.

Northampton arson suspect Anthony Baye seeks jury from outside Hampshire County

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The motion goes on to note that hundreds, if not thousands, of Hampshire County residents have been directly or indirectly involved in the case through community meetings, tip lines, relief funds and a Facebook page set up for the fire victims.

AnthonyBaye12011.jpgNorthampton arson suspect Anthony P. Baye, right, talks with his attorney David P. Hoose, center, during a recent appearance in Hampshire Superior Court.

NORTHAMPTON – Maintaining that he cannot find an impartial jury in Hampshire County, Anthony P. Baye has asked that jurors be impaneled in Hampden County and transported to and from Northampton every day for his trial on murder and arson charges.

Baye, 26, is facing more than 40 charges stemming from 15 separate fires that prosecutors say he set in Northampton in the early hours of Dec. 27, 2009. One of those fires destroyed a hour at 17 Fair St., taking the lives of 81-year-old Paul Yeskie and his son, Paul Yeskie, Jr., 39. Baye is charged with two counts of first degree murder in connection with that fire.

Last month, Judge Constance M. Sweeney heard three days of testimony on a defense request to exclude evidence resulting from Baye’s encounters with police on the night of the fires and his subsequent interview with arson investigators on Jan. 4, 2010. The hearing included some ten hours of video from that interview, some of which shows Baye admitting he set some of the fires. The defense maintains that police did not comply with Baye’s request for a lawyer and that evidence from the interview should not be admitted at his trial.

The evidentiary hearing is scheduled to resume on Wednesday with the defense planning to call an expert witness on coerced confessions to the stand.

The motion to impanel a jury from outside Hampshire County filed Monday by defense lawyers Thomas Lesser and David P. Hoose contends that extensive publicity about the fires and Baye’s subsequent arrest prevent him from getting a fair trial by an impartial Hampshire County jury. The attached exhibits include numerous newspaper articles by The Republican and the Daily Hampshire Gazette. The motion maintains that the newspaper stories are “problematic and noteworthy beyond simply their volume” because they contain references to other unsolved fires in the neighborhood.

“While no one ever directly accused him of responsibility for these other fires, there are several references to investigators pursuing a link between Mr. Baye and these unsolved crimes,” the motion states.

It also notes several editorials in The Daily Hampshire Gazette that can be construed to conclude Baye is responsible for the fires, according to his defense team.

In addition, Baye contends that media coverage of the evidentiary hearing could prejudice potential jurors against him, even if Sweeney rules in his favor and excludes the evidence.

“If the court grants suppression, it will be difficult to find jurors in Hampshire County who have not heard about the defendant’s purported ‘confession,’” the motion states.

The motion goes on to note that hundreds, if not thousands, of Hampshire County residents have been directly or indirectly involved in the case through community meetings, tip lines, relief funds and a Facebook page set up for the fire victims.

Special prosecutor Brett J. Vottero has not yet filed a response to the defense motion.

PM News Links: Five U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq, former IMF chief Kahn pleads not guilty, and more

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German officials are now saying bean sprouts did not cause the E. Coli outbreak that killed at least 22 people across Europe.

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Gov. Deval Patrick's administration opts out of federal immigration program, citing 'lack of clarity'

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The Secure Communities initiative is intended to increase the information shared between local law enforcement and federal immigration agencies.

Deval PatrickMassachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick speaks with reporters from The Associated Press during a pre-inaugural interview in the Governor's office at the Statehouse, in Boston, Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2011. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Boston — The Patrick administration has opted against signing onto the federal Secure Communities initiative, citing a “lack of clarity” and inconsistent implementation of a national program that uses locally gathered fingerprinting information to verify the immigration status of those arrested in Massachusetts.

“The Governor and I are dubious of the Commonwealth taking on the federal role of immigration enforcement. We are even more skeptical of the potential impact that Secure Communities could have on the residents of the Commonwealth,” Public Safety Secretary Mary Beth Heffernan wrote in a letter dated Friday to Acting Secure Communities Director Marc Rapp, informing the Department of Homeland Security that Massachusetts would not sign a memorandum of understanding for participation.

Since the start of the Secure Communities program in 2008, the information sharing capability between local law enforcement agencies and ICE has been expanded to 1,331 jurisdictions in 42 states. According to the Department of Homeland Security, 151,590 convicted criminal aliens have been booked into ICE custody through March 31, 2011, and 77,160 have been deported.

The decision by Patrick to reverse course and not sign the memo follows similar actions taken by New York and Illinois. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo suspended his state’s participation in the program on June 1, and Illinois terminated its involvement a month earlier.

After the state’s participation was an issue during his run for governor, Patrick announced last December that the state would sign onto the federal initiative that would share locally gathered fingerprinting information with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency to verify the immigration status of those arrested in Massachusetts.

The governor and other public safety officials said they were led to believe by the Obama administration that participation would be mandatory by 2013, and hoped to help shape the implementation of the program.

House Minority Leader Brad Jones questioned the timing of the decision while public safety agencies were still focused on assessing the damage caused by three tornadoes last week in western Massachusetts.

“I think this is the governor coming down on the side of illegal immigration, and not willing to take the necessary steps,” Jones said, noting that those deported under Boston’s pilot program might not have been “serious criminals,” but were also not legal residents.


Republican candidate for governor Charles Baker and independent candidate Tim Cahill last year pressed Patrick to enlist Massachusetts in the federal program, promoting it as an essential public safety tool.

At a Baker campaign press conference, former U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan said, “The fact of the matter is there are criminal aliens allowed to walk the streets of the commonwealth and across our country because Massachusetts is refusing to enter into this memorandum of agreement.”

The governor’s announcement last year met with sharp resistance from the immigrant community, which staged several protests at the State House and warned that the program would lead to racial profiling and a frayed relationship between police officers and those in immigrant communities.

Patrick launched a series of hearing statewide to solicit input from the immigrant communities around the state.

“We were told the MOA was going to be mandatory so we planned to sign it to help shape its implementation in Massachusetts. There’s still a lack of clarity around the program. We’ve also seen the implementation to date, both locally and nationally, has not been consistent with the stated goals of the program,” according to administration official who did not want to be identified because Patrick plans to discuss the decision later Monday.

After the governor received a briefing by Heffernan last week about some of the implementation efforts to date and ongoing conversations with Department of Homeland Security, Patrick decided it was “time to refocus on our own law enforcement effort here in Massachusetts,” according the official.

The same official said Massachusetts would continue to share fingerprints with the F.B.I., and undocumented immigrants sentenced to prison in the state would continue to be turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement when their sentences are complete.

In the letter to the Department of Homeland Security, Heffernan wrote that since the start of Boston’s pilot participation in the Secure Communities program, only one in four of those individuals deported under the program had been convicted of a “serious crime,” and more than half of those deported were identified as “non-criminal.”

Heffernan said those statistics raised questions about the stated goal of Secure Communities to identify and remove aliens convicted of “serious criminal offenses.”

Heffernan cited concerns in the law enforcement community as well as some mayors that participation would deter the reporting of criminal activity, and “deteriorate relationships with communities that have been carefully cultivated with years of hard work.”

“We are reluctant to participate if the program is mandatory, and unwilling to participate if it is voluntary,” Heffernan said.

Jones suggested the decision by the governor had more to do with politics than public safety.

“I think this is the wrong decision for the Commonwealth, and as much a political decision trying to keep the coalition together for the elections next fall as it is for the safety of the people in the Commonwealth,” Jones told the News Service.

Weekend news roundup: 'This is not Disney World -- it's a disaster site'

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Major Western Mass news stories from the weekend of June 3 - 5, 2011.

Tornado Ravaged Monson, MAOne of the scores of homes damaged or destroyed on Bethany Rd. in Monson after the June 1 tornado. See more photos of the tornado damage in Monson »

Rounding up some of the major Western Massachusetts news stories from the weekend of June 3 - 5, 2011:

Tornado Aftermath & Recovery

Angelica Guerrero, West Springfield woman who died saving daughter from tornado, recalled as a 'saint'
Guerrero died after shielding her 15-year-old daughter, Ibone, in a bathtub in their 667 Union St. apartment in the hard-hit Merrick section of the city.

City plays its part as tornado recovery continues in Springfield
"This is not Disney World -- it's a disaster site," said Mayor Domenic J. Sarno. "The people who are coming into the city to see the destruction are making it harder for everyone that is working to clean it up for the people who live here. We are asking them to please stay away."

Gawkers causing gridlock in Monson; residents should be wary of scam artist
An elderly couple with downed trees on their property paid $1,200 to some men to remove them, but the group left for lunch and never returned.

Vows of resilience and revitalization are tempered by lingering worries, shattered lives
"From the time I wake up until the time I go to bed, I've been clearing my land," Robert L. Matthews, a landowner on Bolles Road, said on Saturday. "Friends made it a lot easier."

Through history, Massachusetts tornadoes not unprecendented, and very deadly
he frequency of tornadoes - three to four a year on average - is lower than many other states, but because of this state’s large population density and relatively small land area, the deaths per square mile are higher.

National Weather Service confirms three separate tornadoes struck Hampden County
The most severe one was the EF-3 that carved a half-mile-wide path for 39 miles from Westfield to Charlton, killing four people and injuring 200. An EF-1 with speeds of 90 mph touched down in Wilbraham. It was 200 yards wide and traveled 3.6 miles. Another EF-1 touched down in North Brimfield. It was 100 yards wide and traveled 1.3 miles. Those two did not cause any fatalities or injuries.


Springfield

Grassroots group plans first-ever Springfield Pride Week
The June 8 - 16 event will include a film screening, Springfield Pride flag raising ceremony at City Hall, a Town Hall panel discussion, a youth pride celebration, and a Pride Week party for adults.

Springfield considering 2 proposals for reuse of former Visitor Information Center
The redevelopment plans include a proposal filed by Peter J. Pappas and his company, Alliance Converting Machinery Inc., who is proposing two business tenants for the site: a family restaurant and bar named “Fergburger,” which he said he discovered on a family trip to New Zealand; and a specialty coffee and dessert tenant.


Opinion & Commentary

Tom Shea: Taylor Branch recalls meeting Robert Kennedy
A chance encounter in 1968 leads to a memory of a lifetime.

Editorial: Could manufacturing be king here again?
Boston Consulting Group foresees a “manufacturing renaissance” in the U.S. within the next five years.

Commentary: Together for 55 years, they could be your grandfathers or mine
A group called SAGE had begun an outreach mission to elders in the gay community, and this was their introductory gathering. The room was filled with old folks, some gay and some not, but they had one thing in common: They had seen a lot of this world.


Graduations

Browse photo galleries and stories from dozens of Western Mass high school graduations held over the weekend.


Former House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi's lawyers launch defense in corruption trial

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Former Education Commissioner David Driscoll DiMasi told him he hoped the Education Department wouldn’t use another company that caused problems for the state’s court system.

David Driscoll 2007.jpgDavid Driscoll

BOSTON – A former state education commissioner said Monday that ex-House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi didn’t press him to support a state contract that DiMasi and two associates are accused of steering to a software firm in exchange for kickbacks.

David Driscoll was the first defense witness in the federal corruption trial of DiMasi, Richard McDonough and Richard Vitale.

Driscoll said he spoke with DiMasi only twice in 2006 about the $4.5 million software contract. He said in one conversation, DiMasi didn’t push for Cognos, but said he hoped the Education Department wouldn’t use another company that caused problems for the state’s court system.

In a later meeting, Driscoll said, DiMasi didn’t advocate for Cognos, but told him he supported the department’s technology project. He said DiMasi told him it would be difficult to get approval because of budget cuts.


More details coming on MassLive and in The Republican.

Tornado recovery efforts continue for American Red Cross, Western Mass.

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The National Weather Service confirmed that three tornadoes struck Western Mass. last Wednesday: one EF3 and two EF1s.

The American Red Cross is still hard at work helping Western Mass. residents affected by last Wednesday's tornado rebuild.

Two shelters for those affected remain open at the Coburn School at 115 Southworth St. in West Springfield, and at the MassMutual Center at 1277 Main St. in Springfield.

As of 11 a.m., Red Cross mobile trucks are in these three areas: the neighborhood around the Coburn school in West Springfield, the Island Pond Road neighborhood in Springfield, and the neighborhood near the First Church in Monson. These areas are being used as bulk distribution sites and have clean-up kits, which include gloves, rakes, and tarps.

To date, 199 Red Cross workers have served more than 8,000 meals to the 1,286 tornado victims that have stayed overnight in their shelters.

The Salvation Army is working with the Mayor's office in Springfield to provide breakfast and dinner services in the most damaged areas, and is working for elderly citizens who are not able to clean up their yards.

To donate to the Western Mass. tornado recovery effort, send contributions to Pioneer Valley Chapter: 506 Cottage St., Springfield, MA 01104. Donations can also be made via their website For more information, contact them at (413) 737-4306.

The National Weather Service confirmed that three tornadoes struck Western Mass. last Wednesday: one EF3 and two EF1s. It is estimated that the EF3, which caused damage to Springfield, touched down in Westfield around 4:17 p.m. in the city's Munger Hill section. After crossing 39 miles through West Springfield, Springfield, Wilbraham, Monson, and Brimfield, it lifted off the ground in Southbridge around 5:27 p.m. after reaching its maximum width of one-half mile.

The EF3 tornado was on the ground for an estimated time of one hour and ten minutes, with wind speeds reaching approximately 160 miles per hour.

tornado house three.jpgHouses were left in ruins after Wednesday's tornadoes wreaked havoc from Westfield to Brimfield. Several neighborhoods in Springfield -- the region's largest city -- were heavily damaged by the twisters.

A second tornado, an EF1, touched down in the northwestern part of Wilbraham around 6:32 p.m. The tornado was on the ground for about eight minutes, covered 3.6 miles and reached an estimated maximum wind speed of 90 mph. It was the second tornado to hit Wilbraham.

The third tornado hit Brimfield around 6:54 p.m. and was on the ground for only three minutes. It crossed Route 19 and lifted off the ground near Tower Hill Road. Wind speeds also reached 90 mph and it was also the second tornado to touch down in Brimfield.

Gov. Deval Patrick says Massachusetts won't participate in federal immigration status check program

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Immigrant advocacy groups said the program could discourage immigrants from reporting crimes while encouraging police to practice racial profiling.

Deval Patrick 6611.jpgDeval L. Patrick

BOSTON – Gov. Deval L. Patrick has decided Massachusetts won’t participate in a federal program that checks the immigration status of people who are arrested.

In a letter to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Massachusetts Public Safety Secretary Mary Beth Heffernan said Patrick has decided not to sign any memorandum of understanding for the state to participate in the federal Secure Communities program.

Patrick had previously said he believed the state might have no choice but to participate in the program.

Immigrant advocacy groups had urged Patrick not to sign onto the program, saying it could discourage immigrants from reporting crimes while encouraging police to practice racial profiling.

Defenders of the program say it only targets immigrants arrested for committing violent crimes and is not an effort to enforce federal immigration laws.

Average gasoline price in Massachusetts declines for 4th week in a row

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AAA found self-serve, regular as low as $3.59 and as high as $4.05.

BOSTON – Gasoline prices are down in Massachusetts for the fourth consecutive week.

The American Automobile Association of Southern New England reported Monday that self-serve, regular dropped seven cents in the past week to an average of $3.76 per gallon.

That’s 12 cents below the national average but still $1.03 more than at the same time last year.

AAA found self-serve, regular as low as $3.59 and as high as $4.05.

Kenneth R. Tremblay was Vietnam veteran, former Springfield Republican staff member

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Obituaries from The Republican

Kenneth R. Tremblay, 67, of Springfield unexpectedly passed away on Wednesday, June 1. Born in Holyoke, Tremblay graduated from Chicopee High School, Springfield Technical Community College, and American International College. He served in the Army in Thailand during the Vietnam War and then worked in the Nuclear Engineering Division of Combustion Engineering ABB. Tremblay had recently retired from the Springfield Republican and was working as a substitute teacher in the Springfield school system at the time of his death.

Obituaries from The Republican.


  • Bahre, Thomas A.




  • Charette, Paul N.



  • Higgins, Geraldine M. (MacKenzie)


  • Luce, Owen D.




  • Masterman, David N.



  • McCarthy, William J.




  • Patterson, Everitt M.



  • Rzeznikiewicz, Helen (Mozdzierz)


  • Sawa, Christopher J.




  • Surprenant, Vincent M. "Vinny"



  • Tremblay, Kenneth R.




  • Waldon Sr., Clifford L.


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