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Mohegan Sun, Wynn Resorts detail traffic mitigation plans to Massachusetts Gaming Commission

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Mohegan Sun and Wynn Resorts laid out plans Friday to help alleviate Boston-area traffic created by their proposed casinos.

By PHILIP MARCELO, Associated Press

BOSTON (AP) -- Mohegan Sun and Wynn Resorts laid out plans Friday to help alleviate Boston-area traffic created by their proposed casinos.

The casino giants are vying for the lucrative eastern region gambling license, which is expected to be awarded in late August or early September.

Mohegan Sun officials, at a meeting before state gambling regulators at the Hynes Convention Center, said the casino's planned $1.2 billion resort on the Revere side of the Suffolk Downs horse racing track would include an estimated $45 million in transit-related improvements.

Wynn Resorts officials said their proposed $1.6 billion casino on a former chemical plant site in Everett would include about $50 million in such investments.

wynnresorts.jpgThis artist's rendering released Wednesday, March 27, 2013 by Wynn Resorts shows a proposed resort casino on the banks of the Mystic River in Everett, Mass. Wynn Resorts is vying for the sole eastern Mass. resort casino license. (AP Photo/Wynn Resorts) (AP Photo)

Both casino operators put forward a range of traffic-mitigating plans, including improvements to some of the area's most congested traffic circles. The casinos said their independent traffic studies suggest any impact to Boston-area traffic would come after the evening rush hour commute.

The casinos also said they would be limiting employee parking onsite and encouraging mass transit use while also staggering work shifts so that employee are not on the road during rush hour drive times.

Mohegan Sun officials billed their proposal as one of the largest "transit-oriented" developments in state history.

They said the MBTA's Blue Line would be steps from the casino's entrance. Patrons would also have quick access to Boston's Logan International Airport and be able to hop on shuttles to Boston destinations, including Back Bay and the seaport and theater districts.

Wynn, meanwhile, said its proposal would also have close access to the MBTA, include a public harborwalk around the Mystic River and provide bus shuttles, water transportation options and access to Zipcar and Hubway bike share programs on site.

moheganrevere.jpgThis file image released by Suffolk Downs on Dec. 3 2013 shows a conceptual design of a proposed casino development by Mohegan Sun on the parcel of Suffolk Downs thoroughbred racetrack in Revere, Mass.

Both casinos said the improvements would require no taxpayer money.

James McHugh, acting chairman of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission, said the transit discussion was an important primer for the panel as it heads into next week's public hearings on the rival plans.

Mohegan Sun's proposal will be aired at a meeting Tuesday in Revere while Wynn's plan will be heard in Everett the following day.

McHugh said transit impacts are among the top concerns for local residents, if past hearings are an indicator.


What is a slur? Washington Redskins case forces us to decide

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What is a slur, and who gets to decide? How many people must be offended to tip the scales?

Something is happening just beneath the fight over the name of a certain Washington, D.C., pro football team: America is working through the process of determining what is -- or is not -- racially offensive.

What is a slur, and who gets to decide? How many people must be offended to tip the scales? Why should some be forced to sacrifice their traditions out of respect for others?

We are a long way from consensus on these questions, judging by the response to a federal ruling that the "Redskins" team name is disparaging and its trademarks should be canceled.

The team is appealing the decision, and even if it loses its trademark, it can still use the name. But this latest development highlights the limitations of how America wrestles with certain racial statements, and our struggle to balance free speech and social good.

A rapidly diversifying nation has more need than ever to figure out what is racially offensive.

Some offenses are undeniable: NBA owner Donald Sterling earned universal condemnation for asking his mistress not to bring black people to his games.

Yet in an era of blunt and sometimes coarse online discussion and political debate, Americans continue to disagree about the nature of calling Hispanics who cross the border without documents "illegals," or the propriety of images that depict President Barack Obama as a "witch doctor."

And it took years of discussion to win makeovers for Aunt Jemima and Uncle Ben, the stereotypical black faces used to sell syrup and rice.

Jim McCarthy, a lawyer who followed the Redskins trademark case, said he is not offended by the name, but "there's no denying the fact that a certain percentage of Native Americans are offended. We don't know if it's a minority, a majority, but it's a fact."

"If we want to be the best version of ourselves in our society, do we want to promote that, or do we want to minimize that?" he asked.

"I'd love it to be different where people just cooperate to effect change," he said. "But we're a very adversarial society."

Michael Lindsay, who was lead attorney for Indians in a prior trademark case, said there are two ways to determine if something is offensive.

"The first is the legal path. The other is out in the real world. The legal test, it seems to me, actually does have something to teach the real world," said Lindsay, of the Dorsey and Whitney firm in Minneapolis.

Here is what the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board, ruling Wednesday in a case first filed more than 20 years ago, tried to show the real world:

  • What matters is if "Redskins" is disparaging to Native Americans -- whether other ethnic groups are offended doesn't matter.
  • A "substantial" percentage of Native Americans must be offended -- not a majority. The judges defined that threshold at 30 percent.
  • A disparaging term does not require intent: "Redskins" can still be disparaging even if the team says it is intended to show honor and respect.

Based on testimony from linguistics and lexicography experts, and a review of how the term was used in dictionaries, books, newspapers, magazines and movies, the board ruled 2-1 that the term was disparaging to Native Americans.

The dissenting opinion was not a ringing endorsement of the term: "I am not suggesting that the term "redskins" was not disparaging ... Rather, my conclusion is that the evidence petitioners put forth fails to show that it was," the judge wrote.

All of which left Paul Calobrisi, co-founder of www.savethewashingtonredskins.com, quite unsatisfied. In his opinion, there's a simple way to determine whether something is a slur: The majority rules.

"I think an overwhelming majority of Native Americans should be against the name before we change it," said Calobrisi, who grew up in Virginia rooting for the team.

He resisted the idea that a few people could decide something is offensive when he did not intend to offend them.

"If they think we're demeaning them, if they think we think they are mascots, if we were doing it in any negative way, they are wrong ... As Redskins fans, we love them. Cowboys and Indians, we were the Indians. We cherish these people."

But intent is irrelevant to Lindsay, the attorney: "When a substantial percentage tell you this is offensive, you should stop. It's really that simple."

"Even if you meant no offense, if you keep using it, what does that say about you?"

It says that some people care more about their traditions than determining what is offensive, said Gillian McGoldrick, editor-in-chief of the school newspaper at Neshaminy High School in Langhorne, Pennsylvania.

Neshaminy's mascot is the "Redskins." Her newspaper recently chose to no longer print the name, but school administrators ordered them to do so. When McGoldrick and her staff resisted, administrators briefly confiscated the newspapers.

At first, McGoldrick thought the name honored Native Americans. But when an Indian school parent objected, she researched the history and usage of the word and changed her mind. She doesn't think those who support the team name have fully investigated the issue.

"I don't think they want to," she said. "I think they want to decide the word for themselves. But that's not how this works. We have dictionaries for that."

The Merriam-Webster Dictionary says the term is "very offensive and should be avoided." But again, given today's confrontational discourse on the Internet and in politics, do we really care about giving offense? Or has that value gone the way of curtsies and tipping hats?

"As a general culture, I think we care about offending certain people," said Karmit Bulman, executive director of the Conflict Resolution Center in Minneapolis. "We are still very much a power-based society. We care if we offend those in power. We don't care if we offend those who we see as irrelevant and invisible."

"You can look at this (Redskins case) as a trivial dispute, it's just a name," she said. "Or you can look at it as demonstrating how we still have huge clashes between people who we see as different than we are. And that our systems that we use to try to address those issues are really unsatisfactory."

Police: Hope Solo, U.S. women's soccer star, arrested in assault

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Solo was arrested for investigation of two counts of fourth-degree domestic violence assault and booked into jail.

KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) — Police say U.S. women's soccer star Hope Solo has been arrested at a suburban Seattle home for assaulting her sister and nephew.

Officers say they responded just before 1 a.m. Saturday, after receiving a 911 call that a woman at the Kirkland residence was hitting people. Police say they found Solo intoxicated and upset, and they saw injuries on her 17-year-old nephew and her sister.

A news release from Kirkland police said officers arrested Solo after speaking with those present and determining that Solo was the aggressor.

She was arrested for investigation of two counts of fourth-degree domestic violence assault and booked into jail. She is expected to appear Monday at Kirkland Municipal Court.

Solo is a goalkeeper for the U.S. women's national team. She is married to former Seattle Seahawk Jerramy Stevens.

Armory Day celebrated at the Springfield National Armory Historic Site

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A chance to relive local history was provided by the Springfield National Armory Historic Site on Saturday as they celebrated Armory Day. More that 170 years of history came alive thanks to re-enactors. Blank firing demonstrations were featured which allowed visitors to see and hear how some of the vintage weapons were used. There were military encampments from various era...

A chance to relive local history was provided by the Springfield National Armory Historic Site on Saturday as they celebrated Armory Day. More that 170 years of history came alive thanks to re-enactors.
Blank firing demonstrations were featured which allowed visitors to see and hear how some of the vintage weapons were used.
There were military encampments from various era which provided an opportunity to mingle and talk with the people representing soldiers from that time period.
It gave people a chance to see how the armory provided American infantrymen with the weapons they needed at the time.

Alex's Lemonade Stand fundraiser brings hundreds to Belchertown Common

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Alex's Lemonade Stand event is named after a then-four year old, Alexandra “Alex” Scott, who started selling lemonade – with the expressed purpose to fight cancer

BELCHERTOWN – Several hundred parents and children flocked to Belchertown’s common Saturday, attending the 10th annual benefit for Alex’s Lemonade Stand, that is now a national fundraising event raising money to find cures for the types of cancer afflicting young people.

The event is named after a then-four year old, Alexandra “Alex” Scott, who started selling lemonade – with the expressed purpose to fight cancer, she told her mother and father at the time. Alex was diagnosed at less than one year old with Neuroblastoma cancer that affects nerve tissue when a malignant tumor has formed.

Alex passed away at age 8 – but not before her humble efforts on a West Hartford sidewalk inspired a grass roots movement that has now raised $80 million.

That money, to date, has funded 450 research projects, her mother, Liz Scott told those attending the Belchertown fundraiser on June 21.

Liz ScottAlex's mother, Liz Scott speaking at Belchertown's Alex's Lemonade Stand community event on June 21 2014  

“It’s pretty incredible to me,” Scott said. “I thought it was kind of funny she thought she thought she could cure cancer with a lemonade stand. I thought she would raise $5 or $10,” adding: “It’s been ten years since Alex has been with us.”

Scott, 44 is married to Jay Scott, 45. The couple moved to Pennsylvania where they are raising their three boys, Patrick, 19, Eddie, 15, and Joey, 11.

Alex's Lemonade Stand eventChildren and parents listening to Liz Scott describe the evolution of Alex's Lemonade Stand  

In an interview, Scott said there are about 8,000 communities around the country that sell lemonade in memory of Alex and to raise money for cancer research.

She said Belchertown is one of about 20 towns that go a step further, have a grandstand event.

Scott said that the lemonade events became her passion.

“It makes me speechless every time – I did it because of my daughter.”

Scott said her daughter would be 18 now.

The Belchertown Alex’s Lemonade Stand event is organized each year by Jitterbugs Early Childhood Program.

The organization’s executive director, Nicole Bennis was perched on the dunk-tank seat, and children took turns throwing balls at the mechanism that would send her to a splashy finish.

Nicole BennisJitterbugs Early Childhood Program Executive Director Nicole Bennis atop the dunk tank  

“It is a great cause. And it is great because people support it,” Bennis said. “Without people’s support this wouldn’t happen.”

Greg Boyko, 39, and his wife Alyssa, 33, have been married five years. They attended with their daughters Hannah, 2, and Lucy, aged six months.

The Boyko familyGreg Boyko, 39, and his wife Alyssa, 33, with their children Hannah, 2, and Lucy, aged six months  

“It is just amazing, all these people come out – and amazing how many lives Alex has touched,” said Alyssa. “We think it is so great, how Jitterbugs picked up this foundation.”

Liliana Kolasienski, 6, attended with her grandmother, Corinne Kolasienski.

Corinne said her grandchild donated all the money she earned from the tooth fairy in the past year to Alex’s Lemonade Stand.

“I really wanted to help,” Liliana said. “I did not want any kids dying.”

There was plenty of lemonade for sale. And cotton candy, hot dogs, a bouncy house, a disc jockey playing music, and a booth set up by A Healing Touch Therapeutic Massage that is owned by Christopher and Pauline Reynolds.

Jennifer Whitehead, also known as Miss Jennifer, the children’s librarian at Clapp Memorial Library, was reading “Pete the Cat, I Love My White Shoes” by Eric Litwin to a large circle of children.

Police still investigating crash that critically injured at least 4 on Route 20 in Brimfield

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The crash happened just before 5 p.m. and closed a section of Route 20 near the intersection with East Brimfield Holland Road for more than five hours.

BRIMFIELD — Police are still investigating a serious car crash on Route 20 in Brimfield that sent several children and two adults to the hospital where they are reportedly in critical condition.

brimfield police patch.jpg

The head-on crash happened just before 5 p.m. and closed a section of Route 20 near the intersection with East Brimfield Holland Road for approximately five hours.Two Life Flight helicopters and multiple ambulances were dispatched following the accident that injured at least three children and two adults who were reportedly traveling in two Honda Civics.

Published reports indicate that most involved were critically injured, while WGGB and WWLP are reporting that a child was killed in the accident, but neither report names an individual who that statement can be attributed to. Police said they couldn't confirm anything about the crash Saturday afternoon when contacted by The Republican/MassLive.com.

A Brimfield police dispatcher contacted Saturday said no one on-duty was allowed to speak with the media until Sunday at the earliest.

The Worcester Telegram & Gazette reported that four children and two adults were taken to local hospitals with two of the children sustaining only minor injuries. No deaths were reported by the T&G.

State Police Lt. Dan Richard said since troopers were requested to assist and aren't the lead agency, they didn't have information relating to injuries. He did say, however, that troopers were first called to assist with traffic around 4:53 p.m. Friday followed by a call at 5:30 p.m. for the State Police Collision Analysis & Reconstruction Section, which is only called to investigate serious accidents.This story will be updated as additional information becomes available.



Wilbraham Fire Department battles blaze at Butler Road home

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The Wilbraham Fire Department extinguished a blaze at a Butler Road home Saturday afternoon while a dispatcher worked to call in surrounding departments for mutual aid to cover the fire station.

WILBRAHAM — The Wilbraham Fire Department extinguished a blaze at a Butler Road home Saturday afternoon while a dispatcher worked to call in surrounding departments for mutual aid to cover the fire station.

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A single-story wood-frame home at 11 Butler Road, which dead-ends on Lebel Avenue off of Route 20, was fully involved when crews arrived on the scene. The call came in just after 4 p.m. Saturday, and the home is listed as being on the market since May.

The 1,450 square foot house was built in 1953 and listed for $179,900. Wilbraham fire officials didn't immediately have details regarding the incident, including whether anyone was injured in the fire. The cause is still under investigation.


Additional information will be published as it becomes available.

Fourth Annual Worthy Craft Beer Showcase in Springfield wraps up another successful year

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One new twist this year was the inclusion of a homebrewing contest, where attendees were invited to sample each of 15 homebrews and vote with two tokens provided to each patron.

A quote widely attributed to Benjamin Franklin says "Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy."

Well, if good weather is any indication of God's approbation, then today's Worthy Craft Beer Showcase in Springfield definitely backs up Franklin's claim.

Sunny skies and warm–but not too hot–temperatures held sway as the fourth annual iteration of the the Worthy fest wrapped up another successful year. The event offers a unique take that differs from most beer festivals in that each brewery is asked to bring one flagship beer as well as one specialty brew. The showcase is sponsored by, and held in front of, Theodores' and Smith's Billiards on the lower end of Worthington Street.

One new twist this year was the inclusion of a homebrewing contest where attendees were invited to sample each of 15 homebrews and vote with two tokens provided to each patron. The brewer with the most tokens at the end of the day– Footbridge, won the opportunity to brew up at Amherst Brewing Company, and brew "The Fest" beer for the 2015 Worthy Showcase. Footbridge won for its IPA.

Some of these homebrewed beers proved to be incredibly popular.

"One hour into the contest, four of the brewers already kicked through five gallons," said Jeffrey Goulet, one of the event's organizers. "And that's just doing four-ounce pours."

The homebrewing aspect was definitely a plus for one attendee, Cheryl Sirmans Obremski, who has attended many beer festivals over the years.

"I love the homebrew tent, because it's gives those people who homebrew a chance to showcase their beers," she said. "It's a great opportunity for them."

Another attendee, Chris Nuzzo, of Longmeadow, was attending his second Worthy fest. He also enjoyed the homebrew contest, but mostly liked the general convivial vibe of the event.

"I like the atmosphere. It's laid back," he said. "They have great music and it's a relaxed atmosphere with good beer. It feels like you're just hanging out with your buddies."

The festival, which ran from noon-4 p.m., featured a number of new regional breweries such as Abandoned Building, Iron Duke, and Broad Brook.



Traffic stop in Springfield leads to discovery of loaded gun, cocaine

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A traffic stop in Springfield's South End early Saturday morning led to the discovery of a loaded gun and an unspecified amount of cocaine.

SPRINGFIELD — A traffic stop in Springfield's South End early Saturday morning led to the discovery of a loaded gun and an unspecified amount of cocaine.

springfield police patch.JPG

According to a press release, the Springfield police Street Crime and BADGE unit under the direction of Lt. Robert Tardiff were on patrol when they spotted a Honda Pilot on Central Street near Main Street with two individuals inside. Since the SUV was sitting in the middle of the street blocking traffic, according to police, they initiated a traffic stop and quickly learned the vehicle was uninsured and unregistered.

Prior to the SUV being towed, police say they searched it and found an unspecified amount of cocaine and a leaded Smith & Wesson .38-caliber revolver. The driver, 26-year-old Tomas Reyes of Cliftwood Street in the city, and his passenger, Victor Valazquez, 35, of Central Street, were both charged with illegal possession of a firearm, possession of a controlled substance, illegally carrying a firearm, illegal possession of ammunition and Reyes was cited for driving an unregistered and uninsured car.

Both men were held awaiting arraignment in Springfield District Court.

The police department said that extra patrols are hitting the high-crime areas of the city all weekend in the wake of the murder of Caleb Anthony Worrell, also known as Caleb Daniels, who was shot following an argument at a gas station on Sumner Avenue early Friday morning.


Man reportedly killed while scavenging parts from minivan at Worcester salvage yard

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The body of a 43-year-old man was discovered at Sam's Pull-A-Part Friday morning with police believing the man was crushed underneath a minivan while attempting to remove parts after hours.

WORCESTER — The body of a 43-year-old man was discovered at Sam's Pull-A-Part Friday morning with police believing the man was crushed underneath a Dodge Caravan while attempting to remove parts after hours.

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Officers were called to the salvage yard at 210 Granite St. for a report of a dead body at 9:34 a.m. on Friday. The officers spoke to an employee who told them the body was stuck under a vehicle in the rear storage yard. Paramedics pronounced the man dead at the scene.

"The preliminary investigation reveals that the male entered the salvage yard after business hours. It appears that the male was scavenging for car parts underneath a minivan when the jack he was using gave way," Worcester police said in a news release.

Police are continuing their investigation and an autopsy has been scheduled to determine the exact cause of the death.


Hard Rock International jumps back into Northeast casino race with proposed facility in Albany area

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Hard Rock International says it's involved in a proposal to build a casino across the Hudson River from Albany.

RENSSELAER, N.Y. -- Hard Rock International says it's involved in a proposal to build a casino across the Hudson River from Albany.

hard rock logo.jpg

The Orlando, Florida-based entertainment company announced Thursday that it's working with a development group on the proposed Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on the riverfront in the city of Rensselaer.

New York state this fall will grant up to four casino licenses in three upstate regions: the Albany-Saratoga area, the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region and the Catskills and mid-Hudson River Valley.

More than a dozen applications are expected by the June 30 submission deadline. Hard Rock's most recent attempt to penetrate the growing Northeast U.S. casino market came last year when it partnered with the Eastern States Exposition in West Springfield, Mass. in an attempt to build an $800 million resort casino there.

The voters there, however, sent casino officials packing amid a 45-35 percent referendum vote that went in favor of striking down the proposal.


Drawings of the ill-fated West Springfield, Mass. Hard Rock casino can be seen below.
Gallery preview

State police investigating after body, partial human remains recovered from 2 Boston area rivers

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Massachusetts state police are investigating partial human remains found in a river in Boston less than two hours after authorities recovered another body from a separate river.

BOSTON (AP) -- Massachusetts state police are investigating partial human remains found in a river in Boston less than two hours after authorities recovered another body from a separate river.

2013 massachusetts state police patch on trooper's sleeve stock photo.JPG 

State police spokesman David Procopio says authorities on Saturday recovered a body discovered floating in the Muddy River shortly after 9 a.m. Boston police are investigating.

State police, however, are probing the recovery of partial human remains found at 10:40 a.m. in the Charles River.

Police say those remains are possibly related to other human body parts found in the river about a month ago. Police do not believe they were put in the river recently.

Procopio says the discovery of these body parts does not indicate any ongoing threat to the public. He declined to release additional details, citing a potentially related ongoing investigation.


Mass. Gaming Commission sets public hearing dates for Mohegan Sun, Wynn Resorts proposals

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State gambling regulators will hold public hearings this week on the two casino proposals vying for the sole Boston-area license.

By PHILIP MARCELO, Associated Press

BOSTON (AP) -- State gambling regulators will hold public hearings this week on the two casino proposals vying for the sole Boston-area license.

Mohegan Sun has proposed a $1.3 billion casino on the Suffolk Downs horse racing track in Revere.

Wynn Resorts has proposed a $1.6 billion casino on a former chemical plant site in Everett.

Acting state Gaming Commissioner James McHugh says the hearings are a chance for the commission and casino officials to hear from residents of the two cities, which have already voted to approve the projects.

The commission is expected to award the license in late August or early September.

Mohegan Sun's hearing takes place Tuesday at Revere High School; Wynn's will be Wednesday at the Edward G. Connolly Center in Everett.

Both meetings start at 4 p.m.


Dublin Irish Select boxing team visits John Boyle O'Reilly Club in Springfield ahead of Tuesday's showdown with Olympic hopefuls from region

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"Irish Night at the Fights" as it's been dubbed will take place this coming Tuesday at the club, which is located at 33 Progress Ave. in the East Springfield section of the city.

SPRINGFIELD — The Dublin Irish Select boxing team spent time Saturday evening hanging out with locals at the John Boyle O'Reilly Club in Springfield ahead of Tuesday's showdown with Olympic hopefuls from region.

"Irish Night at the Fights" as it's been dubbed will take place this coming Tuesday at the club, which is located at 33 Progress Ave. in the East Springfield section of the city. The boxing matches will pit amateur fighters from Ireland against people from the Northeast US, including a 14-year-old boxer from Kiley Middle School.

Tickets can be purchases in advance of the fight at the club, online or that evening, as long as supplies sustain. General admission tickets are going for $25 while premium seats cost an extra $15. Ringside seats can be had for $50.

The doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the event will also feature beer, food and dozens of vendors, according to organizers. The event is slated to take place in the parking lot outside with the inclusion of ringside lights, speakers and large TVs, and the weather is forecast to be in the high 70s-low 80s with a partial cloud cover. For more information, visit the club's website here.


Obama's historic embrace of transgender rights sparking little fanfare or criticism

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Obama became the first chief executive to say "transgender" in a speech, to name transgender political appointees and to prohibit job bias against transgender government workers.

SAN FRANCISCO -- President Barack Obama, who established his bona fides as a gay and lesbian rights champion when he endorsed same-sex marriage, has steadily extended his administration's advocacy to the smallest and least accepted band of the LGBT rainbow: transgender Americans.

With little of the fanfare or criticism that marked his evolution into the leader Newsweek nicknamed "the first gay president," Obama became the first chief executive to say "transgender" in a speech, to name transgender political appointees and to prohibit job bias against transgender government workers. Also in his first term, he signed hate crime legislation that became the first federal civil rights protections for transgender people in U.S. history.

Since then, the administration has quietly applied the power of the executive branch to make it easier for transgender people to update their passports, obtain health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, get treatment at Veteran's Administration facilities and seek access to public school restrooms and sports programs -- just a few of the transgender-specific policy shifts of Obama's presidency.

"He has been the best president for transgender rights, and nobody else is in second place," Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality, said of Obama, who is the only president to invite transgender children to participate in the annual Easter egg roll at the White House.

Religious conservative groups quick to criticize the president for his gay rights advocacy have been much slower to respond to the administration's actions. The leader of the Traditional Values Coalition says there is little recourse because the changes come through executive orders and federal agencies rather than Congress.

The latest wins came this month, when the Office of Personnel Management announced that government-contracted health insurers could start covering the cost of gender reassignment surgeries for federal employees, retirees and their survivors, ending a 40-year prohibition. Two weeks earlier, a decades-old rule preventing Medicare from financing such procedures was overturned within the Department of Health and Human Services.

Unlike Obama's support for same-sex marriage and lifting the "don't ask, don't tell" ban on openly gay troops, the White House's work to promote transgender rights has happened mostly out of the spotlight.

Some advances have gone unnoticed because they also benefited the much larger gay, lesbian and bisexual communities. That was the case Monday when the White House announced that Obama plans to sign an executive order banning federal contractors from discriminating against employees on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender identity.

In other instances, transgender rights groups and the administration have agreed on a low-key approach, both to skirt resistance and to send the message that changes are not a big deal, said Barbra Siperstein, who in 2009 became the first transgender person elected to the Democratic National Committee.

"It's quiet by design, because the louder you are in Washington, the more the drama," said Siperstein, who helped organize the first meeting between White House aides and transgender rights advocates without the participation of gay rights leaders.

The 2011 meeting came 34 years after Jimmy Carter's administration made history by meeting with gay rights groups. Obama's Cabinet and federal agencies have followed up with actions significantly expanding transgender rights without congressional approval.

For instance, Health and Human Services said in 2012 that it would apply the non-discrimination provision of the Affordable Care Act to investigate federally funded health plans and care providers that refused to serve transgender individuals.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Education Department informed public schools that under its reading of Title IX, the 1972 law that bans gender discrimination in education, transgender students are entitled to federal civil rights protections. The information was included in a memo on schools' obligations to respond to student-on-student sexual violence.

Obama has made clear the guidance has potentially broad implications.

"Title IX is a very powerful tool," he said last week. "The fact that we are applying it to transgender students means that they are going to be in a position to assert their rights if and when they see that they are being discriminated on their college campuses."

Meanwhile, religious conservative groups' opposition to transgender advocacy has trickled in.

The Traditional Values Coalition has lobbied against a bill that would provide federal workplace protections for gay and transgender people by warning that it would require schools to permit teachers to remain on the job amid gender transitions. Group President Andrea Lafferty said no one should mistake the absence of vocal opposition for acquiescence.

"There are other people who are concerned about these things, definitely. I think America is just overwhelmed right now," she said. "Everybody is going to have to take a step back, and that step back is going to be this November."

The stage was set for Obama to become a champion of transgender rights when the LGBT community split over an earlier version of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act that Lafferty's group is fighting.

In fall 2007, openly gay Rep. Barney Frank pursued, with the blessing of the nation's largest gay rights group, legislation prohibiting discrimination against gays and lesbians, but not transgender people. As Frank put it plainly, there were not enough Democratic votes to get a "trans-inclusive" law through the House.

Transgender advocates who had lobbied for legal recognition of same-sex relationships were livid and persuaded more than 100 civil rights groups to oppose a bill that left transgender rights for another day.

"The community was forced to decide: Where are you going to stand?" recalled Diego Sanchez, who was the first openly transgender person appointed to the DNC's platform committee and later became the first transgender staff member on Capitol Hill as Frank's top senior policy adviser.

At the 2008 Democratic convention where Obama was nominated, 28 years after the party pledged to fight discrimination based on sexual orientation, language was added to accomplish the same for gender identity.

As president, Obama has embraced the task of putting that pledge into practice, said Sanchez, now national policy director at Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays.

"It's easier for voices to be heard once you are already in the room," he said. "What has changed is who is listening."


Massachuetts kayaker, 64, dies after capsizing in N.H. lake

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A call came in after noon Saturday that a kayak had capsized near the public boat launch on the lake near Piermont, New Hampshire

PIERMONT, N.H. — A 64-year-old man from Athol, Massachusetts, has died after his kayak turned over on Lake Tarleton, New Hampshire State Police said.

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A call came in after noon Saturday that a kayak had capsized near the public boat launch on the lake near Piermont, New Hampshire, police said. The man's daughter was in another kayak.

Police say the man yelled for help and two nearby boaters responded; he was brought to shore and CPR was performed but he did not survive.

Authorities did not release the man's name.

An autopsy will be done Sunday to determine the cause of death.

Obituaries today: Judith Gordon was office manager in husband's Ludlow optometry office

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
062214-judith-gordon.jpgJudith Gordon 

Judith Barbara Gordon (Friedman), 72, of Springfield, passed away on June 15. She was the office manager in her husband's optometry practice, located in Ludlow, for almost 40 years. Her interests included making scarves, gloves, hats, sweaters and holiday stockings and distributing them to family, friends and charities.

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2 pedestrians killed in Boston crash

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Authorities say 28-year-old John Lanzillotti and 27-year-old Jessica Campbell died after being struck by a car that crashed into another vehicle at the intersection of Beacon and Fairfield streets and rolled over into them Saturday night. Both victims lived in Brookline.

This is an update to a story originally published at 11:07 a.m.

BOSTON (AP) -- Boston police have identified two pedestrians who were killed by a car that crashed and rolled over on a busy street in the Back Bay.

Authorities say 28-year-old John Lanzillotti and 27-year-old Jessica Campbell died after being struck by a car that crashed into another vehicle at the intersection of Beacon and Fairfield streets and rolled over into them Saturday night. Both victims lived in Brookline.

Police say two people in one of the cars were taken to a hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

The cause of the accident is under investigation and police are urging witnesses to come forward with information. No arrests have been announced.

Agawam City Council to vote on proposed $81.3 million general operating budget for fiscal year 2015

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AGAWAM- The City Council is scheduled to take a vote on Mayor Richard A. Cohen’s proposed $81.3 million fiscal year 2015 General Operating budget Monday at the Roberta G. Doering Middle School at 7 p.m.

AGAWAM — The City Council is scheduled to take a vote on Mayor Richard A. Cohen’s proposed $81.3 million fiscal year 2015 general operating budget Monday at the Roberta G. Doering School, 68 Main St., at 7 p.m.

In total, the general operating budget, which covers municipal services, is proposed to increase by 3.7 percent since fiscal year 2014. The new fiscal year will begin July 1.

The operating budget of the School Department is a proposed increase of $1.8 million, with a total cost of $39,952,524 for this upcoming fiscal year.

Agawam’s Police Department has a proposed increase of $489,219, some of which will be used for new police cruisers. The total cost of the Police Department is a little over $5 million for the 2015 fiscal year.

“The budget is always challenging because you want to maintain everything and the services that are offered while also being very cognizant of the taxpayers and what they can afford to pay,” said Cohen.

A large portion of increases to the general operating budget are due to collective bargaining agreements, contractual agreements, insurance and increases in wages, he said.

The city has also utilized roughly $2 million in "free cash" funds which are previously appropriated funds that have not been spent, said Cohen.

There is also a separate capital improvement budget of $788,295, which includes costs for public works equipment and the street improvement program with certain streets that need improved water lines, he said.

“The street improvement program is what we do for paving potholes and street improvement” he said. “We get Chapter 90 funds from the state. This is above and beyond for things that aren’t covered over Chapter 90.”

The Department of Public Works has increased its budget by 0.11 percent, which is roughly a $5,000 increase from the previous fiscal year, he said. The total Public Works budget is $4.9 million.

Several self-sustaining departments such as the Wastewater Department, the Water Department and the Agawam Municipal Golf Course under the enterprise fund have a budget of $8.82 million.

“We can only look at what we raise as to what we can spend,” Cohen said.

General government costs have a proposed increase of 1.14 percent or a $36,295 increase from the 2014 fiscal year’s $3.17 million total.

“Ongoing fiscal challenges are difficult, however we have been able to maintain all services this year with intelligent choices,” he said.

VA falls short on women's health issues

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Already attacked for long wait times for medical appointments, the beleaguered Department of Veterans Affairs has fallen short of another commitment: to attend to the needs of the rising ranks of female veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, many of them of child-bearing age.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Already pilloried for long wait times for medical appointments, the beleaguered Department of Veterans Affairs has fallen short of another commitment: to attend to the needs of the rising ranks of female veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, many of them of child-bearing age.

Even the head of the VA's office of women's health acknowledges that persistent shortcomings remain in caring for the 390,000 female vets seen last year at its hospitals and clinics -- despite an investment of more than $1.3 billion since 2008, including the training of hundreds of medical professionals in the fundamentals of treating the female body.

According to an Associated Press review of VA internal documents, inspector general reports and interviews:

• Nationwide, nearly one in four VA hospitals does not have a fulltime gynecologist on staff. And about 140 of the 920 community-based clinics serving veterans in rural areas do not have a designated women's health provider, despite the goal that every clinic would have one.

• When community-based clinics refer veterans to a nearby university or other private medical facility to be screened for breast cancer, more than half the time their mammogram results are not provided to patients within two weeks, as required under VA policy.

• Female veterans have been placed on the VA's Electronic Wait List, which consists of all new patients for whom appointments cannot be scheduled in 90 days or less, at a higher rate than male veterans.

• And according to a VA presentation last year, female veterans of child-bearing age were far more likely to be given medications that can cause birth defects than were women being treated through a private HMO.

"Are there problems? Yes," said Dr. Patricia Hayes, the VA's chief consultant for women's health in an AP interview. "The good news for our health care system is that as the number of women increases dramatically, we are going to continue to be able to adjust to these circumstances quickly."

The 5.3 million male veterans who used the VA system in fiscal year 2013 far outnumbered female patients, but the number of women receiving care at VA has more than doubled since 2000. The tens of thousands of predominantly young, female veterans returning home has dramatically changed the VA's patient load, and the system has yet to fully catch up. Also, as the total veteran population continues to decrease, the female veteran population has been increasing year after year, according to a 2013 VA report.

All enrolled veterans can use what the VA describes as its "comprehensive medical benefits package," though certain benefits may vary by individual and ailment, just like for medical care outside the VA system. The VA typically covers all female-specific medical needs, aside from abortions and in-vitro fertilization.

The strategic initiatives, which sprang from recommendations issued six years ago to enhance women's health system-wide, have kick started research about women veterans' experience of sexual harassment, assault or rape in a military setting; established working groups about how to build prosthetics for female soldiers; and even led to installation of women's restrooms at the more than 1,000 VA facilities.

Yet enduring problems with the delivery of care for women veterans are surfacing now amid the growing criticism of the VA's handling of patient care nationwide and allegations of misconduct, lengthy wait times and potential unnecessary deaths.

Used to treating the men who served in Vietnam, Korea or World War II, many of the VA's practitioners until a few years ago were unaccustomed to treating menopause or giving advice about birth control.

The study on distribution of prescription medication that could cause birth defects is illustrative of the lagging awareness; one of every two women veterans has received medication from a VA pharmacy that could cause birth defects, compared to one in every six women who received drugs care through a private health care system, said the study's author, Eleanor Bimla Schwarz, a senior medical expert on reproductive health with VA.

Schwarz, who also directs women's health research at the University of Pittsburgh, pointed out that while she does not believe any of the veterans surveyed were pregnant at the time, it is critical to keep in mind that many new female veterans are of child-bearing age, a higher percentage are on medication than in the general population and the majority of these women are not on contraception.

Hayes said the VA seeks to place a trained, designated women's provider in every facility and expects to install a "one-stop" health care model that allows women to go to one provider for a range of services, including annual physicals, mental health services, gynecological care and mammograms. Until that happens, however, some VA clinics have limited gender-specific health treatments available for women.

Army Sgt. Ashley Morris, who worked as an operating room technician for six months in 2008-2009 at a military hospital in Baghdad's Green Zone that treated soldiers hit by suicide bombs or wounded in firefights, said that promised transformation is badly needed. She returned having flashbacks and suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, and spent a month hospitalized in a psychiatric facility in Pueblo, Colorado.

Now back home in Albertville, Alabama, she said she was ordered in March by a physician at the nearby community-based VA clinic to get a mammogram, given her mother's medical history. But Morris said she had to wait so long to get an outside appointment that she never made it to the doctor, in part, she said, because the VA would not reimburse her for the gas mileage to get to the private screening center 65 miles away in Birmingham.

"As a young female coming home from Iraq, they don't have the care that we need at the local clinic," said Morris, 26. "If it's anything over psych medications, I have to go to Birmingham, and they've stopped compensating me for driving there." VA policy says any veteran who has been approved to get care at an outside facility will be reimbursed for gas mileage or get their transport paid for by the system, said VA spokeswoman Ndidi Mojay.

Jeffrey Hester, spokesman for the VA in Birmingham, said he was not aware of Morris' circumstances.

Female veterans are more likely than their male counterparts to be referred outside the VA system for specialty care, Hayes acknowledged. Nearly one-third of all female patients received at least one day of treatment at a non-VA facility in fiscal year 2012, as compared to 15 percent of their male counterparts, according to the most recent data Hayes supplied.

Many female veterans report having to drive hours to get to a facility that offers specialized gender-specific care, while some of them tell of struggling to get the VA to pick up the tab for them to see a nearby private doctor.

LaQuisha GallmonArmy Sgt. LaQuisha Gallmon holds her 2-month-old Abbagayl, as her children Dallin, 8, and Angelicah, 5, sit in their home in Greenville, S.C. Gallmon said that her local VA office had authorized her to see a private physician during her pregnancy, so she went to an emergency room after experiencing complications in her sixth month of pregnancy. She said the VA has thus far refused to pay the resulting $700 bill. (AP Photo/ Richard Shiro) 

Army Sgt. LaQuisha Gallmon of Greenville, South Carolina, whose daughter was born two months ago, said she had been authorized to see a private physician of her choice for prenatal visits and delivery. But because the paperwork hadn't been fully processed when she went to an outside emergency room for complications in her sixth month of pregnancy, VA has refused to pay the $700 bill, she said.

"I called the VA women's clinic and they told me everything was approved for me to get outside care and I should be getting the packet in the mail," said Gallmon, 32, who served six years in Iraq, Germany and Fort Gordon, Georgia. "Right after that, I wound up in the ER for complications, and a week later I received the letter saying they wouldn't pay for it."

The VA typically covers prenatal and pregnancy-related care through arrangements with community health care providers, said Mojay.

According to a recent opinion by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the VA has an urgent need to continue training providers in female reproductive health and contraception.

Women appear to face particular difficulties getting gender-specific care in community-based clinics, 15 percent of which lacked a designated women's care provider at the end of fiscal year 2013, according to data supplied by VA. Separately, in a report published last year, the VA OIG found that 60 percent of the female patients at community clinics who were surveyed by government inspectors did not receive results of their normal breast cancer screenings within the required two weeks and results for 45 percent of them never made it into the VA's electronic health records.

The agency said it has since changed the system so physicians can better track abnormal mammogram results through the VA's internal computerized health records, and says patients with abnormal results are "typically" informed within three days. Hayes said she did not yet have results showing how widely the improvements have been adopted, or what specific progress had been made on the concerns raised by government investigators, especially for women vets who were tested outside a VA hospital.

Hayes said the VA plans to improve its software system so physicians get a more extensive, visible warning to ask patients about their possible pregnancy status and interest in conceiving when prescribing medication that could cause birth defects.

"We want to make it right for our veterans to have the best kind of care, and women are included in that goal," she added.

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