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Springfield police reveal identity of city's latest homicide victim

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Luz M. Vazquez was found lying in a pool of blood on Amore Street early Sunday.

SPRINGFIELD - Springfield police on Tuesday revealed the identity of the city's latest homicide as Luz M. Vazquez.

Vazquez, 42, of Westminster Street, was died early Sunday after she was found lying in a pool of blood on Amore Road by a pizza delivery driver. She had been stabbed multiple times and had multiple fractures to her skull and jaw.

Police have arrested Jose Gonzalez, 32, and charged him with murder. He entered an innocent plea at his arraignment Monday in Springfield District Court. He is being held without the right to bail pending his trial.

Vazquez and Gonzalez were residents in the same boarding house but in different rooms. 

Vazquez was found roughly a mile away from the boarding house. According to documents revealed at the court arraignment, police found  blood in the boarding house and in his car.

Gonzalez was arrested at Mercy Medical Center where he went to be treated for a deep cut on his hand. Police contend the injured occurred in the attack on Vazquez.

Police have not disclosed a motive for the killing. 

Gonzalez is due back in court on June 28.

 


Jury selection continues in trial of man accused of selling heroin to UMass informant Eric Sinacori

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The trial of Jesse Carrillo, the man who allegedly sold the heroin that killed University of Massachusetts student and police informant Eric Sinacori in October of 2013, is expected to begin this week in Hampshire Superior Court.

NORTHAMPTON -- Jury selection is underway in the trial of the man accused of selling heroin to University of Massachusetts student and police informant Eric Sinacori.

Jury selection began Monday in Hampshire Superior Court and is continuing Tuesday. The trial will continue with opening statements once jury selection is complete, according to the clerk's office

Sinacori died of a heroin overdose at his off-campus apartment in October 2013. 

Jesse Carrillo, of Derry, New Hampshire was charged with manslaughter in October 2015, about a year after news broke that Sinacori had been working as a confidential informant for the University of Massachusetts Police Department. Police had promised not to charge Sinacori or tell his parents he was caught with drugs.

Carrillo was also a UMass student at the time he allegedly sold Sinacori the heroin, according to a statement from the Northwestern district attorney's office at the time he was charged.

He has pleaded not guilty to charges of manslaughter and distribution of a class A drug and is out on $25,000 bail.

UMass Chancellor Kumble Subbaswamy ended the confidential informant program after a three-month review that began when the program became public knowledge.

Video: Deep fryer fire prompts evacuation of McDonald's on Liberty Street in Springfield

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Firefighters quickly extinguished the blaze at 660 Liberty St. No injuries were reported Watch video

SPRINGFIELD -- A fire that began in the deep fryer at the Liberty Street McDonald's Tuesday morning prompted the evacuation of the building.

The blaze at 660 Liberty St. was reported at about 8:15 a.m., Dennis Leger, aide to Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant, said.

"Their fire suppression put that out but not before it got up into the ductwork," Leger said.

Firefighters quickly extinguished the blaze in the ductwork. No injuries were reported.

Leger said the restaurant will remain closed until the Health Department gives the OK for it to reopen.

Ariana Grande concert: Massachusetts musician OK after Manchester, England bombing

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A Massachusetts native opened for Ariana Grande in Manchester, England a performance that ended with an apparent suicide bomber attacking concertgoers.

A Massachusetts native opened for Ariana Grande in Manchester, England a performance that ended with an attack on concertgoers.

The apparent suiciding bombing killed 22 and injured dozens. The bombing took the lives of concertgoers as young as 8 years old. 

Bianca Landrau, a rapper better known by her stage name BIA, opened for Grande as part of her Dangerous Woman tour. The 25-year-old is a graduate of Medford High School. 

"My heart is broken," Landrau said on social media following the attack. "Praying for everyone tonight please get home safe." 

She and Grande were unharmed in the attack. 

Police are releasing few details regarding the attack but have confirmed that a 23-year-old man has been arrested in connection with the bombing. 

Update: Suspected suicide bomber identified as Salman Abedi

Gallery preview  

New Wilbraham school board members Patrick Kiernan, Sherrill Caruana give thanks to supporters

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Patrick Kiernan and Sherrill Caruana, the two new members of the Hampden-Wilbraham Regional School Committee, thanked supporters for helping them win big in Saturday's annual election in Wilbraham. They begin their 3-year terms on July 1.

WILBRAHAM -- Patrick Kiernan and Sherrill Caruana, the two new members of the Hampden-Wilbraham Regional School Committee, thanked supporters for helping them win big in Saturday's annual election in Wilbraham.

Kiernan, who ran as an independent, took to Facebook to thank those who trusted him to be their representative on the school board, while Caruana sent a statement to The Republican saying she was "amazed and grateful for the large show of support." 

On Sunday, Kiernan posted the following message on his Facebook campaign page:

A teacher recently shared she recognizes each day that families across our district send their most precious resource to her and she never takes that responsibility lightly.
I thank our community for trusting in me to support these unbelievable educators and students. Thank you for the awesome responsibility. Let's take all this positive passion for our schools and our town to do great things!

"We believe that you are a great leader," Peter Salerno, a former School Committee chairman, posted on Kiernan's page.

Caruana, a Democrat and the soon-to-be-retired principal of Stony Hill School in Wilbraham, said she was humbled by the overwhelming support she received in the race, the most contested election on Saturday's ballot.

"I am amazed and grateful for the large show of support from town voters," she said in the statement. "I pledge that I will work diligently to earn their confidence by putting children first in every discussion held, every position taken, and every decision made during my three-year tenure on the (School) Committee."

Caruana acknowledged that a tough road lies ahead for the two-town district, split over a middle school merger proposal that has led to rancor and accusations on both sides.

"We face tough challenges ahead, but with my background and skill set, I offer fresh eyes along with the insight gained from experience to deal with these problems," Caruana said.

She also said she's looking forward to working with Kiernan, a businessman and Wilbraham parent of four. "I am impressed by Patrick's enthusiasm to serve and look forward to working with him on the School Committee," she said.

 "I want to congratulate all of the candidates who waged robust campaigns and especially thank candidates Pat Gordon and D. John McCarthy for their years of service on the School Committee, faithfully representing the Hampden-Wilbraham Regional School District and the families of Wilbraham," she said.

In addition to Gordon and McCarthy, both Republicans, the other candidate who didn't get the nod was Democrat Patricia McDiarmid.

Kiernan and Caruana will begin their 3-year terms on July 1.

Ariana Grande concert: Suspected suicide bomber identified as Salman Abedi

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British authorities have identified the suspected suicide bomber in Monday night's attack at concert in Manchester, England, as Salman Abedi, according to US officials.

British authorities have identified the suspected suicide bomber in Monday night's attack at concert in Manchester, England, as Salman Abedi, according to US officials.

Investigators hunted Tuesday for possible accomplices of the suicide bomber who attacked an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, killing 22 people and sparking a stampede of young concertgoers, some still wearing the American pop star's trademark kitten ears and holding pink balloons.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the carnage, but the top American intelligence official said Tuesday that the claim could not be verified. British police raided two locations in the city, setting off a controlled explosion in one, and arrested a 23-year-old man in a third location.

Ariana Grande concert bombing: 8-year-old Saffie Rose Roussos among first two victims named

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The first confirmed victim in a lone bomber's attack on a Manchester, England concert venue Sunday after an Ariana Grande show was Georgina Callandar, authorities say.

The first confirmed victim in a lone bomber's attack on a Manchester, England concert venue Monday after an Ariana Grande concert was Georgina Callandar, authorities say.

The 18-year-old, who had met Grande in 2015, hugging her for a picture, issued a haunting tweet Sunday anticipating the Manchester Arena concert.

@ArianaGrande SO EXCITED TO SEE U TOMORROW

-- gina [?] today! (@emiliesatwell) May 21, 2017

Authorities identified a second victim a short time later Tuesday: An 8-year-old girl named Saffie Rose Roussos, who attended the concert with her mother and sister, according to The Guardian.

The mother and sister survived the attack with injuries and were being treated at a nearby hospital, The Guardian reported.

The attack claimed 22 lives and another 59 suffered injuires. "Many" children were among the victims, according to English Prime Minister Theresa May.

The suicide bomber suspected of carrying out the attack, according to a CBS News report, is 23-year-old Salman Abedi. The report claims British authorities knew of Abedi prior to the attack, which occurred around 10:30 p.m. -- as the arena began to empty after the show.

Ariana Grande concert bombing: President Donald Trump says US 'stands in absolute solidarity' with UK, calls out 'evil losers' behind attack

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President Donald Trump called for "obliterating" terrorist ideology and stressed that the United States stands in "absolute solidarity" with the United Kingdom Tuesday, following a reported concert bombing that killed more than 20 people in Manchester, England.

President Donald Trump called for "obliterating" terrorist ideology and stressed that the United States stands in "absolute solidarity" with the United Kingdom Tuesday, following a reported concert bombing that killed more than 20 people in Manchester, England.

The president, during remarks at the Presidential Palace in Bethlehem, reaffirmed his commitment to rooting out terrorism and extended his condolences to those affected by the Monday evening attack. 

Contending that those behind the reported bombing are "losers," Trump said "all civilized nations must join to protect human life and the sacred right of our citizens."

"So many young, beautiful innocent people living and enjoying their lives murdered by evil losers in life," he said, according to pool reports. "I won't call them monsters because they would like that term. They would think that's a great name. I will call them from now on losers, because that's what they are. They're losers...Our society can have no tolerance for this continuation of bloodshed. We cannot stand a moment longer for the slaughter of innocent people."

Noting that children were among the victim's in Monday's attack, Trump argued that "the terrorists and extremists, and those who give them aid and comfort, must be driven out of our society forever."

"This wicked ideology must be obliterated, and I mean completely obliterated. Life must be protected," he added.

At least 22 people were killed and 59 were injured when an apparent suicide bomber attacked an Ariana Grande concert as it ended Monday night, according to the Associated Press. 

Greater Manchester Police said they arrested a 23-year-old man in connection with the attack, the news outlet reported.

Man arrested in connection with attack at Ariana Grande concert in Manchester

According to U.S. officials, British authorities identified the suspected suicide bomber as Salman Abedi. 

The so-called Islamic State claimed responsibility for the reported bombing. American intelligence officials, however, said Tuesday that the claim could not be verified, AP reported.


State Rep. and Army Reserve Captain John Velis to be sent on training mission near North Korean border

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Velis, a Captain in the U.S. Army Reserve, will be sent in August to a U.S Army installation in South Korea near the border with North Korea.

State Rep. John Velis, D-Westfield, is headed to the front lines of the simmering tensions on the Korean peninsula.

Velis, a Captain in the U.S. Army Reserve, will be sent in August to a U.S Army installation in South Korea near the border with North Korea, he said in an interview. There, he will participate in training with the South Korean military and other allies.

"It's going to be very complex, multifaceted army training," he said.

Velis said he could not comment on the specifics of the training mission due to security and confidentiality concerns.

His service overseas, from the beginning of August through early September, will coincide with the legislature's summer recess and Velis said he does not expect to miss votes. His office will remain open to handle constituent services.

"It looks like I will not miss one single formal session day," Velis said.

Velis, a Westfield native and nephew of former State Rep. and Hampden Superior Court Judge Peter Velis, earned his law degree from Suffolk University in 2008 after graduating from the University of South Florida in 2004.

He joined the U.S. Army Reserve in 2011 and attained the rank of Captain in the Judge Advocate General's Corps, the Army's legal branch. He served in the war in Afghanistan and oversaw rule of law operations in Zabul province, training local leaders and Afghan partners in an effort to build a stronger and more effective governance.

Last week he learned that he will be sent overseas again. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has intensified his country's weapons testing recently, sparking concerns from the U.S. and allies. In April, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told the U.N. Security Council that there could be "catastrophic consequences" if North Korea's weapons program is not addressed.

North Korea went nearly three years between nuclear tests from 2013 to early 2016, but has tested two nuclear bombs in the last year and a half. And earlier this month North Korea claimed it had successfully tested a missile capable of carrying a large nuclear warhead.

U.S. intelligence officials have raised concerns that the recent tests show North Korea making progress in its goal to develop a nucear-capable missile that could reach the United States.

"If left on its current trajectory, the North Korean regime will ultimately succeed in fielding a nuclear-armed missile capable of reaching the West Coast," Defense Intelligence Agency spokesman told Bloomberg. "It's impossible to predict when they'll get there, but the regime is on a path where this capability is inevitable."

Velis is used to balancing his military responsibilities with his role in the Statehouse. He participates in weekend drills at least once per month, he said.

"I joke around with people that my army drill weekends are my weekends off," Velis said. "I like to keep in motion. I'm my most effective when I do lots of different things."

And being sent overseas will give him a fresh look at issues facing soldiers in active service, he said -- including lessons he hopes to apply to his work on veterans' issues.

 "It enables me to come back and be a better state representative and advocate for them," Velis said.

President Donald Trump proposes dramatic changes to federal government, slashing safety net programs

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President Donald Trump on Tuesday proposed dramatic changes to the role of the federal government, issuing a budget plan that culls back or eliminates numerous programs that the White House says are a waste of money or create too much dependency.

WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump on Tuesday proposed dramatic changes to the role of the federal government, issuing a budget plan that cuts back or eliminates numerous programs that the White House says are a waste of money or create too much dependency.

Some of these programs - including Medicaid and the modern version of food stamps - provide benefits to up to a fifth of all Americans, and the breadth of the cuts has rattled lawmakers from both parties who have warned that the reductions go too far.

For Trump, his $4.094 trillion budget proposal for the fiscal year that begins in October marks his first exercise is spelling out - in great detail - how he wants the government to change. White House Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney called the plan a "Taxpayer First Budget," and he said they worked to jettison any spending that they felt they could not defend. In total, this meant roughly $3.6 trillion in cuts over the next 10 years.

These cuts, White House officials said, would usher in a sustained period of strong economic growth that would grow wealth, create more jobs, and reduce poverty.

"I think what Trumponomics is and what this budget is a part of is an effort to get to sustained 3 percent economic growth in this country again," Mulvaney said in a briefing with reporters.

But getting there would require a lot of red ink.

Funding for Medicaid, the health care program for low-income Americans and many people in nursing homes, would be cut by more than $800 billion over 10 years. Funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, a modern version of food stamps that provided benefits to 44 million people in 2016, would be cut 29 percent. In many cases, a higher burden of paying for anti-poverty programs would be shifted away from the federal government and onto the states.

Mulvaney said too many of these programs spend other people's money. He said the government should show "compassion" for low-income Americans but it should "also...have compassion for folks who are paying [for] it."

Research programs and environmental protection would also be slashed. There would be a short-term bump in military spending, but even that would flatline after a few years, all in the quest to eliminate the budget deficit by 2027.

The constraints he put on his budget writers made it virtually impossible for him to achieve all of his goals, and the data released by his team include numerous assumptions that budget experts attacked as questionable or dubious.

Trump told Mulvaney not to make any cuts to Medicare benefits or the retirement program within Social Security, two of the government's most expensive line items. And to eliminate the deficit, which they said would reach $842 billion by 2027, they had to make some major cuts.

But they also made some rosy assumptions about economic growth that many economists - both conservatives and liberals - said went too far. Trump has proposed cutting the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 15 percent, but his budget assumes that corporate tax receipts will increase almost every year. The budget says the U.S. government will collect $328 billion in estate and gift taxes over the next decade, but it also says Trump will eliminate the estate tax.

White House budget proposals are often met with a skepticism on Capitol Hill, but Tuesday's release provides the Trump administration with its best opportunity yet to spell out its vision for how the government should be run.

It calls for eliminating many of the foreign aid "grants" that the U.S. extends to other countries and replacing them with loans. It aims to make it harder for people to qualify for Social Security Disability Insurance benefits, and easier to shift people who receive these benefits to move back into the workforce.

It would essentially crack down on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which was created after the financial crisis, and give Congress more power to limit its budget. And it would cut retirement benefits for people who worked for the federal government.

But it also proposes more spending in several areas. It would provide a temporary burst of new defense spending, which White House officials say would allow them to add 56,400 more service members in 2018. It would also increase spending on immigration control and border security and provide another $200 billion for infrastructure projects over 10 years. It would allocate $1.6 billion for the creation of a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico.

"We are absolutely dead serious about the wall," Mulvaney said Tuesday.

Democrats immediately attacked the budget plan and vowed to prevent any part of it from becoming law. Republicans hold just a two-seat majority in the Senate, and it is difficult for them to advance major policy changes without support from Democrats.

"These senseless, irresponsible choices serve one purpose: to pave the way for tax cuts for the very wealthiest," said Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D.-R.I. "The good news is that this extremist proposal will go nowhere in the Senate."

And the size of the cuts appeared to even make many Republicans uneasy. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, disregarded the White House's plan to cut the Children's Health Insurance Program and instead said Democrats and Republicans would work to reauthorize it later this year.

Asked about the CHIP cuts, Rep. Mark Walker, R-N.C., warned there was such a thing as too many cuts.

"There will be some concerns if we go too deep in some of these areas," he said.

Massachusetts receiving $625,000 in massive Target breach settlement

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Massachusetts is slated to receive $625,000 as part of a massive $18.5 million multi-state settlement after an investigation into Target's 2013 data breach.

Massachusetts is slated to receive $625,000 as part of a massive $18.5 million multi-state settlement after an investigation into Target's 2013 data breach. 

The breach involved almost one million credit or debit cards in Massachusetts, according to the Bay State's attorney general, Maura Healey, whose office announced the settlement, calling it the "largest national data breach settlement to date." Nationwide, the total is around 41 million.

"Consumers should be able to shop without fear that their credit card information will be stolen," Healey said in a statement Tuesday.

"This settlement makes clear that we expect retailers to take meaningful steps to protect consumers' credit and debit card information from theft. Massachusetts will continue to take a leading role in protecting the security of our residents' data," she added.

Forty-six other states and the District of Columbia are also part of the settlement.

In the 2013 breach, which took place between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15, hackers managed to get into Target's gateway server after stealing credentials through a third-party vendor, Healey's office said.

Among the things the hackers stole: Consumer names, telephone numbers, email addresses, mailing addresses, payment card numbers, expiration dates, security codes and encrypted debit pins.

Along with the $625,000 payment to Massachusetts, Target is also required to create an information security program, hire an executive to oversee it, and have an outside entity conduct a "comprehensive security assessment," according to Healey's office.

Healey's office added in a release: 

The settlement further requires Target to maintain and support software on its network; to maintain appropriate encryption policies, particularly as pertains to cardholder and personal information data; to segment its cardholder data environment from the rest of its computer network; and to undertake steps to control access to its network, including implementing password rotation policies and two-factor authentication for certain accounts.

Target says customers' encrypted PINs were stolen in recent data breach

Pittsfield police seek help locating missing 16-year-old girl

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Natesa Beaulieu is white, approximately 5 feet 7 inches tall, 190 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes, according to a post on the department's Facebook page.

PITTSFIELD - Police are seeking the public's help in finding a missing 16-year-old girl.

Natesa Beaulieu is white, approximately 5 feet 7 inches tall, 190 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes, according to a post on the department's Facebook page.

She was last seen wearing skinny jeans, a green shirt and black boots. Natesa may still be in Pittsfield.

Those with information are asked to call Pittsfield police at 413-448-9700.

'There's no one out there killing these kids' found in the water, Boston's top cop says

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Boston Police Commissioner William Evans on Tuesday batted down Internet speculation that there's a serial killer out there killing young men and dumping them in bodies of water in and around the city.

Boston Police Commissioner William Evans on Tuesday batted down Internet speculation that there's a serial killer out there killing young men and dumping them in bodies of water in and around the city.

Appearing on WGBH's "Boston Public Radio" show, Evans responded to a caller who asked about young men who have been found dead in the water. Alcohol is the culprit, Evans said, calling their deaths a tragedy.

Evans said he deploys detectives to check bars, especially in the downtown area, for over-serving customers. The detectives also seek to educate bar employees about watching for people's safety as they leave the establishment, according to the commissioner.

"There's no one out there killing these kids," Evans said. "We gotta educate the kids, especially if they're not from the city. They shouldn't be taking shortcuts to the train station or leaving their friends."

Evans added, "Friends gotta be good friends and not let their friends wander when they're in that type of shape."

Evans acknowledged that there have been some attempts on the Internet to link the deaths of various college-age men.

"There's no sinister plot out there," he stressed in the radio interview.

Evans added that he feels the pain of the parents of the young men. "It's all our worst nightmare," he said, adding that he has a 24-year-old son.

"He's a great kid, but he goes out," Evans said. "And I always warn him, John, be careful. If you're drinking, this stuff happens."

Missing 20-year-old Michael Doherty found dead, authorities confirm

Agawam city councilman seeks legal opinion on seizing property by eminent domain

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George Bitzas, a member of the Agwam City Council, is seeking clarification from the city solicitor regarding Agwam's ability to seize private property for public use.

AGAWAM -- City Councilman George Bitzas is seeking clarification from the city's law department regarding Agawam's authority to seize property by eminent domain, or the right of a government to take private property for public use.

A Main Street parcel abutting the Roberta G. Doering School property recently sold for $161,000, according to Bitzas, who believes the city missed a golden opportunity to buy the parcel at 50 Main St.

bitzas headshot.jpgGeorge Bitzas 

"Inactivity of the City Council to take action to participate in the auction of this prime property was not in the best interest of our town," Bitzas said in a May 19 memorandum to the city solicitor, Patrick M. Toney.

Bitzas said the Main Street parcel is next to the Doering School, making it valuable for future municipal use, and asked Toney to clarify if Agawam can pursue the property even if the owner is unwilling to sell.

"Therefore, I would respectfully request clarification on whether a letter can be sent to the new owner(s) requesting to sell this property to the town for municipal use, and if the new owner(s) would be willing to sell it to the town in good faith," Bitzas said in the memorandum.  

"In case of refusal, can the town legally take this property by eminent domain and what would this entail?" he inquired. "I believe we need to have a vision for this area, which includes this very important piece of real estate."

Copies of the memo were sent to Mayor Richard A. Cohen, City Council President James P. Cichetti, and other officials, including outgoing School Superintendent William P. Sapelli.  

Although eminent domain is more commonly used by federal and state governments to seize land for roads or schools, the law also applies to the governments of cities and towns.

The Supreme Court's so-called Kelo decision in 2005 -- pitting the City of New London, Connecticut, against resident Susette Kelo, whose property was condemned so it could be included in a redevelopment plan by a private developer -- left it up to states to protect individuals from having their property condemned at the behest of private developers.

Following the high court decision, numerous states enacted new protections for private property owners, but not in Massachusetts, where legislative reform has not been enacted. Home rule allows commonwealth communities to pass their own eminent domain protections.

Amherst Regional School Committee to discuss recouping costs of failed superintendent search

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The Amherst Regional School Committee is hoping to reach an agreement with the search firm hired last spring to recoup some or all the money spent in the failed superintendent search.

AMHERST -- A botched search for a new superintendent has school committee members seeking reimbursement from the Iowa-based recruiting firm hired to find a new schools chief.

The Amherst Regional School Committee is hoping to reach an agreement with Ray and Associates to recoup some or all the money spent in the failed superintendent search. The company was hired last year. 

The Amherst regional committee and the Union 26 committee -- jointly responsible for finding a new school leader -- halted the search in March after members learned that the online application included questions about applicants' criminal records, which violates state law. 

In 2010, Massachusetts prohibited employment applications from including questions about applicants' criminal records. But, Ray and Associates included such a question in its search materials.

The committee has scheduled an executive session to open its Tuesday night meeting to discuss the issue.

"The agenda item is related to the failed search this spring and our hope we can come to an agreement with Ray and Associates that would unwind the contract and allow the district to recoup all or some of our expenses," committee chairman Eric Nakajima wrote in an email. "The executive session may be necessary if we are discussing strategies associated with that effort." 

The firm was paid $14,000 out of the $17,000 approved for the contract, he wrote.

The committee in part decided to postpone the search to decide whether it wanted to retain this firm or hire another consultant.

In March, Nakajima said Ray and Associates promised to work with the district to make sure it gets things right. "They were apologetic," Nakajima said. He added, "There would be limited to no additional costs to the district."

The committee plans to reopen the search this fall, and Interim Superintendent Michael Morris has agreed to remain in the position for another school year.

WBUR recently reported that there aren't enough qualified superintendents to fill all of the open positions in the state. 

Nakajima is confident that the district will be able to find a strong leader.   

"I think the Amherst Regional School District will remain a desirable landing spot for superintendents and the competition for the position should be robust.

"The best thing we can do to ensure a broad pool is continue a stable environment that is focused on investing in and supporting the work of our teachers and staff, and engaging parents and the community," he wrote.

Last year, school committee members in Longmeadow also balked at Ray and Associate's handling of a superintendent search. In that case, the firm submitted a finalist who would have been unable to meet a deadline for state licensing requirements. 

School committee members argued they should not have to pay the company's full fee for the search because it delivered an unqualified candidate. 

Amherst agenda by ledermand on Scribd


Springfield Armory restores landscape, plans to reopen Byers Street gate to pedestrians (photos, video)

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The landscaping is part of a series of repairs and renovations representing the greatest investment in the Armory complex since the Army left in 1968. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD -- When George Washington and his fellow patriots established the Springfield Armory in 1777, they built it on a hill overlooking the Connecticut River so they could see if the British were coming.

Today, that view toward downtown Springfield, long blocked by an overgrowth of trees, is open again. It's part of a $1.2 million project to redo the landscape, the road and the drainage at the Springfield Armory National Historic Site, said Park Superintendent James Woolsey. 

Now he expects to see visitors -- either out-of-towers drawn by the MGM Springfield casino or locals looking for a place to stroll -- coming up the hill. Not redcoats.

The National Park Serve will replace the trees it removed with trees that once grew at the spot. The Army created detailed maps of tree location and species back in the 1920s and 1930s.

"This was a showplace for the Army," Woolsey said. "They took great pride in it."

The work, expected to be completed later this summer, will also allow the Park Service to reopen the gate at the corner of Byers and State streets to pedestrians.

"When people walk here, and we hope they will," Woolsey said, "they'll see a landscaped restored to look as it was when the United States Army thought of this as its showplace."

"Imagine when the casino opens in 2018," Woolsey said. "We're only a few blocks away."

The landscaping project is just part of an overall rejuvenation effort at the Armory, one that represents the largest financial investment in the complex since before the Army pulled out in 1968, Woolsey said. It includes work at the adjacent Springfield Technical Community College.

Besides the landscaping, the Park Service will spend $350,000 replacing windows and $150,000 replacing the roof on the 1840s storehouse that now serves as park headquarters and museum.

The state of Massachusetts was recognized by the Springfield Preservation Trust for its construction project at a single structure known as Building 5-6. This is a state-funded $545,000 project to do emergency stabilization and preservation on the 1870 structure, which served as housing for Springfield Armory staff for almost 100 years. Building 5-6 is a duplex across the street from the museum building and owned by the state as part of the community college campus. The state provided the money and the Park Service provided the historic preservation expertise to do the work, Woolsey said.

The college is also in the early stages of a 24-month, $50 million project to convert the Armory's old Building 19 into a cafe, library and social space for students.

Building 19 is a 118,000-square-foot structure running 764 feet along the Pearl Street side of the complex, built in 1847 and 1863 as a storehouse for the armory. The renovations are set to be completed in the summer of 2018.

The Springfield Armory was the Army's arsenal from Revolutionary times until almost the end of the Vietnam War and the introduction of the M-16. During World War II, more than 3.5 million M1 rifles were manufactured at the Springfield Armory. This was more rifles than had been produced at Springfield Armory since its founding in 1794.

After the Army closed the armory, the city took over much of the grounds and trucked in dirt to level the area behind the museum building for playing fields. This harmed the natural drainage, Woolsey said. It also destroyed the natural curve of the hill, making it hard to see Byers Street from the armory and vice versa.

"It cut us off from the community," he said.

Once the heavy earth moving is completed, the Park Service will start replanting trees. Woolsey's plan is to replace the colonnade of stately trees that once lined the path up the hill from the Byers Street gate.

"That will be very welcoming to visitors," he said.

Landscaping around the Commandant's House, or Quarters 1, will be improved in anticipation of renovations within, Woolsey said. Built by Commandant James Ripley in 1847, this house served as the home of the commander of the Springfield Armory until its closure in 1968, and is now unused. 

The Springfield Armory National Historic Site drew 22,434 visitors in 2016, up from 16,161 five years earlier.

Woolsey said his team has been able to draw more people with a lot of programming, including events this year marking the 100th anniversary of World War I, with better signs on the interstate highways leading to the armory.

'Small explosion' in chemistry lab reportedly prompts evacuation of Somers High School

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WFSB, citing state police, reported a student suffered a minor injury in the explosion. The building was evacuated about 1 p.m.

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SOMERS, Conn. - A "small explosion" in a chemistry lab at Somers High School Tuesday afternoon reportedly prompted the evacuation of the building.

WFSB, citing state police, reported a student suffered a minor injury in the explosion.

The school, located on Vision Boulevard, was evacuated about 1 p.m. Firefighters and emergency medical personnel were summoned to the scene.

The cause of the explosion remains under investigation. State police said the fire does not appear to be "criminal in nature."

Massachusetts lawmakers say President Donald Trump's proposed budget will 'wreak havoc' on middle class

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Several members of Massachusetts' congressional delegation raised concerns Tuesday that proposed Medicaid, education and other cuts included in President Donald Trump's $4.1 trillion budget could hurt middle class Americans.

Several members of Massachusetts' congressional delegation raised concerns Tuesday that proposed Medicaid, education and other cuts included in President Donald Trump's $4.1 trillion budget could hurt middle class Americans.

State Democrats, who criticized the president's recent spending plan which sought to avoid a government shutdown, offered similarly negative reactions to his proposed budget for the fiscal year beginning in October.

Shortly after White House officials unveiled Trump's budget proposal, congressional lawmakers took specific aim at its proposed $800 billion in Medicaid cuts over 10 years and call for a 29 percent reduction in food stamps funding, among other things.

President Donald Trump proposes dramatic changes to federal government, slashing safety net programs

Arguing that Trump's budget plan "is nothing more than a long list of broken promises to the American people," U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, D-Springfield, cautioned that its proposed cuts "would do nothing but wreak havoc on the lives of middle class and working families across our country."

The congressman raised specific concerns that cuts to the Medicaid program and other resources in Trump's budget plan could force working families to choose between sending their kids to school and caring for aging parents; and hurt local communities' ability to combat the opioid epidemic.

"This is a budget designed to inflict pain on the very people that make up the backbone of this country," he said in a statement.

U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Massachusetts, called the president's budget a "travesty," arguing that it "punishes need and rewards greed" by proposing cuts to Medicaid, food assistance, disability benefits and education programs, while calling for "$5.5 trillion in tax breaks to billionaires and special interests."

"This budget is all about providing even more comfort to the comfortable in the form of massive tax breaks and defense spending increases, all financed by cuts from the most vulnerable segments of our society - the poor, the sick, students, and grandma and grandpa," he said in a statement. 

The senator, who further slammed the proposed cuts to health care research and energy technology funding, argued that although the president touts his foreign policy strategy as being America First, "this budget makes clear its economic policy will make 'America Last.'"

Markey pledged to "fight for a budget that protects hardworking families and our most vulnerable, while making the wealthiest pay their fair share."

Congressman Joe Kennedy III, D-Brookline, argued that while budgets reflect deeply personal and often painful choices, "the president's budget reveals his evident belief that the economic dignity of working men and women is expendable."

"It tells those touched by illness, aging, disability, job loss or other circumstances beyond control that their future - and their family - is worth less," he said in a statement. "And it spells out the Trump worldview in devastating detail: a place where health care and education and our most human needs, like food and shelter, are provided based on wealth and power."

U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark, D-Melrose, called the president's spending proposal "shameful" and "callous."

Despite criticism from members of Massachusetts' congressional delegation, Trump administration officials lauded the president's spending plan.

Secretary of the Treasury Steven T. Mnuchin said the proposal focuses his agency on it's core mission of collecting revenue and managing the nation's debt, while modernizing and increasing efficiencies. 

"The president's budget will achieve savings through reforms that prevent taxpayer bailouts and reverse burdensome regulations that have been harmful to small businesses and American workers," he said in a statement. "These initiatives, coupled with comprehensive tax reform and other key priorities, will move America one step closer to sustained economic growth of three percent or higher."

U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos, meanwhile, said Trump's budget proposal "makes a historic investment in America's students" and reflects the president's commitment to returning decision-making back to states.

"The budget also reflects a series of tough choices we have had to make when assessing the best use of taxpayer money. It ensures funding for programs with proven results for students while taking a hard look at programs that sound nice, but simply haven't yielded the desired outcomes," she said. "By refocusing the department's funding priorities on supporting students, we can usher in a new era of creativity and ingenuity and lay a new foundation for American greatness."

Ashley Koske, who admitted bullying Phoebe Prince, slated for September trial in new harassment case

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In 2011, Koske, then 18, admitted to facts sufficient for a delinquency finding on a misdemeanor criminal harassment charge in connection with Prince's suicide.

BELCHERTOWN -- The harassment case against Ashley Koske -- one of the teenagers who admitted bullying South Hadley High School student Phoebe Prince before she took her own life in January 2010 -- has been set for a jury trial in September. 

On Feb. 22, Koske -- previously Ashley Longe -- pleaded not guilty to threatening to commit murder, threatening to damage a motor vehicle and criminal harassment.

22160353-large.jpgAshley Koske
 

The trial date of Sept. 19 was set Tuesday when Longe returned to the Eastern Hampshire District Court for a pre-trial conference.

According to the South Hadley police report filed Nov. 27, the alleged victim came into the South Hadley police station at 3 a.m. on Nov. 26 because she was concerned "over some electronic messages via text/Facebook from one Ashley Koske (Longe)." 

The woman told police the harassment was over a "friend-ex-boyfriend ... her and Ashely have in common."

"There are numerous messages at various times that are harassing and inappropriate," the report states.

The alleged victim stated that Koske's family warned her that she should take Koske's threats "serious."

The woman said that "caused her some concerns about her safety," the police report states.

Koske is free on her own recognizance, but must remain away from the woman, according to court records.

In 2011, Koske, then 18, admitted to facts sufficient for a delinquency finding on a misdemeanor criminal harassment charge in connection with Prince's suicide. The case was continued without a finding until she turned 19 in April 2012.

Prince's mother praised Koske's "courage" in a victim impact statement, saying she had shown "accountability and remorse."

'Wayfinding' plan aims to reduce congestion, encourage walking in downtown Northampton

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Receipts from municipal parking fees fund the effort, which will result in spending $110,000 to manufacture and erect a number of signs downtown.

NORTHAMPTON -- A committee that has been at work since last year to mitigate downtown automobile congestion, encourage walking and create a recognizable "brand" for the community is making progress, according to Wayne Feiden, the city's director of planning and sustainability.

He is a member of the 10-person Northampton Wayfinding Ideate Committee charged with implementing the project.

Receipts from municipal parking fees fund the effort, which will result in spending $110,000 to manufacture and erect a number of signs downtown. The number of signs, and their placement, are to be determined. What is certain is that each sign will have an image of the Holyoke Range at the bottom, Feiden said in an interview.

At Thursday's Wayfinding Ideate Committee meeting, the panel is expected to review a final draft of signage that has been prepared by Mark Favermann, owner of Favermann Design, who was the consultant hired for the project. The city budgeted $50,000 for the consultant's work.

The committee began meeting in August and held a public forum the following month to elicit feedback. It expects to convene another forum so the community can express what the final design should be and weigh in on where the signs should be placed, Feiden said.

The planning director said it would be good if the signs are in place by the time college students return for the fall semester, although the process may take more time. "Getting it right is important than getting it fast," he said.

"We hope Wayfinding will encourage people to park once" when they travel to the city, and that the signage will help them recognize other downtown destinations are within easy walking distance, Feiden said.

How the signs will encourage more walking has been a focus of the committee, and the final version of what the signs will say to accomplish that is still to be determined, he said.

The agenda for Thursday's meeting includes a review of the Favermann "family of sign images for conditional or final approval, with whatever conditions and changes required," and discussion about the next public forum. It begins at 9 a.m. at City Hall, 210 Main St.

In addition to Feiden, the committee includes:

  • Suzanne Beck, Greater Northampton Chamber of Commerce executive director
  • Amy Cahillane, Downtown Northampton Association executive director
  • Brian Foote, Arts & Culture Department executive director
  • Donna LaScaleia, Department of Public Works director
  • Jody Kasper, chief of police
  • Nanci Forrestall, parking administrator
  • Terry Masterson, economic development director
  • Lyn Simmons, chief of staff to Mayor David Narkewicz
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