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Trash hauler charged with defrauding Massachusetts landfill

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Stephen P. Aguiar allegedly didn't pay correct tipping fees at the Fall River Landfill.

BOSTON -- The owner of a trash company has been charged with defrauding the operator of the Fall River Landfill of approximately $473,000 in disposal fees.

 
Stephen P. Aguiar, Jr., 47, was an owner-operator of Cleanway Disposal & Recycling in Westport. He was charged Friday in federal court with three counts of mail fraud.

Between 2009 and 2014, Aguiar misrepresented the origin of trash he disposed at the landfill, according to the U.S. District Attorney's Office in Boston.

Aguiar allegedly claimed he was disposing trash from the Fall River Housing Authority, when in fact it was collected from his private clients. The company operating the landfill allowed Fall River to dispose of trash from the housing authority at no charge.

All told, Aguiar allegedly defrauded the landfill of approximately $473,000 in revenue.

The maximum sentence under the statute is 20 years in prison, three years of supervised release, a fine of $250,000, restitution and forfeiture.

The announcement was made by Acting U.S. Attorney William D. Weinreb, investigators with the FBI and HUD, and others. Assistant U.S. Attorney Kristina E. Barclay of Weinreb's Public Corruption Unit is prosecuting the case.

Russian spies tried to recruit Trump campaign aide Carter Page in 2013

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The FBI document, filed in the 2015 case of a Russian spy working undercover in New York, does not accuse Page of wrongdoing.

Carter Page, who served for a brief time as a foreign policy adviser to President Donald Trump's campaign, acknowledged Monday that he was targeted by Russian spies for recruitment as an intelligence source in 2013.

ABC News reports Page, one of several Trump associates now under scrutiny in investigations into Russian election meddling, is the person referred to as "Male-1" in a sealed FBI court document.

But the New York-based business consultant said he only talked about the energy industry with a recruiter identified as Victor Podobnyy. Page told investigators the two had met occasionally and exchanged business emails.

The FBI document suggests Page may not have known he was speaking with Russian intelligence agents.

The document is related to the 2015 case of Evgeny Buryakov, a Russian spy who worked undercover in the New York office of a Russian bank. The document details conversations between Buryakov and the spy recruiters, Podobnyy and Igor Sporyshev, about their efforts to turn Page.

Buryakov was sentenced to 30 months in prison but released over the weekend. Page cooperated with the investigation.

The FBI document does not accuse Page of wrongdoing.

Page has long advocated for a better relationship between the U.S. and Russia. Nevertheless, his position in the Trump campaign came as a surprise to some political observers. ABC News reports that when Trump told The Washington Post he was taking Page's counsel, "Page had almost no public profile in Washington foreign policy circles."

Buryakov operated undercover at VEB Bank. About a month before Trump's inauguration, his son-in-law and senior presidential adviser Jared Kushner met with the bank's president at the suggestion of Russia's ambassador to the U.S., sparking controversy when the meeting became public last week.

Page stopped working for Trump's campaign before the election. The White House said he has no relationship with the president.

How the world's glaciers are melting: A visual then-and-now

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In the Geological Society of America's GSA Today journal , a group of ice researchers and a photographer-filmmaker published pictures showing how much five of the world's glaciers have thinned.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Over the past decade, scientists and photographers keep returning to the world's glaciers, watching them shrink with each visit. Now they want others to see how a warming planet is melting masses of ice in a series of before-and-after photos.

In the Geological Society of America's GSA Today journal , a group of ice researchers and a photographer-filmmaker published pictures showing how much five of the world's glaciers have thinned.

"There is something fundamentally compelling about the approach they take. For all our emphasis on models and math, seeing is still believing," said University of Colorado ice scientist Ted Scambos, who wasn't part of the team.

Under natural conditions, glaciers at times melt and retreat while others grow and advance. But measurements from Earth's 5,200 glaciers show warming temperatures have increased the number of melting glaciers and the speed of glacial retreat, according to the study. Scientists primarily blame man-made global warming from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas.

"There is something that touches the heart more profoundly when you see it in pictures than when you see it in maps or reports or graphs," said photographer James Balog, who founded the nonprofit Earth Vision Institute. "It certainly brings it alive."

ICELAND

The Solheimajokull glacier has shriveled by about 2,050 feet (625 meters) between 2007 and 2015.

ALASKA

The forward edge of the Mendenhall glacier outside of Juneau has receded about 1,800 feet (550 meters) between 2007 and 2015.

SWITZERLAND

The Stein glacier has shrunk about 1,800 feet (550 meters) between 2006 and 2015.

SWITZERLAND

The Trift glacier has retreated nearly three quarters of a mile (1.17 kilometers) between 2006 and 2015.

PERU

Ohio State ice scientist Lonnie Thompson has visited the Qori Kalis glacier since 1974. Between 1978 and 2016, it has shriveled 3,740 feet (1.14 kilometers). Thompson described his regular expeditions to the Peruvian glacier "like visiting a terminally ill family member."

Come on down: demolition begins of long-vacant 278 Pine St. in Holyoke

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Demolition began on Tuesday, April 4, 2017 of an apartment building at Pine and Hampshire streets in Holyoke, Massachusetts that has been vacant for over 20 years and has mostly collapsed inside.

HOLYOKE -- One of the 10 worst abandoned buildings in the city is disappearing as demolition began Tuesday of an apartment building at Pine and Hampshire streets vacant for over 20 years.

"While it is unfortunate we have to demolish a building, we cannot allow these blighted buildings to remain and to continue to have a negative impact on the quality of life in our neighborhoods," Mayor Alex B. Morse said.

Built around 1935, the red-brick building at 278-280 Pine St. had 21 apartments and 75 total rooms. It has been vacant for over 20 years. In a tour of abandoned buildings in 2016, Fire Chief John A. Pond described the building as four walls and some roof with much of the interior of floors and stairways collapsed.

"What you have is basically four walls. Everything has collapsed into the basement," Pond said.

The city is using Community Development Block Grant funds to pay $253,200 to Associated Building Wreckers of Springfield to take down the building. Demolition and site cleanup will take about two weeks, Morse said in a press release.

Hampshire Pine Street Trust of Lexington, with Thomas E. Sheedy a trustee, previously owned the building. The city seized it in March 2016 for failure to pay taxes.

The building had little economic development value and was a public safety risk. It was a priority of the mayor's Problem Property Group, a board of city officials that meets regularly to get blighted buildings removed. The board includes representatives from the mayor's office, Fire Department, Building Department, Board of Health, Office of Community Development, city treasurer, Department of Planning and Economic Development, Redevelopment Authority and the Law and Purchasing departments.

10 worst abandoned buildings in Holyoke show ravages of neglect, nature, safety hazards

Once the lot is vacant, the plan is to develop it into green space and parking for the nearby Senior Center and Wistariahurst Museum, Morse said.

"I'd like to thank the Problem Property Group for their work on seeing this project through," he said.

Your Comments: Readers react to PeoplesBank buying Yankee Pedlar site in Holyoke

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The former Yankee Pedlar in Holyoke has been for sale since last summer. None of the potential buyers planed to retain the building.

HOLYOKE -- PeoplesBank plans to purchase the now-shuttered Yankee Pedlar restaurant site on Northampton Street in Holyoke, raze all but two of the buildings on the 2-acre site and build a new financial services center.

The Pedlar, long a local favorite, closed in December after having been for sale for months. None of the potential buyers planned to keep the Pedlar building intact.

Tom Senecal, president and CEO of PeoplesBank, which is based in Holyoke, said he plans to save woodwork, stained glass windows and other memorabilia from the Pedlar and incorporate those elements into the new bank building. Sensitive to Holyokers' love for the Pedlar, he wants to build a financial services center that fits the the neighborhood.

There is no timeline for construction. PeoplesBank is in the process of hiring an architect. PeoplesBank will need a demolition permit from the city and City Council permission to build the drive-thru windows.

Here's what some MassLive readers had to say:

lxs36 wrote:

"It's a shame to ruin a landmark in Holyoke. They should save the building or move it. ..."

Windy wrote:

"This is thanks to all the NON SMOKERS screaming they had no place to go to eat.  They did not show up after the NO SMOKING signs went up.....they crashed many restaurants in the general area, as we knew to expect.

openminded1 wrote:

"It is sad to see old establishments go away, but a restaurant on this site is not coming back. The property has been for sale for years and smarter restaurateurs than found on this comment section have decided it was not viable.
We can all wistfully remember the old days and wish them back, but the building is old, and basically useless .... if not this then what?
I would rather benefit a local organization that has roots, a history of strong support to the area,( so says many local officials), and commits to incorporating the memory.
The alternative seems to be a dilapidated building, another gas station,(probably built with NO regard for history), or a nondescript office building.
Good for PeoplesBank, I appreciate their efforts, applaud their commitments and look forward to seeing the progress."
Enigma wrote:

"The place required an entire make over to save it as a nostalgic restaurant. Given the cost and survival rates of restaurants these days it could have never produce enough revenue to survive. Say goodbye to the past. Much like health care as you once knew it. Times are a changing."

polymather wrote:

"I think this is a surprisingly good outcome. The building is obsolete. Good location. Better than a slowly collapsing vacant building or a no name gas station. I think medical offices would have been better. Holyoke has plenty of vacant buildings that are not being restored. Nice we're not adding to that."

"It's sounds like a plan,  you can't keep and restore every old building in Holyoke, there are just too many."
ishkabibble wrote:
"I really figured Holyoke (Medical Center)  would beat them to it."

hockeymom wrote:

The hypocrisy of the city officials on what deserves protection and what doesn't amazes me.  While Morse and Bartley actively oppose the removal of a dangerous building for which demolition is necessary and whose questionable  historical importance is mainly to people who do not live here, they support the quick removal of this Holyoke landmark which is the center of thousands of memories of countless current and former residents.  Not only is the Pedlar itself an important part of Holyoke history but the fixtures within were lovingly preserved from other historical Holyoke properties. It is very concerning that the best Senecal can do is say they will "try to incorporate" the gorgeous woodwork salvaged from Kenilworth Castle and which was beautiful preserved by the Pedlar owners. If any building deserves a delay in demolition it is this one.  I urge the Building Commissioner and the Historical Commission to do their job and seek a delay in the destruction of this property.

Eversource plans power line inspection by helicopter

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Eversource plans to do aerial inspections of vegetation growing near its high-voltage electric lines this week in Western Massachusetts.

SPRINGFIELD -- Eversource plans to do aerial inspections of vegetation growing near its high-voltage electric lines this week in Western Massachusetts.

Inspections are done with a helicopter.

The aerial inspections begin Wednesday and, weather permitting, end Friday. Flights will take place from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

This semiannual inspection is an important part of the company's ongoing commitment to providing reliable electric service, Eversource said.

"The helicopter inspections of our transmission lines are a crucial and effective part of our commitment to reducing the frequency and duration of power outages," Eversource President of Regional Electric Operations Craig Hallstrom said in a press release. "Well over a million customers in Massachusetts depend on us for their electric service and that's why we're always working proactively to keep the system operating safely and reliably."

Inspections will cover the following cities and towns:

Warwick, Northfield, Erving, Montague, Greenfield, Leverett, Shutesbury, Granby, Pelham, Belchertown, Ludlow, Wilbraham, Hampden, Springfield, Chicopee, West Springfield, Agawam, Deerfield, Shelburne, Conway, Plainfield, Ashfield, Windsor, Peru, Hinsdale, Dalton, Lanesborough, Hancock, Pittsfield, South Hadley, Amherst, Longmeadow, East Longmeadow, Enfield Connecticut.

Belchertown school board discussion on 'Rights of undocumented students and protocols' refered to subcommittee

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The agenda included an item, "Rights of undocumented students and protocols," and school committee member Michael Knapp read parts of a proclamation during the meeting that he would like to see the board approve


BELCHERTOWN -- A school board discussion last week on district protocols involving the town's public school students who do not possess U.S. citizenship or paperwork showing they have a right to reside in the country was referred to a subcommittee for further review.

The agenda included an item, "Rights of undocumented students and protocols," and school committee member Michael Knapp read parts of a proclamation during the meeting that he would like to see the board approve.

The issue, Knapp told his colleagues, is on "the minds of a lot of people."

Knapp said his proposed resolution "borrowed liberally from" the Amherst School Committee's resolution adopted in February titled "Rights of Undocumented Students and Protocols for ICE Access to Schools." ICE is the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

"The building principal can say to someone from ICE, 'You can't come in if you don't have a warrant,'" Knapp said at the March 28 meeting.

The Amherst resolution says, "Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) personnel will be refused entry to district property unless the superintendent and district counsel are provided with a warrant signed by a judge or magistrate authorizing ICE entry onto the property. Amherst Public Schools staff shall not ask about a student's immigration status or that of the student's family members."

It says, "Within the next 90 days, the superintendent shall develop a plan:

  • for training teachers, administrators and other staff on how to respond to ICE personnel who are requesting information about students and families and are attempting to enter district property; and
  • describing procedures for notifying families about ICE efforts to gain information about students and families, and how to support students whose family members have been displaced because of ICE."

    The Northampton School Committee also discussed the issue of undocumented students at its February meeting -- in particular, "14th Amendment protections for undocumented students," the city's superintendent said in an email to The Republican.

    The U.S. Supreme Court, by a 5-4 vote following arguments in the Plyler v. Doe case, struck down a Texas law in 1982 involving undocumented immigrants who were denied enrollment in public schools. The court cited the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause.

    "Held: A Texas statute which withholds from local school districts any state funds for the education of children who were not 'legally admitted' into the United States, and which authorizes local school districts to deny enrollment to such children, violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment," the decision states.

  • South Hadley administrator recommends $45.5M town budget

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    The amount includes a school appropriation of $20,914,067, which would be an increase of 0.66 percent, should next month's annual Town Meeting approve the recommendations


    SOUTH HADLEY -- Town Administrator Michael Sullivan is recommending a $45,547,563 operating budget for the fiscal year that begins on July 1, a 2.5 percent increase from current spending.

    The amount includes a school appropriation of $20,914,067, should next month's annual Town Meeting approve the recommendations.

    In a letter to the Selectboard, Sullivan said a steep hike in health insurance costs of nearly 10 percent contributed to the increase.

    "The increase which really made the budget a challenge was health insurance: it was up 9.8 percent, and we are looking at another 10 percent (increase) next year if there are not plan design changes to the present plan" provided by the Hampshire County Group Insurance Trust, the town's carrier, Sullivan said.

    "At this point I do not expect many changes and really see this as a best picture budget," Sullivan wrote.


    South Hadley candidates night is Thursday, moderated by Ray Hershel

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    The community group Know Your Town will host a candidates night at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Town Hall auditorium, 116 Main St.


    SOUTH HADLEY -- The community group Know Your Town will host a candidates night at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Town Hall auditorium, 116 Main St.

    The event will be moderated by Ray Hershel of Western Mass News.

    There are two Selectboard seats on the election ballot. Incumbent Sarah Etelman is seeking re-election to the board. Also seeking election to the Selectboard are Andrea G. Miles and Scott R. Moore.

    School Committee incumbents Eric M. Sarrazin and Barry Waite are seeking re-election. They are being challenged by Kyle R. Belanger and Carly K. Lapinski.

    Diane L. Dietzen is running against incumbent Michael A. Rosner for a Board of Health seat.

    Incumbent South Hadley Public Library Trustees David C. Morrell, Susan E. Obremski-Crowther and Gillian M. Woldorf are being challenged by Donald J. D'Amato and Amy Diehl for the three seats.

    Larry E. Butler and Diane V. Supczak-Mulvaney are running for a seat on the Planning Board.

    South Hadley's town election is April 11.

    Mosaic constructed by Belchertown High School art students to be unveiled Thursday at Clapp Memorial Library

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    The April 6 reception that includes the mosaic's unveiling at the library, located at 19 South Main St., will be from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. The free event is open to the public.


    BELCHERTOWN -- Clapp Memorial Library on Thursday will unveil a work of art, a four-by-three-foot mosaic constructed by high school students.

    According to the librarian, the mosaic depicts the Clapp Library, Quabbin Reservoir, Belchertown Fair, wildlife, apple orchards and nature, and will become a permanent display inside the building.

    Three classes of Belchertown High School students of art teacher Lori St. Pierre designed and built the mural.

    They worked with Easthampton mosaic artist Christine Kenneally, artist in residence at the school.

    The reception will be from 5:30-6:30 p.m. at the library, 19 South Main St. It is open to the public.

    Springfield College to host advance screening of documentary on former UMass basketball coach John Calipari

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    An advance screening of an upcoming documentary on former University of Massachusetts basketball coach John Calipari is set for Thursday at Springfield College.

    SPRINGFIELD -- An advance screening of an upcoming documentary on former University of Massachusetts basketball coach John Calipari is set for Thursday at Springfield College.

    The sneak peek event, which starts at 7 p.m. in the Fuller Arts Center, is free and open to the public.

    The film, titled "One and Not Done," is the latest work of Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Jonathan Hock, who has directed four other documentaries in ESPN's "30 for 30" series.

    Hock's documentary takes an in-depth look into Calipari's controversial career leading up to his current position as head coach for the men's basketball team at the University of Kentucky.

    Over 25 years Calipari boasts a record of 694 wins spread among three schools: UMass Amherst, University of Memphis and University of Kentucky. In that time Calipari captured 17 regular season championships, 14 conference championships, 18 NCAA tournament appearances and one NCAA championship in 2012 with Kentucky.

    Calipari led UMass basketball during the height of the program, including the school's first Final Four berth in 1996. That appearance was later vacated due to an NCAA violation involving center Marcus Camby receiving money from sports agents.

    After several years in the NBA as head coach of the New Jersey Nets and assistant coach of the Philadelphia 76ers, Calipari returned to the NCAA, first at Memphis in 2000. He led the Tigers for nine seasons before making his move to his current position at Kentucky.

    Following the documentary screening there will be and question-and-answer session with Hock and director of photography Alastair Christopher.

    ESPN is set to air "One and Not Done" on April 13.

    People with disabilities requiring reasonable accommodation to fully participate in the event should contact the Office of Inclusion and Community Engagement at 413-748-3050 or email lholm@springfieldcollege.edu.

    Bingo continuing weekly at Holyoke Senior Center after bad behavior discussed

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    Weekly bingo will continue at the Holyoke, Massachusetts Senior Center after a meeting hashed out differences regarding allegedly rude behavior by seniors at the Friday gatherings, according to an official's email and a bingo player's comments on Tuesday, April 4, 2017.

    HOLYOKE -- Peace is at hand at the Holyoke Senior Center.

    Weekly bingo games will continue at the 291 Pine St. facility.

    That came after Senior Center staff and elderly patrons met to discuss problems of allegedly bad behavior from rudeness to threatening to egg cars attributed to senior citizens had jeopardized the every Friday bingo.

    Navae Fenwick Rodriguez, executive director of the Holyoke Council on Aging (COA), and Lorraine Gorham, 77, a dedicated bingo player, said Tuesday it appeared problems were hashed out and bingo on Fridays will remain available.

    "I wanted to let you know that bingo, through the efforts of participants, staff, and the COA board, has been successfully restored to a weekly activity. We are all very happy with the outcome," Rodriguez said in an email to city councilors.

    "We have bingo back like we had before. We weren't supposed to have bingo last week and we had it," Gorham said in a phone interview.

    Notice of the problems that senior citizens were said to be causing surfaced last month. Rodriguez ordered weekly bingo reduced to two Fridays a month because it was unfair for staff and volunteers to keep putting up with bad behavior, she said.

    Rowdiness included seniors banging on doors of other rooms at the facility, sneaking people in for lunch when a ticket is required, being rude to staff and volunteers and leaving the room a mess, she said.

    Some seniors even threatened to egg the vehicles of staff and volunteers upon learning bingo regularity was in jeopardy, she said.

    "The Friday bingo mindset seems to infect people who behave rationally all other days of the week," Rodriguez had said.

    Gorham said she had never witnessed such problems, but showed a willingness to meet with Rodriguez in the interest of maintaining weekly bingo because it's important to some people.

    "Some people, that's all they have to do. That's all we wanted," Gorham said.

    Bingo games draw 75 to 80 people who look forward to the socializing, she said.

    The agreement includes seniors receiving a copy of house rules with bingo cards and posting of house rules on each table.

    Rules include being respectful of other players, staff and volunteers; buying a lunch ticket if entry for bingo takes place before 12:15 p.m.; silencing cell phones; staying quiet during bingo games; and not removing chairs from chair stacks, Gorham said.


    Springfield police plan new public safety measures before MGM casino opening

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    New C-3 officers are "not just for MGM," said the police commissioner, but for every resident, visitor and business owner "to work together to improve this entire area."

    SPRINGFIELD -- The Police Department is planning to put dozens of officers in and around the South End neighborhood, along with call boxes and other public safety measures, well before the opening of the MGM Springfield casino.

    At a meeting of the South End Business Association on Tuesday, Police Commissioner John Barbieri said 42 community policing officers will join the existing sector officers in the neighborhood this summer.

    Barbieri SEBA.jpgSpringfield Police Commissioner John Barbieri, center, and Mayor Domenic Sarno spoke to the business community Tuesday about increasing the police presence in the South End. 

    "You're going to have the largest C3 program that's ever existed," said Barbieri, referring to the community policing program used here and in other cities.

    "It's to improve the quality of life, to make it a safe place to work, live, go to an entertainment zone, to all the businesses."

    MGM's $950 million resort casino is expected to open in the fall of 2018. Officials estimate the casino, along with other projects like the newly renovated Union Station, will draw 4 million people into the city every year.

    The call boxes, which will have cameras, will allow anyone to press a button and immediately contact police. Extra walking and motorcycle patrols are planned, as well. New supervisor positions will be filled in July, and an upcoming police academy will provide a pool of officers ready to get to work months before the casino's grand opening.

    The city is considering proposals for a downtown police substation, and kiosks with blue lights will line the path between Union Station and MGM Springfield.

    "People know that there's a cop right there. That's the key to getting people to feel safe," said Barbieri.

    He said the new C3 officers are "not just for MGM," but for every resident, visitor and business owner "to work together to improve this entire area."

    Dennis Murphy, a representative of MGM Springfield, said the gaming company wants to be a good corporate citizen, and the casino will be among the safest places in Massachusetts.

    "Public safety is our top concern," said Murphy. "We will have excessive security. We will have an excessive police presence. ... Our goal would be for our families, our spouses, to be able to walk with our children down Main Street at 10 o'clock at night and feel safe."

    Mayor Domenic Sarno addressed the business association, pointing to developments like the South End Community Center, millions of dollars worth of renovations to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, and new cultural events as signs that the quality of life in Springfield is improving.

    "The bad guys don't want to be around a well-lit, clean area where there are a lot of people and a positive atmosphere," said Sarno. "We're going to spread that good time all across the city of Springfield."

    Council overrides mayor to establish Holyoke Community Preservation Act board that will include Councilor

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    The Holyoke, Massachusetts City Council voted on Tuesday, April 4, 2017 to override a veto from Mayor Alex Morse to establish an advisory committee about spending related to the Community Preservation Act that will include among its members a city councilor, which was the point of controversy.

    HOLYOKE -- An advisory committee that will recommend how Community Preservation Act money is spent will include a city councilor among its nine members after the Council Tuesday voted to override a veto issued by the mayor.

    The veto means that the City Council has established an ordinance to form the Community Preservation Act (CPA) advisory board.

    The board will recommendations to the City Council on which projects should money, drawn from property owners in the form of a surcharge on their property tax bills, be spent.

    Supporters said having a councilor on such a board is natural and helpful since all spending must be approved by the City Council and councilors have insight and experience in numerous matters and in prioritizing projects.

    Foes, including Mayor Alex B. Morse, said getting the CPA adopted was a citizen-driven effort and posting a councilor on such a board would block greater community involvement.

    Voters adopted the Massachusetts CPA by approving a ballot question on Nov. 8 by a vote of 8,641-6,900, or 55.6 percent to 44.4 percent.

    The CPA money can be used only for projects in three areas: open space and recreation, affordable housing and historic restoration and preservation.

    The Council voted 10-5 to override the veto that Morse had issued in relation to the ordinance that the Council voted to establish March 7.

    A two-thirds majority of the 15-member City Council, or 10 votes, is needed to override a veto from the mayor, meaning the override passed by the minimum necessary.

    Voting in favor of the override were Council President Kevin A. Jourdain and councilors Nelson R. Roman, Linda L. Vacon, David K. Bartley, Joseph M. McGiverin, Michael J. Sullivan, Diosdado Lopez, Todd A. McGee, Daniel B. Bresnahan and Howard B. Greaney.

    Voting against overriding the veto were councilors Jossie M. Valentin, Rebecca Lisi, Gladys Lebron-Martinez, James M. Leahy and Peter R. Tallman.

    LGBT workers protected by Civil Rights Act, court rules

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    A federal appeals court ruled for the first time Tuesday that the 1964 Civil Rights Act protects LGBT employees from workplace discrimination.

    CHICAGO (AP) -- A federal appeals court ruled for the first time Tuesday that the 1964 Civil Rights Act protects LGBT employees from workplace discrimination, setting up a likely battle before the Supreme Court as gay rights advocates push to broaden the scope of the 53-year-old law.

    The 8-to-3 decision by the full 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago comes just three weeks after a three-judge panel in Atlanta ruled the opposite, saying employers aren't prohibited from discriminating against employees based on sexual orientation.

    The 7th Circuit is considered relatively conservative and five of the eight judges in the majority were appointed by Republican presidents, making the finding all the more notable.

    The case stems from a lawsuit by Indiana teacher Kimberly Hively alleging that the Ivy Tech Community College in South Bend didn't hire her full time because she is a lesbian.

    In an opinion concurring with the majority, Judge Richard Posner wrote that changing norms call for a change in interpretation of the Civil Rights Act, which bars discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin or sex.

    "I don't see why firing a lesbian because she is in the subset of women who are lesbian should be thought any less a form of sex discrimination than firing a woman because she's a woman," wrote the judge, who was appointed by Republican Ronald Reagan.

    The decision comes as President Donald Trump's administration has begun setting its own policies on LGBT rights. Late in January, the White House declared Trump would enforce an Obama administration order barring companies that do federal work from workplace discrimination on the basis of sexual identity. But in February, it revoked guidance on transgender students' use of public school bathrooms, deferring to states.

    N.C. governor signs bill repealing and replacing transgender bathroom law amid criticism

    Hively said after Tuesday the ruling that she agreed to bring the case because she felt she was being "bullied."

    She told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that the time has come "to stop punishing people for being gay, being lesbian, being transgender."

    "This decision is game changer for lesbian and gay employees facing discrimination in the workplace and sends a clear message to employers: it is against the law to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation," said Greg Nevins, Employment Fairness Program Director for Lambda Legal, which brought the case on behalf of Hively.

    The issue could very well land before the Supreme Court at some point. A GOP-majority House and Senate make it unlikely the Congress will amend the Civil Rights Act; Title VII is the section of the law dealing discrimination on the basis of sex. The Chicago ruling came on the anniversary of the assassination of civil rights icon Martin Luther King, whose marches against racism prompted Congress to pass the landmark law.

    The debate in the Hively case revolved around the meaning of the word 'sex' in Title VII. Other courts have concluded that Congress meant for the word to refer only to whether a worker was male or female. They said that it would be wrong to stretch the meaning of 'sex' in the statute to also include sexual orientation.

    The majority of the 7th Circuit sided with a broader meaning.

    "Any discomfort, disapproval, or job decision based on the fact that the complainant -- woman or man -- dresses differently, speaks differently, or dates or marries a same-sex partner, is a reaction purely and simply based on sex. That means that it falls within Title VII's prohibition against sex discrimination ...," writes Judge Diane Wood, a President Bill Clinton appointee.

    The dissenting opinion -- written by Judge Diane Sykes, a conservative who was on Trump's list of possible Supreme Court appointees, said the majority were stretching the meaning of the law's text.

    "We are not authorized to infuse the text with a new or unconventional meaning or to update it to respond to changed social, economic, or political conditions."

    The dissent also alludes to the judicial philosophy of Trump's high-court nominee, Neil Gorsuch, who advocates adhering largely to original legislative texts in deciding legal disputes.

    "It's understandable that the court is impatient to protect lesbians and gay men from workplace discrimination without waiting for Congress to act. Legislative change is arduous and can be slow to come. But we're not authorized to amend Title VII by interpretation," Sykes writes.

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    Posner, though, said sticking to outdated meanings and fading cultural standards didn't make sense.

    "It is well-nigh certain that homosexuality, male or female, did not figure in the minds of the legislators who enacted Title VII," he writes in his concurring opinion.

    "They (lawmakers in the 1960s) shouldn't be blamed for that failure of foresight," he writes. "We understand the words of Title VII differently not because we're smarter than the statute's framers and ratifiers but because we live in a different era, a different culture."


    North Korea fires medium-range ballistic missile off east coast

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    North Korea fired another ballistic missile Wednesday morning, apparently testing a land-based version of its rocket that can be fired from a submarine.

    SEOUL - North Korea fired another ballistic missile Wednesday morning, military officials in the United States and South Korea said, apparently testing a land-based version of its rocket that can be fired from a submarine. However, this missile flew only a short distance.

    The launch comes just days after Pyongyang said it planned to mark two key anniversaries this month as "big" political events, and just days before President Trump meets with China's Xi Jinping - with North Korea at the top of the agenda.

    "North Korea fired an unidentified projectile in Sinpo, South Hamgyong Province, into the East Sea," South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said, according to Yonhap news agency, using the local name for the sea between the Korean Peninsula and Japan.

    The east coast port of Sinpo is home to a known North Korean submarine base.

    The U.S. Pacific Command, based in Hawaii, said that the missile, which it identified as a KN-15 medium-range ballistic missile, was launched from a land-based facility near Sinpo.

    In August last year, North Korea made a major technological breakthrough by launching a ballistic missile from a submarine near Sinpo. It flew about 300 miles before falling into the sea inside Japan's air defense identification zone, the area in which Tokyo controls aircraft movement. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un boasted about the launch, describing it as "the greatest success."

    That missile was a KN-11, known as the Pukkuksong-1 or Polaris-1. Wednesday's missile appeared to be a KN-15, or Pukkuksong-2, a land-based version of the submarine-launched ballistic missile.

    But Wednesday's missile did not appear to fly very far, only about 40 miles, after being launched at 6:40 a.m. Seoul time, South Korean military officials said. The South's national security council convened an emergency meeting for 8:30 a.m. Wednesday.

    PACOM said that the missile "did not pose a threat to North America."

    Kim had signaled that his regime was working on a missile capable of reaching the United States, saying in his New Year's Day address that North Korea had "entered the final stage of preparation for a test-launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile." After Kim's statement, President Donald Trump tweeted: "It won't happen!"

    Trump warned that the United States would take unilateral action to eliminate the nuclear threat from North Korea unless China increased pressure on Kim Jong Un's regime.

    Trump: US will act alone on North Korea if China does not help

    "China has great influence over North Korea. And China will either decide to help us with North Korea, or they won't," Trump said in an interview with the Financial Times published Monday.

    Trump will host Xi for two days of talks, starting Thursday, at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

    This meeting, coinciding with a tense situation on the Korean Peninsula, has led to speculation of imminent provocations from North Korea.

    Satellite images taken over the past 10 days have shown a prolonged and heightened level of activity at North Korea's underground testing site, sparking speculation about whether a sixth nuclear test was planned.

    Plus, North Korea has resumed last year's steady firing of missiles from sites on both the east and west coasts. The last one, on March 22, exploded shortly after launch.

    Regardless, nonproliferation experts say it is clear that North Korea is determined to make progress on its missile program - and presumably on its goal to attach a nuclear warhead to a missile capable of reaching the mainland United States.

    Compounding hitters, April is an important month in the North Korean calendar and the regime likes to mark important dates with fireworks - both with firework displays in the center of Pyongyang and with missile flares. The regime celebrates the 105th birthday of founding President Kim Il Sung on April 15 and the 85th anniversary of the foundation of the Korean People's Army 10 days later.

    These events coincide with annual drills by the South Korean and U.S. militaries, practicing for a sudden change on the northern half of the peninsula. With American aircraft carriers and fighter jets brought to South Korea for the exercises, North Korea views them as a pretext for an invasion and always protests vociferously.

    (c) 2017, The Washington Post. Anna Fifield wrote this story.

    'Has to be better way' Holyoke Councilor says in response to Fire Department reorganization plan

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    Reducing the number of trucks available to fight fires in Holyoke, Massachusetts as proposed in a reorganization plan jeopardizes public safety, the chairman of the City Council Public Safety Committee said Tuesday, April 4, 2017.

    HOLYOKE -- The important part of a proposed reorganization of the Fire Department is that the number of trucks would be reduced and that jeopardizes public safety, the chairman of the City Council Public Safety Committee said Tuesday.

    "This is the real deal. This is very concerning,...This is a real public safety issue," committee Chairman Daniel B. Bresnahan said. "There has to be a better way to do this."

    Fire Chief John A. Pond has proposed a reorganization that would remove a truck from service but free up the firefighters who would be working on that truck to be available to increase the firefighter response at fires on other trucks.

    Engine 2 would be moved to Station 6 at 640 Homestead Ave. from Fire Department headquarters at 600 High St. and Engine 6 would be placed in reserve, under the reorganization Pond has proposed.

    "My objective is to have more personnel on each piece of apparatus that can respond initially to a scene," Pond said in an interview Friday.

    The Fire Commission, a three-member board appointed by the mayor, is considering the reorganization proposal.

    Engine 2 has received a lot of attention as that is the truck that has been browned out, a controversial budget step that means a temporarily removed from service, since December 2014.

    Brownouts happen on shifts when staffing is thin as firefighters are sick, injured on duty, on vacation or otherwise unavailable. The decision in such cases is made to avoid calling in off-duty firefighters and paying overtime. The firefighters on the browned out truck are temporarily reassigned for that particular shift.

    The Fire Department has been operating with 72 firefighters. Ensuring there are enough firefighters on all shifts to staff each truck with at least three firefighters, round the clock, seven days a week, would require boosting staff to 94 firefighters. That is unlikely because it would be too expensive, Pond and other officials have said.

    On average six firefighters are unavailable each day for various reasons, he said.

    A positive step is that 10 firefighters are being hired to join the Fire Department beginning this week, he said.

    Pond and Mayor Alex B. Morse have said the current response capabilities of the Fire Department to fires is sufficient to address emergencies.

    But councilors and others have disagreed. Many have cited the New Year's Day fire at 106 North East St. fire that killed three people and displaced 49 tenants, highlighting that as an example of the need to have as many firefighters and trucks available as possible to respond to fires.

    Faulty alarm system, lack of sprinkler added to deadly Holyoke fire caused by electrical problem: officials

    Engine 2 was browned out on Jan. 1 but Pond said that didn't affect firefighters' ability to provide a sufficient initial response to the 106 North East St. fire.

    Keys to the 106 North East St. fire were that the alarm system in the building malfunctioned and the blaze was burning for 10 minutes before firefighters were even called, Pond and others have said.

    The discussion Tuesday came during the City Council meeting about agenda Item 23D. The council later voted to refer the item to Morse:

    "The Committee on Public Safety to whom was referred an order that the Mayor adequately fund the Fire Dept. to keep all apparatus in service and in operation. This includes the 5 engine companies and the 2 ladder companies, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and 365 days a year. Recommend that the order has not been complied with."

    Councilor at Large Joseph M. McGiverin said he agreed with Bresnahan, that the city needs all fire trucks available at all times.

    But funding remains an issue with the $520,000 to $540,000 in free cash nearly committed and more money needed if all fire trucks and personnel are to be funded.

    "We're asking the mayor to go deeper into the hole. We're asking to use money from the stabilization fund," said McGiverin, referring to the rainy day fund.

    Bresnahan called for an independent consultant to be hired to examine whether the Fire Department is operating with enough or too many trucks and enough or too many deputy chiefs, for example, he said.

    Ward 2 Councilor Nelson R. Roman said he remains confident in the Fire Department. He wants the department fully funded, which currently it is not, since there are brown outs, he said.

    "I do support the Fire Department but we have to have more funding," Roman said.

    Ludlow Mills celebrates cleanup, worries about future grants for more work as complex comes back to life

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    Since buying the Ludlow Mills complex six years ago, Westmass Area Development Corp. has garnered $1.13 million in EPA grants and $3.7 million in state funding, including work to rehab State Street in front of the complex.

    LUDLOW -- Westmass Area Development Corp. announced this week the completion of a $600,000 cleanup of hazardous asbestos and PCBs from the 170-acre Ludlow Mills complex.

    But even with the the good news, Westmass is fearful that U.S. Environmental Protection Agency brownfields funding and state/federal historic preservation tax credits for further cleanups might dry up.

    "I don't know anybody who isn't concerned about the federal budget," said Eric Nelson, president and CEO of Westmass. "It's one of the few ways that these signature mill buildings can be preserved and brought back to life."

    The brownfields project involved removing connectors that once linked mill buildings on the site, he said. Workers recycled approximately 3,500 tons -- that's 160 truckloads -- of concrete and brick and approximately 1,500 tons of brownstone. Large wood timbers and other significant materials could be salvaged and reused. Regulated hazardous waste was disposed of, Nelson said.

    Since buying the Ludlow Mills complex six years ago, Westmass has garnered $1.13 million in EPA grants and $3.7 million in state funding, including for work to rehab State Street in front of the complex. Projects in the mills also received $900,000 in state tax credits in 2014, according to state records.

    Nelson said a project first gets state historic preservation tax credits and then is eligible for federal credits.

    Nelson thanked U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, D-Springfield, state Rep. Thomas Petrolati, D-Ludlow, and state Sen. Eric Lesser, D-Longmeadow, for their support.

    The public money has helped attract $127 million in private investment at the Ludlow Mills, including projects that are completed, underway or committed to at the mill complex.

    "These programs from the EPA and the state are what leverages private dollars," Nelson said. "Ninety percent of what is spent here is private dollars."

    But Nelson said private investors won't come into a project if expensive environmental and infrastructure work is needed. Tax credits from the state and federal government help make rehab on old buildings economically feasible.

    The Ludlow Manufacturing and Sales Co. from the 1860s through the 1970s made cloth, rope and twine out of jute, flax and hemp grown in India. At its height in the years before World War I, Ludlow Manufacturing had about 4,000 employees, many of them children. The Great War disrupted the supply of jute fiber from India, so the company decided to open a mill there instead and started shifting production overseas. The Ludlow operations went into a long decline.

    For many years the mill complex has been subdivided and made into workshops and warehouses for a number of businesses. Westmass Area Development, a private nonprofit, bought the complex to save it from decay and with hopes of attracting business.

    Full redevelopment of the Ludlow Mills complex is expected to take 15 to 20 years, involve $300 million in private funding and create 2,000 jobs.

    Completed, or nearly completed projects include:

    • Mill 10: WinnDevelopment has spend $24 million rehabbing the 109-year-old Mill10 into 75 senior independent living apartments, Nelson said. This project opens in June.
    • HealthSouth: The $26 million rehabilitation hospital opened in 2014.

    • Mill 8: WinnDevelopment has proposed a $50 million mixed-use project. Announced last June, the project needs tax credits to finance construction of apartments, retail and office space. Mill 8 is the building with the clock tower, a familiar symbol of the town.
    • Riverwalk: Now a 1.5-mile paved walking trail along the Chicopee River, the Riverwalk was built with $600,000 from HealthSouth, Nelson said.

    Upcoming:

    • Riverside Drive: In June, Westmass will go for $3 million in U.S. Economic Development Administration money to build an access road through much of the property, which has a narrow dirt track now. The state has already provided $3 million in MassWorks funding for Riverside Drive.
    • Pedestrian safety: The town last week approved a $435,500 state MassWorks grant for pedestrian safety improvements associated with the Riverwalk. It will be used for will be used for installation of historical interpretive signs, lighting, benches and other amenities along the Riverwalk. 


    Iron Duke Brewing and Westmass are still working out a lease dispute that once threatened the popular microbrewery and tasting room with eviction. Nelson couldn't go into any details on those talks.

    Baystate Noble Hospital to hold Wellness Fair

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    Baystate Noble Hospital will hold a Wellness Fair on Thursday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

    WESTFIELD--Baystate Noble Hospital will hold a Wellness Fair on Thursday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

    The event, to be held in the hospital's Conference Room A, will feature free health screenings for high blood pressure and diabetes, as well as general health education on nutrition, safe body mechanics, stroke, women's health and more.

    Baystate Home Health, Westfield Opioid Task Force, Baystate Home Infusion and Respiratory Services and Baystate Noble Translation Services will also host informational tables.

    Also, the City of Westfield Health Department will offer information on ticks and Lyme Disease, and will have radon testing kits and emergency preparedness bags on hand.

    Light refreshments will be served.

    Springfield fire causes $25K damage, displaces 4; found to be intentionally set

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    The fire is being investigated as an arson, according to officials.

    This is an update of a story posted at 3:53 p.m. Wednesday.



    SPRINGFIELD - A fire Wednesday afternoon in the basement of a home at 31 Daytona St. in the city's Forest Park neighborhood has been determined to be intentionally set, according to a fire department spokesman.


    Dennis Leger, aide to Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant, said members of the city Arson and Bomb Squad is treating the fire as an arson investigation.


    No one was injured in the fire, reported just after 3 p.m. he said.


    The fire was quickly extinguished before it could spread, but damage to the house from smoke and water was estimated at $25,000, he said.


    The first floor was vacant, but four residents of the second floor are displaced until repairs can be made.


    The Western Massachusetts chapter of the American Red Cross was called in to assist with temporary shelter.


    Daytona Street is off Sumner Avenue just east of The X.




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