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Despite federal push after BP oil spill, number of aging temporarily sealed wells grows

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Five years after the Obama administration promised to move swiftly to permanently plug unused oil and gas wells in the Gulf of Mexico, even more shafts are lingering for longer periods with only temporary sealing, an Associated Press investigation shows.

Five years after the Obama administration promised to move swiftly to permanently plug unused oil and gas wells in the Gulf of Mexico, even more shafts are lingering for longer periods with only temporary sealing, an Associated Press investigation shows.  

It is not clear how many incompletely sealed wells may have leaked -- they generally are not monitored as carefully as active wells -- but they contain fewer barriers to pent-up petroleum and rupture more easily. The threat to the environment increases with time. 

In July 2010, during the BP oil spill, the AP reported that the Gulf was littered with more than 27,000 unused wells, including 14 percent left with just temporary seals.

The AP's new analysis of federal data shows that the neglect of long-idle wells has intensified since 2010, despite the federal push after the BP accident:

  • Twenty-five percent more wells have now stayed temporarily sealed for more than a year, jumping from 2,855 to 3,576.
  • Wells sealed temporarily for more than a year make up 86 percent of all temporarily sealed shafts, up from 78 percent.
  • The number of wells equipped with temporary barriers for more than five years has risen from 1,631 to 1,895 -- a 16 percent increase.

"I think there are signs of progress, but, my God, we got a long way to go," said Bob Bea, an emeritus engineering professor at the University of California, Berkeley, when told of the AP findings. Bea, who advised the government on safety after the BP spill, said he'd give "a poor grade" to efforts to seal wells since then.

In the aftermath of the BP spill, federal officials rolled out a program to push companies to permanently seal wells "in a timely manner." That effort, known as the "Idle Iron" program, is beset by loopholes that essentially allow companies to delay permanent closure indefinitely, the AP found.

The government allows wells to remain temporarily sealed when companies say they intend to reuse them. However, the rules let oil companies dodge either temporary or permanent sealing on active leases simply by filing plans to make use of the well eventually. Such wells are not considered idle. Other wells without any conceivable use must be plugged after five years, but temporary sealing is then acceptable until the lease expires. Some leases have lasted for almost 70 years.

The AP analysis in May shows that 1,065 wells have been left with temporary sealing for at least a decade, up from 1,009 wells in 2010 -- a rise of 6 percent.

Such wells are subject to corrosion and intense pressure at depths down to almost two miles below the water's surface. Shafts penetrate as far as six miles into the seabed.

"The older it is, probably the more attention needs to be given to monitoring and maintaining it," said John Rogers Smith, a retired professor at Louisiana State University who also used to do engineering work for offshore wells in the oil industry. "Are ... people really paying attention to something that's sitting there doing nothing for five-plus years?"

Permanent sealing installs multiple plugs, including one very near the mouth of the well. Permanent closing also cuts off all hardware 15 feet below the seafloor, blocking any ready oil pathway to the water. But these jobs cost more and take more time than temporary sealing, which also entails multiple seals but allows a smaller uppermost plug to be set 1,000 feet down from the mouth of the well. Temporary sealing keeps piping in place that can channel a leak up to the seabed.

Companies often seal wells temporarily to allow time to work up plans to fix a drilling problem or damage from a storm. Some owners, though, temporarily close wells for economic reasons: to wait for higher oil prices or better drilling technology.

Roger Anderson, an oil geophysicist at Columbia University, said some reasons to keep a well temporarily sealed are legitimate. But at a minimum, he said wells in this temporary condition since the 1950s should be permanently sealed, since they were drilled before many improvements in well design.

In mid-May, according to a federal well database, there were three Gulf wells on U.S. leases kept in temporary sealing since the 1950s and another 17 since the 1960s.

Leaks in such wells are likely to occur in small volumes that could easily go unnoticed. But federal reports have for years warned that such releases are harmful to the environment. And state and federal regulators have acknowledged that even drained wells can re-pressurize, and some sealed wells eventually leak.

The BP leak, the worst-ever in offshore U.S. waters, occurred at a well that the company was in the process of temporarily closing. The accident killed 11 workers and spilled up to 172 million gallons of oil. Federal officials defend their well safety efforts since then, and there have more permanent closures. There were 25,928 permanently sealed wells in mid-May, up 10 percent from 23,468 at the end of the BP spill, according to the AP analysis of federal data.

Michael Saucier, who oversees federal efforts to close idle wells, said in a statement that he intends that "wells with no future use be properly abandoned."

"From the data available," he said, "it is evident that we are accomplishing this goal."

Saucier's agency, the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, released data to the AP saying that as of February, only 1,120 wells remained targets of its Idle Iron program to permanently plug wells. There were 3,233 in October 2010 -- a two-thirds decrease. The number of oil platforms considered idle has dropped from 617 to 266.

However, wells on active leases can remain temporarily sealed for decades under this program, as long there are plans for reuse.

Asked about the rules, federal regulators suggested that some permanent sealing jobs would be unwise, because cutters and explosives used to fully sever and bury wells may pose danger to nearby active wells. They said unsafe wells can be ordered to undergo permanent sealing if necessary.

Fieldwood Energy LLC and subsidiaries -- Fieldwood Energy Offshore LLC and Fieldwood SD Offshore LLC -- have 711 temporarily abandoned Gulf wells, more than any other companies, according to the AP analysis. Those wells also include more such wells inactive for over five years than anyone else -- 419 -- including seven dating to the 1960s.

Mike Dane, a vice president of the private Houston-based Fieldwood Energy, said in a statement that temporary seals act as "vital barriers necessary to ensure a well is safely abandoned," even without permanent abandonment. He acknowledged that it's "generally more practical" to wait for full permanent closure until the associated oil platform is removed.

Oil platforms often remain in place until leases expire. Even then, the rules let companies take another year to fully seal wells.

The pressure on the Gulf is apt to keep increasing. The overall number of wells has increased by 5 percent since 2010: from 50,784 to 53,481. The number of temporarily abandoned wells has risen by 11 percent, from 3,669 to 4,081.


Greenfield Community College Foundation raises $1.1 million in 2015 campaign

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The foundation supports student scholarships and other initiatives.

GREENFIELD -- The Greenfield Community College Foundation has wrapped up its annual appeal by raising more than $1.1 million.

The foundation's 2015 campaign raised $1,106,727 from 1,016 donors, thanks to the help of more than 70 volunteers. The numbers show a boost from the 2014 campaign, which brought in $928,443 from 919 donors, according to a press statement.

A $100,000 challenge from an anonymous donor, in addition to broad support from individuals and the business community, helped the foundation exceed its goal this year, said Liz Carroll, manager of marketing and public affairs for the college.

Fundraisers such as the annual Turkey Run and GCC Day at Mike's Maze in Sunderland also raised money for the foundation.

Robyn Provost of Heath, president of the foundation's board, said she was honored that the community demonstrated confidence in GCC "by their investments in the quality, affordable education offered to students seeking to change their lives through education."

Honorary campaign co-chairs were the Cahillane family of Northampton, who hosted a benefit gathering in Hampshire County in May; sixteen Cahillane family members across three generations attended GCC, said Carroll. 

The annual campaign was co-chaired again this year by Joe Ruggeri and Rich Fahey, both of Greenfield.

The foundation works to support the mission of the college. Since 1968, the Greenfield Community College Foundation has "invested in the dreams of students who work, students who cannot afford tuition, students who cannot travel to other educational institutions--people for whom higher education is otherwise beyond the borders of their personal geographies."

Last year nearly 3,000 students were enrolled at Greenfield Community College, which offers 15 associate degrees, 20 career-ready certificates, and 22 liberal arts options. It recently forged a partnership with Elms College in Chicopee to offer a four-year bachelor's degree track. GCC is headed by president Robert Pura.

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Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com.

Chicopee police arrest armed robbery suspect blaring music from car

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Jose Dones faces two counts of armed robbery with a handgun.

CHICOPEE - A car's loud music lead to the arrest of a suspected armed robber Friday.

Police arrested Jose Dones, 23, of 200 Main St., Holyoke, at about 10:45 a.m. on a Holyoke warrant charging him with two counts of armed robbery with a handgun.

Police officer Paul Gay was patrolling in the Willimansett section of the city when he saw and heard a vehicle stopped about 75 feet away, with the windows up and blaring music, said Michael Wilk, media officer for the Chicopee Police Department.

"He stopped this vehicle and it was discovered the passenger had an outstanding warrant," he said.

Federal charges sought in Eric Garner's chokehold death

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The widow of Eric Garner and hundreds of protesters rallied outside a courthouse Saturday to call on federal prosecutors to indict the white police officer who put the black New York City man in a fatal chokehold a year ago.

NEW YORK (AP) -- The widow of Eric Garner and hundreds of protesters rallied outside a courthouse Saturday to call on federal prosecutors to indict the white police officer who put the black New York City man in a fatal chokehold a year ago.

"You all keep me empowered to speak," Garner's widow, Esaw Garner, told the demonstrators at the federal courthouse in Brooklyn.

"I will not stop loving him," she added. "I will never stop fighting for him."

The rally brought Garner's family together with the loved ones of other blacks whose high-profile deaths have prompted outcry and protests: Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Ramarley Graham. It was the second day of protests to mark the anniversary of Garner's death on July 17, 2014.

>> MORESome 2 dozen protestors arrested during Garner rallies Friday

Garner died after the police officer placed an arm around his neck to take him to the ground. A grand jury declined to indict the officer. A federal inquiry is ongoing but the protesters said they want charges to be brought now.

Bertha Lewis, the founder of a nonprofit called the Black Institute, noted that a former official with FIFA, soccer's governing body, was appearing in the same courthouse to face charges of racketeering and bribery.

"If you can indict FIFA you can bring an indictment in the Eric Garner case," she said.

Gallery preview 

Loved ones of Martin, the unarmed 17-year-old shot to death in Florida in 2012 by a man who reported a suspicious person in his neighborhood; Brown, the 18-year-old shot to death by police in Ferguson, Missouri, last August; and Graham, an 18-year-old shot to death by a NYPD officer in 2012, all joined Saturday's demonstration.

Police stopped Garner on a sidewalk on Staten Island because they believed he was illegally selling loose cigarettes. Officer Daniel Pantaleo placed his arm around Garner's neck to take him down and cellphone video captured Garner gasping "I can't breathe!" 11 times before losing consciousness.

His death, coupled with police killings of unarmed black men elsewhere, spurred protests around the country about police treatment of black men.

>> One-year laterGarner's daughter, Legacy, marks anniversary with dove release

Protesters in Brooklyn wore T-shirts that said "I can't breathe" and joined the Rev. Al Sharpton in chanting "No justice, no peace!"

"We stand together today by the hundreds saying we don't care how long it takes. We want justice for Eric Garner," Sharpton said.

The city medical examiner found that the chokehold contributed to Garner's death. Chokeholds are banned by New York Police Department policy, but Pantaleo has said that he used a legal takedown maneuver known as a seatbelt, not a chokehold.

Garner's family reached a $5.9 million settlement with New York City this week over the death. But family members and their supporters have said they want reform of the criminal justice system, not just a cash settlement.

Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, called for end to secrecy of grand jury system.

"Black lives DO matter," she said. 

Donald Trump says John McCain is not a war hero

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A spokesman for McCain had no comment when asked about Trumps remarks.

AMES, Iowa (AP) -- Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump criticized Arizona Sen. John McCain's military record Saturday, saying he was a "war hero because he was captured."

Speaking at a conference of religious conservatives in Iowa, Trump was pressed on his recent description of the 2008 Republican presidential nominee as "a dummy."

McCain served as a Navy pilot during the Vietnam War. He was captured after his plane was shot down and was held more than five years as a prisoner of war. The moderator, Republican pollster Frank Luntz, described McCain as "a war hero."

Trump said of McCain: "He's not a war hero. He's a war hero because he was captured. I like people who weren't captured."The comment drew some boos from the audience.

During a news conference after his appearance, Trump did not apologize but sought to clarify his remarks.

"If a person is captured, they're a hero as far as I'm concerned. ... But you have to do other things also," Trump said. "I don't like the job John McCain is doing in the Senate because he is not taking care of our veterans."

A spokesman for McCain, Brian Rogers, said no comment when asked about Trumps remarks.

Trump said he avoided service in the Vietnam War through student and medical deferments, adding that he did not serve because he "was not a big fan of the Vietnam war. I wasn't a protester, but the Vietnam war was a disaster for our country."

The comments about McCain drew rapid criticism from other 2016 hopefuls. In a statement, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry said the remarks make Trump "unfit to be commander-in-chief." Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush tweeted: "Enough with the slanderous attacks. @SenJohnMcCain and all our veterans -- particularly POWs have earned our respect and admiration."

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker were also quick to condemn the remarks.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz called McCain an American war hero, but sidestepped when asked whether he would condemn the remarks.

"I recognize that folks in the press love to see Republican on Republican violence," Cruz said. "You want me to say something bad about Donald Trump or bad about John McCain or bad about anyone else and I'm not going to do it."

Trump was among 10 GOP presidential candidates on Saturday's program for the Family Leader Summit.

Donald Trump's attack on John McCain overshadows immigration, foreign policy issues

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Donald Trump blustered his way into more trouble as his feud with a Republican Party elder turned decidedly nasty on Saturday, overshadowing fellow presidential candidates promoting their conservative credentials to evangelical Christians.

AMES, Iowa (AP) -- Donald Trump blustered his way into more trouble as his feud with a Republican Party elder turned decidedly nasty on Saturday, overshadowing fellow presidential candidates promoting their conservative credentials to evangelical Christians.

The 10 White House hopefuls who converged on early-voting Iowa offered broad support for a crackdown on illegal immigration, a forceful approach to the Islamic State group that could include ground troops, and a devotion to Christian values.

They were vying for support from the more than 2,000 religious conservatives crowded into an Iowa sports arena to listen to the candidates less than seven months before the first-in-the-nation caucuses.

Trump overshadowed a more substantive conversation by heaping fresh criticism on a well-respected GOP leader. It was the latest example of the reality television star's willingness to take on his own party, a practice that both excites his party's most passionate conservatives and worries Republican officials.

Pressed on whether his recent criticism of Arizona Sen. John McCain, the GOP's 2008 presidential nominee, went too far, Trump went further.

"He is a war hero because he was captured. I like people who weren't captured," Trump said when the moderator described McCain as a war hero. McCain spent more than five years in a Vietnamese prisoner of war camp.

The comment drew some boos from the audience and an even more aggressive response from national Republican leaders who fear that Trump is damaging their party's brand.

A spokesman for McCain, Brian Rogers, declined to comment when asked about Trump's remarks.

Yet former Texas Gov. Rick Perry said the comment makes Trump "unfit to be commander-in-chief." Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush tweeted: "Enough with the slanderous attacks. @SenJohnMcCain and all our veterans -- particularly POWs have earned our respect and admiration."

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker were also quick to condemn the remarks.

Trump's outsized role in the Republican presidential primary began when, during his announcement speech last month, he described Mexican immigrants as "bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists, and some, I assume, are good people."

"It turns out I was right," Trump declared on Saturday, citing the recent murder of a California woman by an immigrant in the country illegally. "I am so proud of the fact that I got a dialogue started on illegal immigration."

Trump was not alone in his hardline approach on illegal immigration.

Once a leading advocate for an immigration overhaul that included an eventual pathway to citizenship, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio focused almost exclusively on the need to crack down on immigrants in the country illegally as he addressed the conference.

"I don't think we can make any progress on (broader immigration reform), until we bring illegal immigration under control," Rubio said. "We have to secure our borders."

Only then, Rubio said, should voters support granting a "work permit, or something like that" to immigrants who have been in the country illegally for a significant period of time, pay taxes and a fine, and haven't "otherwise violated the law."

Rubio's position, like most of his party's 2016 contenders, moves further away from GOP leaders' previous calls to embrace comprehensive immigration changes heading into a presidential election where Hispanic voters are expected to play a critical role.

On foreign policy, the candidates offered an aggressive approach to the Islamic State group, whose rise has become an increasing concern for American policy makers and a focus in the Republican presidential primary.

Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, a conservative favorite, said he was skeptical of the U.S. invasion of Iraq more than a decade ago. On the Islamic State group, however, Carson said there was a "strong likelihood" that American ground forces would be necessary to contain the threat.

"I would send ground troops if I needed ground troops in order to take the land," Carson said. "You're not going to take the land without troops."

While not addressing ground forces, Rubio charged that, "ISIS is someone we can humiliate," using an alternative acronym for the group.

"We need to subject them to high-profile humiliating defeats that we broadcast and advertise to the world," he continued. "We have won propaganda wars before."

The conversation came as evangelical voters eye their options in an extraordinarily crowded Republican presidential contest. There are already 15 high-profile contenders in the race, while two more are expected to join by the month's end.

Iowa's evangelical voters traditionally hold great sway in the state caucuses, which are expected for the first week in February. Christian conservatives backed the winners of the last two caucuses, Mike Huckabee in 2008 and Rick Santorum in 2012, but neither became their party's nominee.

Former Iowa Republican Party Chairman Matt Strawn said it was likely too early for a leader to emerge among Christian conservatives. He also noted that some of the candidates may have a wider draw.

"Not only are there considerable options within the Christian conservative lane, but there are also those in that lane that demonstrate appeal to a broader base," he said.

Indeed, muscular policies on immigration and foreign policy are often popular among the GOP's most passionate voters -- as is a commitment to Christian values.

"I go to church. And I love God," Trump said. "I'm a religious person. ... People are so shocked when they find this out."

Glasgow Lands Scottish Festival in Northampton celebrates 22nd annual event

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Event highlights include Scottish-style athletics, Scottish food, traditional dancing and lots of music. Watch video

NORTHAMPTON - The opening ceremony of the 22nd annual Glasgow Lands Scottish Festival featured more than 100 bagpipers and drummers marching to the center of Look Park, Saturday.

The assembled clans greeted them with cheers and applause surrounded by 5,000 plus wanna-be Scots men and women for a day.

The event began 22-years-ago on a smaller scale in Blandford as a celebration of Scottish culture and ancestry in Western Massachusetts, but soon outgrew that location. It moved to Westfield but also outgrew that spot.

The day-long event, which stretches into the evening, offers a diverse selection of food, including Scottish delicacies, dancing exhibitions, activities for children and lots of music.

 

The ever popular and unique Scottish-style athletic contests have men and women, large and small, try their hand at throwing heavy weights, stones and hammers. The strongest of them engage in the caber toss, a test of balancing and throwing a long, heavy wooden pole.

Genealogists are waiting to help participants discover their Scottish ancestry. Sheep herding dogs demonstrate their skills near the contest for the "bonniest knees" showing just below the kilt line. The ever present sound of bagpipes provided the soundtrack of the day, the undertone of the festive atmosphere, dampened slightly by a midday shower.

The Glasgow Lands Scottish Festival Committee, a non-profit organization, raises money to hold the festival and to help other non-profits such as Human Resources Unlimited and the River Valley Counseling Center.

For those who missed this year's event, the date for next year is July 16, 2016.

Springfield Mason Square Community Day brings neighbors, police together

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This is the second year public safety officers and families have joined together for Community Family Day in Mason Square.

SPRINGFIELD — Leola Scott said when she was a child, Hennessey Park was the spot where she and multiple neighborhood children played together.

But no more. She said she takes her children to Forest Park, Holyoke or other spots to play outside. Other residents, concerned about gangs and other safety issues, do the same, leaving the park off Oak Grove Avenue empty most of the time.

But on Saturday neighbors from Oak Grove Avenue, Kenyon Avenue and other Mason Square Streets gathered there with police and fire officials, the Hampden Sheriff's Department, The Hampden District Attorney's Office, local churches and others for Community Family Day.

"One of the neighborhood concerns is to bring back our parks. My children weren't allowed to play here without me right here," Scott said.

Muriel Howell, who now lives a few streets away, agreed, saying children used to play there all the time.

"There is too much violence. After 6 p.m. you can't out," she said.

This is the second year the Mason Square Initiative and the Bay Area Neighborhood Council joined with public safety officials for the neighborhood picnic. Rain interrupted the picnic, but many families still walked to the park for the event.

"Last year we had four vendors, this year we have 26," said Vee McCoy, one of the organizers of the event.

Along with free food and information about a wide variety of organizations and services, children had a chance to try gear used by the Springfield Police Department's Tactical Response Unit and could climb into a cruiser or a fire truck.

Entertainment varied and showed the partnerships between public safety and the neighbors. Girls from neighborhood dance team Technique Dance Majorettes, the police K-9 team and a local musician all wowed residents.

Officers from the Mason Square C3 initiative, which works with area residents and organizations to build a close relationship to identify problems, find solutions and arrest criminals, joined with school resource officers from the department's Quebec Team to meet residents of all ages.

"This is a stronghold of one of the city's strongest gangs, the Sycamore Street gang," said Sgt. Charles Howard, supervisor of the school resource officers.

During the school year, school resource officers work with children, from elementary through high school grades. One of their jobs is to teach children about gangs and try to keep them away from them, he said.

An event like the Community Family Day allows officers to reconnect with children they haven't seen since school ended, as well as working with neighborhood residents, he said.

Adrienne Osborn had a dual role yesterday as a program manager for the Hampden Sheriff's Department and a resident who is on the steering community for the neighborhood watch.

In the past the neighborhood watch has done community events including a neighborhood walk and holding programs to teach families how to stay safe and protect their homes. Those were always well received as was the Community Family Day.

"This is a great opportunity for the community to come together as one," she said.

While posing for photographs with neighborhood children and talking to police and others, Mayor Domenic J. Sarno agreed the biggest benefit is creating a cohesive neighborhood and a partnership with police.

"Less than 1 percent are the hard core criminals and it is not hard to be the 99 percent," he said.

Most of the event however was more about having fun together. Resource officer Mark Russell joked with children as he let them try on the heavy bulletproof vests and challenged them to run at him with a shield used to knock down doors.

Joe Sallins, a local musician who grew up in the neighborhood, squeezed an appearance in his old park in between tour dates. He said he was happy to come back when McCoy asked him to.

He taught a quick class on drumming to local children. When he asked for other volunteers, some of the cadets from the Springfield Police Academy happily joined with the young children to play.



1930s video of Queen Elizabeth giving Nazi salute rocks Britain

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Buckingham Palace expressed its disappointment Saturday with a tabloid newspaper for publishing images of a young Queen Elizabeth II performing a Nazi salute with her family in 1933, the year Adolf Hitler came to power.

LONDON -- Buckingham Palace expressed its disappointment Saturday with a tabloid newspaper for publishing images of a young Queen Elizabeth II performing a Nazi salute with her family in 1933, the year Adolf Hitler came to power.

The palace took the unusual step of commenting on the report in The Sun newspaper, which shows the queen -- then about 7 years old -- at the family home in Balmoral, with her uncle Edward, mother and sister. The grainy footage also shows Elizabeth's mother making the salute as the family laughs. 

"It is disappointing that film, shot eight decades ago and apparently from Her Majesty's personal family archive, has been obtained and exploited in this manner," the palace said.

The images, posted on the newspaper's website under the headline "Their Royal Heilnesses," shows the young girls prancing on the grass. A dog runs underfoot. The girls jump up and down.

Military historian James Holland told The Sun that the royals were joking.

"I don't think there was a child in Britain in the 1930s or '40s who has not performed a mock Nazi salute as a bit of a lark," he was quoted as saying.

The queen's former press secretary, Dickie Arbiter, said the royals would be relaxed about the release of the film given the context in which it was shot -- and given that the monarch's parents took a fierce anti-Nazi stand during World War II. But he said they would be angry about how the newspaper obtained what is essentially a home movie.

He noted that the true extent of Nazism's evils became known only later.

The Sun's managing editor, Stig Abell, said the footage was obtained legitimately. He told the BBC that the story was "not a criticism of the queen or the Queen Mum."

The Region 6 American Quarter Horse Association Championship Show at the Eastern States Exposition

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WEST SPRINGFIELD - The Region 6 American Quarter Horse Association Championship Show continued on Saturday, July 18, 2015 at the Eastern States Exposition. Scores of riders and their steeds competed in Select Amateur Western Horsemanship, Western Riding and Ranch Horse classes. The event was held at the Coliseum. The Championships continue on Sunday, July 19 and is free to the...

WEST SPRINGFIELD - The Region 6 American Quarter Horse Association Championship Show continued on Saturday, July 18, 2015 at the Eastern States Exposition.

Scores of riders and their steeds competed in Select Amateur Western Horsemanship, Western Riding and Ranch Horse classes. The event was held at the Coliseum.

The Championships continue on Sunday, July 19 and is free to the public.

Hartford baby pronounced dead five days after tub incident

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A Hartford baby was pronounced dead after his parents found him unresponsive in a tub.

HARTFORD— A one-year-old baby boy was pronounced dead at a Hartford hospital Saturday after his parents earlier found him unresponsive in a tub.

The Hartford Courant reported that the baby, Antonio Armando Delgado, Jr., was removed from life support at Childrens Medical Center Saturday after he had been hopitalized in critical condition for five days.

Hartford firefighters were called to the parent's Elmer Street home Tuesday with the report of an unresponsive child, but before an ambulance got to the home the parents took the child to the hospital by private car. The parents met up with EMS personnel on the way to the hospital.

The child's parents said the baby was in a bathtub where they found him not breathing.

The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner will conduct an autopsy to confirm the cause of death. A police spokesman said initial details are consistent with drowning.

Hartford man shot to death outside his home

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A Hartford man was pronounced dead at Hartford Hospital after he was shot several times on Elliot Street.

HARTFORD— A 34-year-old Hartford man was pronounced dead at Hartford Hospital Saturday morning after he was shot several times in front of his Elliot Street home.

Hartford Police told the Hartford Courant that Jonathan Whaley was found inside his home at about 2:30 a.m. after police responded to a shots fired call at the address. Whaley had been shot multiple times.

Police said evidence indicates the victim was outside his home when shot, then ran inside and collapsed.

Whaley's death marks the 18th homicide for the city so far this year.

Upper Hill stabbing seriously injures Springfield man

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A man was confronted and stabbed early Sunday morning on Wilbraham Avenue.

SPRINGFIELD— A Springfield man was stabbed and seriously wounded during a confrontation Sunday morning in the Upper Hill neighborhood.

Springfield Police Lt. Scott Richard said police have few details as the victim was transferred from Mercy Hospital to the Baystate Medical Center during the early morning hours and was unable to answer detectives' questions.

Police were notified of the assault when the victim showed up at Mercy Hospital at approximately 1:15 a.m. He had been transported by private vehicle, Richard said. He was given immediate treatment, then transferred to the Baystate Trauma Center.

Richard said apparently the man was confronted by his assailant in the vicinity of 34 Wilbraham Avenue at about 1 a.m. Police do not know what transpired between the two except that it ended with his stabbing.

The victim is expected to recover, Richard said.

Holyoke Police Chief James Neiswanger tells residents how they can help police

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The Holyoke police chief asked residents to call police with clothing descriptions and other details about drug-dealing and other problems they see.

HOLYOKE -- With strong feelings about police displayed nationwide and drug-dealers showing sophistication in their peddling, Police Chief James M. Neiswanger requested a favor.

"Next time you see an officer, not me, one of my officers, just thank them for their service. It would mean so much," Neiswanger said Thursday (July 16), at a meeting held at the Marian Center, 1365 Northampton St.

Neiswanger made remarks about community policing and other police efforts to an audience of about 25 as part of Mayor Alex B. Morse's series of neighborhood meetings.

Neiswanger told the audience government grants will result in more visibility of police on foot and bicycle patrols doing community policing beats as the 110-person uniformed force works to fight crime.

A woman who said she lives around Nonotuck Street and Kennedy Park said she often sees young people walking there that appear to be on drugs but rarely sees a police officer.

Neiswanger said most of police time is devoted to high-crime spots in areas such as South Holyoke and the Flats. Just seeing someone walking in an unusual way isn't enough for police to take action, he said.

He asked residents to be alert and talk to police about patterns observed in people they consider suspicious.

Residents can help by contacting police with details such as clothing descriptions and time of day when they see drug-dealers and other problems, he said.

"It's all about establishing relationships and partnerships. Police can't do it alone," Neiswanger said.

The chief referred indirectly to anti-police feelings expressed around the country. A "black and brown lives matter" demonstration was held here Dec. 12 that echoed protests held nationwide after the deaths of black men at the hands of white police officers in Missouri and New York City.

It used to be that police work and tips would lead officers to a drug-dealer's home where they would make arrests and seize narcotics, guns and money. Now, dealers often live separate from where they stash heroin or cocaine that they are selling and they hide firearms and cash in still other locations while using social media to broker deals, he said.

"That's very difficult for us to intercept," Neiswanger said, but he said at another point, "We're moving in the right direction. It's not perfect. But we're moving in the right direction."

He discussed the May 4 crackdown he and Morse announced on a 47-unit building with an address of 365 Appleton St.-173-177 Elm St. Before the crackdown, police had been dispatched to the building more than 1,300 times since January 2011 for shots-fired calls, drug raids and arrests, a fatal stabbing in July, 2014 and other problems.

The landlord has been cooperating since a city threat to seek court action, officials said, and a police presence that includes the community policing truck is a regular sight at the building.

Peggy Melanson, who lives in Ward 7, said larger crime problems seem to be happening in other communities instead of here and police deserve credit.

"I know we have our problems, but we're not as bad as some places are. So I think they're doing their job. They're doing their job well," Melanson said.

Neiswanger said police patrol the city with seven cruisers from noon to 4 a.m. and six cruisers from 4 a.m. to noon. He would like to deploy eight or nine cruisers per shift but available staffing limits that, he said.

He reiterated the value of community policing.

"Any time I can get an officer out walking or on a bicycle, it's huge. People like to see that," Neiswanger said.

The city has had two homicides in 2015. There were three in 2014, four in 2013 -- and none in 2012.

"That's never happened before in Holyoke. We average about four homicides a year," Neiswanger said.

Two factors that can keep the murder rate low are the presence of a trauma center nearby at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield to treat violent-crime victims and the reality that while many thugs have guns, few shoot accurately, he said.

4 Springfield apartment buildings OK'd for nomination to National Register of Historic Places

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The buildings all reflect development patterns in early 20th century Springfield, which were influenced by the adoption of a building code, the city's expansion of the streetcar system, and a significant population rise due to employment opportunities in local industries and increased immigration

SPRINGFIELD — Four early 20th century Springfield apartment complexes – developed by and built for the city's growing immigrant population – have been approved by the Massachusetts Historical Commission for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places, according to the office of Secretary of State William F. Galvin.

The four Classical Revival-style buildings nominated are: the Adams Apartments and the Evans Court Apartments in Springfield's South End neighborhood, the Ivernia Apartments in the Six Corners neighborhood and the Hancock Apartments in the Old Hill neighborhood.

The designation, which received support from the Springfield Historical Commission, is being sought by Home City Housing Development Corp. of Springfield, a multi-service housing organization that develops, owns and manages multi-family rental properties in Greater Springfield.

Home City Housing currently owns 285 units in the area and manages an additional 167 units for non-profit developers in the region, according to its website.

Thomas Kegelman, executive director, said all of the apartments – including two that were severely damaged by the June 1 tornado – have undergone substantial renovations and are fully occupied. Construction cost alone for the 47 units comprising the project totaled $200,000, he said.

"Buildings like these are a valuable resource for people who live in the city," Hegelman said.

Without historical and low-income subsidies, it would be impossible to reclaim them, he added.

Ralph Slate, chairman of the Historical Commission, said the commission is pleased that the apartments won't fall victim to a cycle of deterioration that often leads to abandonment and eventually demolition.

Developers of buildings that receive historic designation are eligible for state and federal tax credits to rehabilitate the structures, Slate said.

Commission member Robert McCarroll said "it's good to see our older apartment buildings being recognized," noting that the historic nature of the apartments are often not appreciated as much as single-family homes.

According to a press release from the state, all four of the buildings reflect development patterns in early 20th century Springfield, which were influenced by the adoption of a building code, the city's expansion of the streetcar system and an influx of immigrants drawn by job opportunities in manufacturing.

"The Massachusetts Historical Commission is dedicated to preserving the commonwealth's rich historic, architectural, archaeological and cultural resources," Galvin said in a press release.

"Inclusion of these four apartment buildings in the National Register will help to preserve an important part of Springfield's early 20th-century heritage," he said.

By the end of the 19th century, Springfield was a booming manufacturing community, teeming with immigrants from Ireland, Canada, Italy and Jews from Eastern Europe.

With more than 500 manufacturers, the city made products including railroad cars, lawnmowers and textiles. One-quarter of the city's population, which had reached 103,000 by 1915, was made up of immigrants.

The Adams, Evans Court and Ivernia complexes – all built by French Canadian immigrants – and Hancock apartments, built by Eastern European Jewish immigrants, not only housed a variety of immigrant groups, but were also developed and constructed by immigrants, according to the release.

The Adams and Evans Court apartment buildings suffered significant damage during the June 1, 2011, tornado.

All four of the apartment blocks were rehabilitated in 2014, with assistance from state and federal historic rehabilitation tax credits.

The nominations will be submitted to the National Register of Historic Places at the National Park Service in Washington, D.C., for final consideration and designation.

Nominated complexes:

  • Evans Court Apartments, 22-24 Winthrop St., designed by J.A. Angers & Brother and built in 1910.
  • Ivernia Apartments, 91-93 Pine St., designed by Gagnier and Angers in 1910 for carpenter Joseph Gaudette.
  • Adams Apartments, 71 Adams St.,designed by Gagnier and Angers and built in 1912 for French Canadian immigrant Anatole Payette.
  • Hancock Apartments, 116-118 Hancock St., designed by B. Edward Geckler and built by mason Oscar Jurist in 1912 as an investment property for Tessie Schaffer & Company.

Collins brothers fight for Springfield schools from different corners

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They also agree that Springfield and other high-minority, high-poverty population schools require and deserve more in state funding than suburban schools that don't deal with those social issues.

SPRINGFIELD — Timothy and Christopher Collins didn't just fall into their civic activists and leadership roles in the Springfield's public school system – they were born into them.

Tim Collins, 66, who is president of the Springfield Teachers Union, and Chris Collins, 65, who is vice chairman of the Springfield School Committee, are among seven children of Geraldine Collins and former Springfield City Treasurer Edward W. "Bud" Collins Sr., who introduced their offspring to a life of civic activism and the art of political debate when they were growing up on West Alvord Street.

Beginning in 1947, Bud Collins served 12 years on the School Committee, twice as chairman. The senior Collins also worked as a laborer at Chapman Valve. "He was a union guy," Tim said.

Later when he was promoted to the executive ranks, the elder Collins understood both sides of employment issues.

Their mother was active on the Democratic City Committee and a ward captain. "We held up signs for candidates before we knew what we were doing," Tim said.

"Dad always taught us to defend two sides of an argument: the position you believe in and the one that you don't believe in," Chris said.

It was a skill that would test the brothers, who began their careers in the early 1970s as classroom teachers on their diverging paths to their current positions – Tim representing teachers and Chris representing the administration of the School Department.

Sometimes the Collins brothers been on the same side of the debate. And other times, they've been at odds.

Early in their careers, they stood together during the 1980 Springfield teachers strike when 1,800 teachers took to the streets to fight for higher pay and, more importantly, the brothers said, for more teacher preparation time and smaller class sizes.

Tim Collins said the absence of adequate planning time for teachers was a "huge" issue. Teachers only had 15-minute breaks, he said. "They had lunch duty and when they had to leave the classroom for short periods, they'd open the doors between classrooms so that another teacher could cover for them."

The brothers each had 28 to 38 children in their classrooms.

During the three-week strike, Tim headed up the bargaining team for the Springfield Education Association and Chris, a teacher at the time, served as a liaison between the SEA and elected officials.

Both said the strike helped bring about changes that put students first by helping teachers do their jobs better.

In the 1990s, during the tenure of former Springfield School Superintendent Peter J. Negroni and the passage of the 1993 Education Reform Act, Tim was allied squarely with the teachers while Chris, who had since become a school principal, found himself questioning the wisdom of creating school-centered management teams giving teachers and parents decision-making powers and minimizing the principals input.

One time the brothers argued the merits of the site-based management team while having a beer at the John Boyle O'Reilly Club. "It got rather heated," Chris said. "The bartender asked if he should call the police."

The server was quickly assured that there was no need for law enforcement, explaining that brotherly debate – rather than fisticuffs –was common in the Collins family.

Both agreed that the Education Reform Act was a major "game-changer" for public education in the Bay State. The new law opened the way for the creation of charter schools and established standardized testing as the measure of a school's success.

Tim Collins still believes the MCAS test is a "crooked yardstick," that doesn't measure the social and collaborative skills of students.

Both agree that without state funding, reforms are meaningless.

They also agree that Springfield and other high-minority, high-poverty population schools require and deserve more in state funding than suburban schools that don't deal with those social issues.

City schools, while improving, still face challenges in boosting academic performance. Currently, eight of the city's middle school have been designated Level 4 or underperforming by the state, one rung about Level 5, the worst performing category.

Tim is much tougher on the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education than his brother. "The bottom line is DESE is hypocritical." He said new educational requirements should come with a big boost in funding.

Both are concerned with teacher retention. When the city was operating under the auspices of the state-mandated finance control board beginning in 2004 with the institution of a salary freeze, the city lost 1,500 teachers over the five years, they said.

"The teachers went four years without raises," Tim said. "Other local districts came after our teachers. The word was out that there were great teachers in Springfield."

The loss of so many veteran teachers had a negative impact on the city and its ability to attract and retain new teachers, both agreed.

Today the Collins brothers are finding themselves in the midst of another reform era as the School Department strives to boost students academic performance and to attract new talent as veteran teachers retire.

With the recent creation of the Springfield Empowerment Zone Partnership – a collaboration of the state, the school system, the teachers union along with guidance from the private education reform organization, Empower Schools – the Collins brothers are back in the thick of it again.

The Empowerment Zone, a first-of-its-kind partnership, was created to help turn around the city's failing middle schools. Principals and leadership teams at nine middle schools have been developing new school policies for the upcoming school year, including extended days, more enrichment and the adoption of a culture that focuses on student responsibility. Each schools plan will be unique and self-determined.

Chris Collins is one of three city representatives on the Springfield Empowerment Zone Partnership board along with Superintendent Daniel Warwick and Mayor Domenic J. Sarno. Three state appointed board members are John Davis of the Davis Foundation, James O'S. Morton, head of the Greater Boston YMCA and Beverly Holmes, a former member of the state board of education.

Educational reformer and activist Chris Gabrieli, co-founder of the Boston -based Empower Schools organization, is chairman of the board.

Tim Collins, who has attended each of the three meetings held by the board so far, plans to give voice to teachers' concerns as the board continues to guide the turnaround efforts.

Before the zone could be created, the state and city agreed that the teachers union should be part of the partnership. After a month of negotiations, 92 percent of the union members agreed to a new contract under the zone that includes more pay, more time for classroom planning, student instruction and professional development.

"No one thought we'd be able to get together and accomplish that goal," Tim Collins said of the deal.

Both brothers have high marks for Gabrieli.

"He came in and he listened," Tim said of Gabrieli. "He understands that this has to be a bottom-up, not top-down process," he said, explaining that school principals and teachers – not state administrators – best understand the needs of their schools.

The collaboration has helped the city avoid a state takeover, which is what happened in Holyoke.

Both brothers are hopeful that the Empowerment Zone partnership will accomplish the goal of improving student performance, not just for next year, but for the long-term.

The stakes are high with so many needy students in Springfield schools, the brothers said.

Providing quality education to all children is "the civil rights issue" of our time, they said.

Given the challenges urban school districts face, Tim Collins said principals and teachers in the city are "miracle workers."

"They take kids who many people believe have no chance" and send 70 percent of them off to four-year college, Chris Collins said.

In summing up the brothers' differences, Chris Collins said:

"Despite our differences, our overall goal will lead us to a solution that is best for the students of Springfield."

What are the five other Collins siblings up to?


  • Edward W. Collins, longtime representative for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers

  • James P. Collins, retired corrections officer

  • William Collins, Springfield police captain

  • Geraldine Marie Collins, paralegal at law offices of Pellegrini, Seeley, Ryan and Blakesley

Kaween Fernando announces bid for Chicopee City Council

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There are seven people running for the four at-large City Council seats.

CHICOPEE -W. Kaween Fernando is announcing his first bid to run for City Council at-large with a pledge to expand the city's cable and broadband Internet system.

If elected, one of his top plans is to encourage the city, through Chicopee Electric Light, to install a municipal cable and broadband Internet utility to expand options for residents and help grow the city.

"A municipal cable and broadband utility (will) lower costs, improve service and, most importantly, eliminate the practical monopoly that exists with having only one real choice for cable and broadband Internet service in the city," he said.

Fernando said he believes installing the infrastructure through Chicopee Electric Light will cost less than it would in other communities the size of Chicopee. It will pay off in the future as a revenue source and making the city a technological leader in the region because it will help attract high-tech businesses to the area.

Fernando returned his nomination papers this week. The Committee to Elect W. Kaween Fernando will kick off the campaign with a fundraiser with dinner and dancing on Aug. 14 the American Veterans Post 12 on Montgomery Street.

He has also set up a campaign website at www.kaweenfernando.com and can be reached by email at w@kaweenfernando.com.

A 2004 graduate of Chicopee High School, Fernando holds a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering with minors in biochemical engineering and technological entrepreneurship. He has worked at various biotechnology companies focusing on autologous cell therapy process development. After losing his job in the summer of 2013, Kaween returned to Chicopee.

He first worked at a manufacturing plant while starting his own business. He now operates his own business, VapeCrafter, which produces liquid to use in electronic cigarettes.

Having a background in engineering, Fernando said he will use a knowledge-based approach to solving problems, using the data available to find real and lasting solutions to problems.

Also included in his campaign platform is a plan to create a curbside citywide composting program to reduce the cost of trash disposal and prevent the city from having to institute a trash fee.

He said he would also push for purchasing body cameras for every police officer to prevent potential lawsuits against the city.

"I am not like every other candidate running for this office. Of course every single one of them wants to reduce taxes, but not one of them has a plan on how to do it in a way that is long lasting that will not lead to limiting what the city can do with its already limited budget," Fernando said.

There are a total of seven candidates running for the four at-large seats Fernando joins newcomers Robert P. Termblay and Douglas P. Giouard who are challenging James K. Tillotson, Robert J. Zygarowski, Frank N. Laflamme and Gerard A. Roy.

He called for Elms College and the city's public high schools to consider holding a debate among the candidates.

Obituaries today: Daniel Federici worked for Colebrook Realty Services

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
071915-daniel-federici.jpgDaniel Federici 

Daniel Paul Federici, 30, of Springfield, passed away on Monday. He was a graduate of East Longmeadow High School and a communicant of St. Michael's Parish, East Longmeadow. He worked for Colebrook Realty Services as a maintenance supervisor.

To view all obituaries from The Republican:
» Click here

'I punched it': Surfer Mick Fanning survives shark attack during competition (video)

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Knocked off his board by an attacking shark, a surfer punched the creature during the televised finals of a world surfing competition in South Africa before escaping.

JOHANNESBURG -- Knocked off his board by an attacking shark, a surfer punched the creature during the televised finals of a world surfing competition in South Africa before escaping.

Australian surfer Mick Fanning was attacked by a shark Sunday during the JBay Open in Jeffrey's Bay in the Eastern Cape Province but escaped without injuries.

On a video on the World Surf League's website, Fanning is seen knocked off his surfboard. As he scans the water, two fins appear and he disappears under the surface. He is next seen furiously trying to swim to safety before a rescuer pulls him out of the water.

Back on land and shaking his head in disbelief, Fanning told spectators that he punched the shark.

The World Surf League cancelled the remainder of the event.

Pioneer Valley corn crop coming in strong with hot, humid weather

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Four Rexes Farm grows 24 varieties of corn on 140 acres in Hadley.

HADLEY -- This season's sweet corn is running about a week late, but after a somewhat cold and challenging spring, the crop is now looking "very nice," according to a local wholesale grower.

Ray Rex and his son Joe were found washing a batch of cucumbers at Four Rex Farm on West Street Sunday afternoon. "You should have been here at 7 a.m.," said Rex. "We had about 40 high school students here picking corn."

Corn thrives when temperatures and humidity rise, he said -- "just the sort of weather you don't want to be working in."

The Rex family grows 24 varieties of corn on 140 acres. The farm's biggest customers are farm stands from eastern and central Massachusetts. Some retail customers drive to the farm every day to pick up the produce themselves, Ray Rex said.

Locally, the Pioneer Valley Growers Association, a growers cooperative, distributes corn from Four Rexes and other farms to grocery stores and restaurants.

Ray Rex emphasized that corn is at its best when fresh-picked. "You don't want it to be sitting around for days, because the sugars will very quickly start to covert to starch."

When you pick sweet corn fresh, you can eat it raw, said Joe Rex: "That's what a lot of the kids do when they're working in the field."

Father and son said they were grateful for the fine, rock-free Hadley Silt Loam at their farm, and that they amend their corn fields with compost and a basic 10-10-10 fertilizer on a yearly basis. They keep bees on the farm year-round.

Aside from corn, Four Rexes Farm devotes another 60 acres to vegetable and melon crops. "We're trying seedless melons for the first time this year. They're a little tricky," said Ray Rex. "Come back in August."

In related news, retired farmer Bill West, who sells Four Rexes corn at his Bay Road farmstand, noted that it's been a good year for hay.

"It was dry in May and we cut early," he said. "Then we got a good second crop in June."

The sweet corn enjoyed at backyard barbecues is different from cow corn, which is often grown in rockier fields. The cow corn is generally chopped and silaged to feed dairy cattle through the winter, said West. 

Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com

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