Quantcast
Channel: News
Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live

'Get it done,' Obama challenges GOP on debt talks

$
0
0

Obama also called on Congress to renew a payroll tax cut that took effect on Jan 1, one of several steps he said lawmakers can take quickly to help reduce 9.1 percent unemployment.

062911obama.jpgPresident Barack Obama gestures during a news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, June 29, 2011.

WASHINGTON — In a blunt challenge to Republicans in Congress, President Barack Obama insisted Wednesday that elimination of selected tax breaks for oil companies and the super-wealthy must be included in any deficit reduction plan.

"You stay here. Let's get it done," he all-but-lectured lawmakers, holding open the possibility of keeping Congress in Washington unless there is significant progress by week's end on a deal to cut deficits, raise the $14.3 trillion debt limit and avert a threatened financial crisis.

He said a plan must be in place by Aug. 2, a date he called "a hard deadline."

At his first White House news conference in three months, lasting a little over an hour, Obama also called on Congress to renew a payroll tax cut that took effect on Jan 1, one of several steps he said lawmakers can take quickly to help reduce 9.1 percent unemployment.

Although he declined to announce support for legalizing gay marriage, he defended his record on rights for homosexual Americans, saying he had done more to advance their cause than any of his 43 presidential predecessors.

On the deficit and economy, Obama said both parties must be prepared to "take on their sacred cows" as part of the negotiations, with Democrats accepting cuts in government programs.

At the same time, he said any agreement must include increased government revenue. Attempting to blunt Republican criticism, he said he also wants to extend existing middle class tax cuts.

"The tax cuts I'm proposing we get rid of are tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires, tax breaks for oil companies and hedge fund companies and jet owners," he said.

Obama's last previous full-fledged news conference was in March. In the intervening months, the economic recovery has slowed, the president has announced a plan to begin withdrawing U.S. combat troops from Afghanistan and the administration has joined an international military coalition working to prevent the rout of rebels hoping to topple Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.

The president stepped to the podium not long after the International Monetary Fund publicly urged lawmakers to raise the U.S. debt limit, now $14.3 trillion, and warned that failure to do so could produce a spike in interest rates and "severe shock to the economy and world financial markets."

The IMF recommended a long-term strategy for reducing red ink, warning that cutting deficits too quickly could slow the weak recovery of the U.S. economy.

The budget deficit is projected to reach a record $1.4 trillion for the current fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30.

Republicans in Congress have been insistent in recent days that any deficit reduction be limited to spending cuts, including reductions in benefit programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, and exclude additional revenues.

In remarks made during the day, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said Obama "said as recently as six months ago that keeping taxes where they are enables businesses to hire more workers. In other words, that raising taxes leads to fewer jobs. So he can call for tax hikes. But he can't call for tax hikes and job creation. It's one or the other. "

Obama said talks led by Vice President Joe Biden had "identified more than $1 trillion worth of spending cuts already. But everyone also know that we need to do more to close the deficit," he added, citing a goal of $4 trillion.

In his opening remarks, the president called on lawmakers to renew a 2 percentage point cut in Social Security taxes in effect since Jan 1, pass trade agreements with Panama, South Korea and Colombia and overhaul of the nation's patent laws.

On Libya, the president defended American participation in the NATO military action, saying the U.S. had carried out a "narrow mission in an exemplary fashion" against a tyrant who was threating to "massacre his people."

"We have not seen a single U.S. casualty," he said. "There's no risk of additional escalation. This operation is limited in time and in scope."

Defending his record on gays, he pointed to eliminating the ban on openly gay men and women serving in the military, a policy known as "don't ask, don't tell," as well as ordering the Justice Department not to defend a law that defines marriage as between a man and woman.

Obama also bristled at calls for him to show greater leadership in the debt talks.

"They need to do their job. Now's the time to go ahead and make the tough choices. That's why they're called leaders," he said, in a clear reference to Republicans who say he has failed to exercise leadership.


Whitey Bulger lawyer: Prosecutors trying to 'game' system

$
0
0

Bulger's lawyer said prosecutors are attempting to manipulate the usual process of randomly assigning judges to cases.

whitey bulger courtroom sketch, apThis courtroom sketch depicts James "Whitey" Bulger before U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf during a hearing in a federal courtroom in Boston Tuesday, June 28, 2011. Prosecutors dismissed a 1994 racketeering indictment against Bulger in order to focus on a later indictment that charged the newly captured fugitive with being involved in 19 murders.

BOSTON — Prosecutors are trying to shop for judges by seeking to dismiss one indictment against former mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger in favor of a later indictment that accuses him of participating in 19 murders, Bulger's lawyer said in a court filing Wednesday.

Peter Krupp made the argument in asking that both indictments against Bulger be consolidated. Krupp said prosecutors are attempting to manipulate the usual process of randomly assigning judges to cases by seeking to dismiss a 1994 indictment that charged Bulger with extortion and loan-sharking, but not murder.

"The government's apparent forum shopping is contrary to the public interest and undermines public confidence in the judicial process," Krupp wrote in his filing. He also said prosecutors are trying to "game the system."

Bulger, the former leader of the notorious Winter Hill Gang, was captured in Santa Monica, Calif., last week after 16 years on the run. He fled Boston just before the first indictment was made public in January 1995.

U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz on Tuesday moved to dismiss the 1994 racketeering indictment and focus solely on a 1999 indictment, which included the murder allegations. If the dismissal is approved, U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf would be removed from the case. The 1999 indictment is assigned to Judge Richard Stearns.

Krupp suggested that prosecutors are trying to avoid having Wolf preside over the case.

"Such forum shopping is disfavored," Krupp wrote.

Wolf has been a pivotal figure in the Bulger saga. He held a series of hearings in the 1990s that exposed the corrupt relationship between the Boston FBI and Bulger, who was an FBI informant who provided information on the Mafia, his gang's main rivals.

Former FBI Agent John J. Connolly Jr. was convicted of racketeering and obstruction of justice for protecting Bulger and his cohort, Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi from prosecution.

Krupp said that after "having encountered difficult questions" from Wolf during the 1990s hearings, the government obtained a new indictment — the 1999 case — rather than adding the charges to the 1994 indictment, "so that it might be assigned a different docket and drawn to a different judge."

Christina DiIorio-Sterling, a spokeswoman for Ortiz, declined to comment on Krupp's allegations. She said prosecutors plan to file a written response in court.

In court documents filed Tuesday, Ortiz said prosecutors want to dismiss the earlier indictment because they consider the 1999 indictment the stronger case. Bulger faces life in prison if convicted on those charges.

Ortiz also cited the long wait the families of the murder victims have had to endure for authorities to find Bulger, now 81.

"The 19 families of murder victims have been denied justice for many years because the defendant has successfully eluded law enforcement apprehension," Ortiz said in court documents.

On Wednesday, Bulger was brought to the Boston federal courthouse from the Plymouth County Correctional Facility in Plymouth, where he has been held since Friday. The move was apparently so Bulger could meet with his lawyer.

Bulger is expected to be in court Thursday for two hearings: one on his request to get a taxpayer-funded attorney, the other on prosecutors' move to dismiss the earlier indictment.

Jehovah's Witnesses to hold 7-weekend 'Let God's Kingdom Come!' convention in Amherst

$
0
0

The “Let God’s Kingdom Come!” conventions focus on preparing for the heavenly government that Jehovah’s Witnesses pray will soon rule the Earth.

Witnesses.JPGView full sizeThe 2008 District Convention of Jehovah's Witnesses was held at the Mullins Center on the campus of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Here, attendees sing a song of praise.

AMHERST – Hotel rooms from Brattleboro to Bradley International Airport are booked, families have opened their homes and local businesses may see a boost from thousands of Jehovah’s Witnesses coming to town.

About 35,000 people are expected to attend the group’s district conventions at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst’s Mullins Center. Over the next seven weekends, three-day events are scheduled to spread the faith’s message.

Witnesses from congregations throughout New England and Eastern New York are set to go door-to-door to deliver invitations. The conventions begin Friday at 9:20 a.m. and run through Sunday every weekend until Aug. 14. It is free to attend and there will be no collections taken.

The “Let God’s Kingdom Come!” conventions focus on preparing for the heavenly government that Jehovah’s Witnesses pray will soon rule the Earth. But two elders from local congregations were clear that there will be no fire-and-brimstone preaching.

“It’s a very positive message. ... The community will not hear that they’re condemned,” said Peter Lavinio, an elder from Holyoke. “From God’s arrangement, from God’s message, that’s where blessings will be showered here on Earth.”

The Jehovah’s Witness teachings will be presented in a variety of ways. Each weekend, three dramas will be performed to show how they believe the Bible’s ancient precepts can be applied to the modern world. On two weekends, July 15-17 and July 22-24, the whole program will be held in Spanish.

Lavinio said the Mullins Center was chosen because Amherst “is a good location” and the arena can accommodate the 5,000 to 7,000 people expected each weekend.

“We really appreciate the cooperation and the whole environment” of the Mullins Center, he said. The group has used the venue since 1998.

David Ryan, a Northampton elder, said the conventions always please local business owners.

“We utilize hundreds and hundreds of hotel rooms every weekend,” said Ryan. In fact, local Witnesses have volunteered to let out-of-towners stay with them if they can’t find a room, he said.

With the influx of restaurant patrons, sightseers and families looking for fun, the conventions will have a positive financial impact on Amherst and the surrounding communities, he said.

“When we are in town, people know the difference,” said Lavinio.

“It doesn’t have as much of an impact in Amherst as we’d like it to have,” said Tony Maroulis, executive director of the Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce. “There’s certainly an up-tick.”

He said the chamber can do a better job of advertising the downtown area to convention-goers and hopes to do so in the future.

Identical conventions will take place in 98 American cities this year.

“It’s our goal to reach every household in every community at least once a year,” said Ryan.

Herbert Levy of Springfield denies assault, gun charges following brawl in Northampton

$
0
0

As many as 10 people may have been involved in the May 21 brawl at Pleasant and Pearl streets in Northampton

NORTHAMPTON – A Springfield man charged with assault and battery on two police officers following a May disturbance on Pleasant Street as well as numerous gun violations pleaded innocent to charges Wednesday afternoon in Hampshire Superior Court.

As many as 10 people may have been involved in the May 21 brawl at Pleasant and Pearl streets; Hebert Levy, 23, was one of three arrested but the only one facing gun charges.

Bail was set at $20,000 bail when he was arraigned in Northampton District Court last month and remains at $20,000. Levy is currently being held in the Hampshire County House of Correction.

Two state troopers and three police officers from Easthampton were summoned to assist city police. The injured officers, Kenneth Kirchner and Brian D’Amico, were treated at Cooley Dickinson Hospital and released.

Levy was allegedly carrying the handgun and resisted arrest. Police said they needed pepper spray to subdue him.

Levy is charged with possession of a firearm without a firearms identification card, carrying a firearm without a license, possession of a firearm with a defaced serial number, committing a firearms violation with two prior violations, carrying a firearm with ammunition, two counts of assault and battery on a police officers, and resisting arrest.

Jose M. Rodriguez, of 47 Montague Road, Amherst, who allegedly confronted police and required both pepper spray and batons to subdue him has been charged with interfering with police, disorderly conduct and three counts of assault and battery on a police officer. The third suspect, Caitlin Cassidy, 22, of 51 Hunter’s Hill Circle, Amherst, was charged with disorderly conduct.

An out of court pre-trial conference for Levy has been set for July 27 with a pre-trail hearing slated for Aug. 25.

Melvin Jones III, subject of videotaped Springfield police beating, charged with conspiracy to sell crack cocaine

$
0
0

DA Mark Mastroianni: Jones is charged with brothers Alfred and Raheim Reid, of Springfield, with selling drugs to an FBI informant on videotape.

040411 melvin jones iii.jpgMelvin Jones III, shown at his arraignment in Springfield District Court on charges related to a domestic disturbance earlier this yer, has been charged with conspiracy to sell crack cocaine.

SPRINGFIELD – Melvin Jones III, who became a civil rights cause celebre after being beaten by a group of police during a 2009 traffic stop while an amateur videotape rolled, was charged Wednesday with conspiracy to sell crack cocaine by a grand jury in Hampden Superior Court.

The charges further muddy the waters for Jones – who had cocaine possession charges brought in connection with the traffic stop; those charges were later dropped. But in the meantime, Jones managed to pick up two arrests for shoplifting and domestic assault, had his bail revoked and is now being held behind bars pending resolution of those charges.

To complicate matters, Jones has a lawsuit pending against the police department in U.S. District Court for assault and civil rights violations. Jones is black while the officers in question are white.

One of the officers involved in the alleged beating, retired patrolman Jeffrey M. Asher, was fired and faces criminal assault charges in Chicopee District Court. Asher is scheduled to be tried beginning Nov. 28.

For his part, Jones is charged with brothers Alfred and Raheim Reid, of Springfield, with selling drugs to an FBI informant on videotape, according to District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni. Investigators with the FBI Western Massachusetts Gang Task Force said Jones sold the drugs on Dec. 2 and Dec. 13.

The Reids helped facilitate the deals and supply the drugs, according to prosecutors. The brothers were arrested by task force members this morning and are scheduled for arraignment in Hampden Superior Court this afternoon. Jones is being held in county jail.

"The pending District Court complaint in which Melvin Jones is a named victim will remain," Mastroianni said, referring to the Asher prosecution.

Shawn Allyn, a lawyer for Jones in his civil case in federal court, argued that Mastroianni brought the charges so close to Asher's trial date to sully Jones' credibility, already potentially wobbly because of his prior criminal record, and his recent arrests for allegedly stealing pants from a J.C.

Mark Mastroianni Press Release on New Charges Against Melvin Jones III

Penney outlet last year and a tussle with his girlfriend earlier this year. The latter charge prompted the revocation of his bail.

"He's just trying to tank the Asher case. If he was serious about prosecuting Asher he would have indicted him. The Feds rejected the case," Allyn said.

Asher was charged after Jones' criminal defense lawyer sought a complaint through a district court clerk magistrate last year. Three other officers involved in the traffic stop were cleared of criminal conduct but temporarily suspended by Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet in connection with it.

The case was referred to Superior Court by the U.S. Attorney's office, according to Mastroianni.

Allyn has said the domestic dispute was overblown by police who were acutely aware of Jones' history with the department. Allyn expected the charges against his client to be dropped at a previously scheduled hearing on Thursday.

Jones will be arraigned on the new charges also on Thursday.

Higher gas prices mean fewer New Englanders plan to travel this Fourth of July than last, AAA says

$
0
0

Hotel occupancies were up year-over-year in both April and May, according to the Greater Springfield Convention and Visitors Bureau.

SPRINGFIELD – More than 1.9 million New Englanders plan to travel for the Fourth of July weekend this year.

That will be a 2.7 percent drop from last year, a change AAA of Pioneer Valley is blaming on spiking gas prices.

A gallon of regular gas averaged $3.67 Tuesday, down from $3.72 the week ago. But it is up from $2.71 a year ago.

Sandra J. Marsian, vice president for marketing and public relations at AAA Pioneer Valley, said spiking fuel prices also lead travelers to hold off making plans. They might decide on a weekend getaway on the Tuesday before instead of setting something up weeks in advance.

But on the upside, holiday revelers will have an abundance of good weather. The National Weather Service predicts good weather all weekend, especially on the July Fourth itself: mostly sunny, with a high near 87.

“We’ve been waiting for some good weather, said Karen Blom, co-owner of Zoar Outdoor in the Franklin County town of Charlemont.

Zoar offers adventure trips with rafting and zip lines where participants slide from tree to tree on suspended cables.

“We’ve had a lot of water,” Blom said this week. “But it was a slower start with a cool, wet spring. Now that school is out things are looking really good.”

Mary Kay Wydra, president of the Greater Springfield Convention and Visitors Bureau, said hotel occupancies were up year-over-year in both April and May. June’s numbers will be hard to make sense of because of the tornado.

“But gas prices are weighing on people’s decisions,” Wydra said. “We are hearing that from our destinations.”

That’s why convention and business and large tour groups are an important part of the region’s tourist economy. Those come no matter what.

Zoar’s Blom said gas prices have an interesting impact on her business, Luckily, most Zoar customers live within one tank of gas.

“People who normally might take an airplane ride will come to us on a weekend,” she said. “People who normally can only afford to come out and see us are staying home.” According to AAA, those 1.9 million travelers will account for 13.4 percent of the region’s population, the largest ratio of travelers of any region in the country. The national average is 12.4 percent.

In New England 1.7 million will travel by car, a 3.2 percent drop. About 100,000 New Englanders will travel by air, a 9.3 percent increase from 2010.

Nationally, AAA expects 39.1 million Americans to travel for the July 4 holiday.

Springfield-based Peter Pan Bus Lines anticipates carrying more than 120,000 passengers during the holiday period from Thursday through Tuesday, July 5. The bus company will add 250 additional buses to its popular route service from Washington north to New York City and Boston.

Adam Hurtubise, a spokesman for the state Department of Transportation, said Friday and Monday should be the peak travel days with people leaving for, and returning from, their holidays. The state plans to suspend construction on those days, but people attempting an early getaway should be warned that construction will continue as normal Wednesday and Thursday, June 29 and June 30.

Hurtubise said travelers should expect traffic to be heavy, especially on interstate highways.

Wall Street: Dow closes up 73 points after Greece nears solution on debt crisis

$
0
0

The relief package from international lenders does not eliminate the possibility that Greece will default.

2 Greece Financial Crisis 62911.jpgRiot police run to the protesters as they enter at Syntagma square during clashes in central Athens Wednesday. Greece approved more austerity measures needed to avert default next month, in a vote Wednesday that calmed markets but triggered a second day of riots that left dozens injured and the capital blanketed with tear gas.

NEW YORK – Stocks closed higher for the third day in a row Wednesday after Greece cleared a hurdle toward getting more emergency loans. Financial stocks rose after Bank of America reached a settlement with investors over failed mortgage securities.

Greek lawmakers passed an austerity bill that brought the country closer to getting a financial backstop it needs to avoid defaulting on its debt. A default by Greece would shock global markets and freeze lending to other heavily indebted European countries.

The $17 billion relief package from international lenders does not eliminate the possibility that Greece will default, but it does buy Greece and other European countries more time to repair their budgets.

“The hope is that through the passage of time and slow improvement of finances, markets will become a little more forgiving,” said Wasif Latif, a vice president at USAA Investment Management.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 72.73 points, or 0.6 percent, to close at 12,261.42 Wednesday. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 10.74, or 0.8 percent, to 1,307.41. The Nasdaq composite rose 11.18, or 0.4 percent, to 2,740.49.

Financial companies in the S&P 500 rose 2.1 percent after Bank of America Corp. reached an $8.5 billion settlement with investors over claims it sold them bad loans. The investors said Bank of America violated agreements with them by selling them low-quality mortgage-backed securities that lost value when the housing market collapsed. Much of the losses stem from Bank of America’s 2008 purchase of the troubled lender Countrywide.

Bank stocks also got a lift from news that the Federal Reserve plans to limit the fees banks can charge retailers for swiping debit cards to 21 cents. That’s higher than the 12 cents the Fed first proposed.

Relief that Bank of America settled with investors sent the lender’s stock up 3 percent. Bank of America is still down 24 percent over the past year, far more than any other major U.S. bank.

It was the third and largest settlement Bank of America has struck this year over mortgage investments. The bank reached a $2.6 billion settlement in January over home loans sold to the government-backed mortgage agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. In April, the company agreed to pay up to $1.6 billion to an insurer that demanded the bank repurchase faulty mortgages it had been sold.

Energy stocks rose more than 1 percent after oil prices rose above $95 on a report that U.S. crude supplies fell last week. The drop suggests demand for oil might be rising.

Monsanto Co. gained 5 percent after the chemicals company reported earnings that beat analysts’ expectations. BJ’s Wholesale Club rose 4.6 percent after announcing that two private equity firms would buy the warehouse chain.

More than two stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange. Consolidated trading volume was an average 3.9 billion shares.

Nancy Kotowitz and Daniel Kotowitz now majority owners of Shaker Farms Country Club in Westfield

$
0
0

Daniel Kotowitz and his family have had an ownership stake in the 200-acre property at 866 Shaker Road on the southern edge of the city since the 1960s.

WESTFIELD – A financing deal is in place and the ownership picture has solidified at Shaker Farms Country Club ensuring its future as a golf course, new co-owner Nancy J. Kotowitz announced this week.

shaker farms cc logo.jpg

Her husband, Daniel P. Kotowitz, and his family have had an ownership stake in the 200-acre property at 866 Shaker Road on the southern edge of the city since the 1960s, Nancy J. Kotowitz said. But she said over the years ownership had passed to a number of people, all with differing visions for the business. The end result was that the property was nearly foreclosed upon and sold at action two years ago.

“What happened was the families couldn’t decide what to do,” she said.

There were plans at one time to develop the land, something she and her husband were against.

This week, Kotowitz and her husband became majority owners with Ellen Clark and Constance Friend as silent-partner minority owners, Nancy Kotowitz said.

Nancy Kotowitz wouldn’t put an exact dollar amount on the deal, but she said the refinancing was just less than $2 million.

She thanked the U.S. Small Business Administration, an agency that secures business loans, and SCORE, an organization that provides business veterans as volunteer mentors to small businesses along with the Massachusetts Small Business Development Network Western Regional Office in Springfield. She also thanked Granite State Development Corp., Farm Credit, which makes business loans in rural communities, as well as First Niagara Bank and Hampden Bank.

The course has about three employees in the off-season and 42 in the summer. The course was built in 1954. The property includes 200 acres. Of that, the 18-hole golf course covers about 105 acres. They have about 150 members and also allow golfing by the general public.

According to the City of Westfield, the portions of the property in Westfield are assessed at $853,425. The town of Southwick said the property in Southwick is assessed at $85,200.

Kotowitz said she settled the back taxes in Southwick at closing.

For many years, the old ownership group rented out the course to various operators with mixed results.

“The course wasn’t cared for,” she said. “You have to take care of things. You have to do crabgrass control. When I came here two years ago there was no grass on the sixth hole.”

She said the recession has been tough on golf courses and Shaker Farms, but she’s been assured that once the public learns that Shaker Farms is now well cared for, golfers will return.


U.S. deploys plane equipped with radiation monitors over New Mexico fire near Los Alamos nuclear lab

$
0
0

Lab authorities described the monitoring as a precaution, and they expressed confidence the blaze would not scatter radioactive material.

Gallery preview

By P. SOLOMON BANDA
and SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

LOS ALAMOS, N.M. — The government sent a plane equipped with radiation monitors over the Los Alamos nuclear laboratory Wednesday as a 110-square-mile wildfire burned at its doorstep, putting thousands of scientific experiments on hold for days.

Lab authorities described the monitoring as a precaution, and they, along with outside experts on nuclear engineering, expressed confidence that the blaze would not scatter radioactive material, as some residents feared.

"Our facilities, our nuclear materials are all safe, they're accounted for and they're protected," said lab director Charles McMillan.

The twin-engine plane, which can take digital photographs and video as well as thermal and night images, was sent to New York City to take air samples after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. It has flown over wildfires and areas damaged by Hurricane Katrina. It monitored the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. It also helped locate debris from the disintegrated space shuttle Columbia shuttle.

"It can look for a wide variety of chemical constituents in a plume and the plumes can originate from fires, from explosions, from a wide variety of sources," said lab spokesman Kevin Roark.

And in a testament to the sophisticated research done at Los Alamos, the plane was developed with technology from the lab, the desert installation that built the atomic bomb during World War II.

The pillars of smoke that can be seen as far as Albuquerque, 60 miles away, have people on edge. The fire has also cast a haze as far away as Kansas. But officials said they analyzed samples taken Tuesday night from some of the lab's monitors and the results showed nothing abnormal in the smoke.

Anti-nuclear groups have sounded the alarm about thousands of 55-gallon drums containing low-grade nuclear waste — gloves, tools and other contaminated items — about two miles from the fire. Lab officials said it was highly unlikely the blaze would reach the drums, and that the steel containers can in any case withstand flames and will be sprayed with fire-resistant foam if necessary.

Kevin Smith, site manager for the National Nuclear Security Administration, said the lab's precautions have been scrutinized by dozens of experts.

The lab has been shut down since Monday, when all of the city of Los Alamos and some of its surrounding areas — 12,000 people in all — was evacuated. The fire has held up research on such topics as renewable energy, AIDS and particle physics.

"We have 10,000 experiments running at the same time," said Terry Wallace, science chief at the lab. "We'll have to do an analysis to see what's been affected and how it's been affected."

The plane is just one part of an elaborate air monitoring network surrounding the lab. The lab and the New Mexico Environment Department have dozens of monitors on the ground throughout the region. McMillan said four high-volume air samplers were deployed Tuesday and more were on their way Wednesday.

Some experts familiar with the Los Alamos lab said there is no reason to fear that flames will scatter radiation.

"The nuclear materials are secure," said Penn State University nuclear engineering professor Barry Scheetz, who has served on National Academy of Sciences nuclear review boards and has been to Los Alamos several times. "There's multiple redundancy in the protection of this material. It's not just laying out. It's not there so that a fire is going to disrupt it there and disperse it. The procedures that are in place to protect this material are tremendous."

He added: "The U.S. government, the Department of Energy, has spent literally hundreds of millions of dollars for scenarios that are so unlikely to occur that it is even ridiculous to think about."

Greece passes steep cuts to fend off bankruptcy; riots seize Athens

$
0
0

Rioters set up burning barricades along Syntagma Square, where demonstrators have staged a sit-in for the past month.

Gallery preview

By DEREK GATOPOULOS
and ELENA BECATOROS

ATHENS, Greece — Greece fended off a bankruptcy that threatened to roil global financial markets, approving severe spending cuts and tax increases Wednesday in the face of violent protests by Greeks who say they have suffered enough.

The package of austerity measures would keep bailout money flowing to Greece from other European countries and the International Monetary Fund. It would free $17 billion in fresh loans, although the money will only be enough to see the nation through September.

Investors around the world cheered the news, but protesters, fighting tear gas, hurled whatever they could find at riot police and tried to blockade the Parliament building.

"This is bad. The country will be sold for a piece of bread," said insurer Dimitris Kostopoulos. "There were many other more appropriate alternatives to this. Parliament has once again betrayed us."

Public sector salaries and pensions have been cut in the past year, and unemployment is above 16 percent. By comparison, it is about 9 percent in the United States.

Parliament approved $40 billion in tax increases and spending cuts, and privatization of public services to raise $71 billion more, all through 2015. Greece's overall economic output is about $330 billion, or roughly the size of Washington state's.

The $17 billion in loans are the latest batch in a $157 billion bailout by the European Union and the IMF. Parliament is expected to pass another bill Thursday to implement the austerity measures.

Without the bailout money, Greece was at risk of default. While no one knows for sure what would have happened next, analysts have said it would have threatened the viability of the euro, the European Union's common currency, and could have done much worse.

Some market experts had predicted a Greek default could have trigged another world financial meltdown, like what happened after the Lehman Brothers investment house collapsed in 2008 in the United States.

The risk is that banks, both in Europe and the U.S., would have had to chalk up billions of dollars in losses because of Greek loans that had gone bad. No one knows which U.S. banks hold what amount of Greek debt.

On Sunday, European finance ministers will meet in Brussels to work on a second bailout for Greece, expected to be similar in size to the first, in hopes of shoring up its finances beyond just a few months.

Banks are expected to share some of the burden. One way would be for banks to repurchase Greek bonds after they expire, as French banks have indicated they may do. Many economists still expect it won't be enough.

"We must avoid the country's collapse with every effort," Prime Minister George Papandreou said before the vote. "Outside, many are protesting. Some are truly suffering. Others are losing their privileges. It is their democratic right. But they and no one else must never suffer the consequences ... of a collapse."

More protests could undermine the government's ability to implement the harsh austerity measures, which tax even the lowest-paid Greeks and raise prices during a recession.

"They are not out of the water just yet," said Carl Campus, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets.

The cuts and tax increases passed 155-138, with five voting "present" and backing neither side. During the vote, stun grenades echoed across a square outside Parliament. Acrid clouds of tear gas and orange and green smoke-bomb mist hung in the air.

Several banks and storefronts were smashed, while a Socialist dissenter who backed the government at the last minute, Alexandros Athanassiadis, was briefly assaulted by protesters after leaving Parliament on foot.

Violence continued throughout the afternoon, and smoke billowed from a post office beneath the finance ministry before a fire was put out. Rioters set up burning barricades along Syntagma Square, where demonstrators have staged a sit-in for the past month. Nearby streets were littered with chunks of smashed marble and ripped-up paving stones that had been thrown at police.

A general strike that began Tuesday paralyzed the country, grounding planes, leaving ferries docked and stranding tourists during the busy summer season.

By Wednesday night, police said 49 officers had been injured, one seriously when he was hit in the face by a chunk of marble. Forty-three protesters were detained, with 17 of them arrested. Emergency services said they had treated 99 protesters and passers-by for injuries.

Dozens of injured were treated at a first-aid center set up inside the square's metro station. Most were treated for breathing problems, contusions and broken bones, volunteers at the first aid center said, appealing for medical supplies.

Across Europe, officials hailed the vote as an act of "national responsibility" and urged Greek lawmakers to follow up with another positive vote Thursday.

"That's really good news," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on her way out of an economic forum in Berlin. Germany is Greece's biggest creditor.

Relief was the main response in markets, too. Soon after the vote, the euro rose against other world currencies, including to $1.44 against the American dollar. Stock markets around the world were posting big gains.

Christopher Torchia, Menelaos Hadjicostis and Demetris Nellas in Athens and Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed.

Judge denies Massachusetts Retirement Board motion to suspend Salvatore DiMasi pension

$
0
0

Justice Janet Sanders said the board can only withhold pension payments after a final conviction and that a final conviction cannot take place before sentencing.

DiMasi convicted 61611.jpgFormer Massachusetts House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi makes a statement outside the Federal Courthouse in Boston after his conviction on conspiracy and other charges in a scheme to steer two state contracts worth $17.5 million to a software firm in exchange for payments. DeMasi's attorney Thomas Kiley is at right.

By STEVE LeBLANC

BOSTON — A Superior Court judge on Wednesday denied a request by the state Retirement Board to let it vote to suspend the pension of former House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi.

Assistant Attorney General David Marks had argued that the board should be given the ability to place DiMasi's $4,981.86 a month pension in an escrow account given his recent conviction on federal corruption charges.

In her ruling, however, Justice Janet Sanders said the board can only withhold pension payments after a final conviction and that a final conviction cannot take place before sentencing.

DiMasi's sentencing is scheduled for Sept. 8.

Sanders concedes that the decision to continue allowing state pension payments to DiMasi may not be popular, but it is the law. Earlier this month, a jury found DiMasi guilty of using his power as speaker to steer two state contracts worth a combined $17.5 million to a software company in exchange for payments.

"That the statute does not permit the Board to set aside or hold in escrow pension payments pending the resolution of a criminal prosecution could be viewed by some as unfortunate (particularly in a case like this one)," Sanders wrote in her decision.

"But the remedy for that omission in the statute lies not with the courts, but with the legislature," she added. "In the meantime, this court has an obligation to construe the statute as written."

Treasurer Steven Grossman, who is also the chairman of the Retirement Board, had hoped the board could vote to suspend DiMasi's pension at its Thursday meeting.

Sanders' decision takes that option off the table, he said.

101310 steve grossmanSteven Grossman

"We respect and will abide by the court's decision," Grossman said in a statement following the ruling.

"We took reasonable steps to protect the interests of the Commonwealth's taxpayers," he added. "I continue to believe it's appropriate to act responsibly to prevent individuals from collecting a pension once they've been convicted of crimes related to their office."

Sanders' ruling came a day after a court hearing during which Marks argued on behalf of the Retirement Board to allow it to place the pension payments in escrow, in part to protect taxpayers.

DiMasi's lawyer, Thomas Kiley, argued in court that the board can't suspend a state pension until after a conviction is final. Kiley pointed out that even Marks agreed that a conviction isn't considered final before sentencing. Kiley went further, arguing that a conviction isn't final until after every appeal has run its course, a process that could take years.

Kiley said the judge paid attention to the law when making her decision.

"I always persuade myself, but I never know whether I'm persuading the judge, so I am pleased with the outcome," Kiley said Wednesday.

Sanders also rejected a second argument by the board that under one part of the statute, it is allowed to stop pension payments to a contributing member charged with "misappropriation of government funds," provided that it first holds an evidentiary hearing.

Sanders pointed out that the board has not held such a hearing.

Kiley has argued that DiMasi was not charged with misappropriation of government funds.

DiMasi, a Boston Democrat, was convicted June 15 of one count of conspiracy, several counts of theft of honest services and one count of extortion under color of official right.

Emergency shelter in MassMutual Center closes after 4 weeks of aiding people displaced by tornado

$
0
0

Pioneer Valley Red Cross Executive Director Rick Lee said the closing of the shelter after nearly a month represents a water-shed moment in the tornado recovery.

Se shelter   2.jpgSonia Burke of American Red Cross Pioneer Valley, left, hugs Deborah Flores on Wednesday as Flores prepares to check out of the emergency shelter at the MassMutual Center. Flores was one of the last remaining tornado victims in the facility on its final day.


SPRINGFIELD - As she packed the last of her belongings into a van Wednesday, Deborah Flores laughed and cried.

“It’s such a mix of emotions. I met a lot of great people here, but it will be so good to finally sleep in a real bed,” said Flores, the last person to leave the Red Cross shelter at the MassMutual Center.

The shelter closed its doors Wednesday, after four weeks of helping families who lost their homes to the June 1 tornado that rampaged from Westfield to Sturbridge, leaving thousands homeless and causing more than $100 million in damage.

The anniversary was marked by events including a Springfield fund-raiser, a West Springfield prayer service, a donation distribution, and status updates by hard-hit communities.

“The closing of the shelter is a watershed event for us because it means that we have come to the end of the emergency stage and the city can now move on to the recovery stage,” said Rick Lee, the executive director of the American Red Cross of Pioneer Valley.

Lee said many agencies came together to make the shelter work.

“This was a community disaster that required a community result, and the level of cooperation and collaboration with the city, the MassMutual Center and so many agencies has been extraordinary,” he said. “This was an event like nothing I have ever seen in 27 years of working with the Red Cross,” he said of the tornado.

Se shelter 1.jpgRed Cross volunteer Mary Noll moves a cart full of personal items while helping a resident of the shelter move out. The shelter in the MassMutual Center closed Wednesday.

Lee credited the MassMutual Center for helping the shelter operate smoothly.

Terry Bischoff, a spokeswoman for the American Red Cross, said 1,100 victims registered for the shelters in Springfield and West Springfield. Most recent figures showed there were 27 people remaining, including some families and who have not found permanent housing and will be moved to hotels, including Flores.

“I haven’t been able to find something yet, and I have been looking since the day after everything happened,” said Flores, who said she lost her home in Puerto Rico in 1989 to Hurricane Hugo.

Bischoff said the Red Cross is working with local agencies to get homes for everyone who is in transitional housing. Until then the Red Cross will pay for them to stay in hotels.

Bischoff said more than 600 volunteers from across the country assisted families, including 200 local volunteers.

In West Springfield most displaced people being sheltered at the Eastern States Exposition have found apartments and will be moving Friday, said Mayor Edward Gibson. The city will continue to work with those who do not have shelter, he said.

As the last few families exited the MassMutual Center, city officials and residents participated in a cookout for tornado relief across the street in Court Square, where the tornado downed large trees on its path to the South End.

During the event, organized by the Springfield City Council and the Spirit of Springfield, people paid $5 for a hamburger or hot dog, chips and a drink. Friendly’s also sold $2 ice cream cups.

“Everything was donated, from MassMutual donating tables, to Performance Food Group, who donated the food, to Friendly’s and O’Brien’s Corner. There were so many generous people who helped,” said Judith A. Matt, president of the Spirit of Springfield.

Amid remnants of downed trees from the June 1 tornado, people enjoy the City Council Cookout to benefit residents affected by the storm.

“The proceeds will be divided equally among the neighborhood councils in the South End, Maple High, East Forest Park and Old Hill,” said City Council President Jose F. Tosado.

Elegant Affairs, located on Main Street, donated grills, condiments and staff for the event.

“We are a part of the downtown community, and we were lucky not to be hit,” said owner Peg Boxold. “We wanted to do our part to help.”

In West Springfield, where two people were killed by the tornado, residents gathered at First Congregational Church at 20 Lathrop St. to pray for those whose lives were touched by the storm.

Pastor Jan Powers said the congregation decided to invite the public because “we want our neighbors to know we walk beside them and that they are companioned by God and God’s people.” The church planned to offer those who attended the prayer service a special meal following the service.

ae service 1.jpgFirst Congregational Church of West Springfield pastor Jan Powers speaks at a prayer service Wednesday for survivors of the tornado. The West Springfield church held a service and dinner to reflect on the tornado and the healing that followed.

Renee Charbonneau, 14, and her brother, John, 12, of West Springfield, decided to volunteer their time to help with the meal and set up tables with tablecloths and flowers. “We wanted those who lost their homes and those who live in the neighborhood where the tornado hit and all the residents of West Springfield to know this dinner is for them,” Charbonneau said.

The East Forest Park Civic Association distributed $21,300 raised from a recent fund-raiser to three Springfield neighborhood churches to aid tornado relief efforts in the neighborhood.

The money was distributed in equal payments of $7,100 to Holy Cross Church, St. Anthony Maronite Church and Heritage Baptist Church during Wednesday’s meeting of the civic association.

Civic association President Christopher A. Caputo said the association reached out to the three churches to distribute the money because each has the community-outreach infrastructure in place already to handle the task, much more than the volunteer association.

The money will be used for supplies, food and other essentials for people recovering from the tornado.

The money was the result of a recent fund-raiser at McCaffrey’s Public House, 1171 Main St.

McCaffrey’s owner Robert Gossman, himself an East Forest Park resident, said he wanted to do something to help the neighborhood and the people in it.

“Half my customers are from East Forest Park; half my staff are from East Forest Park,” he said.

All of the proceeds from a cookout at the pub and accompanying T-shirt sales went to the relief effort, he said.

Meanwhile, the tally of the damage continues to rise. An estimated $175 million in damage has been reported by insurance carriers from more than 9,500 claims, according to the state Division of Insurance.

One third of Springfield was hit by the tornado, said Mayor Domenic J. Sarno. So far, 22 buildings have been demolished, 171 condemned and more than 1,000 damaged. A Springfield rebuilding plan is under way.

churchchecks.jpgRepresentatives of 3 East Forest Park churches display big checks symbolizing the contributions they received from the East Forest Park Civic Association to benefit tornado victims.Robert Tyer, a volunteer with St. Anthony Maronite Church, City Councilor Timothy Rooke, Rev. Anthony Cullen of Holy Cross Church, Robert Gossman of McCaffrey's Public House and his daughter, Angelina, and Pastor Curtis Rowe of Heritage Baptist Church. McCaffrey's raised $21,000 from a fundraiser for East Forest Park tornado relief.

Westfield is in the final stages of cleanup from the tornado and has spent an estimated $170,000 in Department of Public Works overtime and private contractor costs.

City officials said the Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster center at Munger Hill Elementary School will close effective Friday after being open to residents and business owners in determining if they qualify for disaster relief.

Emergency Management Director Jimmy D. Wiggs said, “The final cleanup involves remaining tree debris in the Munger Hill School area as well as some city-owned land in that area.”

Storm-related costs are rising in Monson and could reach $5 million, said Town Manager Gretchen Neggers, who said she hopes the federal government will increase its reimbursement of municipal cleanup costs from 75 percent to 90 percent. “This is approaching 25 percent of our budget,” she said.

The First Church of Monson, which has coordinated the volunteer effort in town, is ending operations Friday, and will be serving its last dinner at the High Street church from 5 to 7 p.m. that night.

The church quickly became the go-to place after the tornado tore through the town and has provided food, supplies and more to residents in need.

“We’ve done more than we expected to do. It’s time for us to go back to being a church,” said outreach coordinator Ted Sisley.

Volunteer coordinators Lynn M. Taylor, of Palmer, and Alison C. Hill, of Monson, will carry on the volunteer coordination through the Internet. They will post on the Facebook page “Monson Tornado Watch 2011” and are creating a new Monson tornado volunteers group so they can continue helping those affected by the tornado.

Republican reporters Suzanne McLaughlin, Patrick Johnson, Lori Stabile, Ted LaBorde and John Appleton contributed to this report.

First Church of Monson to close down post-tornado operations

$
0
0

The church quickly became the go-to place after the tornado tore through the town.

060411 first church of monson tornado relief.JPGFILE | 06.04.2011 | Volunteer James Demers of Brimfield, center, grills hamburgers for utility crews, residents and other volunteers helping clean up the town at the First Church of Monson, which had its steeple blown off by the June 1 tornado.

MONSON – The First Church of Monson, which has coordinated the volunteer effort following the June 1 tornado, is ending operations Friday, and will be serving its last dinner at the High Street church from 5 to 7 p.m. that night.

The church quickly became the go-to place after the tornado tore through the town, and has provided food, supplies and more to residents in need. Outreach coordinator Ted Sisley said the pantry downstairs will remain open during the Farmers’ Market on Thursdays, from 3 to 7 p.m., as well as on Saturday mornings, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

“We’ve done more than we expected to do. It’s time for us to go back to being a church,” Sisley said. “If the need comes back, we’ll probably open back up again.”

Volunteer coordinators Lynn M. Taylor, of Palmer, and Alison C. Hill, of Monson, will carry on the volunteer coordination through the Internet, instead of a tent at the church. They said they will post on the Facebook page “Monson Tornado Watch 2011” and are creating a new Monson tornado volunteers group so they can continue helping those affected by the tornado.

“We’ll also be driving around making sure people have water and sandwiches,” Taylor said.

“The two of us are willing to stick it out for the long haul,” Hill said.

Sandra E. Harris, who is the kitchen coordinator for the church, estimates they have served “thousands” of meals since the tornado struck, between breakfasts, lunches and dinners, to sending meals off-site. Any food left over after July 1 that cannot be kept for the pantry will go to charity, she said.

As for Harris, she said she is looking forward to an upcoming vacation.

“People need to get back to normal,” Harris said.

060211 russell bressette monson tornado.JPGRussell Bressette Jr. talks with Heather L. Emery. Behind him is what is left of his house on Stewart Avenue in Monson. The tornado picked it up and moved it 30 feet, he said.

Russell Bressette Jr., whose home on Stewart Avenue in Monson was leveled by the tornado, has moved into a new temporary home on Crest Road with the help of local Realtor Karen King. She has been linking families with new housing. Bressette, a school bus driver, said when he returned to work, the students surprised him with a mall gift card, Dunkin’ Donuts gift certificates and 15 new ties, because they know he likes ties.

“The kids were totally awesome. They held a fundraiser for me,” Bressette said.

Bressette said he will rebuild on Stewart Avenue, and is thankful to the many volunteers, some he didn’t even know, who came in the days after the tornado to help him salvage items such as pictures, wedding albums, his late wife’s wedding dress.

“I could never thank them enough. It was just incredible for me,” Bressette said.

“Houses are material things,” Bressette said. “I will be back, stronger than ever.”

Massachusetts closes deep-water swimming pools after Fall River workers fail to notice drowned woman for 2 days

$
0
0

Authorities have suspended all workers at the Veterans Memorial Pool in Fall River.

FALL RIVER — Authorities have suspended all workers at a public swimming pool in Fall River after they failed to detect the body of a 36-year-old woman who was apparently submerged there for two days.

The Department of Conservation and Recreation said Wednesday that it has also closed its 30 deep water pools while officials review safety and operational procedures.

The move came a day after youngsters jumped over a fence at night for a clandestine swim and found the body of Marie Joseph floating in the Veterans Memorial Pool at Lafayette Park. She was pulled from the water and taken to a local hospital, where she was later pronounced dead.

Authorities were trying to determine if Joseph had been submerged in the pool since Sunday, when she reportedly slipped on a water slide and went underwater. The incident went undetected.

Palmer School Committee passes over superintendent Gerald Fournier for interim job in favor of business manager Thomas Charko

$
0
0

Committee Chairwoman Maureen Gallagher added an element of suspense to the voting – before it began, she said she changed her mind after "some things came to light ..."

PALMER - The School Committee voted at its meeting Wednesday to appoint Business Manager Thomas Charko as interim superintendent, passing over Superintendent Gerald A. Fournier, who also wanted the job.

GAFournier2008.jpgGerald A. Fournier

The vote was 3 to 2, with School Committee Chairwoman Maureen R. Gallagher, Vice-Chairman James L. St. Amand and Gary A. Blanchette voting for Charko, and members Robert S. Janasiewicz and David M. Lynch voting against him.

Gallagher added an element of suspense to the voting. Before it began, she said she changed her mind after "some things came to light today."

"It's a very difficult decision. I don't feel I've been kept abreast of some things or dealt with honestly ... so therefore I changed my way of thinking," Gallagher said, adding she "lost some sleep over it."

Gallagher did not say what the "things" that came to light were, but elaborated after the meeting. She said she was led to believe that it was Charko who demoted cafeteria worker Catherine R. Les last year, when it was actually the superintendent's doing. Gallagher would not reveal her source for the information.

092607 maureen gallagher.JPGMaureen Gallagher

At the meeting's end, Fournier said he had "no idea" what Gallagher was referring to, and said he hoped that she would talk to him about it. Contacted later, he declined to address the Les situation.

"The School Committee sent a message to the community that they can get by with only one person who manages the finances, runs the school district and oversees curriculum," Fournier said.

Fournier's retirement was announced by the School Committee on April 15.

In late 2009, Fournier’s contract was extended by the School Committee until June 30, 2014, but no raises were included because of the district’s grim financial situation. Fournier, of Vernon, Conn., makes approximately $123,000. He started working in the district in January 2006.

Fournier said that he enjoyed his six years in Palmer and that he is proud of what has been accomplished academically. Now, he said, he will enjoy his retirement.

During the meeting, St. Amand said he felt Fournier should honor the rest of his three-year contract instead of retiring June 30 and returning to serve as an interim superintendent sporadically until the end of the year. Due to retirement restrictions, Fournier could not serve more than 52 days, and said he would work part-time, with some of the summer off.

"I'm not supportive of not working in July," St. Amand said.

Blanchette asked who would keep track of the part-time superintendent's hours, and said Charko would still need to pick up the slack on the days Fournier wasn't there.

Janasiewicz said keeping Fournier in the position would provide stability, as there have been numerous position changes in the district, including a new principal at Old Mill Pond Elementary School and new special education director.

Fournier told the committee that by keeping him on, he could continue his work on a number of programs. Fournier said he felt having a part-time superintendent would be effective.

Charko said he is familiar with procedures and policies, and said he would represent a savings to the district in the interim job, something that also appealed to Gallagher.
Charko's appointment is effective July 1. A salary increase was not discussed.
Janasiewicz and Lynch thanked Fournier for his service.

In other news, the School Committee restored a media specialist position slated for a budget cut. That means that Catherine Reed will continue to work as the school librarian at Converse Middle School and Old Mill Pond School next year, instead of moving to the high school to be a social studies teacher. Reed said she is happy she can remain a librarian.

Converse Middle School Principal David Stetkiewicz congratulated her afterward, and said she is knowledgeable and supportive of students and an asset to his school.


Chicopee City Council refuses to reconsider cuts to mayor's staff

$
0
0

Last week's meeting turned hostile with the mayor and some city councilors yelling at each other.

CHICOPEE – The City Council refused to reconsider the budget it adopted a week ago, which cut the mayor’s staff by two positions.

In a meeting Wednesday, Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette asked the council in writing to reconsider next fiscal year’s $158 million budget and the cuts it made a week previously. Next fiscal year begins July 1.

He also said he believed city councilors had made procedural errors when adopting the budget on June 22, which invalidated the vote. But Karen T. Betournay, the city solicitor, said she reviewed recordings from the meeting and said she felt the vote was legitimate.

“The special meeting was opened late and the vote was taken. It was valid,” she said.

The budget passed last week in a 7-6 vote during a meeting that turned hostile with some councilors and the mayor yelling at each other.

A week ago, the council also voted 7-6 to eliminate the $47,299 salary for the mayor’s chief of staff and the $28,114 salary of his administrative assistant. It also reduced the full-time $75,000 salary for the city solicitor to a part-time $47,000 position and eliminated a new position of a grants writer for the planning department that would have cost $45,000.

For the budget to be reconsidered Wednesday, one of the seven people who made up the majority had to request reconsideration. None did.

The cuts infuriated the mayor, who called them “an attack on his office” and angered some of the other city councilors who said their colleagues were starting an unnecessary war with the mayor.

On Wednesday, several councilors defended their positions to cut the budget. Councilor Frank N. Laflamme cited concerns about several large raises that were granted, including a $9,000 increase for the director of golf and a $7,500 increase for the human resource director, as partial justification for cutting the mayor’s staff.

He denied Bissonnette’s allegations that there was a violation of the Open Meeting Law. “I take offense at the accusation of the violation of the open meeting law,” Laflamme said.

The law bans deliberations of elected officials, even if they are casual and done over the phone or by e-mail. Bissonnette said he believed the cuts were planned ahead of time by the seven councilors.

Betournay said Bissonnette plans to file a complaint with the Attorney General.

Councilor John L. Vieau said he took to heart the comment Bissonnette made about not needing his staff to do his job.

The mayor did say his staff was needed to help constituents.

“The mayor takes an inch, takes an inch and then takes a foot. Now he is taking a mile,” Vieau said.

Massachusetts Democrats issue their own promotional baseball card - starring Republican Sen. Scott Brown

$
0
0

Democratic spokesman Kevin Franck said they noticed the original Brown card was blank on the back, so they decided to fill in the back with details of the senator's voting record.

scottbrown1.jpgThe front face of a collectible baseball card featuring Sen. Scott Brown that is being used to raise money for the Republican senator's re-election campaign.
Scott_Brown_Stats.jpgThe reverse of the same Scott Brown baseball card being used by the Massachusetts Democratic to raise money for state democratic candidates.

There’s two sides to every story, every coin, and now every baseball card.

Upon news that Sen. Scott Brown was seeking to raise campaign funds by pitching a baseball card of himself sporting a Red Sox cap, the Massachusetts Democratic Party responded with a pitch of their own, albeit a brush-back pitch.

Massachusetts Democrats are selling their own commemorative Brown card. The picture side is a copy of the Brown card, but the reverse side of the card lists some unflattering excerpts from Brown’s voting record such as voting with Senate Republicans 88 percent, voting against summer job programs and expanding student loans, and otherwise serving as a "reliable foot soldier for D.C. Republicans."

Where the Brown card sells for $10, people can get the alternative Brown card by a contribution to the Massachusetts Democratic Party for as little as $9.

MassDems communication director Kevin Franck said “You know how baseball cars usually have two sides? The front side is a big picture and the back has career stats and biographical info. For some reason, the junior Senator’s cars only has a front side, so we decided to help him out with a design for the other side.”

One interesting thing about the original Brown card is that it is nowhere to be found. The offer of an autographed card from the senator is still on the website, but the image of Brown in the Red Sox hat is nowhere to be found. This was noted by Politico under a headline that reads “Brown scrubs baseball card image from his site.”

Politico reporter Ben Cantanese notes “a campaign spokesman did not respond to an inquiry to why the image was removed.” This has led some speculation that Brown's people did not get approval from Major League Baseball Properties to wear a
Red Sox hat in a promotional photograph.

NECN also did a piece on Brown's card, asking fans outside Fenway Park what they thought about it. The piece also noted that $10 for a Brown card would get you a rookie card for Adrian Gonzale ($1.28) a Dustin Pedroia card ($3) and a David Ortiz ($1.09), and still have enough money left over for 25 Jonathan Palpelbon cards and a rookie Kevin Youkilis.


Brown campaign selling baseball cards: MyFoxBOSTON.com

Bill would OK Massachusetts fireworks sales

$
0
0

"The only people we're hurting with the ban is ourselves," said Rep. Richard Bastien, R-Gardner.

062911 phantom fireworks.jpgA selection of fireworks inventory is displayed at Phantom Fireworks in Londonderry, N.H., Wednesday, June 29, 2011. Massachusetts state Rep. Richard Bastien is sponsoring a bill that would allow border towns in Massachusetts to compete for sales with New Hampshire for fireworks. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

By JOHANNA KAISER

BOSTON — It might be too late for this weekend's festivities, but more fireworks could light up the state's skies legally next Independence Day.

Lawmakers are contemplating legislation that would legalize the sale and private use of the celebratory pyrotechnics, a move some say would prevent injuries and brighten the state's economy.

"The only people we're hurting with the ban is ourselves," said Rep. Richard Bastien, R-Gardner, who is sponsoring a bill that would allow cities and towns to permit fireworks in their municipality.

Under Bastien's proposal, if a city or town chooses to allow fireworks, residents planning to light them must obtain a permit from the local fire department so safety officials would know when and where fireworks are being used.

Cities and towns that do not want to legalize fireworks would not be affected by the bill.

Some larger cities might want to maintain the ban, but in towns in rural areas and along the state's borders, firework sales could bring the much-needed revenue to the state, Bastien said.

"It's one less incentive to drive over the border," he said.
Gallery preview

Various fireworks are legal in Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island, and many Massachusetts residents take the short drive out of state every year to bring fireworks to their own backyards. Massachusetts is one of only four states that ban all forms of fireworks. New York, New Jersey, and Delaware have similar laws.

Bastien estimates firework sales could be a $40 million industry for the state.

Nationwide, firework sales generate just under $1 billion. Massachusetts could bring in from $500,000 to $1 million in tax revenue, estimates Julie Heckman, director of the American Pyrotechnics Association.

But some safety officials say the costs outweigh the potential benefits.

"There's got to be better ways of creating jobs than in a way that will increase injuries," said Paul Zbikowski, president of the Fire Chiefs' Association of Massachusetts.

Zbikowski, who is the Ashburnham fire chief, said too many people already are hurt by illegally obtained fireworks, and lifting the ban would only increase injuries.

According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, about 8,600 people were treated for firework-related injuries in 2010. It is unclear how legalization will impact the number of injuries because the agency does not track injuries by state.

Heckman said legalizing fireworks encourages people to learn how to use them safely and find an appropriate location.

"When you are knowingly breaking law, you don't plan ahead that's when things go awry," Heckman said.

As for the financial cost, Zbikowski said monitoring private fireworks shows could put a financial strain on police and fire departments.

"That's more time we're going to have to expend, and we're already short-handed," he said.

Money from permit fees and fines will be collected in a Fire Marshal Fireworks fund to help local departments defray costs.

Maine lawmakers also are considering legalizing fireworks. A similar bill passed the House there Tuesday, and the Senate was scheduled to vote on it Wednesday. While proponents there also expect fireworks sales to boost the economy in the long run, some are concerned about the $27,000 cost of the legislation in its first year. Most of the cost would be the result of lost revenue the state now gets from violators.

Maine law currently allows sparklers, but no fireworks.

In Massachusetts, a person can be fined $10 to $100 for using fireworks or $100 to $1,000 for selling them.

Heckman said laws prohibiting use were rarely enforced.

While Massachusetts and Maine debated, New Hampshire businesses handled a rush of customers during their busiest time of year.

"Business is booming," said Mary McCluskey, manager of Phantom Fireworks in Londonderry, N.H.

McCluskey said shops in the state teach customers how to safely use fireworks and only sell to people over 21.

She said she supports legalizing the sale of fireworks in her neighboring states.

"The more the merrier," she said "The more people who are educated about firework safety the better."

Former President Bill Clinton: Jobs push will help tornado-ravaged Joplin, Mo.

$
0
0

During a Clinton Global Initiative conference, Clinton announced that Onshore Technology Services plans to create 1,000 jobs in rural Missouri with a focus on Joplin.

062911_bill_clinton.jpgFormer President Bill Clinton, presides over the of The Clinton Global Initiative America meeting, Wednesday, June 29, 2011, in Chicago. More than 700 leaders from businesses, nonprofit, and all levels of government are participating in the the two-day meeting which is focusing exclusively on driving job creation and economic growth in the United States. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

By DEANNA BELLANDI

CHICAGO — Former President Bill Clinton had some good jobs news Wednesday for Joplin, as the southwest Missouri city works to recover from a devastating tornado.

During a Clinton Global Initiative conference in Chicago, the Democrat announced that the Macon, Mo.-based outsourcing firm Onshore Technology Services plans to create 1,000 jobs in rural Missouri over the next five years with a focus on Joplin. The company trains people, including those who are underemployed or have lost manufacturing jobs, for new careers in information technology.

Clinton praised Onshore for its focus on rural America and for keeping information technology jobs, which are routinely outsourced to other countries, in the United States.

"This is a model for all of you who care about this part of our country which has consistently suffered higher unemployment and lower income gains over the last 20 or 30 years. I ask you all to keep this in mind," he said.

Ron Yust, a principal consultant with Onshore, said during a phone interview that the company's model is "to build outsourcing centers in rural Missouri so that the cost of living is low and we can compete with offshore firms."

The company, which has 72 employees, has Missouri offices in Joplin and Macon and a smaller staff in St. Louis.

News of the jobs push for Joplin comes as the city struggles to rebuild after the May 22 tornado that killed 156 people, injured hundreds of others and damaged about 8,000 homes and businesses.

Shane Mayes, the company's chief executive, said the tornado renewed his commitment to help put people to work.

"We've got a job-creation engine that works," Mayes said after appearing on stage with Clinton.

Mayes said his company hopes to replicate its rural outsourcing model and create an additional 12,000 jobs in the coming years throughout rural America.

The Clinton Global Initiative conference, which like Onshore started six years ago, typically focuses on sweeping global issues such as poverty, disease and climate change.

About 750 people, including business and not-for-profit leaders, are attending the two-day conference in Chicago. The event attracted such big-name speakers Wednesday as Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, a former top aide to Clinton, and Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was scheduled to appear Thursday with Clinton.

Barnes Air National Guard F-15s to participate in homeland air defense exercise over Cape Cod and Islands

$
0
0

The drill is designed to train pilots from the Air National Guard's 104th Fighter Wing in intercept and airborne tracking procedures.

050209_barnes_f-15.JPGCrews secure a F-15 Eagle at Barnes Air National Guard Base in Westfield.

WESTFIELD – A joint homeland air defense exercise involving F-15 fighter jets from Barnes Air National Guard Base and the Civil Air Patrol will be held on Thursday in the skies over the Cape and islands.

The drill is designed to train pilots from the Air National Guard’s 104th Fighter Wing in intercept and airborne tracking procedures.

The F-15 jets will intercept the lower speed propeller aircraft flown by CAP pilots. The drill will test fighter pilots’ responses, systems and procedures and involve scenarios of airspace restriction violations, hijackings and unknown aircraft.

Maj. Sean Halbrook, head of Air Sovereignty Alert at Barnes, said “The 104th Fighter Wing takes its mission of homeland defense very seriously. This exercise, along with other drills, keeps the team prepared to support this 24/7 mission.”

The 9 to 11 a.m. exercise will take place over Provincetown, Hyannis, Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard.

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images

<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>
<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596344.js" async> </script>