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Accident on I-91 South near exit 17 snarls traffic

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An accident on Interstate 91 southbound near exit 17 has backed up traffic for Friday morning commuters.

I-91 Traffic04.08.2011 | HOLYOKE - Traffic sits at a standstill following an early morning crash on Interstate 91.

UPDATE, 7:40 a.m.: The accident scene has been cleared and all lanes are open, MassDOT reports via Twitter.

HOLYOKE -- A roll-over accident on Interstate 91 southbound near exit 17 backed up traffic for Friday morning commuters.

Just before 7 a.m., Massachusetts State Police responded to the scene and traffic has been backed up on the Exit 17 on-ramp ever since.

Gallery preview
The Mass. Department of Transportation issued a notice via Twitter stating that I-91 southbound at Easthampton Road is closed.

Troopers at the Northampton barracks reported that the male driver sustained a minor abrasion to his head and that the cause of the one-car accident is under investigation.

Drivers should avoid this portion of the highway until the scene is cleared.

Republican reporter Conor Berry contributed to this report.


AM News Links: Connecticut boy who shot dad in trouble again, fire victim tackles photographer and more

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Connecticut boy draws fire for shooting gun, a barn blaze brouhaha and more of the morning's news

ben-affleck-ap.jpgBen Affleck says he's interested in role in new "Gatsby" film.

NOTE: Users of modern browsers can open each link in a new tab by holding 'control' ('command' on a Mac) and clicking each link.

Sunrise report: Forecast, poll and more for Friday April 8

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Today's poll: Do you expect a government shutdown to directly impact your life?

04.06.2011 | CHICOPEE - Gary Lareau and Norman Rivet (in the background) of the Chicopee Parks Department prepare the grounds of the Danny Dulchinos Baseball Field for a high school baseball game later in the day.

The Forecast

Skipping ahead to Monday, temperatures may approach 80 degrees. Crazy, right?

Well, as abc40 / Fox 6 meteorologist Mike Masco pointed out yesterday, it's not uncommon for early April to flirt with summer-like temperatures. And, indeed, look at some of the highs for April 2010:

  • April 5: 75
  • April 6: 72
  • April 7: 91 (!)
  • April 8: 80

... and then the high on April 9 was 55.

The National Weather Service is still calling for a fine Saturday -- sunny and in the mid-60s -- but Sunday could bring some clouds and rain.

Find the full forecast here.




Today's Poll

With a potential government shutdown looming, President Barack Obama said he did not have "wild optimism" that lawmakers will reach an agreement Friday.

A temporary federal spending measure expires at midnight; after that, it's lights out, resulting in furloughs of hundreds of thousands of workers and the services they provide. Of the latest efforts to avert the shutdown, the AP reports:

The aides were trying to cobble together a deal on how much federal spending to slash, where to cut it and what caveats to attach as part of a bill to fund the government through Sept. 30. A temporary federal spending measure expires at midnight Friday.

This morning, House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer said talks have progressed "70 percent of the way on the numbers."

What do you think -- do you expect a government shutdown to directly impact your life? Check out the AP's "How would a government shutdown affect you?", and vote in our poll.

Thursday's results: Yesterday, we asked, "Do you agree with Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni's decision to end prosecution against Melvin Jones III on drug and resisting arrest charges?" 28 people voted. 67.86% chose "no," and 32.14% chose "yes."




Thursday's Top 5

The top 5 headlines on MassLive.com on April 7 were:

  1. 'Glee': Jonathan Groff discusses return of Jesse St. James, new film

  2. 'American Idol': Pia Toscano eliminated in shocking results show

  3. Springfield school bus drivers fed up with student harassment, violence and lack of action by administrators

  4. Western Massachusetts on tap for burst of 'gorgeous' weather

  5. Fox News drops Glenn Beck show; cites low ratings, advertiser boycott



Quote of the Day

"Tony's been the chief in Holyoke for 10 years and everyone in the country knows who he is. I've been the police chief in Chicopee for 20 years and half the people in the city don't know who I am."

— Chicopee Chief of Police John Ferraro, speaking at Thursday's retirement roast for Holyoke Chief of Police Anthony R. Scott. Read a "What They Said" recap of the event here.

Time's up: Obama and GOP scramble to halt government shutdown

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Obama said he still hoped to announce an agreement on Friday but did not have "wild optimism."

government-shutdown.jpgPresident Barack Obama walks to the podium to speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington after meeting with House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., regarding the budget and possible government shutdown Thursday, April 7, 2011.

WASHINGTON — Uncomfortably close to a deadline, President Barack Obama and top congressional leaders have only hours to avert a Friday midnight government shutdown that all sides say would inconvenience millions of people and damage a still fragile economy.

Obama said he still hoped to announce an agreement on Friday but did not have "wild optimism."

In revealing nothing about what still divides them, Obama and the lawmakers, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., all said another late night of talks in the Oval Office had narrowed their differences over cutting federal spending and other matters.

But Obama said ominously that the machinery of a shutdown was already in motion.

"I expect an answer in the morning," Obama told reporters Thursday evening as representatives from the White House and Capitol Hill plunged ahead with negotiations into the night.

The aides were trying to cobble together a deal on how much federal spending to slash, where to cut it and what caveats to attach as part of a bill to fund the government through Sept. 30. A temporary federal spending measure expires at midnight Friday.

As the pressure mounted, Obama abruptly postponed plans to promote his agenda in Indiana on Friday.

For a nation eager to trim to federal spending but also weary of Washington bickering, the spending showdown had real implications.

More coverage:

A closure would mean the furloughs of hundreds of thousands of workers and the services they provide, from processing many tax refunds to approving business loans. Medical research would be disrupted, national parks would close and most travel visa and passport services would stop, among many others.

Obama spoke after a double-barreled day of meetings with Boehner and Reid. The three have held four such meetings this week.

Throughout Thursday, the president, Reid and Boehner bargained and blustered by turns, struggling to settle their differences while maneuvering to avoid any political blame if they failed.

With the economy just now beginning to create jobs in large numbers, the president said a shutdown would damage the recovery.

"For us to go backwards because Washington couldn't get its act together is just unacceptable," he said.

But agreement remained elusive.

Republicans passed legislation through the House at midday to fund the Pentagon for six months, cut $12 billion in domestic spending and keep the federal bureaucracy humming for an additional week.

"There is absolutely no policy reason for the Senate to not follow the House in taking these responsible steps to support our troops and to keep our government open," Boehner said.

Obama flashed a veto threat even before the bill passed on a 247-181, mostly party-line vote. The administration issued a statement calling it "a distraction from the real work" of agreeing on legislation to cover the six months left in the current fiscal year, and there was no indication Reid would allow a vote on it.

As they left the White House after the evening meeting, Reid and Boehner issued a brief written statement that said they had narrowed their disagreements and said they would "continue to work through the night to attempt to resolve" the remaining ones.

On Friday morning, House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said that talks have progressed "70 percent of the way on the numbers," but said the two sides are still squabbling about Republican riders to the legislation that would change abortion and environmental policy.

"There's no deal yet," he said on NBC's "Today" show. Hoyer blamed Republicans, saying that "when we were in charge of the House and had disagreements with George Bush, we compromised." He said he's "embarrassed" that Congress has put the country on the brink of shutdown, calling it "inappropriate."

Republicans want deeper spending cuts than the Democrats favor and also are pressing for provisions to cut off federal funds to Planned Parenthood and stop the Environmental Protection Agency from issuing numerous anti-pollution regulations.

"They're difficult issues. They're important to both sides and so I'm not yet prepared to express wild optimism," the president said.

For all the brinksmanship — and the promise of more in the Senate on Friday — there was agreement that a shutdown posed risks to an economy still recovering from the worst recession in decades.

The political fallout was less predictable, especially with control of government divided and dozens of new tea party-backed Republicans part of a new GOP majority in the House. Twin government shutdowns in the mid-1990s damaged Republicans, then new to power in Congress, and helped President Bill Clinton win re-election in 1996.

This time, individual lawmakers worked to insulate themselves from any political damage. Sens. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Ben Nelson, D-Neb., both seeking new terms in 2012, became the latest to announce they would not accept their congressional salary during any shutdown. "If retroactive pay is later approved, I'll direct my part to the U.S. Treasury," Nelson said. Some two dozen senators of both parties scurried to make similar pledges.

One day before the shutdown deadline, events unfolded in rapid succession.

In a shift in position, Obama said he would sign a short-term measure keeping the government running even without an agreement to give negotiations more time to succeed.

At the White House, a senior budget official said the impact of a shutdown "will be immediately felt on the economy."

For all the tough talk, it did not appear the two parties were too far from a deal.

Officials in both parties said that in the past day or so, Democrats had tacitly agreed to slightly deeper spending cuts than they had been willing to embrace, at least $34.5 billion in reductions.

Agreement on that point was conditional on key details, but it was a higher total than the $33 billion that had been under consideration.

It also was less than the $40 billion Boehner floated earlier in the week — a number that Republicans indicated was flexible.

There also were hints of Republican flexibility on a ban they were seeking to deny federal funds to Planned Parenthood. Officials said that in talks at the White House that stretched on after midnight on Wednesday, Republicans had suggested giving state officials discretion in deciding how to distribute family planning funds that now go directly from the federal government to organizations such as Planned Parenthood.

That would presumably leave a decision on funding to governors, many of whom oppose abortion, and sever the financial link between the federal government and an organization that Republicans assail as the country's biggest provider of abortions.

Holyoke police charge 4 juveniles in what is described as unprovoked attack on 51-year-old man with sticks, pipes and bottles

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The victim of the Thursday night attack, who suffered abrasions and was bleeding, declined medical treatment.

1999 holyoke police car.jpg

HOLYOKE – Four juveniles, armed with pipes, sticks and bottles, have been charged in what police describe as an unprovoked attack Thursday night on a 51-year-old man who had been collecting cans and bottles on Jackson Street.

The incident started shortly before 9 p.m. when the youths approached the man near 82 Jackson St. and tipped over the shopping cart that he had been pushing, Capt. Arthur R. Monfette.

The victim, visibly upset when police arrived, told the officers that he did not know his attackers and that the assault was completely unprovoked.

“There doesn’t even look like there is a motive for this,” Monfette said. “It looks like they did it for fun.”

The victim, who suffered abrasions on his shins and hands and was bleeding, declined medical assistance, Monfette said.

The suspects fled north on Commercial Street and police apprehended them a short time later. Two of the suspects are 12-years-old and two are 14, police documents state.

Neighbors corroborated the story and the victim subsequently identified the four as being his attackers. Each of the suspects faces a single count of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

Your comments: readers react to rally by immigration advocates at the Statehouse in Boston

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Immigration advocates gather at the Statehouse in Boston in an effort to show the voting power of the immigrant community.

immigration.JPGFILE PHOTO - People against proposed United States immigration reform gather in Boston. April 10, 2006.

Immigrant advocates held a public gathering at the Massachusetts Statehouse on Wednesday for the 15th annual “Immigrant Day.”

Many immigrants from across the state, including the surrounding areas, attended the rally in an effort to demonstrate the voting power of the immigrant population.

Immigration rights advocates have voiced their opinions loudly and clearly recently. In December advocates were planning a rally at the statehouse in order to protest a decision made by Gov. Deval Patrick to join a federal program which checks the immigration status of individuals who are arrested.

In February, after the DREAM Act was defeated at the federal level, immigration advocates refocused their energy on an attempt to convince state lawmakers to reconsider a law that would allow illegal immigrant students who can prove state residency would be eligible for in-state tuition rates.

Here is what some of our readers had to say about the most recent rally by immigrant advocates:

whoknows1 says: In-state college tuition for illegal immigrants? That is without a doubt the dumbest and most insulting thing any politician could ever support. I kill myself working to put my kids through college and you want to make it free for people breaking the law? How can anybody make an argument for that? I am not against immigrants - my grandparents were immigrants - I AM AGAINST ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS!!! There is a right way and a wrong way to enter our country! Please support the right way! Illegal is Illegal - let's keep it that way!! Illegal immigrants should not have the same rights as citizens! NONE!!! ILLEGAL _ ILLEGAL_ ILLEGAL

pronoblem says: With all the talk of "Freedom Isn't Free" and the desire to "Liberate" people in foreign lands with TRILLIONS of war chest tax dollars you'd think that the drop in the bucket costs of education, healthcare and whatnot for the immigrants would be embraced by everyone. I don't get politics.

ThisMachineKillsFascists says: There's a lot of terrified older white people in this country. They see America getting browner and it freaks them out. Lot of 'em are Republicans, because the GOP caters to their xenophobia.

Bendell says: Soults said immigrants and their advocates intended to lobby lawmakers throughout the session now to stave off potential cuts to English language classes and health care programs for legal immigrants. come on now, I'd like to see the enrollment for the English speaking class,Probably a hand full, and court ordered may I add,I do know about their health care programs, all you have to do is walk into any emergency room to view that.

Have a comment you would like to add? Just visit the original story.

Northampton police probe theft of cast-iron urn, weighing as much as 300 pounds, from yard of Bridge Road home

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The urn has a value of about $250, police said.

030911 Northampton Police Car Police Cruiser 103.09.11 | Photo by Julian Feller-Cohen – A Northampton Police Department cruiser.

NORTHAMPTON – Police are probing the theft of a distinctive cast-iron urn, which weighs some 200 to 300 pounds, from the yard of a Bridge Road home late Thursday morning.

Capt. Scott A. Savino said the urn is green and decorated with a pair apiece of cherubs and goat heads.

The owner of the urn told police that the urn had been in its rightful place when she left her home about 11 a.m. When she returned around noon, the urn was gone, Savino said.

A second urn, similar to the one taken, was left untouched. Each urn is worth about $250, Savino said.

It’s possible, Savino said, that the urn was stolen for the value of its metal. Such thefts have increased in recent years to do the soaring cost of metal.

Government shutdown: What impact would it have in Massachusetts?

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As Congress struggles to find consensus in Washington, failure to do so could have impacts in the Commonwealth.

government-shutdown.jpgPresident Barack Obama walks to the podium to speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington after meeting with House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., regarding the budget and possible government shutdown Thursday, April 7, 2011.

With just hours left on the clock, Congressional Republicans and Democrats are still wrestling over the federal budget before it expires at midnight Friday.

The Associated Press provides a run-down of how a failure to reach consensus by deadline would affect Americans.

U.S. Representative John Olver, D-Amherst, also released a list of frequently asked questions regarding a possible government shutdown.

Olver, who said in a statement that the possibility of a shutdown was "completely unacceptable," nevertheless acknowledged the "probability that the government will shut down when the current temporary budget expires at midnight." His FAQ outlined which services would continue:

Services that are deemed essential for the safety of human life and the protection of property will continue. This includes the armed forces, border patrol, law enforcement, fire fighting, and federal workers who provide medical care on the job. The Postal Service and the Federal Reserve, which are both self-funded, will also continue to operate. Read more »

More coverage:

The Boston Globe reports that there are 65,000 federal employees in the Commonwealth, and as many as 25 percent of them could be impacted. The Associated Press reports that would impact historical sights, and that Gov. Deval Patrick expressed concern for a number of federally-supported programs in the state.

"We're very concerned about the support for students who get federal aid for college, federal support of infrastructure, the continued flow of Medicaid dollars for MassHealth programs," Patrick said.

Pittsfield Mayor James Ruberto tells WBUR in Boston that his office is communicating with the office of U.S. Sen. John Kerry. Kerry, who called the stalemate "disgraceful," held a conference call with Massachusetts mayors and municipal leaders in advance of the shutdown.

The latest AP report sets the proposed spending cuts agreed upon by Congressional Republicans and the White House and Democrats at $38 billion, but leaders are still debating where those cuts will come from.

President Barack Obama said Thursday that the steps toward a government shutdown were already in progress.


Missing GlobalPost correspondent James Foley reportedly located in Libya

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Reports from Libyan and U.S. officials said that Foley, of Rochester, N.H., and three other journalists are expected to be taken to Tripoli and then released.

James Foley GlobalPost 4811.jpgThis undated still image from video released by GlobalPost.com, shows James Foley of Rochester, N.H., a freelance contributor for GlobalPost, in Benghazi, Libya. GlobalPost said it has been told Foley was taken prisoner in Libya on Tuesday, but is expected to be released along with three other journalists soon.

BOSTON – An American correspondent for GlobalPost.com taken prisoner by forces loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi has been located, the Boston-based international news website said Friday.

Reports from Libyan and U.S. officials say James Foley, of Rochester, N.H., and three other journalists are expected to be taken to Tripoli and then released, the inernational news website said. The other detained journalists are Clare Morgana Gillis, an American freelance journalist and contributor to The Atlantic; Spanish photographer Manu Brabo; and South African photographer Anton Hammerl.

GlobalPost President and CEO Philip Balboni said the news organization has not been able to independently confirm the reports about the journalists’ whereabouts.

“We are aware of reports coming out of Libya that our correspondent James Foley and the other journalists taken prisoner on Tuesday are now in the hands of the Libyan government and are safe,“ Balboni said in a statement. “We are not able to independently confirm these reports, but we are encouraged that a positive end to this situation may be closer at hand.“

New York-based Human Rights Watch said the journalists were taken captive Tuesday morning while reporting on the outskirts of Brega.

Foley regularly contributes videos and dispatches and had been traveling with Libyan rebels, said GlobalPost spokesman Rick Byrne.

Besides GlobalPost, Foley has written for a number of news organizations including Stars and Stripes and Al Jazeera. Foley has also appeared on PBS News Hour and sent video dispatches to CBS Nightly News.

Gillis has been based in the Middle East for a year and has written dispatches for The Atlantic, The Boston Globe, USA Today and the Christian Science Monitor, according to her website.

GlobalPost said it and other news organizations are working to make sure the journalists are released immediately.

Reporters Without Borders said about 100 foreign reporters are in Libya to cover the conflict between longtime leader Gadhafi and rebel forces.

Before founding GlobalPost, Balboni was president and CEO of New England Cable News.

Springfield juvenile court officer Daniel Curran pleads guilty to assault and battery

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He pleaded guilty to a reduced charge in connection with pinching a 15-year-old boy’s buttocks in an East Longmeadow health club.

022511_daniel_curran.jpgDaniel J. Curran, the Springfield juvenile court officer accused of indecently assaulting a 15-year-old boy in the locker room of an East Longmeadow health club, seen in Palmer District Court on February for a pretrial hearing.


PALMER
Daniel J. Curran, who has been on unpaid leave from his job as a Springfield juvenile court officer, plead guilty on Friday in Palmer District Court to a reduced charge in connection with pinching a 15-year-old boy’s buttocks in an East Longmeadow health club in 2009.

Curran’s job status was unclear Friday morning. He has been on unpaid leave since 2009, the year the incident happened.

Standing with his lawyer Michael O. Jennings, Curran, 39, said little except for his plea. He appeared before Judge Bethzaida Sanabria-Vega, who said Curran will be placed on probation for one year. Curran also must undergo counseling, and stay away from the victim, his family and the Healthtrax health club.

Curran, of Springfield, initially was charged with indecent assault and battery on a person 14 or over, which is a felony. That was reduced by the commonwealth to assault and battery, a misdemeanor. A conviction on the felony charge requires registration as a sex offender. A second charge of lewd, wanton and lascivious conduct was continued without a finding for one year.

Prosecutor Jennifer Fitzgerald described the events that happened two years ago. She said a 15-year-old boy went to exercise at a local fitness center in his hometown.

She said he swims in the pool, then goes to take a shower, and hears a nearby shower turn on. He feels someone “pinching his buttocks area,” then sees a man who “definitely has an erection,” and appears to be masturbating, she said. That man beckoned to the boy and said “come on,” Fitzgerald said.

Fitzgerald said the boy “is terribly frightened,” gets dressed and reports the incident immediately to the health club staff. The boy also identified Curran as he walked by, she said.

Sanabria-Vega said she agreed with the district attorney’s recommendation for a guilty finding and probation for a year, which Jennings said they accepted.

Fitzgerald told the judge that the boy and his family were not in the courtroom, but supported the guilty finding. Fitzgerald described Curran’s behavior in the locker room as “reckless.” Curran also must pay a $50 victim witness fee and $65 per month probation fee.

Curran began work as court officer on Sept. 16, 2002 and made $51,799.18 annually.

Conn. woman accused in school bus brawl over trash

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Bridgeport police said 29-year-old Daisha Womack told officers she was driving behind the bus when her car was hit by things thrown out the bus windows.

Bridgeport, Conn. — Police in Connecticut say a woman annoyed by students throwing trash from a school bus climbed aboard at one of the stops and became involved in a fight that sent one student to the hospital.

Bridgeport police said 29-year-old Daisha Womack told officers she was driving behind the bus when her car was hit by things thrown out the bus windows. She got on the bus at one of the stops and allegedly confronted a student, when others jumped her.

Police said one student was taken to Saint Vincent's Medical Center after complaining of head pain from the Thursday afternoon scuffle. They said Friday that Womack was charged with criminal trespass, breach of peace, third-degree assault, and risk of injury to a minor. Her bond was set at $10,000.

Springfield police charge 32-year-old city resident Jose Marin with unarmed robbery in South End

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The suspect allegedly took his female victim into an alley and demanded money.

josemarincrop.jpgJose Marin

SPRINGFIELD – Police said they arrested a 32-year-old city man early Friday morning after he allegedly forced a woman into an alley in the South End and demanded money.

Sgt. John M. Delaney said that the distraught 27-year-old victim, who lives in Holyoke, flagged down police officers Daniel Billingsley and Michael McNally shortly after 12:30 a.m.

The woman told police that she had been walking on Main Street, near Marble Street, when the suspect came out of the shadows, put her into a headlock and grabbed her cell phone.

The suspect, Jose Marin, of 43 Central St., then took the woman into an alley and demanded money, Delaney, aide to Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said.

The robbery was interrupted, however, when the two officers, on routine patrol, passed by. They captured the suspect as he attempted to get away, Delaney said.

Marin was charged with unarmed robbery, Delaney said.

Springfield police raid North End apartment, arrest 44-year-old Daniel Sanchez for heroin

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Undercover narcotics detectives executed their search warrant about 6 p.m. Thursday night.

danielsanchez44crop.jpgDaniel Sanchez

SPRINGFIELD – Undercover narcotics detectives raided a North End apartment Thursday night and seized a large quantity of heroin and nearly $6,000 in cash.

Police charged Daniel Sanchez, 44, of 1506 Dwight St., with possession of heroin with intent to distribute and violation of a drug-free zone (Calhoun Park), Sgt. John M. Delaney said.

The raid, conducted under the direction of Sgt. Martin Ambrose at about 6 p.m., followed a two-week investigation, Delaney, aide to Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said.

Economic Impact Zone for Westfield downtown gains City Council support

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Councilor James Brown also gained Council support to investigate assistance from the UMass Center for Economic Development.

oct_2009 james brown westfield.jpgJames E. Brown Jr.

WESTFIELD – Ward 2 City Councilor James E. Brown Jr. wants the city to create additional efforts to attract and encourage business development in and around the city’s downtown area.

Brown, noting a new marketing strategy for the Elm Street corridor is already underway, said Friday additional work is needed to “ensure that Westfield can take advantage of any state and federal program that can assist in the city’s rebirth."

He was successful Thursday in gaining City Council support to consider establishment of an Economic Impact Zone for the downtown and the council will now work with Mayor Daniel M. Knapik, City Advancement Officer Jeffrey R. Daley and City Planner Lawrence B. Smith and others who are already working to market the city.

“The creation of an Economic Impact Zone will allow us to take advantage of any and all state and federal resources either those that currently exist or future new ones,” said Brown.

Brown also gained City Council support to investigate possible assistance from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst’'s Center for Economic Development. He wants UMass to conduct a “comprehensive study” on what he calls a “business advancement master plan” for the downtown.

“There are several efforts already underway to bring attention to revitalizing downtown. I just want to make sure no stone is unturned. We need everyone engaged in this effort. Everyone, all agencies and departments, must work together and be prepared to take advantage of anything that might come our way,” said Brown.

Smith suggested Friday that the city consider a market analysis and a business recruitment plan for the downtown.

“The analysis will identify what businesses will be supported in the downtown area and the recruitment plan will outline the steps that should be taken to attract new and maintain existing businesses,” said Smith.

The city last year completed a six-month review of the downtown that sought suggestions and recommendations from businesses and residents on ways to revitalize the area.

The volunteer Downtown Action Plan Committee is now in the process of prioritizing those recommendations. Also, the committee is working to identify and create out-reach programs that will involve various ethnic groups in and around the downtown.

The focus is on retention of existing business and the reuse of vacant storefronts and other buildings in the downtown, including Depot Square and Westfield River Front.

State Police track down Hernan Santana of Chicopee, charge him with leaving scene of April 1 Springfield crash

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Police tracked down Santana by a thumb print on a rum bottle found in the wrecked car.

massachusetts state police car icon.jpg

CHICOPEE - State police arrested 30-year-old Hernan J. Santana on Friday in connection with an April 1 accident in Springfield in which a stolen car fleeing police crashed into a van on St. James Avenue in Springfield, officials said.

State Police spokesman David Procopio said state police investigators tracked down Santana through forensic evidence, specifically a fingerprint found on a rum bottle found inside the wrecked Honda Accord that Santana abandoned after the accident.

Santana was arrested Friday morning in the presence of his lawyer. State police and the lawyer had been communicating with each other about Santana turning himself in since Wednesday when he learned that authorities were looking for him, Procopio said.

He was charged with receiving a stolen motor vehicle, negligent operation of a motor vehicle, two counts of leaving the scene of a personal injury accident, driving after license revocation, speeding, two counts of failure to stop for police, and vandalizing property.

Procopio said the thumb print matched prints on file for Santana. Troopers contacted the owner of the stolen car who said there was not a bottle in the car when it was stolen on Firglade Street in Springfield one day before the accident.

Police also found traces of blood, hair and skin on the windshield of the car, which corroborated witness statements that the man fleeing the accident had a bloody face, Procopio said. During the investigation, they learned that Santana was seen days after the accident wearing a hat to conceal a large cut over his eye.

A state police trooper began chasing the Honda April 1 at about 9:30 p.m. on Martha Street in Chicopee after learning the vehicle had been reported stolen. He eluded one trooper but was spotted again minutes later on St. James Avenue in Chicopee. As the trooper turned to begin pursuing him, the Honda crashed into a van at St. James Avenue and Princeton Street.

Two occupants of the van suffered minor injuries in the accident.

The case was investigated by troopers assigned to the Hampden County State Police Detective Unit and the Crime Scene Services Section.



Holyoke Council on Aging director Kathleen Bowler has little to say about fired employee case

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The $17,500 that officials determined to be missing in lunch fees collected at the Council on Aging over several years has been recovered.

082510 kathleen bowler.jpgKathleen Bowler, executive director of the Holyoke Council on Aging, responding to the firing of an employee after $17,500 was found missing, declined to discuss the issue of oversight in detail beyond saying Council on Aging and School Department officials are installing controls to avoid repeat of such a problem.

HOLYOKE – The department head responsible for overseeing the employee fired from the Council on Aging after $17,500 was determined to be missing said she realizes criticism will come regarding oversight of the situation.

“We addressed the issue when it came to light,” said Kathleen A. Bowler, executive director of the Council on Aging, on Tuesday.

The funds were recovered by claiming money from the employee’s retirement account, City Solicitor Lisa A. Ball said on Monday.

Ball declined to identify the employee, but said he had been fired when officials became aware of the problem early last month.

No arrests have been made in the case and the investigation, which involved the Police Department and city treasurer’s office, is finished, officials said.

The funds came from lunch fees of $1.75 per person collected over several years, officials said.

The case involved meals provided at the War Memorial, 310 Appleton St., where the Council on Aging is located, through the School Department lunch program. Such meals are provided for a fee at various off-school sites.

Bowler declined to discuss the issue of oversight in detail beyond saying Council on Aging and School Department officials are installing controls to avoid repeat of such a problem.

One change will be to have the lunch-fee money deposited in a city bank account weekly instead of monthly, the previous method, she said.

Thirty to 50 lunches are sold per day at the Council on Aging, she said.

The School Committee discussed the matter in closed-door session on Monday. The committee plans another executive session on the matter Monday at 5:30 p.m. at Dean Technical High School, 1045 Main St.

Meanwhile, mayoral candidate Alex B. Morse criticized Mayor Elaine A. Pluta, chairwoman of the School Committee, because he said she had handled the matter with secrecy. The community wants answers about the taxpayer funds, he said in an e-mail.

“As Mayor, I pledge to always be transparent, honest, and accountable to the citizens of Holyoke, and I will do absolutely everything in my power to ensure that taxpayer dollars never go to waste,” Morse said.

Pluta said the city solicitor advised her not to comment because it is a personnel matter.

Obituaries today: Miriam Cavanaugh was chairman of AIC English department

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Obituaries from The Republican.

04_08_11_Cavanaugh.jpgMiriam K. Cavanaugh

Miriam Katherine (Collins) Cavanaugh, of West Springfield, died March 23. Born in West Springfield, she graduated from West Springfield High School and received a BA degree from the University of Missouri. Returning to West Springfield, she became a reporter and feature writer for the Springfield Republican, covering labor. In 1967 she received a master's degree from Mount Holyoke College and went on to earn a Ph.D degree from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in English and American literature. Cavanaugh was a professor of English and American literature at American International College for 30 years, retiring in 1994. She served as chairman of AIC's English department. Cavanaugh also founded the college's Scholastic Press Forum and was its director for many years. Active in Democratic politics, she was a member of the West Springfield Democratic Town Committee and a delegate to the Democratic State Convention. For nine years she was a member of the West Springfield School Committee, serving two terms as chairman. In 2000 she was named a Democrat of the Century, earning a citation from the Massachusetts Senate and citations from Congress.

Obituaries from The Republican:


Springfield attic fire displaces 12 residents, 1 python, 2 lizards from Armory Street home

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The property was condemned after significant electrical problems were found.

armoryfire1.jpgSpringfield firefighters on a platform outside 25-27 Armory Street after emerging from the attic where a fire broke out.

SPRINGFIELD – A fire in the attic at 25-27 Armory St. Friday afternoon caused an estimated $70,000 damage in smoke and water damage, and resulted in the building being condemned when inspectors discovered significant wiring problems, officials said.

A total of 12 residents of two apartments, including six children, were displaced in the fire, said fire department spokesman Dennis Leger. The Pioneer Valley chapter of the American Red Cross were called to find temporary shelter.

The building, a 2 1/2 story wood frame less than a block away from Springfield Technical Community College, is owned by a landlord from Worcester, Leger said.

SCT fire 2.jpgView full sizeMichael Jusino, a resident of the first floor at 25-27 Armory St., holds pet snake Swiggles that he rescued from the apartment.

The fire was caused by electrical problems in the attic and had apparently been smoldering for a while, Leger said. Firefighters put down the fire quickly, but discovered problems with the wiring. The city Building Department ordered the building boarded up until repairs can be made.

Among the evacuated were first floor residents Jasmen Caraballa and Michael Jusino, and their pets, a 2-year-old ball python named Swiggles and two bearded dragons named Peaches and Skittles.

Caraballo said she was inside when she heard someone yelling fire. She didn't realize how serious it was until someone went out and saw smoke coming from the roof.
As she spoke, she cradled the two lizards on her shoulders trying to keep them warm. She wondered how long before they could go back inside or go somewhere warm.

Jusino said he went back inside to get their pets. The fireman were willing to rescue the lizards but drew the line at the snake, he said.

“They wouldn’t go near it,” he said.

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Surge in oil prices, threat of U.S. government shutdown weigh stocks down

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The Dow Jones industrial average lost 29 points to close at 12,380.

Spending Showdown 4811.jpgSusanne Brands, 22, left, and Mina Seljogi, 21, both interns at the American Foreign Service Association, attend a rally of U.S. diplomats and federal workers against the prospect of a government shutdown, Friday, in Washington. The threat of such a shutdown weighed heavily on Wall Street that day,

NEW YORK – A surge in oil and the threat of a government shutdown weighed on stocks Friday.

Investors kept one eye on Washington, where Republicans and Democrats were in the final day of talks to reach a budget agreement. Without a deal, the federal government is expected to stop all services that aren’t considered essential. That means most economic reports would be suspended. Sales of debt would continue.

Benchmark crude oil jumped $2.49 to settle at $112.79 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. That’s the highest price since Sept. 22, 2008.

Over the past two months, most stocks have fallen following large jumps in oil prices as investors worried that higher transportation costs would cut into company margins and consumer spending.

The Dow Jones industrial average lost 29.44 points, or 0.2 percent, to close at 12,380.05. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index slipped 5.34, or 0.4 percent, to 1,328.17. The Nasdaq composite lost 15.72, or 0.6 percent, to 2,780.42.

The Dow ended the week flat, while the S&P and Nasdaq lost 0.3 percent. All three indexes made gains in the previous two weeks.

Transportation companies fell. Delta Air Lines Inc. dropped 3.9 percent, and United Parcel Service Inc. lost 1 percent. Energy companies rose, leading the 10 industry groups within the S&P 500. Occidental Petroleum Corp. rose 2.6 percent, and Anadarko Petroleum Corp. rose 1.6 percent.

Todd Salamone, director of research at Schaeffer’s Investment Research, said most stocks tend to rise along with oil prices over the long term. “The recent breakdown in the pattern has largely been due to fears of supply shocks,” he said. “But the oil rally could also be attributed to a stronger world economy.”

World markets rose broadly. The Euro Stoxx 50, an index of European blue chips, gained 0.7 percent. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei index rose 1.9 percent.

Expedia Inc. rose 13 percent, the most in the S&P 500 index, after it said it would split off its TripAdvisor.com division.

More than two stocks fell for every one that rose on the New York Stock Exchange. Trading volume was 3.7 billion shares.

Aging software lets Pathfinder High School students see the future ... and it's not pretty

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School officials tried appealing to students' vanity in the latest anti-smoking effort by showing them how they would look after a lifetime of smoking cigarettes.

brian p odiorne.JPGPathfinder Regional Vocational Technical High School freshman Brian P. Odiorne, 15, sees his class picture, and then how he'll look at age 72 if he smokes or becomes obese. The school leased aging software to show students how poor choices could affect their looks.

PALMER – Students at Pathfinder Regional Vocational Technical High School got a glimpse of their future selves if they became obese, smoked cigarettes or spent too much time in the sun, and it wasn’t pretty.

“It was awful. There were spots everywhere, wrinkles. My face was chubbier,” said Corina L. Dembowski, 17.

“It wasn’t pretty. Everyone looked kind of bad,” said Ashlee M. Douillard, 17.

For “Kick Butts Day” last month, grants manager Christopher C. Pope leased high-tech aging software so students could see firsthand how their faces would be ravaged by smoking, the sun or by gaining too much weight.

Students could choose up to two out of three lifestyle factors (smoking, obesity or sun) and their results broadcast on the big screen during lunch for everyone to see. Dembowski and Douillard chose sun and obesity damage.

Pope reported that approximately 50 students signed up, and gave up their lunch and social time to see their faces age 60 years.

The software, developed by AprilAge.com, gradually aged the student up to age 72. The project was adopted by the junior health class, of which Dembowski and Douillard are members. They learned the software and tested it on each other before the March 24 unveiling in the cafeteria.

Pope said the school previously tried “scare tactic” approaches to keep kids from smoking, such as showing a smoker’s blackened lungs. This time, they tried appealing to their vanity. He hopes that the “CSI-style” software will make a bigger impact on their future decisions, and may even convince some who smoke to give it up.

“We’ve done all the other kinds of anti-smoking things, and their response is, ‘Yeah that won’t happen to me.’ But to see yourself age could make a difference,” Pope said.

To advertise the event, junior Melissa L. Landry, 17, said the health shop made posters, and Pope said he talked about it on announcements. Dembowski said all sorts of students tried out the software. Pope said students were riveted to the screen as they watched their peers “age” before their eyes.

“The program was supposed to scare you straight,” said Alexander A. Burbee, 17, another junior health class member.

Landry said the students who chose “smoking” as their vice aged the worst in the software.

Dembowski and Landry said the computer program made an impact, as students were talking about the pictures all week. They said some students said they are going to stop tanning, and a few talked about cutting back on smoking.

Freshman Brian P. Odiorne, 15, said he wanted to do it just to see how he would look in the future. He said the image of himself as a wrinkled, obese old man was shocking, and funny. Brian said he thought that bringing the software to Pathfinder was a good idea.

If one student is prevented from starting smoking, or if one stops smoking as a result of the program, it served its purpose, Pope said. He said buying the software is too expensive, but he plans on looking into grant opportunities, or possibly sharing the cost of the purchase with other schools.

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