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State study of Holyoke, Springfield, other communities, shows transient students struggle in school

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Housing advocates, social service agencies and schools need to work together to help mobile children.


HOLYOKE – More than 27 percent of the student population in Holyoke and 6,346 children in Springfield moved in and out of the schools last year.

Educators, social service providers and housing advocates joined together last week to discuss a study on student mobility and how it affects schools. The little-studied problem has dogged urban superintendents who see transient students struggle academically.

“Overall student mobility presents significant challenges that are hard to overcome,” said Lisa Famularo, vice president of research and evaluation for the Rennie Center.

The Boston-based educational think tank this week released a study of so-called gateway cities which have a large migrant population and are often economically depressed. A total of 11 city schools were studied including those in Springfield, Holyoke, Worcester and Pittsfield.

Many agreed part of the reason for the dramatic mobility is housing problems. The poor live in unstable neighborhoods, and many move often because they are ducking rent payments or looking for a better place to live.

Patricia Spradley, chief parent and community engagement officer in Springfield schools, said the issue is complex and requires many to work together.

“I don’t think parents understand the effect that moving has on their children,” she said.

The study showed children who move frequently often arrive at a new school with few academic records. Students tend to miss school because they take breaks of a couple of weeks or longer, especially those who may have immigrant or migrant parents who frequently visit their homelands, Famularo said.

“What we have to do after the report is to do something,” said Holyoke Superintendent David L. Dupont.

Dupont said he wants to open a transition academy for all children who move frequently. Those new children would attend small classes in a separate building to help them catch up and prepare for a regular classroom.

A smaller version of the program was tried in Holyoke about four years ago but the funding dried up. It also did not reach its full potential because it was held in a corridor of an existing school, instead of being separate, he said.

“I have a plan for this and I have support from the Holyoke School Committee,” Dupont said. “I need money and I need a place.”

Dupont estimated the program would cost about $750,000 to be run properly.

Kate Silva Moran, a seventh-grade teacher in Holyoke, talked about how disruptive it is to have as many as half the children in a class move in and out in a year.

“Kids are dropped off in the middle of class and they are expected to do what everyone else is doing,” she said.

The stable students in the class also tend to get frustrated with the disruptions when new children come in every week, she said.


Two men killed in fatal West Springfield auto accident were riding in a stolen vehicle, say police

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Killed were driver Israel Menendez, 20, of the Indian Orchard section of Springfield and passenger Jose Ortiz, 20 of Greenfield.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – The two people killed early Sunday in a head-on collision on Route 20 were riding in a stolen car, police said.

Detective Brian Duffy of the West Springfield police said police have determined the car, a 1990 Honda Civic, had been reported stolen in Westfield prior to the 12:30 a.m. accident.

The head-on crash between the Honda and a Nissan Pathfinder occurred in the area of 1840 Westfield St. near the Mittineague Congregational Church.

The road was closed for several hours as police investigated the scene and the wreckage of the two vehicles cleared away.

Killed were driver Israel Menendez, 20, of the Indian Orchard section of Springfield and passenger Jose Ortiz, 20 of Greenfield.

A second passenger in the car, Joel Menendez, 24, of Springfield, was seriously injured. He was listed in critical condition Monday in the Intensive Care Unit at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield. Joel Menendez and Israel Menendez are brothers

Joel Menendez was riding in the front seat. Duffy said police do not believe Joel
Menendez or Ortiz were wearing seat belts. Israel Menendez was wearing a seat belt, Duffy said.

The driver of the other vehicle, Mark Saracino, 27, of West Springfield, suffered serious injuries that were not considered life-threatening. His condition was not available through the hospital.

Duffy said police have determined that the Honda was heading east on Route 20 when Saracino’s vehicle crossed the center line and struck it head on.

He said speed and alcohol do not appear to be factors in the crash. The accident remains under investigation

No charges have been filed so far as a result of the crash, he said.

Approximate location of fatal accident in West Springfield

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Community Preservation Committee in Wilbraham seeking proposals

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Applications are available in the Town Office Building.

wilbraham town seal wilbraham seal small

WILBRAHAM - For the eighth year the town’s Community Preservation Committee is seeking proposals for projects addressing open space preservation, historic preservation, affordable housing and recreation for possible funding under the Community Preservation Act for fiscal 2013, which begins July 1.

The application deadline is the close of business of Jan. 26. Applications are available at the Town Office Building in the selectmen’s office.

The Community Preservation Committee will hold two public meetings to answer questions from applicants and to receive comments from residents.

Attendance is strongly recommended from applicants, to assure that the requirements of the Community Preservation Act are understood and incorporated into applications. The meetings are set for Dec. 15, 2011, and Jan. 12, 2012 at 7 p.m. at the Town Office Building.

Interested groups are urged to visit the statewide Community Preservation Coalition’s website at www.communitypreservation.org to review the types of projects being approved across the commonwealth.

Voters adopted the Community Preservation Act by a vote of 4,399 to 3,111 on Nov. 2, 2004.

The act provides funding through a local property tax surcharge and state funding for open space, historic resources and affordable housing.

Wilbraham residents approved a ballot question calling for a 1.5 percent surcharge on property tax bills while exempting the first $100,000 of the value of each taxable parcel of residential real estate and providing abatements for qualifying low-income residents and moderate-income senior citizens.

The Community Preservation Act requires that at least 10 percent of annual revenue be allocated to each of the three purposes, with the remaining 70 percent available for allocation among the three categories and to community recreation facilities.

Allocation of act receipts must be by recommendation of the town’s Community Preservation Committee and approval of Town Meeting. The CPA is projected to raise approximately $345,000 for fiscal 2012.

Massachusetts Senate launches debate on casinos, defeats proposals for major changes to bill

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A Senate leader estimated the new casinos and slot parlor could eventually generate in the vicinity of $100 million a year in additional local aid.

BOSTON -- The Massachusetts Senate on Monday started debate on a bill to legalize casinos, voting to kill a proposal that aimed to send more gaming tax revenues to local aid and to defeat other measures that sought significant changes to the bill.

During more than four hours of debate, the Senate finished 60 of the 182 proposed amendments to the bill. The Senate agreed to start work again on the bill on Tuesday.

Sen. Stephen M. Brewer, a Barre Democrat and key author of the casino bill, said the Senate defeated amendments that aimed to “micro manage” casinos including one that might have hurt casino revenues by banning casino resorts from running retail businesses. Senators also defeated measures to prohibit automated teller machines at casinos from providing cash advances and to limit the possible transfer of ownership of a license for a slot parlor.

“We're not interested in trying to kill the goose that lays the golden egg,” Brewer said after the debate ended. “We want to make sure these entities remain viable, that they are going to produce revenue for the commonwealth.”

brewer.jpgSen. Stephen Brewer of Barre

Brewer estimated that up to about $1.8 billion in revenues could eventually be produced by the three casino resorts and single slot parlor proposed in the bill. The state tax on gross gaming revenues would be 25 percent, meaning the state could see about $450 million annually in tax receipts. The bill divides up those tax dollars in various ways including sending 25 percent, or in the vicinity of $100 million a year, to cities and towns for local aid, Brewer said.

The debate came after release of a poll that found 56 percent of Massachusetts residents supported the bill, 31 percent opposed and 13 percent undecided. The poll of 552 residents by a center at University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.1 percentage points.

The debate also started after five Democratic state senators, none from Western Massachusetts, held a press conference to denounce casinos. The senators said casinos profit from addiction, increase crime and bankruptcies and siphon money away from local restaurants and retailers.

The casino bill establishes a five-member gaming commission to accept bids and issue licenses for three casinos in three geographic zones including one defined as the four counties of Western Massachusetts. The bill also includes a separate slot parlor with up to 1,250 slot machines that could be located anywhere in the state.

The bill is on track to reach the desk of Gov. Deval L. Patrick sometime next month. The state House of Representatives on Sept. 14 voted to approve the bill by 123-32. The governor also supports casinos.

In Western Massachusetts, the Mohegan Sun is planning a casino for Palmer and Paper City Development is proposing a casino for Holyoke. Another company, Penn National Gaming of Pennsylvania, is planning to propose a casino for Springfield or nearby communities.

In one of the more contentious debates, the Senate voted 26-11 to defeat a proposal to kill a provision in the bill that imposes a 9 percent tax on gaming revenues at just the slot parlor and directs the money to a fund to develop race horses. Under the proposal, the 9 percent tax would have been sent to aid for cities and towns.

Sen. Patricia D. Jehlen, a Somerville Democrat who sponsored the amendment, said the 9 percent tax for race horses is a special deal for a special group and the money should go to assistance for cities and towns.

But Brewer said the 9 percent tax would help farms and the environment.

“The racing industry is more than just the tracks,” said Brewer, who is chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, which overwhelmingly voted to approve the Senate casino bill on Sept. 16.

Jehlen, who opposes casinos, also fought unsuccessfully to prohibit casinos from running retail stores. “Donald Trump says people spend a tremendous amount of money at casinos, money they would normally spend buying a new refrigerator or a new car,” Jehlen said. “There is no reason to allow casinos to have retail.”

Before debate, Jehlen spoke at a press conference to oppose casinos, along with Sens. James B. Eldridge of Acton, Sonia Chang-Diaz of Boston, Susan C. Fargo of Lincoln and Barry R. Finegold of Andover.

During debate, senators approved an amendment to allow the governor to negotiate a casino agreement with a federally-recognized Indian tribe, most likely the Mashpee Wampanoag, before the tribe receives approval from the federal government for land that it plans for a casino.

A provision in the bill gives a federally-recognized Indian tribe an advantage for obtaining a casino license in the southeastern part of the state. It gives the tribe about a year to negotiate a license for that part of the state.

The Senate voted 38-0 for an amendment to ban local councils on aging from using state money to sponsor trips or provide transportation to out-of-state casinos once casinos are operating in Massachusetts.

The Senate approved at least a couple of amendments aimed at helping small businesses deal with a casino.

One amendment would require applicants for gaming licenses to determine the potential economic harm on local small businesses.

The other amendment would add two members -- a small business owner and a member of a chamber of commerce -- to a panel that would study ways to provide assistance to a community that would host a casino and to surrounding communities.

Latest drowning at Congamond has Southwick officials seeking FEMA grant for $80K rescue boat

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Increased activity on the lakes have made it necessary for the fire department to have a boat docked and ready in the event of an emergency, Fire Chief Richard Anderson said.

Congamond Body 1.jpg Southwick police in June search Congomond Lakes for the body of a 22-year-old Southwick man who jumped from a boat and drowned. The fire department is seeking a grant to purchase a new rescue boat equipped with sonar.


SOUTHWICK – Two summer drowning incidents prompted town officials to seek a grant to fund the addition of an $80,000 boat specially equipped with a side scan sonar to aid in rescue and recovery operations on Congamond Lakes, and a third drowning over the weekend has made the apparatus more important than ever.

Fire Chief Richard W. Anderson said the grant, funded through the federal Assistance to Firefighters grant program and administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, would supply his department with a 19-foot, medium-sized platform boat for operations on the lakes. The $80,000 price tag also includes the trailer.

“It would give us a secure platform for any operation from jet ski and boating accidents to fires,” he said. “This equipment will allow us to safely respond to boating incidents with the proper tools on board.”

A five percent, or about $4,000, local contribution toward the purchase of the boat is a grant requirement that the Board of Selectmen approved, with the stipulation that the equipment be made available to other town departments as needed.

“That’s not a problem,” Anderson said. “If another department needs it, we would most likely be on the scene with them.”

On Saturday, Dongsoo Kim, 44, of Chicopee, drowned after jumping into the lake to rescue his an eight-year-old girl who fell from the boat he was navigating.

Police said Kim was operating the boat and two passengers, the eight-year-old and her 11-year-old sister. He made a turn in the lake and the child accidentally fell out. He stopped immediately and dove into the water to rescue the child, Southwick Police said.

Police on Monday said they could not yet say for sure what the relationship was between Kim and the two girls.

Nearby boaters rescued the child but could not find Kim. Later that evening divers and boat operators from the Southwick Police Department and the Massachusetts Environmental Police recovered the body of the man, police said.

The drowning remains under investigation. While it is ongoing, police are declining to disclose if the two children were wearing flotation vests, as is required under state law.

On June 19, 22-year-old Larry Cauley, of Suffield, Conn., disappeared in Middle Pond after jumping or falling from a pontoon boat. His body was recovered nearly 36 hours later 200 feet from shore in about 35 feet of water.

Less than one month later, on July 11, 19-year-old Kevin J. Major, of Westfield, lost his life on Middle Pond as well when he, too, disappeared in the water. His body was recovered the next day.

Prior to these two incidents, the last reported drowning at Congamond Lakes was in August 2000, when an 18-year-old from Brooklyn, N.Y., died in South Pond, the second largest Congamond pond. Before that, a 33-year-old West Suffield, Conn., man died after drowning in Middle Pond in October 1994.

Increased activity on the lakes, as well as the three drowning incidents, have made it necessary for the fire department to have a boat docked and ready in the event of an emergency, Anderson said, and the sonar could make a life or death difference.

“We have some period of time that someone can be resuscitated if located,” he said.

Depending on the temperature of the water, with survival rates higher in colder water, someone could survive anywhere from 30 to 60 minutes at the bottom of the lakes.

“We had an instance where we did recover someone, and they had a couple of heart beats, but by then they were too far gone,” Anderson said.

The fire department currently uses an inflatable boat that is brought to the scene, and during the two summer drowning incidents private boats were also used.

“We’ve been looking at this for a while,” Anderson noted. “It’s a big lake, and we want our people out there safe when they’re doing what they have to do without putting their own lives at risk.”

In addition to aiding in operations on the lakes, the boat can also be used to fight fires at homes on the water he said, some that can be difficult to access with a fire engine.

“We’re hoping to equip it with a small pump so that we can use the lake water for fires,” the chief said. 

Springfield police to offer free self-defense seminar for women

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The three-session, hands-on class is planned for Oct. 17, Oct. 26 and Nov. 2. Each session will be from 5:30 - 8 p.m. at center court in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

womencops.JPGIn this file photo from 2008, Monson police officer Jane E. Jalbert demonstrates a wrist grab technique during a self- defense and protection for women class at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

SPRINGFIELD – The Springfield police will be offering a free defensive training seminar for women who live or work in Springfield.

The three-session, hands-on class is planned for Oct. 17, Oct. 26 and Nov. 2. Each session will be from 5:30 - 8 p.m. at center court in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

It is offered at no charge and is open to the first 100 women who register. Preference will be given to women age 18 and older who live in or work in Springfield.

The sessions will be led by Springfield police officers who will teach basic self-defense, how to anticipate an attack and the best ways to stay safe.

It is a hands-on course and participants should were sweatpants and sneakers.

The police department has offered the seminars in the past and had a strong turnout.

To sign up or for more information, people should contact either officer Richard Rodriguez or cadet Melissa Rodriguez in the office of Police Commissioner William Fitchet at (413) 787-6313.

Local businesspeople speak out at Republican legislators 2011 GOP Jobs Tour

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Local buisnesspeople targeted unemployment compensation practices and labor regulations around independent contractors during a GOP forum on job creation.

jobs tour.JPGRepublican state representatives Donald F. Humason, R-Westfield; Todd M. Smola, R-Palmer and Nicholas A. Boldyda, R-Southwick, at the 2011 GOP Jobs Tour visit to the Agawam Senior Center.


AGAWAM – Local businesspeople recited a laundry list of complaints during a stop by state Republican lawmakers at the Senior Center Monday as part of the 2011 GOP Jobs Tour.

Their criticisms targeted state labor laws and unemployment compensation practices.

About 20 people attended the event hosted by state Rep. Nicholas A. Boldyga, R-Southwick; state Rep. Donald F. Humason, R-Westfield and state Rep. Todd M. Smola, R-Palmer.

City Councilor Robert A. Magovern, who owns the Neighbor to Neighbor of America Inc. home welcoming service, complained that the state Labor Department has ruled that the women he sends out to people’s homes as independent contractors are actually employees.

Magovern said the state wants the women classified as employees so it can tax their earnings, adding that the Internal Revenue Service and Connecticut consider the women independent contractors.

Several businesspeople complained about the difficulty of fighting having to pay unemployment compensation even when employees are terminated for causes such as stealing from their employer.

“They’ve turned it into another welfare system,” Joseph Ascioti, who owns Reliable Temps Inc., said.

Ascioti also said sometimes when employers make job offers people opt to continue to draw unemployment benefits instead of return to work.

Cecilia P. Calabrese, who works in her husband Dr. Michael J. Calabrese’s dental practice, expressed concern about a bill filed in the legislature that would require all employers to offer workers seven days a year of paid sick time.

If required to give sick leave to their three employees, Calabrese said she and her husband would have a hard time raising rates.

“We should let the free market decide,” Humason said.

Architect Gregory C. Neffinger, a Republican who is running for mayor in West Springfield, also weighed in. He said sometimes a building addition pegged at $100,000 in cost sometimes grows to a $110,000 project after local building inspectors issue their input.

Monday’s visit was the second stop in the jobs tour, with the first one having taken place in the eastern part of the state. The tour is expected to make a total of seven initial stops.

It comes at a time when the national unemployment rate is 9.1 percent and the state unemployment rate is 7.6 percent.



Gov. Patrick OKs 'sweeping overhaul' of Massachusetts alimony laws

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One of the biggest changes in the law would set limits on how long a spouse can receive alimony, based on how long the couple was married.

Deval Patrick 6611.jpgDeval L. Patrick

BOSTON – Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick has signed a sweeping overhaul of the state’s alimony statutes into law.

The new law establishes guidelines for alimony payments and limits their duration, virtually ending so-called “lifetime alimony” payments ordered by some judges in divorce cases.

One of the biggest changes in the law would set limits on how long a spouse can receive alimony, based on how long the couple was married.

Patrick signed the bill at a Statehouse press conference on Monday.

The state’s earlier alimony laws didn’t set any time limits. The bill’s supporters said the new guidelines will help judges make fair decisions.

The new law also allows a judge to end alimony payments if the individual receiving payments is living with a new partner – even if they haven’t formally married.

Hampden Family and Probate Judge David G. Sacks said the revised law will create a more predictable process for determining alimony payments, while also reducing the backlog of cases in family and probate court.

“A lot of cases that used to go to trial are no longer going to,” Sachs said. “The more predictable something is, the more likely it is that (the litigants) will settle.”

The bill’s co-sponsor, state Sen. Gale Candaras, D-Wilbraham, said the changes are long overdue.

“This law has not changed in four decades, and the world has changed a thousand times in four decades,” said Candaras, who spent 14 months shepherding the bill through the legislature.

In July, the legislation was approved on unanimous votes in the House of Representatives and the Senate.

The new law also received strong support from the Massachusetts Bar Association, which has pushed for reforms since the 1990s and praised Gov. Patrick for signing the bill Monday.

“This sweeping alimony reform will lead to some predictability that is lacking in alimony orders. Having suggested durational limits will enable families to do long-range planning, which will help them move forward with their lives,” said Fall River lawyer Denise Squillante, the association’s former president.

“The act also, importantly, maintains judicial discretion. Judges will now be able to consider the facts of each case in determining alimony orders.”


Hampden police investigate robbery at Monson Savings Bank branch

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Police released a limited description of the suspect, describing him only as white man who appeared to be acting alone


HAMPDEN - An armed robber made off with an undisclosed amount of cash during a Monday evening robbery at Monson Savings Bank, 15 Somers Road.

Police were called to the scene around 6:45 p.m. after bank employees said a man with a gun robbed a drive-up teller.

Hampden police are working with state police from the Hampden County Crime Prevention and Control Unit.

Police were tracking several leads, but no one was in custody as of late Monday night.

Authorities released a limited description of the suspect, describing him only as white man who appeared to be acting alone. Few details about the robbery were released.

The holdup occurred at the bank's drive-up window, according to a 22News report.

Hampden Police Chief Jeff Farnsworth told the TV station that a man driving a late model Mercury Marquis pulled up to the window and pointed a gun at the teller on the other side of the glass.

The teller was able to provide a description of the car, which police later found parked at a Monson residence with a handgun left on its front seat. The suspect, who reportedly is known to police, was nowhere to be found, but Farnsworth told 22News that an arrest might soon be made.


THE MAP BELOW shows the location of the Hampden branch of Monson Savings Bank, which was robbed at gunpoint Monday evening:


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Obama defends push to raise taxes on rich at LinkedIn town hall

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In a session dominated by economic concerns, the president plugged his jobs agenda in fielding questions on the employment picture, education, Medicare and Social Security. The president spoke midway through a three-state Western swing built largely around fundraising for himself and other Democrats.

president-obama-linkedin-town-hall.jpgPresident Obama gestures during a LinkedIn Town Hall Meeting at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif., Monday, Sept. 26, 2011, as he participates in "Putting America Back to Work: LinkedIn Presents a Town Hall with President Obama."

Inviting questions, President Barack Obama got one he was happy to answer.

"Would you please raise my taxes?" one man asked the president Monday at a town hall hosted by the social networking company LinkedIn.

The questioner described himself as unemployed by choice after succeeding at a search-engine startup company that did "quite well" — he was later identified as former Google executive Doug Edwards — and said he wants the nation to spend more on education, infrastructure and job training. That gave Obama a chance to promote his nearly $450 billion jobs plan that would be paid for by higher taxes opposed by Republicans but not, evidently, by some of Silicon Valley's wealthiest.

"I appreciate the fact that you recognize that we're in this thing together. We're not on our own," Obama said. "Those of us who have been successful, we've always got to remember that."

In a session dominated by economic concerns, the president plugged his jobs agenda in fielding questions on the employment picture, education, Medicare and Social Security. The president spoke midway through a three-state Western swing built largely around fundraising for himself and other Democrats.

Obama is in a deadlock with congressional Republicans, including House leaders, over raising taxes as part of a formula for helping a staggering economy. He has put forward a debt-reduction plan that would raise $1.5 trillion in new revenue, including about $800 billion over 10 years from repealing the Bush-era tax cuts for couples making more than $250,000.

Obama also said the financial crisis rippling through Europe is "scaring the world" and that steps taken by European nations to stem the eurozone debt problem "haven't been as quick as they need to be." His reference to the European debt crisis came on the heels of remarks by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who over the weekend urged governments to unite with the European Central Bank to help defuse the "most serious risk now confronting the world economy."

In the short term, Obama wants Congress to cover the cost of his jobs plan by, among other changes, limiting the itemized deductions for charitable contributions and other deductions that can be taken by individuals making more than $200,000 a year and families making over $250,000.

Obama said he did not want to punish the rich, but rather to return income tax rates to the level of the 1990s that he said were fair.

"During that period, the rich got richer," the president said. "The middle class expanded. People rose out of poverty."

Edwards, former director of consumer marketing and brand management for Google, encouraged Obama to "stay strong" in his push for higher taxes on the wealthy.

Obama also made no apologies for Wall Street regulation and environmental rules and doesn't buy the GOP charge they're costing jobs.

The event was at the Computer History Museum, near LinkedIn's Silicon Valley headquarters.

Referring to the countries of Europe, Obama said they have not fully dealt with banking crises, and now the struggles in Greece have compounded the problem. "So they are going through a financial crisis that is scaring the world and they're trying to take responsible actions, but those actions haven't been quite as quick as they need to be," he said.

Obama is on the road selling both his jobs plan and his own re-election.

He held three fundraisers Monday on the heels of four he held Sunday as he races to collect cash ahead of a Friday quarterly fundraising deadline that will provide a snapshot of the president's strength against the GOP field.

"I can't do it alone. You guys are my ambassadors, you guys are my advocates and my shock troops out there," Obama told donors in La Jolla, Calif., where 130 guests paid $5,000 per ticket to attend a private lunch where he spoke.

At a fundraiser in Los Angeles late Monday, Hollywood executives and performers — including actors Eva Longoria, Jack Black and Gina Gershon — paid $17,900 each to see the president.

"Don't get tired on me now," Obama told them.

2 people shot in Holyoke in separate gun assaults

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The first shooting was reported shortly before 10 p.m. Monday, while the second occurred around 1 a.m. Tuesday. The victim from the earlier shooting received a gunshot wound to the leg, but the status of the second victim was unknown.

HOLYOKE -- City police are investigating a pair of shootings that injured two people within a three-hour period from Monday night into early Tuesday morning.

"I don't think they're connected," Holyoke Police Lt. Matthew Moriarty said.

The first incident was reported at 9:52 p.m. Monday and involved a man who was shot in the leg near the intersection of South Street and Harrison Avenue. The victim sustained non-life-threatening injuries, Moriarty said.

The second shooting occurred around 1 a.m. Tuesday near the intersection of Main and Spring streets, but Moriarty said he had little information about that incident.

"I know there's one victim," the lieutenant said, adding that he was unsure of the person's gender or condition.

Moriarty said the victims were taken to area hospitals, but he was unsure if they were treated at Holyoke Medical Center or Baystate Medical Center in Springfield.

Both shootings remain under investigation. Anyone with information about either crime is asked to call the Holyoke Police Department at (413) 322-6900.

More details will be posted on MassLive.com as they become available.

UMass-Amherst dedicating permaculture garden Thursday

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Francis Moore Lappé, author of "Diet for a Small Planet," will be the keynote speaker.

gard.1.JPGNathan Aldrich, a permaculture designer and a sustainability specialist with UMass Auxiliary Services, helped create this permaculture garden outside the Franklin Dining Commons at the University of Massachusetts.

AMHERST – As Nathan Aldrich was talking about the permaculture garden adjacent to the Franklin Dining Commons at the University of Massachusetts, a student stopped and asked how she could volunteer.

Aldrich told her to just show up, she need not register at all.
Aldrich, a permaculture designer and a sustainability specialist with UMass Auxiliary Services, said this happens all the time and demonstrates the garden’s success.

On Thursday, UMass is scheduled to dedicate the garden with a ceremony beginning at 4 p.m. at the garden. Francis Moore Lappé, author of "Diet for a Small Planet," will be the keynote speaker. Lappé is also co-founder of three national organizations including the Small Planet Institute of Cambridge.

Other speakers include Chancellor Robert C. Holub, the executive director of Auxiliary Services, Ken Toong, and the chief sustainability specialist of Auxiliary Services, Ryan Harb.

Harb met Lappé at a conference and the two were admirers of each other’s work so she agreed to speak, Aldrich said.

Last fall, students transformed the former one-quarter acre lawn into what this summer and fall has become a viable garden yielding produce and herbs for dining services. Spices from the garden were used in the record-breaking campus stir-fry earlier this month.

Also just outside the dining commons thousands pass by it every day. Aldrich said the visibility helps involve more students and educate them on how food is grown and how they can grow their own as well on a little bit of space.

The garden was created in such a way as to reduce maintenance later on, that meant preparing the soil with in 250,000 pounds of compost, wood chips, and cardboard.

Students and former students began planting right after commencement last summer, Aldrich said. Some students earning credits worked throughout the summer. A new crew is working this fall.

The garden is expected to produce about 1,000 pounds of produce including tomatoes, Swiss chard, potatoes, carrots, squash, and spices including basil, cilantro, and parsley.

Aldrich said the garden is unique in that it is one of the first on the campus of a public institution and one that also provides produce to dining services.

gard4.JPGThe garden will be dedicated at cermonies at the University of Massachusetts Thursday.

The project has involved students from a range of disciplines, Aldrich said. It has proved so successful that will be creating a smaller permaculture garden near Berkshire Dining Commons in Southwest.

He said the garden will be smaller and poses a challenge. The site was most recently used to park the trucks used for renovations there.

"It's a good way to highlight working together," Toong said last fall. He said it has been beneficial to show students about "turning the lawn area into more productive space. . . .You can see the food coming with your own eyes."

Senate candidate Alan Khazei discusses ideas for job growth during Springfield campaign stop

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His planned tax credits for businesses that hire would cost $28 billion and create as many as four million jobs in two years, he said.

Alan Khazei 2009.jpgAlan Khazei

SPRINGFIELD – To spur hiring, the country needs a balanced approach of spending cuts, entitlement reform, new revenue and public works investment, according to Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Alan A. A. Khazei.

Khazei, 50, of Brookline, spent Wednesday touring Western Massachusetts and sat down for an interview with The Republican. He made stops here and in Holyoke, Pittsfield and at Williams College in Williamstown. He is planning to take on five other Democrats for a shot at Republican Sen. Scott P. Brown in 2012.

Khazei ran in the senate special election primary in 2009, but lost out to Attorney General Martha Coakley. This time, he’s facing Harvard professor Elizabeth Warren; Newton mayor Setti Warren (no relation); attorney Marisa DeFranco; state Rep. Thomas P. Conroy, D-Wayland; and Robert Massie, who unsuccessfully ran for lieutenant governor in 1994.

His planned tax credits for businesses that hire would cost $28 billion and create as many as four million jobs in two years, he said. Coupled with increased consumer spending, Khazei said businesses would see a rise in demand and the need for more workers.

Khazei is a graduate of Harvard Law School and the founder and chief executive officer of Be the Change, Inc., an organization that encourages citizen involvement in politics. He also co-founded City Year, a national service organization for people ages 17 to 24, and played an integral role in the salvation of AmeriCorps when it was on the chopping block in 2003, he said.

He wants to bring down the corporate tax rate while eliminating loopholes that allow companies to pay little or nothing and he proposed a voucher program for unemployed people.

“Why not allow states to turn that unemployment check into a voucher? So, if I’m unemployed, and I’m entitled to $15,000 in unemployment benefits, and I’m out in the marketplace applying for a $30,000 job, I can walk into that employer and say, ‘Hire me! You’re going to get me half-off for the first year!’” he said.

He said he needed to study President Barack Obama’s deficit reduction package before commenting on it, but he said he supports raising taxes on top-tier earners back to their Clinton-era rates. Khazei pointed out that GOP leaders oppose new taxes, but Ronald Reagan didn’t shy away from hikes.

“If it was good enough for Ronald Reagan, the god of the Republican party, why isn’t it good enough today?” he said.

Khazei said he was against an Obama-authored payroll tax cut passed in January because it was too expensive and promised too few jobs.

Going up against Scott Brown would be “tough,” but the freshman senator is “beatable,” he said. “He had a chance to be a game-changing leader (but) he’s been totally AWOL in terms of providing any kind of leadership.”

Khazei said he wants to encourage involvement in the political process. He pledged to work with Republicans if elected and reject donations from special interest groups.

Explosion at Springfield's Smith & Wesson facility triggers fire department response

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No one was injured in the explosion, which occurred around 3:30 a.m. at the Roosevelt Avenue facility.

SPRINGFIELD -- No one was injured in an explosion early Monday at the Smith & Wesson facility at 2100 Roosevelt Ave.

According to initial reports from the scene, "a couple of explosions" occurred in the so-called heat treatment area of the sprawling gun-making plant, where a salt bath tank cracked and began leaking.

Officials said no hazardous materials were spilled during the incident.

"It made a big 'boom,' but there were no injuries," Springfield Fire Department spokesman Dennis G. Leger said.

Preliminary damage estimates were unavailable, according to Leger, who characterized the explosion as relatively minor.

Poll: Young people say online meanness pervasive

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56 percent of young people have been the target of some type of online taunting, harassment or bullying.

092711onlinepoll.jpgCatherine Devine, 22, reads instant messages on her laptop screen at her home in Kings Park, N.Y., Monday, Sept. 26, 2011.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Catherine Devine had her first brush with an online bully in seventh grade, before she'd even ventured onto the Internet. Someone set up the screen name "devinegirl" and, posing as Catherine, sent her classmates instant messages full of trashy talk and lies. "They were making things up about me, and I was the most innocent 12-year-old ever," Devine remembers. "I hadn't even kissed anybody yet."

As she grew up, Devine, now 22, learned to thrive in the electronic village. But like other young people, she occasionally stumbled into one of its dark alleys.

A new Associated Press-MTV poll of youth in their teens and early 20s finds that most of them — 56 percent — have been the target of some type of online taunting, harassment or bullying, a slight increase over just two years ago. A third say they've been involved in "sexting," the sharing of naked photos or videos of sexual activity. Among those in a relationship, 4 out of 10 say their partners have used computers or cellphones to abuse or control them.

Three-fourths of the young people said they consider these darker aspects of the online world, sometimes broadly called "digital abuse," a serious problem.

They're not the only ones.

President Barack Obama brought students, parents and experts together at the White House in March to try to confront "cyberbullying." The Education Department sponsors an annual conference to help schools deal with it. Teen suicides linked to vicious online bullying have caused increasing worry in communities across the country.

Conduct that rises to the point of bullying is hard to define, but the AP-MTV poll of youth ages 14 to 24 showed plenty of rotten behavior online, and a perception that it's increasing. The share of young people who frequently see people being mean to each other on social networking sites jumped to 55 percent, from 45 percent in 2009.

That may be partly because young people are spending more time than ever communicating electronically: 7 in 10 had logged into a social networking site in the previous week, and 8 in 10 had texted a friend.

"The Internet is an awesome resource," says Devine, "but sometimes it can be really negative and make things so much worse."

Devine, who lives on New York's Long Island, experienced her share of online drama in high school and college: A friend passed around highly personal entries from Devine's private electronic journal when she was 15. She left her Facebook account open on a University of Scranton library computer, and a prankster posted that she was pregnant (she wasn't). Most upsetting, when she was 18 Devine succumbed to a boyfriend's pressure to send a revealing photo of herself, and when they broke up he briefly raised the threat of embarrassing her with it.

"I didn't realize the power he could have over me from that," Devine said. "I thought he'd just see it once and then delete it, like I had deleted it."

The Internet didn't create the turmoil of the teen years and young adulthood — romantic breakups, bitter fights among best friends, jealous rivalries, teasing and bullying. But it does amplify it. Hurtful words that might have been shouted in the cafeteria, within earshot of a dozen people, now can be blasted to hundreds on Facebook.

"It's worse online, because everybody sees it," said Tiffany Lyons, 24, of Layton, Utah. "And once anything gets online you can't get rid of it."

Plus, 75 percent of youth think people do or say things online that they wouldn't do or say face to face.

The most common complaints were people spreading false rumors on Internet pages or by text message, or being downright mean online; more than a fifth of young people said each of those things had happened to them. Twenty percent saw someone take their electronic messages and share them without permission, and 16 percent said someone posted embarrassing pictures or video of them without their permission.

Some of these are one-time incidents; others cross into repeated harassment or bullying.

Sameer Hinduja, a cyberbullying researcher, said numerous recent studies taken together suggest a cyberbullying victimization rate of 20 to 25 percent for middle and high school students. Many of these same victims also suffer from in-person abuse. Likewise, many online aggressors are also real-world bullies.

"We are seeing offenders who are just jerks to people online and offline," said Hinduja, an associate professor of criminal justice at Florida Atlantic University and co-director of the Cyberbullying Research Center.

And computers and cellphones increase the reach of old-fashioned bullying.

"When I was bullied in middle school I could go home and slam my door and forget about it for a while," said Hinduja. "These kids can be accessed around the clock through technology. There's really no escape."

"Sexting," or sending nude or sexual images, is more common among those over 18 than among minors. And it hasn't shown much increase in the past two years. Perhaps young people are thinking twice before hitting "send" after publicity about adults — even members of Congress — losing their jobs over sexual images, and news stories of young teens risking child pornography charges if they're caught.

Fifteen percent of young people had shared a nude photo of themselves in some way or another; that stood at 7 percent among teens and 19 percent among young adults. But almost a fourth of the younger group said they'd been exposed to sexting in some way, including seeing images someone else was showing around. And 37 percent of the young adults had some experience with "sexting" images.

Many young people don't take sexting seriously, despite the potential consequences.

Alec Wilhelmi, 20, says girlfriends and girls who like him have sent sexual messages or pictures — usually photos of bare body parts that avoid showing faces. Once a friend made a sexual video with his girlfriend, and showed Wilhelmi on his cellphone.

"I thought that was funny, because I don't know what kind of girl would allow that," said Wilhelmi, a freshman at Iowa State University.

Technology can facilitate dating abuse. Nearly three in 10 young people say their partner has checked up on them electronically multiple times per day or read their text messages without permission. Fourteen percent say they've experienced more abusive behavior from their partners, such as name-calling and mean messages via Internet or cellphone.

The AP-MTV poll was conducted Aug. 18-31 and involved online interviews with 1,355 people ages 14-24 nationwide. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

The poll is part of an MTV campaign, "A Thin Line," aiming to stop the spread of digital abuse.

The survey was conducted by Knowledge Networks, which used traditional telephone and mail sampling methods to randomly recruit respondents. People selected who had no Internet access were given it for free.


State police to hold sobriety checkpoint somewhere in Hampden County

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The checkpoint will run Friday night into Saturday morning.

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SPRINGFIELD – State police plan to run a sobriety checkpoint somewhere in Hampden County Friday night into Saturday morning.

State police stress the selection of vehicles will not be arbitrary, safety will be assured and any inconvenience to motorist will be minimized with advanced notice.

The state police conduct periodic checkpoints throughout the state to look for drivers who are impaired by drugs or alcohol and to educate the public.

One such checkpoint, conducted this spring on West Columbus Avenue, yielded the arrest of eight people for drunken driving.

The checkpoint will be funded by a grant from the Highway Safety Division of the state Executive Office of Public Security and Safety.

NH brewery not blamed for death of Mass. man who fell from window of bus

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Authorities say the Redhook Ale Brewery in Portsmouth did not over-serve the two men.

PORTSMOUTH, N.H. — Authorities say a New Hampshire brewery did not over-serve two men who later fell from a speeding bus on a Massachusetts highway, killing one of them.

New Hampshire Liquor Enforcement Chief Eddie Edwards tells the Portsmouth Herald that he has received a preliminary copy of the investigation into the April incident on Route 2 in Shirley, Mass. that indicated that the Redhook Ale Brewery in Portsmouth did not do anything wrong.

Edwards says the investigation is ongoing.

Police say 31-year-old Thomas Johnson of Gardner, Mass. and another man were horsing around in the bathroom of the bus going about 60 mph when they fell out the window. Johnson died, the other man survived.

The bus was returning to Gardner following a tour of New Hampshire brew pubs.

Holyoke man 'stable' after being shot twice in the chest; 2 arrested in connection with separate city shooting

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Three Holyoke shooting incidents -- including two with gunshot victims -- kept Paper City police busy from Monday evening into early Tuesday morning.

Updates a story originally published at 3:40 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 27.


HOLYOKE -- A Holyoke man was in stable condition at a local hospital after being shot twice in the chest around 1 a.m. Tuesday, police said.

Holyoke Police Lt. Matthew Moriarty identified the shooting victim as 27-year-old Luis Rivera, a city resident who was shot twice in the chest and once in the leg.

"He's in stable condition," Moriarty said, declining to indicate which area hospital was treating Rivera.

Authorities cited security reasons for remaining mum about identifying the hospital.

Rivera's shooting capped a 24-hour spasm of violence in the Paper City that began early Monday and continued through Tuesday, including an armed robbery and three separate shooting incidents -- two of which occurred within a three-hour period.

Rivera and another man were injured in the gun violence, but investigators do not believe the shootings are related.

"There's no connection between any of these three shootings," Moriarty said.

The latest unrest began when the Northampton Street Burger King was robbed shortly before 1 a.m. Monday, and it continued with a 6:30 p.m. shooting near the corner of Beech and Dwight streets. That was followed by another shooting just before 10 p.m. in the vicinity of South Street and Harrison Avenue, and then Rivera's shooting about three hours later at 1 a.m. Tuesday.

Prior to this latest violence, police had investigated a Sunday evening home invasion and stabbing at the Hampshire-Pine Apartments at 164 Sargeant St., the scene of an Aug. 8 homicide.

In the Rivera case, police officers responding to a gunfire report found the wounded man walking near the intersection of Clemente and Cabot streets around 1:03 a.m., according to Holyoke Police Department records.

Moriarty initially cited Main and Spring streets as the shooting site, but the lieutenant subsequently told The Republican that investigators were still trying to determine the precise location.

"He was shot somewhere else," Moriarty said, adding that Rivera made his way to Clemente Street afterward. "He was walking when officers came upon him."

Authorities did not cite a motive for the shooting, but investigators found drugs and a handgun near where Rivera was located. Authorities did not indicate the weapon's caliber or the types of drugs they recovered.

There were no reported injuries in the 6:30 p.m. Monday shooting near the intersection of Beech and Dwight streets, but a vehicle was hit multiple times by gunfire. "A car got shot-up," Moriarty said.

The next shooting with injuries was reported at 9:52 p.m. Monday, when a city man was shot in the leg near the intersection of South Street and Harrison Avenue. The victim sustained non-life-threatening injuries, Moriarty said.

Two men have been arrested in connection with that incident, though neither is the suspected shooter, according to Moriarty.

Holyoke residents Xavier R. Vazquez-Colon, 23, of 534 South St., and Angel M. Rosario, 21, whose address was listed in police records simply as South Street, are expected to be arraigned Tuesday in Holyoke District Court.

Police said Vazquez-Colon is charged with trespassing and breaking and entering at night to commit a felony, while Rosario is charged with illegal possession of a gun and ammunition.

Moriarty was unable to explain how police tied the men to the shooting incident, saying only that they were "not connected to the shooting, per se."

No injuries reported in East Longmeadow fire that heavily damaged Birchland Avenue home

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The fire at 46 Birchland Ave. was reported Monday at about 7:35 p.m.


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EAST LONGMEADOW – Investigators believe an electrical problem may have sparked a blaze that heavily damaged a Birchland Avenue home Monday night.

Fire Chief Richard J. Brady said there were no injuries in the blaze at 46 Birchland Ave. which was discovered at about 7:35 p.m. when one of the residents returned home.

“It was in the living room in front of the house,” Brady said, adding that when he arrived on the scene a short time later the whole interior front of the home was involved.

The blaze caused heat and smoke damage throughout the home which will be uninhabitable until repairs are made. A damage estimate was not available Tuesday morning.

Brady said he believes the fire may have started from an electrical problem but the official cause remains undetermined for now. State Trooper Joseph Gura, who is attached to the state Fire Marshal’s office, was expected to inspect the fire scene on Tuesday.

The property is owned by Thomas Flynn. Longmeadow firefighters covered the fire station during the course of the fire.


Man who washed truck naked at Mass. car wash gets probation

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Police say the man was wearing shorts by the time they arrived at the scene and denied doing anything wrong.

ATTLEBORO — A man who scrubbed his pickup truck in the nude at a Massachusetts car wash has been sentenced to a year of probation.

Robert E. Bailey, of Cumberland, R.I., pleaded guilty on Monday to open and gross conduct for being naked at Economy Car Wash in North Attleborough on May 31.

The Sun Chronicle reports that a woman vacuuming her vehicle at the business called police after she saw the 65-year-old Bailey in the nude.

Police say Bailey was wearing shorts by the time they arrived at the scene and denied doing anything wrong.

A judge also ordered Bailey to stay away from the car wash and the witness and to continue counseling. He will also be required to register as a sex offender.

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