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Springfield Union Station parking deck taking shape, mild winter weather allows construction to continue

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Work erecting the parking deck is expected to continue through March. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD - Contractors began erecting the six-level 377-spot parking deck at Springfield's Union Station this week, the work expected to be completed by March.

"It's nice to see this stuff really coming togetherr," said Executive Director
Christopher J. Moskal , executive director of the Springfield Redevelopment Authority which owns station and is taking the lead in its rehabilitation. "I'm really pleased and amazed at the progress that has been made."

Both Moskal and Springfield Chief Development Officer Kevin Kennedy said relatively warm winter weather has allowed contractors to make good progress.

The $88 million rehabilitation and redevelopment of Union Station is still expected to be completed by December. Daniel O'Connell's Sons in Holyoke is the general contractor. About 70 construction workers are on the scene every day.

The new Union Station Regional Intermodal Transportation Center on will feature retail, food service, Amtrak, intercity bus service via Peter Pan and others, intracity bus service from PVTA and in the future commuter rail service east-west and north-south. the station is expected to host 6 million to 8 million visitors a year.

Kennedy said work on the garage, which is on Main Street in the old Hotel Charles site, is a choreographed affair with pieces of the structure arriving from manufacturer Unistress in Pittsfield every 15 minutes and in a specific order so crane operators can put each piece in its place efficiently and in order. 

Moskal said the garage is not the the only work ongoing at the Union Station site. Passersby might also notice the metal installed on the embankment wall near the railroad tracks. That's preparation work, Moskal said, for the covering treatment which will one day adorn that wall.

the western side of the station building is covered with plastic to allow work to continue on the interior in cold weather.

Workers are nearly done on the roof.

By February, workers will be ready to begin installing  drywall in the interior.

Also, bids are due Jan. 22 from operators who want to lease retail and food space within the station. Moskal said opportunities include traveler-oriented retail like newsstands and convenience type food like coffee-and-doughnut stands.

There are also opportunities to rent space for a sit-down restaurant or a bar, possibly, Moskal said.


Treasurer Deb Goldberg to canvass for Hillary Clinton's Democratic presidential campaign in New Hampshire

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State Treasurer Deb Goldberg announced this week that she will be traveling to New Hampshire to campaign for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton ahead of the first-in-the-nation primary.

SPRINGFIELD ‒ State Treasurer Deb Goldberg announced this week that she will be traveling to New Hampshire to campaign for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton ahead of the first-in-the-nation primary.

Goldberg, who plans to canvass for the former secretary of state in Salem, N.H. on Jan. 16 and Jan. 23, is the latest Massachusetts official to go door-to-door for Clinton in the Granite State.

The treasurer, in an email to supporters, praised what she called the Democratic White House hopeful's message of wage equality, paid family leave, college affordability and economic empowerment, adding that she hope it reaches every New Hampshire household before the Feb. 9 primary election.

"Over the past few months, many of us have gone up to New Hampshire to knock on doors for Hillary," she said in the email asking supporters to join her in the canvasses. "If we keep up the momentum, all of our hard work will soon pay off. But we cannot take anything for granted."

Goldberg said she and other Clinton supporters will meet at Ermer Road in Salem, N.H. at 1 p.m. before knocking on doors to promote the former first lady. The treasurer added that she will partake in the canvasses despite having a broken foot.

Goldberg was among those named to Clinton's "Massachusetts Leadership Council," a group of 190 politicians, labor leaders and community organizers who the campaign said will help promote the Democratic front-runner before the state's presidential primary.

Attorney General Maura Healey, who campaigned for Clinton in Salem and Nashua in mid-October, and Auditor Suzanne Bump are also on the leadership council.

U.S. Reps. Joe Kennedy III, D-Brookline; Jim McGovern, D-Worcester; Seth Moulton, D-Salem; and Niki Tsongas, D-Lowell, have also traveled to New Hampshire to promote Clinton's presidential campaign in recent months.

New rule to require Massachusetts surgeons sign in and out of operating room

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Members of the state medical board voted by an overwhelming majority Thursday to approve a new rule to mandate medical staff sign in and out of surgeries.

Members of the state medical board voted by an overwhelming majority Thursday to approve a new rule mandating medical staff sign in and out of surgeries.

The new measure from the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine was passed to regulate doctors who double-book surgeries. In addition to requiring doctors timestamp when they enter and exit the operating room, the board will require a backup doctor be in the room while the surgeon is away. Other medical staff - such as nurses - already document their time in operating rooms, The Boston Globe reports

The regulation comes following a report by the Boston Globe. An investigation found patients often do not know their surgeon would not be present for the entire operation nor would the doctor's whereabouts be fully documented in medical reports.

Massachusetts is the first in the nation to pass such a requirement of medical staff.

State's highest court hears global warming lawsuit naming MassDEP

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Environmental groups claim MassDEP did not adopt greenhouse gas reduction rules as required by the 2008 Global Warming Solutions Act.

BOSTON -- The Conservation Law Foundation appeared before the state's highest court today arguing that the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection failed to properly create regulations to cut greenhouse gas emissions as mandated under a 2008 law.

The Global Warming Solutions Act requires that Massachusetts cut its greenhouse gas emissions 25 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 and 80 percent by 2050. The landmark climate change law ordered MassDEP to adopt regulations to reach those targets by January 2012 and to implement the regulations by January 2013.

The suit filed by the foundation, the Mass Energy Consumers Alliance, and four high school students in was dismissed in March by a Suffolk County Superior Court judge who ruled that the Department is "substantially fulfilling the legislative expectations" of the act "in a reasonable manner."

The Supreme Judicial Court agreed to hear the matter on appeal. 

Lawyers for the environmental activists argue that the state's "abject failure to promulgate regulations" establishing declining aggregate emissions limits "undermines the Commonwealth's efforts to mitigate climate change impacts." They say the Superior Court's interpretation of the law is wrong and should be rejected.

The state maintains that it has been a leader in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, points to a variety of steps it has taken, and contends that the statute does not require actual emission limits, but only "aspirational" emission-reduction targets.

The state further argues that the law gives the agency broad discretion on how to cut emissions, and charges that the appellants "seek to rewrite the statute and supplant the Legislature's objective with their own."

The lawsuit comes as Plymouth Nuclear Power Plant gears plans to shut down, and as the Baker administration pushes to import large amounts of hydropower into the state. Video feeds of SJC proceedings can be found online.

Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com

Springfield man gets 3 to 4 years in strangulation case

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Carlos Marrero was sentenced to three to four years state prison after pleading guilty to two counts of strangulation or suffocation in Springfield case.

SPRINGFIELD - A 35-year-old Springfield man has been sentenced to three to four years in state prison after pleading guilty to two counts of strangulation or suffocation, with the victim in each count being the same woman.

Carlos Marrero was also sentenced Wednesday by Hampden Superior Court Judge Richard J. Carey to three years probation following the prison sentence.

As conditions of his probation he must undergo mental health evaluation and complete a certified batterers program.

Marrero had also pleaded guilty to a third count, assault and battery, with the victim being a different person than the strangulation victim.

Marrero, of 38 Sanderson St., admitted to the three counts late last month but sentencing was postponed until Jan. 6.

Assistant District Attorney Melissa Doran had asked for a three- to five-year state prison sentence and defense lawyer Marissa Elkins has asked for a 21/2 year sentence to the Hampden County Correctional Center in Ludlow.

The crimes were committed May 10 in Springfield. Marrero has 241 days credit toward his sentence for time spent in jail awaiting trial.

The strangulation or suffocation crime was added to state law in 2014. Definitions stated in the law are:

''Strangulation'', the intentional interference of the normal breathing or circulation of blood by applying substantial pressure on the throat or neck of another.

''Suffocation'', the intentional interference of the normal breathing or circulation of blood by blocking the nose or mouth of another.

US Economy adds 292,000 jobs in December despite global shutdown

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In its monthly jobs report Friday, the Labor Department said the unemployment rate remained 5 percent in December for a third straight month. More Americans started looking for jobs and succeeded in finding them.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- American employers added a robust 292,000 jobs in December, suggesting that the U.S. economy is so far defying global weakness and growing solidly.

The strong figures underscore the resilience of the United States at a time of financial turmoil stemming from China's slowing economy and plummeting stock market. Most economists expect U.S. consumer spending to continue to offset overseas weakness, though many foresee only modest U.S. growth.

In its monthly jobs report Friday, the Labor Department said the unemployment rate remained 5 percent in December for a third straight month. More Americans started looking for jobs and succeeded in finding them.

The government also said employers added a combined 50,000 more jobs in October and November than it had previously estimated. For the July-September quarter, hiring averaged 284,000 a month -- the best three-month pace in a year.

U.S. stock futures, which had been up sharply before the jobs report was released, rose further afterward.

"The economy is reflected most strongly in the jobs numbers -- and it's doing OK, maybe better than OK," said David Berson, chief economist at Nationwide Insurance.

For all of 2015, employers added 2.65 million jobs, a monthly average of 221,000. That made 2015 the second-best year for hiring since 1999, after 2014's gain of 3.2 million jobs.

"2015 went out with a megabang," says Patrick O'Keefe, director of economic research at the accounting and consulting firm CohnReznick. "It speaks to the underlying strength of the domestic economy. The United State is intertwined with the international economy but to a far lesser degree than many other countries."

O'Keefe noted that global trade accounts for only about 30 percent of U.S. economic activity, one of the lowest such percentages in the world.

Even as demand for workers grew, average hourly pay slipped a penny in December to $25.24 an hour. Still, average pay has risen 2.5 percent in the past year, only the second time since the Great Recession ended in mid-2009 that it has reached that level. At the same time, pay growth remains below the roughly 3.5 percent pace typical of a healthy economy.

Last month, the percentage of adults with jobs rose for a second straight month, though it remains below pre-recession levels. And many of the new jobs were in higher-paying industries: Construction added 45,000, health care nearly 53,000. Professional and business services, which includes accountants, engineers, and architects as well as lower-paid temporary workers, added 73,000 positions.

For months, U.S. employers have hired steadily even as global growth has flagged and financial markets have sunk. Stronger customer demand has given most businesses confidence to hire even though some sectors -- notably manufacturing and oil and gas drilling -- are struggling.

Still, stumbling growth in countries like China, the world's second-largest economy, and financial market turmoil might pose long-term challenges for the U.S. economy. A strong dollar and faltering global growth have already cut into exports of factory goods.

The dollar has climbed about 10 percent in value in the past year compared with overseas currencies. That has made U.S. goods more expensive globally while lowering the price of imported products.

In November, exports fell to their lowest level in nearly four years and shaved about 0.6 percentage point from the economy's growth in 2015, according to Goldman Sachs. Most analysts estimate that the economy expanded at a modest pace 2.5 percent last year.

Another blow to manufacturing has been oil prices, which fell to their lowest level in 12 years Thursday. Oil and gas drillers have responded by slashing payrolls and sharply cutting spending on steel pipes and other drilling equipment.

Manufacturing added 30,000 jobs last year, a marked decline from 2014. Yet it makes up just 10 percent of the U.S. economy and oil and gas drilling even less.

For now, Americans are confident enough to buy more homes. Sales of newly built homes jumped nearly 15 percent in 2015 and helped spur building and construction hiring: Construction companies added 215,000 jobs last year, a 3.4 percent gain.

In another sign of consumer health, auto sales rose to a record high last year as cheap gas and low interest rates led to booming sales of SUVs and pickup trucks.

Lower gas prices may have hurt the oil patch, but they should benefit consumers by cutting their gas bills.

Chris Christopher, an economist at IHS, a forecasting firm, estimates that American households saved, on average, $722 last year from cheaper gas. He expects them to save an additional $217 in 2016 given the continuing drop in oil prices.

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Boston police officer shot in Dorchester

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A Boston police officer was shot this morning, 7News is reporting.

A Boston police officer was shot this morning, 7News is reporting.

Few details are currently available. The shooting took place around 10:30 a.m. on Mount Bowdoin Terrace in Dorchester, according to 7News.

The male officer was shot in the leg and is expected to recover, WCVB is reporting. The officer was taken to Boston Medical Center

According to NECN, state police are reporting that a suspect is in custody.

 

The Massachusetts State Police expressed support for the officer who was shot in a Twitter post.

NBC to drop affiliate WHDH, start new station with necn and Telemundo Boston

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The Peacock network is ruffling feathers in Boston following the announcement this week that it will drop its affiliation with WHDH-TV and launch NBC Boston at the start of 2017.

The peacock network is ruffling feathers in Boston following the announcement this week that it will drop its affiliation with WHDH-TV and launch NBC Boston at the start of 2017.

In an announcement Thursday, NBC said the new station will broadcast all station programming currently carried on WHDH, also known as Channel 7.

NBC Boston will share a studio and newsroom with necn and Telemundo Boston in New England's first broadcast triopoly to serve English and Spanish speaking viewers in the region's six states.

WHDH has been the broadcast's affiliate since 1995. Station owner Ed Ansin told the Boston Globe he will challenge NBC's decision and not accept the network's offer of 200 million for his license and broadcast facility. "We are going to contest it," Ansin said. "They are trying to steal our station." 


Chicopee church to collect socks, serve soup to help the poor

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The socks will be donated to local shelters.

CHICOPEE - Members of Holy Mother of the Rosary Church invites the community to join to join them on "Souper Socks Saturday" to help those in need.

The church, on 26 Bell St., will collect socks starting at 11 a.m., Jan. 30 in the social center of the church.

Hot soup will be served to thank people for their contributions.

The socks will be distributed to local shelters to help adults and children in need.



Calf reunited with owner in New Hampshire after help from social media

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A jersey calf was reunited with its owner in New Boston, New Hampshire Thursday after police put out a Facebook post with its picture and instructed the owner to "post his bail."

NEW BOSTON, New Hampshire -- Police in this small town frequently use social media to help locate owners of any dogs or cats they find loose in town.

So when they found a small jersey calf wandering around Thursday, they posted its picture on Facebook and said the owner should come post bail for the dairy cow.

The post was shared 60 times, and a similar post by WFXT, a Boston television station, was shared 900 times.

Within an hour, police had connected with the owner and the calf was safe at home, Police Chief James Brace said Friday.

"The cow was in good health. He probably hadn't been gone for more than half an hour," he said.

He said police respond to calls about loose cows probably four or five times a year. Usually, they can figure out which of the farmers in town owns the cow.

But in the most recent case, they did not know of any farms in the area where the calf was found at Riverdale and Parker roads, he said. Brace said the owner ended up to be a kind of backyard farmer with just one calf.

"We've been very successful reuniting animals with their owners using Facebook," he said. In this case, "not knowing who the owner was, we used the same resources we do to find pet owners."

He said the Facebook post reached 7,000 people. 

Officers in New Boston, a town of roughly 5,300, are trained to deal with all kinds of loose animals. They even carry peppermints in their cruisers to lure any roaming horses, Brace said.

Despite the joking Facebook post instructing the owner of the calf to "post his bail," the calf wasn't held at the Police Station. Brace said another farmer in town took care of the calf in the short time before the owner was found.

Chicopee Police catch one man on roof, arrest another in narcotics bust

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The city's Narcotics Unit arrested two men, including one who they chased onto a roof, in a raid on a Park Street home.

CHICOPEE -- The city's Narcotics Unit arrested two men, including one who officers chased onto a roof, in a raid on a Park Street home.

Enrique Baerga Jr., 48, and Julio Rivera-Maldanado, 46, both of 44 Park St., second floor, will be arraigned in Chicopee District Court Friday morning on charges related to drug distribution, according to Public Information Officer Michael Wilk.

maldanadojp.jpgJulio Rivera-Maldanado 

The Narcotics Unit investigated the pair and executed a search warrant at the Park Street apartment at 5:40 a.m. Thursday.

"After making entry, one of the suspects had gone out a window and onto the roof," Wilk said in a post on the department's Facebook page. He confirmed Friday that the suspect was Baerga. "Our officers were able to access the roof and secure him and bring him back inside."

Rivera-Maldanado was found in the kitchen. Police arrested him, Wilk said, after he refused to comply with orders to show his hands and get on the ground.

baerga1.jpgEnrique Baerga Jr. 

"During the search, narcotics as well as paraphernalia were found," he said. Police seized over 300 bags of heroin and cocaine, as well as cash.

Wilk said both men will be charged with possession with intent to distribute a class A drug (heroin), possession with intent to distribute a class B drug (cocaine), a drug violation near a school or park, and resisting arrest. 

Rivera-Maldanado also faces a charge of a subsequent offense of distribution of a class A drug (heroin).

The drug violation near a school or park is applicable because the apartment is across the street from Lucy M. Wisniowski Memorial Park.

Powerball jackpot soars to $900 million as lottery fans scoop up tickets

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Lottery officials say the odds are growing that someone will win the $900 million Powerball jackpot, which grew by $100 million just hours before Saturday night's drawing.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Lottery fans, take heart. Officials say the odds are growing that someone will win the $900 million Powerball jackpot, which grew by $100 million just hours before Saturday night's drawing.

If no one matches all the numbers, the next drawing is expected to soar to $1.3 billion, according to the Multi-State Lottery Association, which runs the Powerball game.

The U.S. saw sales of $277 million on Friday alone and more than $400 million are expected Saturday, according to Gary Grief, the executive director of the Texas Lottery.

But for all the excitement, Grief urged those hoping to hit it big not to spend more than they can afford on the $2 tickets.

"We're very concerned about people playing responsibly and not overspending," he said. "It only takes one ticket to win."

Since Nov. 4, the Powerball jackpot has grown from its $40 million starting point as no one has won the jackpot. This kind of huge jackpot was just what lottery officials hoped for last fall when they changed the odds of matching all the Powerball numbers, from about one in 175 million to one in 292.2 million. By making it harder to win a jackpot, the tougher odds made the ever-larger prizes inevitable.

The bigger prizes draw more players, who in turn make the jackpots even bigger.

Anndrea Smith, 30, of Omaha, Nebraska, has already spent more than she usually does on Powerball tickets.

"I bought four yesterday, and I usually never buy any," said Smith, manager of Bucky's gas station and convenience store in northwest Omaha.

She's not alone, saying the store sold "about $5,000 worth of tickets yesterday. Usually on a Friday, we might sell $1,200 worth."

If she wins, her first purchase will be "a warm vacation," she said, as the temperature outside the store hovered in the single digits. "I'd share with family, too."

The chance of no one hitting all five initial numbers and the Powerball number is growing slimmer, Grief acknowledged.

"We anticipate that by the time sales close tonight, around 75 percent of all the combinations will be wagered on," he said.

How to improve your odds

The odds are a matter of statistics and probability, but they're facts that most players may not completely understand, said Ron Wasserstein, executive director of the Alexandria, Virginia-based American Statistical Association.

"Once you get numbers that size, it's hard for people to wrap their minds around them," Wasserstein said.

Man reportedly stabbed above left buttock in Holyoke

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A man who was reportedly stabbed just above his left buttock Saturday morning was transported to Baystate Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries, according to Holyoke police.

HOLYOKE ‒ A man who was reportedly stabbed just above his left buttock Saturday morning was transported to Baystate Medical Center with non-life-threatening injuries, according to Holyoke police.

Officers responded to reports of an alleged stabbing at 240 Walnut St. around 9:30 a.m. Saturday. They found the victim, who had a one inch stab wound just above his left buttock, in the doorway holding his left hip area, Holyoke Police said.

The victim told police, who checked the area for suspects, that he did not know the person who allegedly stabbed him. He was transported to Baystate for treatment, according to Holyoke police.

Indian Orchard and other local residents flood citizens council with donations for New Year's Day fire victims

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An entire room of the Indian Orchard Citizens Council on Main Street was overflowing with toys and clothing donors had begun funneling through local church and various other organizations in the week following the fire.

SPRINGFIELD - How do you piece a lifetime of belongings back together after a fire ravages your home?

In the case of 36 Indian Orchard residents whose Centre Street homes were destroyed in a New Year's Day inferno, residents from the neighborhood and beyond were more than willing to help. A virtual flood of donations of clothing, money, gift cards, boots, small appliances and all the trappings of a new domestic life.

More than three dozen volunteers and Indian Orchard Citizens Council board members rallied to receive the charitable tsunami on Saturday, which included a $1,000 check from a local donor who wished to remain anonymous.

"Neighborhood councils are more than just zone and ordinance changes. We want to help people who need us," said Linda Yarber, president of the Orchard's Citizens Council.

An entire room of the Indian Orchard Citizens Council on Main Street was overflowing with toys and clothing donors had begun funneling through local church and various other organizations in the week following the fire.

"We had to begin turning away donations at around 11:30," said council vice president Mark Goraj. "This was a lot of work ... I think we did a hell of a job. All these people gave up their whole Saturday."

Volunteers came from the Indian Orchard neighborhood and surrounding cities and towns including East Longmeadow, Belchertown, Springfield and Wilbraham. They sorted through mountains of adult and children's clothing, shoes, boots and incidental items such as screw drivers, tissue and calendars.

Soveiva Vazquez and her 5-year-old son were among the families displaced at the fire that quickly swallowed up 266-268 and 270-272 Centre St., adjacent multi-family apartment complexes that caught fire around 2:45 a.m. on New Year's Day.

She came to the center on Saturday and stocked up on clothes, pots and pans, shampoo and toys for her son.

"The fire was completely traumatizing. I lost every single thing we owned," Vazquez said. "I'm so grateful for this."

firevic.jpgSPRINGFIELD - Soveiva Vazquez and her son, Jadiel, 5, were among 36 victims displaced by fast-moving fires in Indian Orchard on New Year's Day.  


Ward 8 Springfield City Councilor Orlando Ramos said the effort captured the spirit of the neighborhood.

"This is what Indian Orchard is all about," Ramos said.

The council partnered with the Hampden County Sheriff's Department to coordinate the clothing and fund drive.

Damian Cherry, a corporal with sheriff's department, said he corralled 12 off-duty law enforcement and police vehicles to haul the goods to the council on Saturday.

In addition to individual donations, New Life Christian Church, other homeowners and a hotel owner in Northampton have offered families beds, tables, desks and other furniture.

Yarber said the donations the council could not handle will be forwarded to the Survival Center in Indian Orchard and other local charities so the items will stay in the community.

Massachusetts State Police: 84-year-old Bernardston man killed in crash near West Springfield toll booth

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An 84-year-old Bernardston man has been identified as the driver of a 2001 Ford Ranger who died following a Friday afternoon crash at a toll booth near exit four of the Massachusetts Turnpike in West Springfield, state police have reported.

WEST SPRINGFIELD ‒ An 84-year-old Bernardston man has been identified as the driver of a 2001 Ford Ranger who died following a Friday afternoon crash at a toll booth near exit four of the Massachusetts Turnpike in West Springfield, state police have reported.

Richard Tetreault was reportedly taking the westbound exit when he suffered a medical emergency, causing his vehicle to strike a Toyota Prius on the off ramp, according to state police. His truck then traveled over the median and a barrier separating the off ramp and on ramp traffic where it reportedly struck a Chevy Tahoe.

Tetreault's vehicle came to a rest on its roof and he was transported to Baystate Medical Center where he was later pronounced dead, state police said.

The occupants of the Tahoe, who have been identified as a 28-year-old female from West Brookfield, a 45-year-old female from Belchertown and a 61-year-old male from Ware, Maine, were also transported to the medical center, state police reported.


Winning Powerball numbers: What time and channel is the jackpot drawing?

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There has not been a Powerball winner since Nov. 4.

The Powerball jackpot has reached $900 million, and was expected to inch even higher before this evening's drawing.

The jackpot has set a nationwide record, surpassing the $656 million prize that was up for grabs in 2012.

There has not been a Powerball winner since Nov. 4.

No Massachusetts TV stations air the live drawing tonight at 10:59 p.m., though WTIC, Channel 61, and WCCT, Channel 20, both in Hartford, and WBIN, Channel 18, in Derry, New Hampshire do, according to the Multi-State Lottery Association.

The results can be found online at powerball.com

With the drawing so close to the start of the 11 p.m. newscasts, you can bet that the results will be announced sometime during the broadcast.

Note: The evening news may be delayed on CBS affiliates by the AFC wildcard game.

Cottage Street Cultural District in Easthampton wins 'placemaking' grant

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ECA+ advocates for the arts to fuel the city's cultural renaissance.

EASTHAMPTON -- Easthampton City Arts+, under the leadership of director Burns Maxey, continues to find innovative sources of funding to support arts and culture in this small city, especially within its Cottage Street Cultural District.

The group announced two new grants this week -- one from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and another from the National Association of Realtors(r) through its local branch.

The "placemaking micro-grant" was made through the Realtor(r) Association of the Pioneer Valley. It will fund $2,200 for a new public art project at the Promenade Park at Nashawannuck Pond. The arts organization will release a request for proposals in February for an interactive art project.

A $5,000 matching grant from the state will boost projects within the Cottage Street Cultural District, including the third annual Winterfest (Feb. 13), public art, and other programs. The grant is part of $150,000 awarded statewide for designated cultural districts.

Easthampton's Cottage Street Cultural District was one of the first cultural districts to be recognized by the state. It's billed as place where visitors can find "down-to-earth funkiness" and an eclectic array of shops, galleries, and nightlife.

Easthampton City Arts+ was formed in 2005, and works to integrate arts, culture and community while revitalizing and protecting the city's cultural assets.

Mary Serreze can be reached at mserreze@gmail.com

Connecticut man allegedly held woman at apartment, forced her to have sex

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A 31-year-old man has been arrested and charged for allegedly holding and sexually trafficking an 18-year-old Enfield woman for almost a month.

HARTFORD, CONN. ‒ A 31-year-old Windsor man has been arrested and charged for allegedly holding and sexually trafficking an 18-year-old Enfield woman for almost a month.

According to an arrest affidavit, the woman reportedly met Dwayne Hairston, who went by "Crash," at a store on Westland and Main streets in September and was invited to his apartment to smoke marijuana and hang out, the Hartford Courant reported this week.

According to the newspaper, the woman told investigators that while she and Hairston had consensual sex, sex with four men who came into the bedroom afterward was not consensual. The woman also told police that she was not allowed the leave the room for the next week as men came in to have sex.

Hairston, who reportedly made about $800 from men who had sex with the woman, also allegedly forced her to snort and inject what's believed to be heroin and attempted to sell her to another man, the newspaper reported.

Police found the woman in an apartment at 2572 Main St. in Hartford on Sept. 29, but did not apprehend Hairston until earlier this week, according to the Courant. He faces charges of trafficking of a human, kidnapping, unlawful restraint and promoting prostitution, police told the newspaper.

Hairston was held on $800,000 bail following a Thursday court appearance, the Courant reported.

James Eric "Nut" Williams, 25, of Hartford, was also arrested and charged with first-degree sexual assault this week after being identified by the victim as one of the men who reportedly sexually assaulted her. He was held on $500,000 bail after appearing in court Thursday, according to the newspaper.

Police said more arrests were expected.

'El Chapo' extradition to US: Unlike 2014, Mexico 'is ready' to hand over drug lord

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Mexico is willing to extradite drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman to the United States, a federal law enforcement official said Saturday.

MEXICO CITY -- Mexico is willing to extradite drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman to the United States, a federal law enforcement official said Saturday. It's a sharp reversal from the official position after his last capture in 2014.

"Mexico is ready. There are plans to cooperate with the U.S.," said the official, who spoke on condition anonymity because he wasn't authorized to comment.

But he cautioned that there could be a lengthy wait before U.S. prosecutors can get their hands on Guzman, the most-wanted trafficker who was recaptured Friday after six months on the run: "You have to go through the judicial process, and the defense has its elements too."

Top officials in the party of President Enrique Pena Nieto also floated the idea of extradition, which they had flatly ruled out before Guzman's embarrassing escape from Mexico's top maximum security prison on July 11.

"He has a lot of outstanding debts to pay in Mexico, but if it's necessary, he can pay them in other places," said Manlio Fabio Beltrones, president of Pena Nieto's Institutional Revolutionary Party.

But even if Mexican officials agree, Guzman's attorney Juan Pablo Badillo told the Milenio newspaper that the defense already has filed six motions to challenge extradition requests.

"They can challenge the judge, challenge the probable cause, challenge the procedure," said Juan Masini, former U.S. Department of Justice attache at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico. "That's why it can take a long time. They won't challenge everything at once ... they can drip, drip, milk it that way."

Mexican drug kingpin El Chapo Guzman arrested -- again (with timeline)

Guzman, a legendary figure in Mexico who went from a farmer's son to the world's top drug lord, was apprehended after a shootout between gunmen and Mexican marines at the home in Los Mochis, a seaside city in Guzman's home state of Sinaloa.

The operation resulted from six months of investigation by Mexican forces, who located Guzman in a rural part of Durango state in October but decided not to shoot because he was with two women and a child, said Mexican Attorney General Arely Gomez.

After that he took a lower profile and limited his communication until he decided to move to Los Mochis in December.

Following his capture, the head of the powerful, international Sinaloa Cartel was brought to Mexico City's airport, frog-marched to a helicopter before news media, and flown back to the same prison he'd fled.

There were immediately calls for his quick extradition, just as there were after the February 2014 capture of Guzman, who faces drug-trafficking charges in several U.S. states. At the time, Mexico's government insisted it could handle the man who had already broken out of one maximum-security prison, saying he must pay his debt to Mexican society first.

Then Guzman escaped a second time on July 11 under the noses of guards and prison officials at Mexico's most secure lock-up, slipping out an elaborate tunnel that showed the country's depth of corruption while thoroughly embarrassing the administration of President Enrique Pena Nieto.

In celebrating Guzman's latest capture, Mexican officials showed none of their bravado of two years ago, though they made clear that the intelligence building and investigation were carried out entirely by Mexican forces. They did not mention extradition.

"They have to extradite him," said Alejandro Hope, a security analyst in Mexico. "It's almost a forced move."

Gomez said that one of Guzman's key tunnel builders led officials to the neighborhood in Los Mochis, where authorities had been watching for a month. The team noticed a lot of activity at the house Wednesday and the arrival of a car early Thursday morning. Authorities were able to determine that Guzman was inside the house, she said.

The marines were met with gunfire as they closed in. Five suspects were killed and six others arrested. One marine was injured.

"You could hear intense gunfire and a helicopter; it was fierce," said a neighbor, adding that the battle raged for three hours, starting at 4 a.m. She refused to be quoted by name in fear for her own safety.

Gomez said Guzman and his security chief, "El Cholo" Ivan Gastelum, were able to flee via storm drains and escape through a manhole cover to the street, where they commandeered getaway cars. Marines climbed into the drains in pursuit. They closed in on the two men based on reports of stolen vehicles and they were arrested on the highway.

In 2014, Guzman evaded capture by fleeing through a network of interconnected tunnels in the drainage system under Culiacan, the Sinaloa state capital.

"The arrest of today is very important for the government of Mexico. It shows that the public can have confidence in its institutions," Pena Nieto said in a public address. "Mexicans can count on a government decided and determined to build a better country."

What happens now is more crucial for Guzman, whose cartel smuggles multi-ton shipments of cocaine and marijuana as well as manufacturing and transporting methamphetamines and heroin, mostly to the U.S.

The United States filed requests for Guzman's extradition last June 25, just days before he escaped from prison. In September, a judge issued a second provisional arrest warrant on U.S. charges of organized crime, money laundering, drug trafficking and homicide, among others. But Guzman's lawyers already had filed appeals and received injunctions that could delay the extradition process for months or even years.

"The arrest is a significant achievement in our shared fight against transnational organized crime, violence, and drug trafficking," the Drug Enforcement Administration said in a statement.

After his first capture in Guatemala in June 1993, Guzman was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He reportedly made his 2001 escape from the maximum security prison in a laundry cart, though some have discounted that version.

His second escape last year was even more audacious. He fled down a hole in his shower stall in plain view of guards into a mile-long tunnel dug from a property outside the prison. The tunnel had ventilation, lights and a motorbike on rails. Construction noise as a digger broke through from the tunnel to his cell was obvious inside the prison, according a video of Guzman in his cell just before he escaped.

Mexican officials say dreams of Hollywood helped them track down and capture the world's most notorious drug trafficker.

Apparently Guzman, while on the run, thought his story was worthy of a movie. Part of the reason authorities tracked him down was because he wanted to film a biopic, Gomez told the press at the airport ceremony where the prisoner was shown off to the press.

"For that he established communication with actresses and producers, which became a new line of investigation," she said.

Police identify two men killed in Route 20 crash in West Springfield

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Police have released the identities of the two men killed in a two-car head-on collision on Route 20 in West Springfield Friday afternoon.

WEST SPRINGFIELD ‒ Police have released the identities of the two men killed in a two-car head-on collision on Route 20 in West Springfield Friday afternoon.

According to police, Jeff Martell, 50, of Northampton, and Benjamin Stulpin, 24, of Springfield, died at the scene of the crash, which occurred shortly before 5 p.m. Friday, the Daily Hampshire Gazette reported.

West Springfield Police Sgt Hubert Rees told the Republican early Saturday that initial indications suggest the two cars were traveling in opposite directions on Route 20 near the Westfield town line when one lost control and crossed the center line.

The vehicles reportedly crashed head-on, killing both drivers who were alone in their vehicles at the time of the incident, Rees said. Two other cars reportedly collided with either the first two cars or each other when attempting to avoid the crash, he said. None of those involved in the second set of cars was reported injured.

Martell, a Pioneer Valley folk singer, was reportedly driving to a gig at The Backwater Grille in Canaan, New York, according to the Gazette.

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