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Belchertown officials want to see progress at Skate Park

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Belchertown Selectman George Archible said the Skate Park is not safe and is an eyesore.

BELCHERTOWN – Dissatisfied with the lack of progress made cleaning up the Skate Park, the selectmen are saying that unless steps are taken soon by those who use it and their parents, the park will stay closed for the year and possibly longer.

“The Skate Park remains in a serious state of disrepair,’’ Town Administrator Gary L. Brougham told the selectmen during his report to the board Monday.

Selectman George D. Archible said, “I was very disappointed.’’

“I don’t want to hurt anybody’s feelings, but I say, ‘Let’s just close it. It is an eyesore. I am afraid somebody could go through the gate thee and get hurt,’’ Archible said.

Maintenance of the Skate Park has been a thorny issue for the Board of Selectmen in the last several years.

The park is town property, located behind the Police Station. The ramps were built in 2002 with $40,000 of private donations and the facility has never been taken over and run by the town Recreation Department like other parks.

Town officials have said that concerns about liability and the lack of funds resulting from state decreases in revenue have been problems, but they have also encouraged those interested in the park to make improvements there and come up with plans for long-term maintenance.

Over the years, parents of the teenagers using it would volunteer for the positions on the town Skate Park Committee and would oversee and take part in cleanup and maintenance work needed for the selectmen and building inspector to allow it to be used.

When the building inspector and the selectmen decided in late May that it should remain closed until improvements were made, a group of parents, acting as the Skate Park Committee, started to work on it, but Archible said that although he witnesses some hard work weeks ago, it has not progressed to the point of making the place safe.

Archible said that the place is now enough of an eyesore that it could detract from plans for commercial development on nearby sections of the former Belchertown State School property, so it cannot be left as it is.

Archible said he realizes that frequent rain early this summer followed by excessive heat made it difficult for volunteers to work there, but the situation must be addressed.

Town Administrator Gary L. Brougham, who has also inspected the park and found need for repairs, cleaning and maintenance, said he would invite members of the Skate Park Committee to an upcoming meeting of the Board of Selectmen to see if progress can be made.


South Hadley teacher Debra Caldieri, friend of late freshman Phoebe Prince, fired

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Caldieri taught school in Connecticut before South Hadley hired her to teach high school Latin in 2005. The students who spoke on her behalf to the School Committee said she was know for her devotion to them.

This is an updated version of a story posted at 6:30 this morning.


Debra Caldieri 62211.jpgFormer South Hadley Latin teacher Debra Caldieri, left, is seen with her son Sergio at a School Committee meeting in June.

SOUTH HADLEY – Debra Caldieri, the South Hadley High School Latin teacher who was closest to Phoebe Prince, has been fired.

Caldieri, 48, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, said she received a letter from School Superintendent Gus Sayer last week informing her that she has been taken off medical leave and terminated.

Her firing came despite a public comment at a June School Committee meeting in which her former students and Caldieri herself made impassioned pleas to at least put her on paid disability leave as she became increasingly destitute. Caldieri said Wednesday that friends have been paying her rent and insurance premiums. Nonetheless, her telephone was disconnected because of her inability to pay her bills and she is unable to support herself and her 16-year-old son.

“I can’t feed my own family,” she said. “I’m just borrowing money from people.”

Caldieri taught school in Connecticut before South Hadley hired her to teach high school Latin in 2005. The students who spoke on her behalf to the School Committee said she was know for her devotion to them, both in terms of their school work and their personal lives. Caldieri came to the meeting in the wheelchair she is now forced to use.

Caldieri believes her downfall at South Hadley High School is connected to her relationship with Phoebe Prince, a 15-year-old freshman who hanged herself in January of 2010. Investigators said Prince’s suicide followed a period of intense bullying by classmates. Her death sparked an international campaign against school bullying and put the media spotlight on South Hadley and its social dynamics. Six former South Hadley High School students were charged with felonies in connection with Prince, although their cases were eventually resolved without jail time.

“Ultimately it was about Phoebe,” Caldieri said of her termination. As she explained it, Caldieri came under fire from Principal Dan Smith for leaving school grounds with some students on the day after Prince’s suicide to visit a grieving classmate. Her classes were subsequently monitored and the resulting stress exacerbated her multiple sclerosis.

She eventually went on medical leave, but that ran out in April. Caldieri said Sayer offered to extend her leave until August but told her if she was not physically able to perform her duties by September she must submit a letter of resignation. Last month, Caldieri spoke at a Statehouse rally in support of legislation called “The Healthy Workplace Bill,” which would criminalize bullying in the workplace. At the rally Caldieri said she was harassed and berated at school. Her notice of termination came less than two weeks later.

“I was a little shocked,” she said. “I just got it in the mail. It was very impersonal.”

Caldieri telephoned Sayer a few days later to ask why he didn’t call her instead. Sayer said her home telephone had been disconnected and he didn’t have her cell phone number, Caldieri said, although she noted that the schools had called her on her cell phone in the past.

Sayer is on vacation this week and could not be reached for comment. The School Committee announced at its meeting on Tuesday that Sayer will resign after Oct. 1, before his current contract is over. Smith resigned at the end of the school year and has not returned calls from the press.

Eileen Moore, Prince’s aunt, has been paying Caldieri’s health insurance premiums, but said the insurance she has through school will end on Sept. 1. Moore has started a benefit fund for Caldieri at Peoples Bank for those who wish to donate. She called Caldieri’s treatment by the school system “horrendous.”

“You just don’t treat someone like that,” she said. “Especially a colleague.”

Holyoke Fire Commission tells public it's dealing with William Moran controversy while balancing his due process rights

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Moran is subject of a show-cause hearing Aug. 29 on a request for a criminal complaint after officials said he sent a fire truck to a fake call.

billymoran.JPGHolyoke Deputy Fire Chief William P. Moran

HOLYOKE – The Fire Commission Wednesday released a statement about the controversy involving Deputy Chief William P. Moran that officials said is meant to tell a skeptical and frustrated public, “We hear you.”

Chairwoman Priscilla F. Chesky said in an interview the commission is investigating and doing all it can to resolve the Moran issue swiftly while balancing Moran’s due process rights.

Officials know the issue has prompted “much discussion,” the statement said.

“The commission will make every effort to keep the public informed in the future to the extent allowable,” the statement said.

A show-cause hearing is set for Moran for Aug. 29 in Springfield District Court. That’s on a criminal complaint that Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni has sought against Moran for sending a fire truck on a fake call to the Holyoke Mall at Ingleside June 15.

“Part of ensuring the proceedings are conducted subject to due process is allowing the district attorney’s office to complete its investigation into a criminal proceeding free of interference,” said the commission statement, prepared with City Solicitor Lisa A. Ball.

“For this reason the commission does not plan on conducting any evidentiary hearings regarding Mr. Moran until the district attorney’s office has an opportunity to present its case,” the statement said.

Chesky said she was “not 100 percent pleased” the commission is waiting for the criminal proceedings to conclude before the commission acts on Moran, “but I think for all the right reasons we’re waiting for the criminal investigation to take its course.”

Up to June 15, Moran, a 27-year veteran who worked on Mayor Elaine A. Pluta’s 2009 election campaign, had been acting chief since September.

The city and Moran’s lawyer, Jeffrey S. Morneau, agreed July 26 to change the status of Moran’s leave. The change could save the city money in the long run because Moran’s use of that time leaves less of it the city would have to buy back at his retirement, Ball said.

The annual salary of a deputy chief is $68,775 while the line-item for the chief’s salary in the current city budget is $95,873.

The three-member commission is a volunteer board appointed by the mayor. It has sole authority to hire, discipline and fire the chief. The commission consists of Juan A. Pedrosa, William N. McCoy and Chesky.

Holyoke Board of Fire Commissioners Statement

Wall Street: Stock market posts small gains following morning of deep loses

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The Dow, which was down 166 points at one time, closed up 30.

Coca Cola 2011.jpgJane Choi holds cans of Coca-Cola and Diet Coke in Anne's Deli, in Portland, Ore., earlier this year. The soft-drink maker led the Dow Jones industrial average higher Wednesday with a gain of nearly 2 percent.

NEW YORK — Stock indexes came back from deep losses in the morning and ended Wednesday with small gains. The Dow Jones industrial average avoided its longest losing streak since Jimmy Carter was president.

The Dow rose 30 points — after being down 166 — to break an eight-day losing streak. Nine days would have been the longest since February 1978. The S&P 500 index rose 6 points and broke a seven-day streak.

Markets have fallen recently because investors are becoming increasingly worried about the U.S. economy.

Shortly after the market opened, the Institute of Supply Management said its index measuring the service sector of the U.S. economy grew in July at the weakest pace in 17 months. Economists had expected a slight increase.

The report was the latest sign over the last week that the economy may be slowing. Consumers cut their spending in June for the first time in nearly two years; manufacturing slowed, and the government said that in the first half of the year the economy grew at its slowest pace since the recession ended in June 2009.

"There has been too much at the same time for investors to hang in there and you're starting to see some element of panic finally showing up," said Andrew Goldberg, U.S. market strategist at JP Morgan Funds.

The Dow, the Standard & Poor's 500 index and Nasdaq were down more than 1 percent earlier in the day, but edged higher throughout the afternoon.

The Dow Jones industrial average finished with a gain of 0.3 percent, to 11,896.44. The S&P 500 index rose 6.29, or 0.5 percent, to 1,260.34. The S&P had been down for seven straight days through Tuesday. It is up 0.2 percent for the year after being down 0.3 for the year on Tuesday.

The Nasdaq composite added 23.83, or 0.9 percent, to 2,693.07.

The broad S&P 500 index— the index followed by most professional money managers and U.S. mutual funds — rose after it hit a low for the year of 1,234. Some investors saw it as an opportunity to buy the S&P 500 index. As a whole, companies in the index are expected to have record profits this year.

Some of those gains might also be due to automatic buying triggered when an index reaches a certain level. Many traders use computer programs that buy or sell stocks once they break through their long-term averages.

"It seems like the early money was based on fear and the market climbed back as computer-program trading took over," said Mark Lamkin, the head of Lamkin Wealth Management in Louisville, Kentucky.

Lamkin said the stock market was in a "tug of war" between strong corporate earnings and a "horrible economic backdrop."

Coca-Cola led the Dow average higher with a gain of nearly 2 percent. Companies that depend most on an expanding economy in order to make profits had the steepest losses. Caterpillar Inc. fell 0.9 percent, the most of the 30 stocks in the Dow average, followed closely by Chevron Corp. and Boeing.

Along with the concerns about the U.S. economy, investors were also unnerved by a surge in bond yields to 14-year highs for Italy and Spain. High bond yields typically indicate that investors believe there is a greater chance that a country or corporation will be unable to make interest payments.

"We've been so focused inwardly because of the debt ceiling debate that we've ignored Europe over the last couple of weeks," said J.J. Kinahan, chief options strategist at T.D. Ameritrade. "We have problems, but if Italy falls the euro zone doesn't look sustainable."

Italy and Spain are the third and fourth largest economies in Europe, respectively.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to another low for the year of 2.56 percent, from 2.62 percent Tuesday, as investors moved money into assets that hold up better during economic downturns. Gold, another traditional safe haven, rose 1 percent to $1,666 an ounce.

Several large U.S. companies reported earnings before the market opened. MasterCard rose nearly 14 percent after the company beat analysts' estimates. Clorox fell 2 percent after the company said higher commodity costs were eating into its income. And CBS gained 1.6 percent after it said a deal with Netflix Inc. had lifted profits.

Payroll processor ADP said private companies added 114,000 jobs last month. The number was within Wall Street's forecasts, but still well below the rate of growth that signifies a healthy jobs market. ADP's employment figures do not always predict the government's broader employment report, which will be released Friday morning. Last month, for example, ADP reported that private employers added 157,000 jobs in June. The government later said that private companies added just 57,000 jobs.

Economists expect that 90,000 were created in the U.S. last month. That's fewer than the 125,000 jobs per month that are needed just to keep up with population growth. At least 250,000 jobs need to be created every month to substantially bring down the unemployment rate.

Analysts predict that the unemployment rate was 9.2 percent in July, unchanged from the month before.

Shawn Buffum of Westfield charged with felony after cardboard box ignited on ex-girlfriend's porch

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Police said Buffam's former girlfriend extinguished the fire with a bucket of water.

WESTFIELD – Police charged a Main Street man with burning the contents of a building Monday night after he ignited a cardboard box on the porch of a former girlfriend.

Police early Tuesday charged Shawn Buffum, 35, of 83 Main Street, with burning the contents of a building, a felony.

Police said a Meadow Street woman was alone in the house with her child when she heard knocking on the door. She opened the door to find a cardboard box on top of a baby’s mattress leaning against a couch on the porch that had been ignited.

The woman said she carried the mattress and burning box outside where she extinguished the fire with a bucket of water.

USDA announces recall of 36 million pounds of Cargill ground turkey linked to salmonella cases

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A death in California and at least 76 other illnesses in the outbreak date back to March and have been reported in 26 states coast to coast.

080311_tom_vilsack.jpgU.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack speaks to the International Association for Food Protection Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2011, in Milwaukee. Afterward, he told The Associated Press that the government hopes to find the source of a salmonella outbreak linked to ground turkey "very, very" soon. (AP Photo/Carrie Antlfinger)

By MARY CLARE JALONICK

WASHINGTON — The Agriculture Department says meat giant Cargill is recalling 36 million pounds of ground turkey linked to a death in California and at least 76 other salmonella illnesses.

Illnesses in the outbreak date back to March and have been reported in 26 states coast to coast.

Government officials say that even contaminated ground turkey is safe to eat if it is cooked to 165 degrees and handled properly before cooking.

72 charged in probe of international child pornography network

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Prosecutors say the network used an online bulletin board called Dreamboard to trade tens of thousands of images and videos of sexually abused children.

080311_janet_napolitano_eric_holder.jpgAttorney General Eric Holder listens at left as Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano speaks at the Justice in Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2011, to discuss the results of the largest U.S. prosecution of an international criminal network organized to sexually exploit children. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

By PETE YOST

WASHINGTON — Seventy-two people have been charged with participating in an international child pornography network that prosecutors say used an online bulletin board called Dreamboard to trade tens of thousands of images and videos of sexually abused children.

Attorney General Eric Holder and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said Wednesday a 20-month law enforcement effort called Operation Delego targeted more than 600 Dreamboard members around the world for allegedly participating in the private, members-only Internet club created to promote pedophilia.

Numerous participants in the network sexually abused children ages 12 and under, produced images and video of the abuse and then shared it with other club members, according to court papers released in the case.

At a news conference at the Justice Department, the attorney general called the criminal activity a "nightmare" for the children and said that some of the children featured in the images and videos were just infants.

In many cases, the children being victimized were in obvious, and intentional, pain - even in distress and crying, just as the rules for one area of the bulletin board mandated, the attorney general said.

Fifteen arrested Dreamboard participants personally created child pornography, according to the Justice Department.

Napolitano said the amount of child porn swapped by participants in the network was massive, the equivalent to 16,000 DVDs. Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer, who heads Justice's criminal division, called the criminal enterprise "a living horror."

Of the 72 charged in the United States, 43 have been arrested in this country and nine abroad. Another 20 are known to authorities only by their Internet names and remain at large.

Authorities have arrested people in 13 other countries — Canada, Denmark, Ecuador, France, Germany, Hungary, Kenya, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Qatar, Serbia, Sweden and Switzerland, but some of those were arrested on local rather than the U.S. charges.

The U.S. indictments were unsealed in Shreveport. La.

To conceal their conduct, members used screen names rather than actual names and accessed the bulletin board via proxy servers, with Internet traffic routed through other computers to disguise a user's location, according to the court papers.

Participants were required to continually upload images of child sexual abuse to maintain their membership.

Participants who molested children and created new images of child pornography were placed in a "Super VIP" category that gave them access to the entire quantity of child porn on the bulletin board, the court papers stated.

A "Super Hardcore" section of the bulletin board was limited to posts showing adults having violent sexual intercourse with "very young kids" subjected to physical and sexual abuse.

All 72 U.S. defendants are charged with conspiring to advertise and distribute child pornography, and 50 of them are also charged with engaging in a child pornography enterprise. Thirteen of the 52 defendants who have been arrested have pleaded guilty in the conspiracy. Of the four who have been sentenced, the least amount of prison time was 20 years behind bars and the most was 30 years.

Springfield Law Department opinion says School Superintendent Alan Ingram not required to repay controversial $30,000 relocation bonus

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City attorney Edward Pikula said that while Ingram is required to live in the city, his contract does not require he purchase a house.

Alan IngramSpringfield School Supt. Alan J. Ingram

SPRINGFIELD – The Springfield Law Department issued an opinion Wednesday that School Superintendent Alan J. Ingram is not required repay the city a $30,000 for moving expenses, despite a call from School Committee members that he give back the money because he did not use it to purchase a home in the city.

City attorney Edward M. Pikula said that after reviewing Ingram’s contract he found no grounds for the city to demand repayment.

“It is the opinion of the Law Department that the superintendent is under no legal obligation to repay the funds to the city,” Pikula wrote.

The opinion was issued at the request of Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, after the controversy over the $30,000 payment to Ingram arose recently when School Committee member and candidate for mayor Antonette Pepe began publicly questioning portions of Ingram’s contact.

Members of the School Committee’s Legislative and Contract Subcommittee voted unanimously recently for Ingram to repay the money.

Ingram in a recent interview with the Republican and Masslive.com said there was never any requirement for him to use the money for the purchase of a house in Springfield, and he has no intention of paying it back.

“It was a legally binding contract. It was negotiated and executed in good faith,” he said at the time.

Ingram was hired in 2008 at an annual salary of $190,000. That has since been increased to $202,000

Pikula said Ingram’s contract includes a $30,000 bonus for to be paid for “relocation.”

022309 edward pikula.jpgEdward Pikula

Also two separate letters signed by Stephen J. Lisauskas from June 23, 2008 and June 25, 2009 that are part of Ingram’s contract and benefits package describe the $30,000
amount as payment for “transition expenses” and for “relocation expenses.” At the time of Ingram’s hiring in 2008, city operations were in the hands of the Finance Control Board, and Lisauskas was its executive director.

Neither the contract nor any of the supporting documentation specifically say the $30,000 was to be used toward the purchase of a house in Springfield, Pikula said.

“While it is a condition of the contract that the superintendent ‘maintain a residence’ in Springfield, the contract in no way obligates that superintendent purchase a house,” Pikula wrote.

Terms of Ingram’s contract are satisfied “by the rental of an apartment, and there is no dispute that (Ingram) does rent an apartment in Springfield as his residence.”

Pikula also noted that even if the contract stipulated Ingram had to purchase a house in the city, there is no mechanism in the document requiring repayment if he failed to do so.

“The Law Department suggests that, to the extent that future contracts include similar relocation provisions, conditions for repayment be included in the event of the failure of the employee to meet the intended terms,” Pikula wrote.

Minus $11,990.97 for taxes and retirement withholding, Ingram received a net payment of $18,009.13.

June 30, 2008 Side Letter From Springfield Finance Control Board to Alan Ingram

Sarno, in a prepared statement, expressed confidence with Pikula’s review that payments and bonuses stipulated in Ingram’s contract are legally binding.

Sarno said his concerns “are that there are not any distractions that interfere with school students and their education as we continue to move our school systems forward.”

Pikula also noted the charge that Ingram submitted expense requests that included the purchase of alcoholic beverages, but said he had not been provided evidence of any such reimbursements. He said he would defer to the city Office of Internal Auditing for a final determination. If such payments were issued to Ingram, he should return that money.

He also deferred to Internal Auditing the issue of Ingram being reimbursed for parking expenses despite Ingram receiving $650 monthly for transportation expenses.

Sarno said Internal Auditing is looking at each of those issues.
Opinion of City Solicitor re: school superintendent contract


Advocates file 31 petitions for 2012 Massachusetts ballot

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Among the petition filed: Ending the mandate requiring virtually everyone in the state to have health insurance.

vote no vote yes.jpg

By JOHANNA KAISER

BOSTON — With the next general election more than a year away, activists across Massachusetts are already pushing for ballot questions that would allow voters to weigh in on dozens of issues, including whether to eliminate a key provision of the state's 2006 landmark health care law.

A total of 31 initiative petitions were filed with the state Attorney General's Office Wednesday, the deadline for the proposals to be approved by the office. The petitions also include calls for changes to the ways teachers are considered for jobs and a repeal of part of a law aimed at preventing domestic violence.

Massachusetts Citizens for Life, an anti-abortion group, filed a petition that would end the individual mandate that requires virtually everyone in the state have health insurance or face tax penalties.

"We are really concerned about the health care plans at the federal and state level, and since the one at the federal level is model after the state's model we feel an obligation to point out some of the failings of the plan," said Anne Fox, president of the organization, which is working to repeal both the state and federal health care laws.

Fox said the law was well-intentioned, but believes it has led to higher health care costs and a lower quality of care.

The domestic violence law allows people to file restraining orders if they feel their lives are threatened, but advocates working to repeal that provision of the law say it is flawed and discriminatory.

"It particularly affects fathers. It's so easy to take out a restraining order with just the claim of the word fear" said Joseph Ureneck, chairman of the Fatherhood Coalition, an organization that promotes the importance of fathers.

Ureneck said system is flawed and discriminatory because restraining orders are now too easily obtained even when there is no sign of violence, and false claims force partners, often men, to leave the house and prevents them from seeing their children.

Supporters of the current law say the legal process of getting a restraining order prevents false claims from being filed, and the few that do get through do not merit ending the law.

"Overwhelmingly restraining orders are life-saving tools for victims of domestic violence," said Toni Troop, a spokeswoman for Jane Doe Inc., an anti-domestic violence organization.

The quality of teachers and how they are promoted is being taken up by another petition initiative that would prevent teachers from being assigned to a position based solely on seniority.

The petition, filed by Stand for Children, an organization focused on education issues in public schools, would require that administrations consider a teacher's effectiveness, portfolio of work, and other indicators of job performance before considering the teacher's years on the job while ensuring a fair transition process for underperforming teachers.

"Not only will this elevate the profession, they (teachers) are getting targeted support they need," Jason Williams, director of the organization, who hopes the change in law will support similar regulations approved by the state's Education Board in June.

Other filed petition initiatives include efforts to place a deposit on non-carbonated beverages, legalize medical marijuana, and legalize casino gambling. These issues are also being considered by the Legislature.

Advocates of these and the other possible ballot questions still have many obstacles to overcome to make it on next year's ballot. Once the petitions are approved, advocates need to collect signatures from nearly 69,000 registered Massachusetts voters by late November.

Developing: Brimfield police on scene of 3-car accident on Rt. 20 near Sturbridge line

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The accident was reported just before 6 p.m. along Route 20 near the Sturbridge town line.

brimfieldaxx1.jpgOne car is on its side and another is slammed into a guard rail along a section of Route 20 in Brimfield.

BRIMFIELD - Police are on the scene of a three-car accident on Route 20 near the Sturbridge town line that resulted in three people taken to the hospital with injuries, police said.

The accident was reported just before 6 p.m.

Police are still investigating the accident but it appears two cars were heading east on Route 20 toward Sturbridge when a third car pulled out of a driveway into the eastbound land in front of them, police said.

One of the cars ended up on its side, and another crashed into the guard rail.

Three people were taken by ambulance to UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester. The extent of their injuries was not available.

Two other people declined medical attention at the scene.


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Federal funds OK'd to clear trees downed by tornadoes in Brimfield State Forest

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Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Richard Sullivan will visit Monson on Thursday to announce a net sent of incentive programs to help home and building owners repair or rebuild tornado-damaged properties.

Gallery preview

By MATT MURPHY

BOSTON – Just days after the two-month anniversary of the deadly tornadoes that ripped through western Massachusetts, Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Richard Sullivan told lawmakers Wednesday that federal funding will be made available to start clearing fallen trees blocking fire access roads through Brimfield State Forest.

Sullivan will be in Monson on Thursday afternoon to announce a new set of incentive programs to help home and building owners repair or rebuild damaged properties, with a focus on energy efficiency and renewable energy technology and administered by the Department of Energy Resources and the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center.

Monson was one of the hardest hit communities by a series of tornadoes that touched down in western Massachusetts on June 1. The House and Senate in June passed a supplemental budget that included $15 million in tornado relief funds.

Testifying on Wednesday before the House Bonding Committee, Sullivan said that disaster funding through the Federal Emergency Management Agency can be applied to cleanup within the state forest of fire access roads for public safety, but that the Department of Conservation and Recreation was working to develop a plan to remove an estimated 133,000 downed trees in the forest – an effort that could spill over into next year.

“We will start with the access roads first done as part of FEMA activities,” Sullivan said, fielding a question about Brimfield State Forest from Rep. Todd Smola, a Republican from Palmer.

Smola also raised the issue of providing local assistance for the removal or repair of structurally deficient dams, which can often be cost prohibitive despite the threat they pose to recreational property and businesses if left unattended.

“Has there been any thought given to helping with the removal or repair of these dams?” Smola asked during the hearing centered around state bonding and capital spending projects.

Sullivan said that there are 3,000 dams under the jurisdiction of DCR, including many in serious disrepair. “The balance you need to strike is always an interesting exercise between recreation, public safety, which always comes first, restoring the river and in some case providing power,” Sullivan said.

The secretary told the committee that 20 dams have been identified as having potential for low-level hydro power, and the state is searching for private companies that might be interested in repairing those dams to access the electricity.

Sullivan also noted the ongoing discussion between the administration and Rep. James Cantwell, who sits on the Bonding Committee, and Sen. Marc Pacheco, about the possibility of creating a low-interest revolving loan fund for dam and seawall repairs.

Sullivan also said that his executive office was seeking $150 million in fiscal 2012 capital spending authority from the five-year capital plan being developed by the administration. He said the $150 million funding level would be consistent with what the agency has received in past years to fund park and conservation projects, Superfund site clean-up, farming support programs and energy efficiency programs.

Sullivan said he is very excited about the new Boston Public Market project, which will bring 100 construction jobs and 200 permanent jobs to downtown Boston through the creation of a public market at 136 Blackstone Street that will promote fresh, sustainable, locally grown and harvested produce, dairy, seafood and other goods.

Oklahoma woman claims famed hijacker D.B. Cooper is her late uncle

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When an FBI agent pleaded several years ago for help finding notorious skyjacker D.B. Cooper, he wondered, off-handedly, if someone's "odd uncle" might be their guy.

Marla CooperMarla Cooper holds a photograph of her late uncle Lynn Doyle Cooper during an interview in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2011. Cooper said she believes that her late uncle Lynn Doyle Cooper was the man who hijacked a plane in 1971 and parachuted away with $200,000 ransom into a rainy night over the Pacific Northwest. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

By SEAN MURPHY, Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — When an FBI agent pleaded several years ago for help finding notorious skyjacker D.B. Cooper, he wondered, off-handedly, if someone's "odd uncle" might be their guy.

Marla Cooper believes her late uncle Lynn Doyle Cooper was, and is "thoroughly convinced" he hijacked a plane in 1971 and parachuted away with $200,000 ransom into a rainy night over the Pacific Northwest.

"I was 8 years old, so I can't tell you exactly what he said, but I do remember the words: 'Our money problems are over. We just need to go back and get the money,'" she said in an interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday.

While federal investigators say solving the hijacking is a low priority because present-day criminals pose a greater threat, the case holds a prominent place in American folklore: here's a guy who pulled an incredible heist and got away.

"We're desperate to believe in people who can do things we can't," said Geoffrey Gray, who has written a book about the case.

The FBI isn't convinced D.B. Cooper even survived the jump, but has chased more than 1,000 leads in the nation's only unsolved hijacking. It said Monday it was following a new lead, but FBI agent Fred Gutt declined Wednesday to say whether Marla Cooper was their source.

"It is an unsolved crime and we are obligated to address that if new, credible information comes to us," Gutt said.

Marla Cooper, whose comments were first reported by ABC News, said she recalled two of her uncles, including an uncle she knew as "L.D.," plotting something "underhanded" during a visit to her grandmother's house in Sisters, Ore., during the Thanksgiving holiday in 1971.

"I knew they weren't shooting straight with me when they were teasing me and telling me they were going turkey hunting," she told the AP.

"I was a witness to them returning from their so-called turkey hunt early the next morning ... when my uncle L.D. was very injured and heard them telling my father that they had hijacked an airplane," she said.

Over the years, Marla Cooper said she never gave much thought to the incident until she pieced together her memories with comments made first by her father, shortly before his death in 1995, and later her mother two years ago.

CooperFILE--A 1971 artist's sketch released by the FBI shows the skyjacker known as 'Dan Cooper' and 'D.B. Cooper', was made from the recollections of passengers and crew of a Northwest Orient Airlines jet he hijacked between Portland and Seattle, Nov. 24, 1971, Thanksgiving eve. FBI spokeswoman Ayn Sandalo Dietrich tells The Seattle Times that a law enforcement member directed investigators to a person who might have helpful information on Cooper. (AP Photo/FBI/file)

After her mother's comments spurred her memory, Marla Cooper said she looked up the story of D.B. Cooper and "over the next few days, I was just flooded with memories of what happened."

She said she contacted the FBI after she "was certain that what I was remembering were real memories and not imagined." When agents didn't immediately follow up, she spoke with a retired law enforcement agent who later talked to federal investigators.

On Nov. 24, 1971, a man who gave his name as Dan Cooper claimed shortly after takeoff in Portland, Ore., that he had a bomb, leading the flight crew of the Northwest Orient plane to land in Seattle. Passengers were exchanged for parachutes and ransom money.

The flight then took off for Mexico with the suspect and flight crew on board. The hijacker parachuted from the plane after dark as it flew south, apparently over a rugged, wooded region about 100 miles from Marla Cooper's grandmother's home.

The story has captured the imagination of amateur sleuths for decades in part because it has all the elements of a classic tale, including a hero who is perceived as a Robin Hood-type character, said Gray, whose book "Skyjack: The Hunt for D.B. Cooper" comes out this month.

"We all want to believe in heroes, even if they're bad guys," Gray said.

Marla CooperThis undated photo provided by Marla Cooper shows her late uncle, Lynn Doyle Cooper. Marla Cooper said she believes that her late uncle was the man who hijacked a plane in 1971 and parachuted away with $200,000 ransom into a rainy night over the Pacific Northwest. (AP Photo/Courtesy Marla Cooper)

A generic looking sketch released by the FBI shortly after the hijacking only added to the media frenzy, Gray said.

"That sketch became just a blank portrait for people to fill in with their own fears, suspicions and hunches, and this phenomenon emerged," he said.

But without something more than the memories of an 8-year-old girl, Gray said he remains skeptical Lynn Doyle Cooper is actually D.B. Cooper. He said the FBI's case file is littered with names of dozens of people who suspected a relative might be the infamous hijacker.

"It's unclear what separates Uncle L.D. from this lot," he said.

Seattle-based FBI case agent Larry Carr was tasked with reigniting the case five years ago and the agency posted a "D.B. Cooper Redux" on its site in 2007, urging the public to help solve the enduring mystery.

The FBI released photos of a black J.C. Penney tie the hijacker wore and some of the stolen $20 bills found by a young boy in 1980 along the banks of the Columbia River. In the FBI's recounting, it quoted Carr as saying he thought it was likely that Cooper didn't survive the jump.

But Carr still sought the public's help.

"Maybe a hydrologist can use the latest technology to trace the $5,800 in ransom money found in 1980 to where Cooper landed upstream," Carr said. "Or maybe someone just remembers that odd uncle."

The FBI said a new lead came to the bureau after a tipster initially discussed the case with a retired law enforcement officer, who then contacted the agency. Gutt said only after the FBI contacted the tipster directly did the person speak with investigators.

The lead focuses on a suspect who died more than 10 years ago.

Marla Cooper said her uncle died in 1999 but wouldn't say where he lived before his death.

She said her mother recently provided investigators with a guitar strap belonging to her uncle to be tested for fingerprints.

Investigators have tested a guitar strap from the suspect who is the subject of the new lead, Gutt said Wednesday, but found it wasn't suitable for fingerprint analysis. They are now working with family members to identify other items that can be analyzed.

But the FBI doesn't have a timeframe for how long it will take to vet the lead, which is something they've known about for more than a year, he said.

___

Associated Press writer Mike Baker in Olympia, Wash., contributed to this report.

The Story of Famed Skyjacker D.B. Cooper

Hospitals in Massachusetts to see additional $275 million thanks to health care law

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Hospitals in Massachusetts will reap an annual windfall of $275 million due to a loophole enshrined in the new health care law. Hospitals in most other states will get less money as a result.

ap_healthcare_jp_110323_wg.jpgA man holds a sign as he sits with others Tuesday, March 22, 2011, at Northgate II in Camden, N.J., during the announcement that a new clinic is opening in the public housing building that's been found to be a hot spot for medical problems. A year after its passage, more than half of the historic health care law has been implemented, but the battle over its future has grown fierce. (Mel Evans/ AP Photo)

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Hospitals in Massachusetts will reap an annual windfall of $275 million due to a loophole enshrined in the new health care law. Hospitals in most other states will get less money as a result.

The disclosure was buried in a regulation that Medicare issued late last week. Hospital association executives in other states are up in arms over the news, which comes at a time when they are girding for more cuts under the newly signed federal debt deal.

"If I could think of a better word than outrageous, I would come up with it," said Steve Brenton, president of the Wisconsin Hospital Association.

Even Medicare says it is concerned about "manipulation" of its inpatient payment rules to create big rewards for one state at the expense of others.

Hospitals in 41 states will lose money as result of the change. The biggest loser: New York, which is out $47.5 million.

Seven states come out ahead, though none do as well as Massachusetts. The runner-up, New Jersey, stands to gain $54 million, or about 20 percent of the Massachusetts windfall.

President Barack Obama's health care overhaul was supposed to open the way for reforms to Medicare's byzantine payment system. Critics say this latest twist will encourage hospitals and other big players to game the system in a scramble for increasingly scarce taxpayer dollars.

The health care law "was to usher in a new era, based on innovations that focused on quality improvement and more efficient health care," said Herb Kuhn, president of the Missouri Hospital Association. "What we are seeing is innovation in the area of how to manipulate the payment system."

The head of the Massachusetts Hospital Association defended the change. "We do not see this as a manipulation of the rules," said Lynn Nicholas. She said the higher payments will help compensate Massachusetts hospitals for a Medicare policy change a few years ago that cost them hundreds of millions.

Massachusetts Democratic Sen. John Kerry, a co-sponsor of the health care law amendment, was also steadfast.

"When (Medicare) changed the rules five years ago, the rest of the country gained at our expense and Massachusetts took a big hit," Kerry said in a statement. "These new rules just provide some protection."

The American Hospital Association supported the change when the law was being debated. An official there now says hospitals didn't understand what they were getting with the obscure provision.

The saga of how Massachusetts scored big could come straight from a lobbyist's playbook.

It goes back a few years and twists and turns through Medicare's mind-boggling payment rules.

Those rules include a factor that's used to adjust payments to hospitals for the difference in labor costs around the country. The adjustments cannot lead to any increase in overall Medicare spending, so that automatically sets up the potential for winners and losers.

On top of that, another rule says that the labor cost factor for a hospital in an urban area of a state cannot be less than for that state's rural areas.

That's where two small hospitals on Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard, islands off the Massachusetts coast popular with vacationers, come into the picture.

Those hospitals had been operating as "critical access hospitals," reimbursed by Medicare at special rates that usually work out to be top tier.

Then, in 2007, according to Kuhn, mainland hospitals persuaded them to reclassify themselves as "rural" hospitals. That put them back under the same payment rules as the mainland hospitals. What followed was a sort of domino effect.

Since labor costs are relatively high on the islands, it had the effect of raising rural costs in the entire state. In turn, that led to higher payments for urban hospitals. The mainland hospitals also agreed to reimburse the island hospitals for any financial losses as a result of the change.

Changing from "critical access" to "rural" hospitals was totally legitimate, Nicholas said.

"They were fully qualified to do that," she said. "That hurt them individually financially, but because of their relationship with the overall system they were able to subsidize those losses."

Medicare put up roadblocks to the change, and for a while it looked like the feds had won out. Then the health care overhaul passed, turning the tables.

Medicare officials did not respond to a request for an interview. But in another regulation issued this year, the agency expressed "concern" with what it termed the "manipulation" of its rules to win an 8 percent increase for one state at the expense of others.

The new payment rates take effect Oct. 1.

In addition to Massachusetts and New Jersey, other states that come out ahead — for a variety of reasons — are Alaska, California, Colorado, Connecticut and New Hampshire. Hospitals in Wyoming break even. And Maryland hospitals have long been paid under a different system.

Every other state loses.

Palmer Board of Health orders Joseph Martowski to clean up 3030 Main St. in Bondsville

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Joseph Martowski was told that the items outside the house are in excess of the 50 cubic feet of junk and debris allowed under town ordinances.

IMG_1288.jpgThe property at 3030 Main St. in Bondsville.

PALMER - The Board of Health unanimously agreed at its meeting Tuesday that Joseph Martowski is in violation of a town ordinance that prohibits keeping a substantial amount of junk or debris in the public view, and gave him 30 days to remove the items piled at 3030 Main St. in the Bondsville section.

Martowski vehemently disagreed with the board, saying "there's no violation. There is no trash. There is no debris."

"Your law is too vague. It's useless," Martowski said.

He was told that the items outside the house are in excess of the 50 cubic feet of junk and debris allowed under town ordinances.

Martowski seized upon a typo that was in a letter sent to him by the Board of Health that stated "50 cubic yards" that was quoted in a previous newspaper article about the issue.
He was told repeatedly that the law states "50 cubic feet" and also was told that a copy of the ordinance was sent to him with the correct language to review.

Martowski argued that the items outside the property are for sale and that the property is in an area zoned business. He said he is "grandfathered in" as he had the property before the ordinance was adopted.

"This has been an ongoing problem for a long time," health board member Jayne Heede said.

Martowski asked who exactly has been complaining about the property, and board members responded that they have received verbal complaints, nothing in writing.

"The Board of Health is reacting to constant complaints about that property," health board member John J. Lukaskiewicz said.

"We have an obligation to respond to them," Heede said.

Calling the hearing "nonsense," Martowski said he plans to appeal the board's decision and wants it dismissed.

Joe Gulluni, who said he owns property next to Martowski at 3022-3026 Main St., said that three years ago, the property was cleaned up, "but slowly but surely everything's come back again." Gulluni asked Martowski why he can't just agree to clean it up.

Martowski also said that nothing on the property belongs to him, but would not say to whom it belongs. There is a dryer and grills, and other assorted items, piled outside 3030 Main St. Martowski was seen outside the property sifting through items in the hours before the hearing.

Martowski was notified of the issues with the property after Health Agent Lorri McCool inspected it in May; he requested the hearing.

Assessor's records show the owner is Deutsche Bank National Trust of California. The property was foreclosed on in 2009; Martowski bought the property in 2006, according to the assessor's office.

Martowski told the board where he lives is "immaterial" and that he also lives in Florida and Maine.

"I have a lot of homes," Martowski said.

Donations have replaced kindergarten teaching supplies at tornado-damaged Munger Hill School in Westfield

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Teaching supplies in both kindergarten classrooms were destroyed by the June 1 tornado.

080211 munger hill kindergarten.jpgMunger Hill Elementary School kindergarten teachers Mary L. Yvon, foreground, and Kathleen M. Farris sort through donated items Tuesday at the Westfield school.

WESTFIELDMunger Hill Elementary School kindergarten teachers Mary L. Yvon and Kathleen M. Farris are overwhelmed by public generosity that, since June 1, has virtually restored all their teaching tools needed to welcome their new pupils next month.

“Just unbelievable,” said Yvon of the outpouring. “Lots of people are reaching out to us in a time of need. This is a huge blessing,” added Farris.

Donations ranged from a envelope full of proceeds from a first-grader’s lemonade stand to an ongoing book drive at the Westerly, R.I., Public Library, the “tens of thousands of dollars worth of supplies and materials are being restored,” Farris said.

“With everything coming in, I just feel so fortunate,” said Yvon. “Because of the way people and businesses have, and are, donating, and the spirit in which it was given, would restore anyone’s faith in humanity.”

Yvon and Farris’ classrooms were all but destroyed at 4:18 p.m. June 1, when a tornado struck Westfield on its way to West Springfield, Springfield, Wilbraham, Monson, Brimfield, Sturbridge and Southbridge.

Most teaching supplies and materials were blown around the school and soaked with rain from a gaping 20-foot hole in the school’s roof.

Yvon and Farris said all materials were destroyed, including a book entitled “The Monkey and the Alligator” that Yvon has read to her kindergarten students for more than 30 years.

Donations have come from Westfield businesses and organizations such as Staples Inc., WalMart, the Munger Hill Parent-Teachers Organization, Lucky Nails and Amelia Park.

They have also come from such faraway places as Hingham High School, Wilwood School, Mass Child, Manchester High School and Asylum Hill Choice in Hartford, people and organizations in Albany, N.Y., and Scholastic Weekly Reader.

Westfield Kiwanis promised a donation this week.

Many items received are slightly used, but most are brand new, the teachers said.

“Many of the donations, regardless of individual or business, are the result of friends knowing people and those people helping without even being asked,”said Farris.

Materials and supplies range from pencils and markers, blocks and games, to folders and index cards.

School Department Operations Director Frank B. Maher Jr. signed $40,000 in contracts last week that will lead to repairs to the roof, classrooms including carpeting, exterior and interior lighting and a new flag pole for Munger Hill School.

Westfield’s public schools open for the 2011-2012 school year on Aug. 29, but kindergarten pupils begin their full schedule on Sept. 6.

Yvon and Farris, along with kindergarten teacher Amy Wagner, will each welcome 20 new pupils.


Men arrested for allegedly trying to rob and kill pizza delivery woman charged for 2010 near fatal shooting

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Cecil Grant and Derrick Newkirk are facing felony charges for what police say was a near fatal shooting that happened in August almost a year ago.

Hartford Arrests.jpgCecil Grant, left, and Derrick Newkirk

HARTFORD, Conn. - Two men arrested in July for their alleged part in the attempted robbery and attempted murder of a pizza delivery woman in Hartford are facing a new set of charges stemming from another almost fatal shooting.

The Hartford Shooting Task Force announced that Cecil Grant of 27 Orange St., and Derrick Newkirk of 55 Elmer St, both 19-year-old Hartford residents already in custody, were additionally charged for a drive-by shooting that took place on Aug. 20, 2010.

Hartford police said that on that date around 1 a.m., officers were called to investigate a drive-by shooting in front of 45 East St. Witnesses reported that two men, who police allege was Grant and Newkirk, were in a car that fired several shots into another vehicle, striking a victim in the face and jaw. The victim lived but police say he is still recovering from the serious injuries.

The closure of this year-old shooting case is the latest by the Hartford Shooting Task Force since it was reinstated by Hartford mayor Pedro E. Segarra at the beginning of July.

In this case, both Grant and Newkirk were charged with attempted murder, first-degree assault and three counts of criminal attempt to commit first degree assault. Newkirk was also charged with unlawful discharge of a firearm and criminal use of a firearm while in commission of a felony.

Both men, who are already facing felonies following a May 1 incident that left a pizza delivery woman with bullet wounds, are awaiting further court proceedings and being held in lieu of $500,000 bonds.

"The impact of the shooting team is being felt throughout the city," Segarra said. "Despite the recent success, however, I am resolute in my commitment to continue working with all of the stakeholders to provide them with the tools they need to apprehend violent individuals and ensure they remain incarcerated and are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law."

Hartford Police Chief Daryl K. Roberts said, "The violence perpetrated by these individuals has left two shooting victims with serious injuries from which they continue to recover; there lives have been changed forever. I congratulate all the members of the Hartford Shooting (Task Force) for their pursuit and apprehension of Newkirk and Grant, who will now face the consequences for violent actions."

The Hartford Shooting Team is a partnership between the Hartford Police Department, Office of the Hartford State's Attorney, Office of the Chief State's Attorney, the Connecticut State Police, the Department of Corrections, and the East Hartford, West Hartford and Manchester police departments. It is charged with investigating gun violence and bring those responsible for such violence to prosecution.

Elizabeth Grimaldi offers to donate 12-acre parcel to Agawam

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Grimaldi does not feel she has the ability to develop the parcel, and doesn't want to keep paying taxes on it.

AGAWAM – The city is on track to accept a donation of 12 acres of land off the south side of School Street to set aside for conservation and open space.

Mayor Richard A. Cohen has forwarded a request to accept the land to the City Council. The council received the request at its meeting Monday and is expected to discuss the proposal when it meets Sept. 6.

The mayor said Monday he favors accepting the land, which is owned by Realtor Elizabeth M. Grimaldi of Grimaldi & Burzdak Real Estate. The parcel is near School Street Park and is not suitable for building because it has wetlands, according to the mayor.

At an assessment of $142,000, the parcel does not generate much in the way of property taxes for the city, the mayor said.

“She is very generous to the town and very generous to the Senior Center, too,” Cohen said of Grimaldi.

The mayor said both the Planning Board and the Conservation Commission have recommended the city accept the parcel to be preserved for conservation and open space.

Grimaldi said the address of the land is 0 School St. and it is located on the south side of the street across from Beverly Lane. The parcel is heavily wooded and has wetlands, according to her.

The land generates a yearly property tax bill of about $2,000, Grimaldi said.

“I don’t want to pay taxes on it. I have owned it for at least 20 years,” Grimaldi said when asked why she wants to give the land to the city.

At the age of 79, Grimaldi said she is no longer up to the task of developing the property.

The landowner said if the city does not want the parcel she will donate it to a church or a charity.

More to FAA shutdown than air service subsidies

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4,000 FAA employees have been furloughed, more than 200 construction projects have been halted and an estimated 70,000 other private-sector workers affected.

Harry Reid, Charles SchumerSen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., left, accompanied by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev., gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2011, to talk about the need to overcome the partisan standoff over a bill to end the partial shutdown of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

By JOAN LOWY, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — On the surface, the partial shutdown of the Federal Aviation Administration is about whether to cut $16 million in air service subsidies, a pretty small amount in this town. Underneath are layers upon layers of political gamesmanship that, at its heart, is about whether Democrats or Republicans get to call the shots in Congress.

The immediate price is high. Already, 4,000 FAA employees have been furloughed, more than 200 construction projects have been halted and an estimated 70,000 other private-sector workers affected. Air traffic controllers and safety inspectors have remained on the job because the agency still has money from another pool of funds to pay them.

The government has been losing about $30 million a day in uncollected airline ticket taxes since the shutdown began on July 23. If it's not resolved until after Congress returns from its August recess in early September, lost revenue will tally about $1.2 billion.

The political stakes are even higher.

Democrats complain that Republicans, by manufacturing crisis after crisis, are trying to force them to accept painful policies that haven't been negotiated through normal legislative processes.

Earlier this year, it was the prospect of a government shutdown over tax breaks for higher-income Americans. More recently it was a potential default on the government's financial obligations. Now it's a continued shutdown of the FAA unless Democrats accept the air service subsidy cuts.

"This is becoming a very disturbing pattern: A small, uncompromising group, feeling the righteousness of their cause, hurt tens of thousands of innocent people and takes them hostage until they get their complete way," Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said. "These debates should not be determined by which side is willing to take the most casualties."

Republicans said they have to use the tools available to them because Democrats are unreasonable about cutting spending.

Ray LaHoodFILE - In this July 21, 2011, file photo, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood talks in Washington. Lawmakers dug in Tuesday, July 26, 2011, for what is shaping up to be a protracted fight over legislation necessary to end a partial shutdown of the Federal Aviation Administration even as the economic and social consequences of the shutdown widened. LaHood said he unaware of any negotiations to end the legislative stalemate between the House and Senate that permitted the FAA’s operating authority to expire at midnight on July 22. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

"If we're having this fight over $16 million in subsidies, how are they going to get trillions (of dollars in cuts) from government? It's not a good start," Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said in an interview with The Associated Press. "This may be emblematic of what we face getting any cuts."

But Democrats said the spending cuts aren't the real issue. They said that if they accept the air service cuts now, Republicans will demand a higher price when the next short-term FAA extension bill must be passed, which is expected to be in mid-September.

Mica made the first move leading up to the shutdown in July when he attached a provision eliminating subsidies for air service to 13 rural communities to a bill to extend FAA's operating authority, which was due to expire shortly. The FAA has been operating under a series of 20 short-term extension bills since 2007, when the agency's last long-term funding bill expired.

The Senate approved a long-term bill in February and the House its own bill in April. More than 200 differences between the two bills have been worked out, but a dozen thorny issues remain.

One of those issues is the air service program, which was created after airlines were deregulated in 1978. It pays airlines to fly less profitable routes to remote communities. The entire program costs about $200 million a year, about the same as what the government is losing each week the FAA shutdown continues. Critics say some of the communities don't deserve aid because they are within a reasonable drive of a hub airport or because their subsidies are exorbitantly high — more than $1,000 per passenger.

Since both bills would reduce funding for the program, although in very different ways, it has been clear for months that some cuts will be made, lawmakers said.

But the most politically difficult issue involves a labor provision in the House long-term bill. Republicans want to overturn a National Mediation Board rule approved last year that allows airline and railroad employees to form a union by a simple majority of those voting. Under the old rule, workers who didn't vote were treated as "no" votes.

Democrats and union officials say the change puts airline and railroad elections under the same democratic rules required for unionizing all other companies. But Republicans say the new rule reverses 75 years of precedent to favor labor unions.

The GOP labor provision has the backing of the airline industry. The biggest beneficiary would be Delta Air Lines, the largest carrier whose workers aren't primarily union members.

Last month, in comments to the House Rules Committee and separately to reporters, Mica said the labor provision was the only issue standing in the way of the House and Senate reaching an agreement on a long-term FAA bill. He said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, R-Nev., has refused to negotiate with Republicans on the issue.

"There is only one issue — have I not been clear? It's up to Mr. Reid," Mica told the committee. He added that including the subsidy cuts to the extension bill "forces the Senate's hand to act."

One of the communities that would lose subsidized service is Morgantown, W.Va., in the home state of Democratic Sen. Jay Rockefeller, Mica's Senate counterpart. Reid and Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which handles the tax aspects of the bills, also have communities on the list.

Besides Morgantown, the cities on the list are Athens, Ga.; Glendive, Mont.; Alamogordo, N.M.; Ely, Nev.; Jamestown, N.Y.; Bradford, Pa.; Hagerstown, Md.; Jonesboro, Ark.; Johnstown, Pa.; Franklin/Oil City, Pa.; Lancaster, Pa.; and Jackson, Tenn.

"Yes, I did work with our leadership to find some pressure points to get leverage on the (long-term) bill," Mica told the AP. "I didn't ask for a lot."

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas, the senior Senate GOP negotiator on the FAA bill, called Mica's inclusion of the subsidy cuts in the extension bill a "procedural hand grenade."

It has been House Republicans who have refused to negotiate with the Senate unless Democrats agreed to concessions on the labor issue, Hutchison said.

The House bill was approved on July 20 by a mostly party-line vote. Senate Democrats have introduced their own FAA extension bill with no strings attached, but Republicans have repeatedly blocked votes on the measure. Democrats have responded in kind, blocking votes on the House-passed bill containing the subsidy cuts.

A few days ago, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, indicated to Democrats that he'd be willing to accept their extension bill without the subsidy cuts in exchange for concessions on the labor issue, but Democrats refused the offer, Rockefeller said.

Boehner didn't respond to a request for comment.

Roads to be closed for paving projects in Longmeadow

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Roads closed will include Forest Glen Road, Laurel Street and Williams Street.

LONGMEADOW – Several streets will be closed for paving and related work from Aug. 8 to 31. Roads will be closed from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. No on-street parking will be permitted during the paving.

Roads closed during the week of Aug. 8 include Forest Glen Road, Laurel Street and Williams Street.

For the week of Aug. 22 the intersection of Villa and Converse streets, Highland and Converse streets, and Homecrest and Converse streets will be closed.

During the Aug. 29 week, Converse Street from Laurel Street to Dickinson Street will be closed.

For more information call the Department of Public Works at (413) 567-3400

AM News Links: State regulations set to hurt craft breweries across Massachusetts; Outrage builds after homeless man dies following reported beating by 6 cops; and more

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A Pittsfield High School staffer admits to attacking 15-year-old student; An in-depth look inside the famine crisis in Somalia; and more of the morning's headlines.

Somalia Drought Nune Abdil, 2, a malnourished child from southern Somalia get treatment in Banadir hospital in Mogadishu, Saturday, July 16, 2011.. Thousands of people have arrived in Mogadishu over the past two weeks seeking assistance and the number is increasing by the day, due to lack of water and food. The worst drought in the Horn of Africa has sparked a severe food crisis and high malnutrition rates, with parts of Kenya and Somalia experiencing pre-famine conditions, the United Nations has said. More than 10 million people are now affected in drought-stricken areas of Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and Uganda and the situation is deteriorating. (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh)
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