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1 man shot, 1 Springfield police officer injured in downtown shooting

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A man was shot and a police officer apparently was hit by a vehicle during a shooting incident near the intersection of Taylor Street and Kibbe Avenue.

taylor street shooting.jpgA Springfield police cruiser blocked Taylor Street, just east of Kibbe Avenue, as detectives probed a shooting that injured a man around 1:30 a.m. Sunday. An officer who responded to the call was apparently struck by a car involved in the incident. The conditions of the officer and the man who was shot were not immediately known.

SPRINGFIELD -- A man was shot and a police officer was injured near the intersection of Taylor Street and Kibbe Avenue around 1:30 a.m. Sunday.

The officer apparently was struck by a car containing three suspects, at least one of whom opened fire on a man who sustained gunshot wounds and was rushed to the hospital for treatment. His condition was not immediately known.

A second ambulance was called for the officer, who was "down" but "good," according to police reports. Preliminary reports identified the injured patrolman as "Officer Benoit," whose first name was not immediately available.

The suspects were in police custody, including the apparent shooter, who was taken to the police station for processing around 2:30 a.m.

The shooting occurred along the eastern edge of the Metro Center neighborhood, just down the hill from the high-crime Federal Street area.

At least a dozen-plus police cruisers, including unmarked cars, descended on Taylor Street near Mastroianni Auto Body at the corner of Kibbe Avenue. Police tape was strung across Taylor Street just east of Kibbe Street, which was blocked at Worthington Street.

A pair of women, huddling in the cold outside a Taylor Street apartment building, watched as detectives examined a car with an open door and headlights running.

The circumstances leading up to the shooting were still sketchy as of 3 a.m. Additional information will be posted on MassLive as it becomes available.

Springfield Police Capt. John K. Slepchuk was the ranking officer at the crime scene, but a patrolman said the lieutenant was referring media inquiries to Capt. Cheryl C. Clapprood. The captain was not immediately available for comment.

"She's very busy right now," Sgt. Jeffrey Martucci said.

"Everything's under investigation. It's going to be a little while until we sort things out," Martucci said.

THE MAP BELOW shows the approximate area where Springfield police were investigating a shooting incident that injured a man early Sunday morning:


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With more than 12,000 still in the dark, power restoration efforts will continue through Sunday in Pioneer Valley

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Hampden County, particularly Springfield, West Springfield and Wilbraham, leads the pack when it comes to lingering outages more than a week after a nor'easter knocked out power to the region.

October snowstorm Day 7: Recovery and cleanup efforts continueUtility workers are continuing to restore full power to Western Massachusetts, including in this photo of a crew working on State Street near Roosevelt Avenue in Springfield.

A total of 12,135 Pioneer Valley power customers were still without electricity as of early Sunday morning, according to the latest data released by National Grid and Western Massachusetts Electric Co.

Broken down, that includes 6,743 National Grid customers and 5,392 WMECO customers, most of whom were expected to have heat and light by Sunday or Monday, according to the utility companies.

The widespread outages were caused by a late October nor'easter that pummeled the Northeast, leaving some 3 million people without power, including around 700,000 utility customers in Massachusetts. Around 200,000 of the outages occurred in Hampden, Hampshire and Franklin counties, while Berkshire County was spared the brunt of the storm.

Although power was knocked out from Greenfield in the north to the little town of Hampden in the south, restoration efforts in Hampshire and Franklin counties were generally faster than they were in Hampden County, which leads the pack when it comes to lingering outages. Only a handful of communities in Franklin County still had no electricity by Sunday morning, with National Grid reporting 100 percent restoration to its customers in the largely rural county.

As of Sunday morning, the communities with the largest percentage of outages were Springfield (2,723), Ware (1,253), West Springfield (1,132), Wilbraham (1,085) and Palmer (1,044).

Other sizable outages still existed in Monson (956), East Longmeadow (796), Hampden (642), Agawam (435), Longmeadow (412), Brimfield (294), Belchertown (239) and Holland (224).

Communities with less than 200 reported outages included Southwick (174), Easthampton (170), Wales (163), Amherst (124), Southampton (75), Granby (42) and Ludlow (36).

While WMECO has not specified precise times for completion of its restoration efforts, National Grid estimates that all power should be restored by 11:59 p.m. Sunday, or early Monday morning. However, some customers have expressed frustration at the utility for repeatedly amending its estimates, particularly since the one-week anniversary of the storm has already come and gone and those customers still don't have any power.

Editorial: The Republican's 2011 endorsements for Western Massachusetts mayors

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Because mayors set the municipal agenda and the tone for conducting city business, it is the most important elected position.

ElectionLogo2011.JPGKeep up with municipal elections in Western Mass.

Agawam
Chicopee
Easthampton
Holyoke
Northampton
Springfield
West Springfield
Westfield

This year’s political campaign season draws to a close on Tuesday when Western Massachusetts voters head to the polls to make their voices heard.

In addition to seven mayoral contests, voters will decide who will serve on town and city councils. And in Holyoke, there is a ballot question calling for revamping the 115-year-old city charter. While we agree the charter needs updating, including a plan for a four-year mayoral term, the lengthy reform proposal may be too complicated to decide on an election ballot.

Because mayors set the municipal agenda and the tone for conducting city business, it is the most important elected position.

Below is a recap of our mayoral editorial endorsements:




SPRINGFIELD

072511-sarno-cathedral.JPGDomenic J. Sarno

Our endorsement goes to two-term incumbent Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, who faces a challenge from City Council President Jose F. Tosado. We believe Sarno has demonstrated his ability to manage during tough fiscal times while seeking new ways to address stubborn problems including crime and poverty. His leadership in the aftermath of the June 1 tornado and last weekend’s freak snowstorm are indicative of his hard work and commitment to make the City of Homes a stronger community.

Read more »




HOLYOKE

Alex Morse 2011.jpgAlex Morse

Our endorsement goes to political newcomer Alex B. Morse, 22, who is seeking to unseat one-term incumbent Holyoke Mayor Elaine Pluta, 67. Our endorsement was a tough call. Throughout her long career - as a former city councilor and assistant to U.S. Rep. John W. Olver, D-Amherst - Pluta has represented her constituents and hometown well. With Holyoke on the brink of a establishing itself as a high-tech hot spot, we think Morse. a 2011 Brown University graduate, has the edge. Fluent in Spanish, Morse says he’s also attuned to the problems of the city’s large Latino population.

Read more »




CHICOPEE

102411 michael bissonnette.JPGMichael Bissonnette

Our endorsement goes to three-term incumbent Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette, who faces a challenge from political newcomer and restaurant owner Gary R. Lefebvre. Bissonnette is a strong fiscal manager. His efforts to revitalize the massive former Uniroyal/Facemate property - a jungle of environmentally contaminated properties - into a mixed-use development, are beginning to bear some fruit. The project, which will take several years to realize and calls for a complex of townhouses, office buildings, stores and a recreation center, is in line for a $5.4 million grant.

Read more »




EASTHAMPTON

michael tautznik easthampton mayor.JPGMichael Tautznik

Our endorsement goes to Mayor Michael A. Tautznik, a six-term incumbent, who faces a challenge from retired former police captain Donald C. Emerson. The mayor has done a good job managing the finances of the city and he has had success nurturing an arts-based economy by luring artists to the Eastworks complex.

Read more »




NORTHAMPTON

102511 david narkewicz.JPGDavid Narkewicz

In the race to succeed longtime Mayor Mary Clare Higgins, our endorsement goes to David J. Narkewicz, who has been serving as acting mayor since Higgins stepped down in September, over City Councilor David Bardsley. Narkewicz and Bardsley are ideologically similar. We believe, however, that Narkewicz, a former congressional aide in Washington for U.S. Rep. John W. Olver and others, is the better candidate to lead Northampton.

Read more »




WEST SPRINGFIELD

100411 gerard matthews.JPGGerard Matthews

In the race to succeed longtime Mayor Edward J. Gibson, who is stepping down after more than a decade on the job, we endorse Democratic Town Councilor Gerard B. Matthews over Republican Gregory Neffinger, an architect and Republican newcomer. Matthews, who supports the new high school and library, has the experience to lead the city in this tough fiscal environment.

Read more »




AGAWAM

050611 richard cohen.JPGRichard A. Cohen

Our endorsement goes to incumbent Mayor Richard A. Cohen over former state Rep. Rosemary Sandlin. Cohen has managed the city’s finances well during his tenure in office, holding the line on tax rates. Cohen is accessible, hard-working and sincere. Sandlin has failed to make a case to unseat him.

Read more »

Springfield police investigate homicide in city's North End

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A man with a hole in his head was found dead outside 564 Chestnut St., and detectives are treating the case as a homicide.

SPRINGFIELD -- A man found dead on Chestnut Street early Sunday is the city's latest murder victim, according to a ranking Springfield police officer.

"Detectives are treating it as a homicide," Capt. Cheryl C. Clapprood said.

The victim was found outside 564 Chestnut St. in the city's North End some time after 2 a.m. Sunday.

Details were sketchy, but Claprood said the man was declared "dead at the scene," and detectives are now attempting to learn what happened.

The homicide was reported while a dozen or so police units remained at the scene of a 1:30 a.m. shooting incident involving an officer and the occupants of a stolen car. The alleged car thief, an 18-year-old male, was shot and wounded by the officer after striking him with the vehicle, Clapprood said.


Clapprood said the officer fired once, wounding the teenager, who remained in "very serious" condition at Baystate Medical Center Sunday morning.

Back on Chestnut Street, police cordoned off the block between Bancroft Street and Brookline Avenue, where detectives were probing what -- and who -- caused the man's death.

Clapprood said the victim had a large hole in his head, but she was unsure what sort of weapon was used in the killing.

Police received a report of a "man down bleeding" outside 564 Chestnut St., which is just a few blocks north of Mercy Medical Center and south of Baystate Medical Center.

The man's death marks Springfield's 20th murder investigation of the year, though at least one of those investigations has yet to be deemed a homicide.

More information will be posted on MassLive as it becomes available.

Springfield police: officer shoots, injures alleged car thief who tried to run him down

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The officer fired a single shot, which struck and wounded an 18-year-old. The teenager attempted to run down the officer with the car, police said.

taylor street shooting 2.jpgSpringfield police were at the scene of a Taylor Street shooting incident early Sunday involving an officer and a car thief who tried to run him down, according to authorities.

Updates a story published at 1:45 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 6.


SPRINGFIELD -- A city police officer shot and wounded a teenage car thief on Taylor Street early Sunday morning, according to a commanding officer.

The incident occurred around 1:30 a.m. as the officer was questioning three teenagers in a stolen car near Mastroianni's Auto Body at the corner of Taylor Street and Kibbe Avenue.

The driver of the car -- a sedan -- attempted to flee, striking the officer in the process, according to Springfield Police Capt. Cheryl C. Clapprood.

"He tried to run us down," she said, adding that the car was reported stolen.

Clapprood said the officer fired a single shot, wounding the 18-year-old driver, who had two juvenile passengers with him. Both juveniles were charged with receiving stolen property.

The 18-year-old, meanwhile, remained in "very serious condition" at Baystate Medical Center, Clapprood said.

The officer, preliminarily identified as "Officer Benoit" (his first name was unavailable), sustained injuries to both legs. He was still undergoing treatment at the hospital early Sunday morning, according to Clapprood, who was unsure of the extent of the officer's injuries.

The incident occurred along the eastern edge of the Metro Center neighborhood, just down the hill from the high-crime Federal Street area.

At least a dozen police cruisers, including unmarked cars, descended on Taylor Street near Kibbe Avenue. Taylor was cordoned off with police tape and a cruiser blocked Kibbe at Worthington Street.

"Everything's under investigation. It's going to be a little while until we sort things out," Sgt. Jeffrey Martucci said.

Live updates: Sunday updates on October snowstorm aftermath -- day 8 of recovery efforts

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As of Sunday morning, the statewide total of customers without power is edging toward 10,000.

Gallery preview

We're back with our continuing live coverage on day 8 of the recovery efforts following a punishing October snowstorm.

As of Sunday morning, the statewide total of customers without power is edging toward 10,000.

Our live blog continues today, with readers sharing observations about where they've seen power restored and where they see crews working.

View Live Updates on a mobile device »

Or, follow the updates below.

North End killing is Springfield's 20th this year, according to city police

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The homicide occurred on a Chestnut Street sidewalk, where a man was declared dead from a gunshot wound to the head.

Updates a story published at 5:45 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 6.


SPRINGFIELD -- The city's mobile forensics investigation truck has been getting a workout this year.

Early Sunday morning, it was parked outside a North End home, where a man was shot in the head and fell to the cold, hard ground some time before 2:15 a.m.

The extent of the man's head injury was bad, according to authorities, who later hosed down the blood-stained sidewalk in front of 564 Chestnut St. while the neighborhood slept.

For a homicide detective and firefighters, it was just another day on the job. They chatted and joked as a fireman trained his hose on a pool of blood. A murky, red stream inched its way toward the gutter, turning a tawny color as it pooled near the base of a driveway.

The sidewalk was clean. The firefighters said goodbye to the detective. Spikes of sunlight spread down the dark, frost-covered block.

Back at the police station, Springfield Police Detective Capt. Peter J. Dillon was less than five hours into the city's 20th murder investigation this year.

An Oct. 4 shooting death on White Street in the Forest Park neighborhood has since been ruled a homicide, Dillon said, making Sunday's killing No. 20 of the year.

With almost two months remaining in 2011, Springfield already has tied last decade's high of 20 murders in 2007 and may be on track to break that record.

Dillon said police would not release the victim's identity until his family was notified.

"He was shot," the detective said bluntly, optimistic that autopsy results would indicate the number of gunshots and caliber of weapon used in the crime.

Of the Oct. 4 death of 21-year-old Justin Garrafa, Dillon confirmed that the victim's older brother, 25-year-old David Garrafa, has since been charged with murder. It was not immediately clear when David Garrafa was incriminated in connection with his brother's death. He was initially charged only with weapons offenses.

Prior to Sunday's homicide in the North End, the city's most recent killing occurred Oct. 24, when 30-year-old Victor Mercedes was shot in the head on Garfield Street in the Forest Park section.

Springfield had 16 murders last year, 17 in 2009 and 14 in 2008.

On Sunday, authorities said that they received a 2:15 a.m. report of a man down on Chestnut Street. The victim was declared "dead at the scene," Springfield Police Capt. Cheryl C. Clapprood said.

The homicide was reported while a dozen-plus police cruisers were at the scene of a 1:30 a.m. shooting involving an officer and occupants of a stolen car. The alleged car thief, an 18-year-old male, was shot and wounded by the patrolman after the teen struck the officer with the vehicle, Clapprood said.

The officer and teenager were both taken to the hospital for treatment.

Clapprood said the teen drove directly into the officer, who fired in self defense and injured both of his legs.

THE MAP BELOW shows the approximate spot where a man with a bleeding head wound was found dead early Sunday in the city's North End:


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Springfield firefighters extinguish blaze at Sixteen Acres home

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No one was injured in a furnace-related fire at 132 Vincent St. that caused around $5,000 worth of damage, according to Springfield Fire Department Public Information Officer Dennis G. Leger.

SPRINGFIELD -- Firefighters quickly extinguished a structure fire reported around 3:12 a.m. Sunday at 132 Vincent St., a one-story home in the city's Sixteen Acres neighborhood.

No one was injured in the blaze, which was linked to a furnace, Springfield Fire Department Public Information Officer Dennis G. Leger said.

Over time, the furnace appears to have heated up a section of wall, which became dry and eventually caught fire, Leger said.

"The furnace was too close to combustibles," he said.

THE MAP BELOW shows the approximate location of a Vincent Street house fire in Springfield's Sixteen Acres neighborhood early Sunday morning:


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Springfield School Committee gets advice on superintendent search

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Currently, 18 Massachusetts communities are looking for new superintendents; last year, 60 superintendents left their posts, whether by resigning, being forced out or retiring.

ingram.jpgSpringfield Superintendent of Schools Alan J. Ingram

SPRINGFIELD – School officials were advised Thursday to plan for a four- to six-month search for a new superintendent and expect some out-of-state candidates to be scared off by the state’s tough educational standards.

“You will have all the advantages and disadvantages of being a large city in Massachusetts,” said Glen S. Koocher, executive director of the Massachusetts Association of School Committees, who repeatedly described the state as a “punitive” environment for educators.

Koocher and Patricia Correira, field director for the association, appeared at a School Committee meeting Thursday to offer advice on the search to replace Alan J. Ingram, who plans to leave in June when his four-year contract expires.

Koocher told the committee to be wary of hiring search consultants, and to consider appointing a screening committee that would include one or two school board members, along with business professionals, educators, parents and other community members.

The screening committee could evaluate applicants and narrow down the field before submitting the best candidates to the School Committee, Koocher said. By using this method, school officials can avoid publicly disclosing the names of candidates until late in the process, he said.

The prospect of being publicly identified as a candidate for a superintendent’s job could be enough to discourage many applicants, Koocher said.

Currently, 18 communities are looking for new superintendents; last year, 60 superintendents left their posts, whether by resigning, being forced out or retiring, he said.

Several factors account for the high turnover rate for superintendents, from high housing prices and harsh winters to pressure to keep improving test scores to meet state and federal standards, Koocher said.

“No matter how hard you try in Massachusetts, you will fail on paper,” Koocher said. “A lot of people would rather go to a state with lower standards and not fail.”

The committee also heard from two members of Springfield Business Leaders for Education, a volunteer group dedicated to improving city schools.

B. John Dill, president of Colebrook Realty Services, urged the committee to appoint a business executive as chairman or co-chairman of the screening committee. The move would give the committee someone with a background in interviewing and hiring, plus the potential to tap into corporate resources to help with the search.

“We do a lot of searches,” said Dill, adding that selecting a new superintendent will be the most important decision the committee will make.

Paul S. Doherty, a partner in the Springfield-based Doherty, Wallace, Pillsbury and Murphy law firm, said the business sector had an obvious incentive to push for a stronger school system, given that its students are the work force of the future.

“They are our lifeblood,” Doherty said.

Holyoke police charge 2 men in connection with armed home invasion

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A pair of Springfield men are facing charges in connection with a robbery and home invasion, according to Holyoke police.

HOLYOKE -- Police have charged two Springfield men in connection with a past armed robbery and home invasion.

The date of the alleged offense was not immediately available, but 22-year old Shawn Gibson and 20-year-old Clyde Epps were each charged Saturday with single counts of home invasion and masked armed robbery, according to Holyoke Police Department records.

Lt. David D. Fournier said both men were being held in the police station lockup facility pending arraignment Monday in Holyoke District Court.

Gibson recently served jail time for perjury in connection with the case of Central High School basketball star Mario Hornsby Jr., who was shot to death in 2008.

Springfield to keep schools closed on Monday

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School officials cited safety concerns in keeping schools closed.

2008 school bus icon.jpg

Springfield school officials, in an automated telephone call to faculty and parents on Sunday afternoon, announced schools will remain closed on Monday because of safety concerns.

Officials had expressed concerns over downed wires still snaking across city streets and hanging tree limbs still dangling overhead from the October 29 n'oreaster.

Springfield students have already missed a full week of classes.

Enfield and Monson schools will also be closed on Monday as power restoration and cleanup efforts in those communities continue.

Analysis: Is student loan, education bubble next?

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The possible student loan bubble poses much less of a threat than housing debt did to drag down the entire economy.

An AP News Analysis

First the dot.coms popped, then mortgages. Are student loans and higher education the next bubble, the latest investment craze inflating on borrowed money and misplaced faith it can never go bad?

Some experts have raised the possibility. Last summer, Moody's Analytics pronounced fears of an education spending bubble "not without merit." Last spring, investor and PayPal founder Peter Thiel called attention to his claims of an education bubble by awarding two dozen young entrepreneurs $100,000 each NOT to attend college.

Recent weeks have seen another spate of "bubble" headlines — student loan defaults up, tuition rising another 8.3 percent this year and finally, out Thursday, a new report estimating that average student debt for borrowers from the college class of 2010 has passed $25,000. And all that on top of a multi-year slump in the job-market for new college graduates.

So do those who warn of a bubble have a case?

The hard part, of course, is that a bubble is never apparent until it bursts. But the short answer is this: There are worrisome trends. A degree is an asset whose value can change over time. Borrowing to pay for it is risky, and borrowing is way up. The stakes are high. You can usually walk away from a house. Not so a student loan, which can't even be discharged in bankruptcy.

But there are also important differences between a potential "student loan bubble" and an "education bubble." Furthermore, many economists think the whole concept of a bubble is a misleading way to think about what's happening, and may actually distract from the real problems. College affordability is a serious issue, but it's a different one. Borrowing for college and borrowing for, say, a house, are fundamentally different in important ways.

To be sure, there are some classic bubble warning signs:

—Everybody wants in. The idea that higher education is the only way to get ahead has become widely held. College enrollment has surged one-third in a decade. With rising demand, college tuition and fees have more than doubled over that time, outstripping inflation in every other major sector of the economy — energy, health care and housing, even when housing was bubbling itself.

—Those bills are paid with borrowed money. The volume of outstanding student loans is rising rapidly and now exceeds credit card debt, though recent reports of it crossing $1 trillion may be premature. Moody's Analytics puts the number at around $750 billion. But while credit card debt is declining, student loan debt keeps going up.

—Just like housing, many student loans were made with little or no research into whether borrowers were fit. Federal Stafford loans are basically automatic for college students, and government backing for other types of loans gave other student lenders little reason to be picky.

—Defaults on federal student loans jumped from 7 percent to 8.8 percent in the most recent fiscal year. That measures just recent borrowers who were already behind within two years of their first payments coming due.

Those numbers are all alarming. But putting them in context requires thinking separately about the ideas of a "student loan bubble" and an "education bubble."

First, one thing that's important about the possible student loan bubble is that it poses much less of a threat than housing debt did to drag down the entire economy. Yes, many individual borrowers may find themselves in trouble. But total student loans probably amount to less than 10 percent of outstanding mortgages. Every single student loan could default and it still probably wouldn't match total mortgage defaults during the recent downturn. More importantly, unlike mortgages, Wall Street isn't knee-deep in securities comprised of bundled student loans, as it was with mortgages. (It also helps that it's also harder to speculate in student loans; an investor can flip a house, but not a brain.)

The other big difference with student loans is the dominant role the federal government has assumed in the market in the last few years: it accounts for roughly 85 percent of student debt.

That matters for several reasons.

First, the government is answerable to voters and not shareholders, so it's more likely than private investors to take steps such as those announced by President Barack Obama to try to relieve student debt burdens.

Second, notes Mark Kantrowitz of the website Finaid.org, it's important to remember what actually causes a bubble to burst. It's not simply a run-up in prices. What bursts the bubble is a liquidity crisis, when borrowers suddenly can't get the money they need. Even during the depths of the 2008 financial crisis, when private student loans dried up, the government's dominant role kept student loans flowing.

That doesn't guarantee the bubble won't slowly and painfully deflate over time. But it insures against the chaos of a "crash" where suddenly students can't get loans at all — a scenario that could shut down untold numbers of colleges whose students rely on financial aid.

None of that, however, changes the fundamental risk for individual student borrowers: they could borrow heavily to pay for a college education and find the return much less than expected.

It's here, looking at the debate from an individual borrower's point of view as opposed to the entire economy, that the debate over the term "bubble" gets tricky. Can an education lose value?

Certainly a college degree can.

A key measure is the wage premium for bachelor's degree recipients over those with just high school diplomas, and there are various ways to measure it. All show the wage premium is substantial, though after rising steadily for years it appears to have slipped some lately. Wages for the median bachelor's degree recipient are roughly $55,292, compared to $34,813 for those with only high school, according to the latest data from Georgetown University's Center on Education and the Workforce.

That reflects a premium that has fallen from roughly 67 percent a few years ago to 59 percent (the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics data put the 2010 premium at 65 percent for weekly wages). Still, all told, estimates for the lifetime earnings advantage of a college degree range from a conservative $500,000 to more than $1 million, according to the Census Bureau. Even with recent price increases, for the average student loan borrower that remains a very high return on investment.

It's true the unemployment rate for new college graduates is more than 10 percent. But unemployment for college graduates overall is 4.2 percent, compared to 9.7 percent for those with a high school degree.

Could college prices rise so much, and the premium fall so far, that a degree is no longer worth it? Of course, for some degrees. But in a modern economy, it's difficult to imagine that happening across the board. Here's where a degree is truly unlike other assets — most should correlate at least somewhat with skills that are useful in the world. Particular degrees may prove bad bets, but to imagine the premium on education itself dropping off a cliff is to imagine a world where things have gone so wrong that job skills no longer matter.

Or, as Kent Smetters, an economist at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, puts it: "In that case, nobody's worried about paying back their loans. Everyone's heading for bunkers in Idaho and canned goods and that kind of stuff."

Here's the rub: Nobody earns a generic "college degree." Degrees are earned from different schools, with different reputations, and in different majors with much different payoffs. What counts most, says Georgetown's Anthony Carnevale, are the courses you take and your major. Roughly 30 percent of associate's degree recipients earn more than people with bachelor's degrees. A graduate with a mere certificate in engineering will earn roughly 20 percent more than the average bachelor's recipient.

That suggests there isn't one big bubble, but many smaller but significant ones stretching across different sectors — certain liberal arts grads, artists, lawyers who borrow six figures for law school and can't find a job, and students at for-profit colleges. The signs of a bubble at for-profits are unmistakable: Enrollment has tripled in a decade, roughly 96 percent of graduates have loans and borrowing is substantially higher than at other types of institutions. Default rates recently jumped to 15 percent.

But what's most important is the huge numbers who never earn a degree at all. At community colleges and for-profit schools, roughly one in five aiming for a bachelor's degree fail to secure it. Even at four-year public universities, the failure rate within six years is almost half. Anyone who borrows a large amount of money and then fails to complete a degree is in a world of hurt — quite possibly worse off than if they'd never even tried to go to college in the first place.

The 27th Massachusetts was Springfield's second regiment to go to war

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The first day of November 1861 was the last full day the nearly 1,000 soldiers of the 27th Massachusetts would be home.

2004-D03-472.jpgThis scene was repeated many times in the Springfield area on Nov. 1, 1861


fleet.JPGThe federal fleet bombards forts guarding entrance to Port Royal, S.C.

The first day of November 1861 was the last full day the nearly 1,000 soldiers of the 27th Massachusetts would be home. It was a time of farewell parties, gifts of swords, pistols and cash to the departing heroes. It was a time of anguish for loved ones saying good-bye to brothers, husbands, fathers, friends and relatives.

When the first regiment, the 10th Massachusetts, left its encampment at Hampden Park in Springfield on July 16 there was still talk that the war would be over in at most a few months. The devastating defeats of the Army of the Potomac at Bull Run and Ball’s Bluff and in the West had quelled rumors of a quick Union victory.

Springfield & The Civil War

We at The Republican are launching a four-year project to tell the story of how our community coped with 48 months of war, from April of 1861 to April of 1865.

On the first Sunday of each month we will run a report of what was happening here 150 years ago during that month.

by Wayne Phaneuf, Executive Editor

Part 1 -- The Civil War is upon us: The events of April 1861 changed Springfield and the nation forever

Part 2 -- A call to arms: President Lincoln upgraded call for troops in second month of Civil War

Part 3 -- Boom Town: Springfield becomes vital to the Civil War effort

Part 4 -- The Springfield Republican recounts 'Saddest day this country ever saw'

Part 5 -- John Brown's spirit marches with Union soldiers

Part 6 -- Springfield Armory fuels the remaking of a city

Part 7 -- October 1861 finds a nation and Springfield divided over slavery

Introducing the project



The soldiers were putting their lives in order on these final days at home. A story in The Republican’s edition on Nov. 1 began:

“The Athol company of the 27th regiment have set an example worthy of imitation by other companies, 88 of the men having signed a pledge to use no intoxicating liquors while in the United States service ...”

On the morning of the first, Col. Horace C. Lee’s Camp Reed, located on the road to Wilbraham a mile from the Springfield Armory, was inspected by Quartermaster General Reed, for whom the camp was named. Later in the afternoon Gov. John A. Andrew and his staff reviewed the soldiers in “battalion drill” for two hours and also inspected the hospital and other departments.

The next morning the tents were struck at 7 a.m. and the camp was left for good. Baggage wagons snaked through the camp laden with tons of supplies, including hundreds of items ranging from blankets, pillows and bandages, to pin cushions, lemons and jars of pickles. The Republican took nearly a full column to list the most recent donations and acknowledge each one right down to the “pot of preserved ginger” from Mrs. Wasson.

Thousands of cheering citizens saw the boys off at the depot where they boarded a 22-car train to bring them to Hudson, N.Y., where they would travel by steamer to Jersey City and then by ship to Annapolis.

On the day the regiment left, an article in The Republican speculated about the whereabouts of the “Great Armada” of more than 70 federal ships that sailed south on a secret mission. The paper’s correspondent dismissed the conventional wisdom that the fleet was headed for Pensacola and guessed it would launch attacks along the southern coast, “perhaps at Port Royal” in South Carolina.

The first list of killed, wounded or missing soldiers from Massachusetts who fought at the Oct. 21 battle of Ball’s Bluff was printed in the paper on Nov. 1. Among the missing was George Walkley from Springfield and among those killed was Francis Dickinson, the first soldier who enlisted from Amherst to die in the war. Experts on poetry say that his death prompted his relative, Emily Dickinson, to write a poem about the war, which began one of the most productive periods for “the Belle of Amherst.”

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This was also the same day that news of Gen. Winfield Scott’s resignation as commander of the Union army was announced. He had entered the service in 1808. He was succeeded by Gen. George B. McClellan.

Not all the war news was about battles or military retirements. The Springfield area continued to benefit from the war spending. The Armory continued to grow, the Wasson Manufacturing Co., that not only made railroad cars, but caissons for cannon and other artillery components, was employing 850, and the Ames Co. was turning out swords and cannons.

The Chicopee-based Ames was the site of an experimental testing a rifled cannon that could shoot twice the payload, much further than the old smooth-bore cannon. During the demonstration one of the guns at a seven degree elevation fired a 64-pound shell more than a mile and a half. Ames was looking for the contract to convert thousands of useless smoothbore artillery pieces into rifled cannon.

Although the area was famous for its weaponry, an advertisement in The Republican revealed another source of wealth for the Springfield area:

“WANTED IMMEDIATELY, One thousand coat makers to work on military coats. Inquire of D. H. Brigham & Co.”

The downtown Springfield company had received an order for 60,000 coats for the army. They had four months to fill it.

The city was also preparing for the state elections on Nov. 5 that had a ballot question of interest to Springfield’s future. Would the voters authorize the transfer of the city farm, or poor house, to the state for the creation of an agricultural college in the city? An additional $25,000 had already been pledged for the project. The newspaper editorialized in favor and the vote passed, but the war delayed the project and federal funds eventually became available. Imagine Springfield as the home today to a 30,000-student university.

cameron.JPGSecretary of War Simon Cameron


A large retinue of army and political brass, led by Secretary of War Simon Cameron, arrived in Springfield on Election Day and checked into the Massasoit House near the depot before touring the Armory. Accompanying Cameron was Major General James W. Ripley, former commandant of the Springfield Armory, and now chief of ordnance for the war effort. Adjutant Gen. Lorenzo Thomas announced during the inspection that he was promoting Capt. Alexander Dyer, present Armory commandant, to the rank of major. Dyer thanked the general and then heaped praise on the man he replaced, former civilian superintendent George Dwight.

On Nov. 12, the first and only EXTRA edition of The Republican was issued on that Tuesday evening. The great fleet had reached its destination and The Republican correspondent was right. It was Port Royal, S.C., which fell to a withering force of 77 ships (the number finally came out) and more than 12,000 troops. Fewer than 100 casualties were sustained on both sides as the Confederate forces withdrew and the north had a base of operations in the south.

News of another battle, this one in Belmont, Mo., also found it way in The Republican, although the battle was not a big one by Civil War standards and victory was claimed on both sides, it did introduce a new general to the press – an officer known as Ulysses S. Grant.

Despite the war news there was still everyday life to contend with. When late November brought the first hard frost and a couple of inches of ice with it, there was an item in the paper asking, “why cannot we have a skating pond in Springfield and not depend on the river?” The suggestion was to flood a portion of Hampden Park for a pond.

Then there was this item:

“One of the very best labor-saving machines lately introduced is the clothes-wringer ... We have seen nothing so good as the patent of C.H. Amidon of Greenfield.” The author went on to say if it’s not for sale in Springfield it ought to be, and it should be in every house.

On Nov. 21, Massachusetts, a week earlier than most states, celebrated Thanksgiving. For some reason, not at all supported by The Republican, Gov. Andrew wanted to synch up with the first Thanksgiving given by the Mayflower crowd. Boxes of “goodies” were sent by Western Massachusetts residents to the troops of the 10th Regiment outside Fortress Monroe and the 27th at Annapolis.

The newest regiment of volunteers from towns west of Worcester was being formed at Camp Seward in Pittsfield, but recruiters from New York and New England rented space in Springfield venues to entice locals to sign up. One newspaper item refers to P. Rafferty, recruiting officer for the 28th Irish regiment, who would address the citizens of this city on the duties of Irishmen in the present crisis.

One poignant article in The Republican on the aftermath of the Battle of Belmont, Mo., recounts this scene:

“Capt. Brooks of Buford’s regiment came across the body of his own brother, who was a surgeon in the rebel army; he knew he was a rebel surgeon but did not know he was in the engagement until he stumbled over his corpse. The scene forms one of the horrible incidents of this unholy rebellion.”

Unfortunately it was a scene that would be repeated hundreds of times over the next 40 months in many battlefields.


Western Massachusette Electric Company: Historic restoration "essentially complete"

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The utility's online outage map still showed over 500 Springfield customers without power as of 6:30 p.m.

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SPRINGFIELD - Western Massachusetts Electric Company has issued a statement claiming that its work to restore power to customers who have been in the dark since the historic October 29 snowstorm is "essentially complete."

The company issued the statement via Facebook at 6:19 p.m. Sunday.

“We understand the difficulties that the extended power outage caused our customers. We recognize their frustration with the lengthy restoration, and want to thank our customers for their incredible patience and understanding during this extraordinary event,” said Peter J. Clarke, the company's president and Chief Operating Officer.

The release read, in part: "Work on all known customer outages has been completed. An outbound calling campaign has been run to identify any customers remaining without power. Crews will work through the evening to address any lingering outages, and WMECo will maintain extra staffing to reconnect customers who have completed repairs on their property."

At 6:30 Sunday evening, company's online outage map still showed pockets of customers throughout the Pioneer Valley without power, including 502 in Springfield.

Outages in the remainder of the cities and towns the utility serves affected between 1 and a few dozen customers.



Our live blog has continued today, with readers sharing observations about where they've seen power restored and where they see crews working.

View Live Updates on a mobile device »

Or, follow the updates below.

Springfield Police Officer Matthew Benoit, run down by car theft suspect on Taylor Street, treated at Baystate and released

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Suspect Tahiem Goffe, pictured here, remained hospitalized in critical condition Monday after being shot by a Springfield police officer Sunday.

tahiemgoffe18.jpgTahiem Goffe

SPRINGFIELD – Police officer Matthew Benoit, who shot and wounded a suspected car thief as the suspect ran him down on Taylor Street early Sunday, was treated at Baystate Medical Center and has since been released.

The suspect, Tahiem Goffe, 18, of 376 Berkshire Ave., remained in critical condition Monday morning at Baystate Medical Center, Sgt. John M. Delaney said.

Goffe deliberately drove at Benoit, who was on foot, striking him and sending him airborne over the front corner of the vehicle and onto the pavement, Delaney said.

“The officer was able to fire a round at the oncoming car to possibly save his life,” Delaney, aide to Police Commissioner William J. Fitchet, said.

It’s not yet known if Benoit fired his round before, during or after the moment of impact, Delaney said.

“He’s very lucky to be alive,” Delaney said. “Our police officers are trained for this. I consider Officer Benoit to be a very good proactive police officer -- all our police officers are. It appears that his training kicked in.”

Goffe, who suffered a single gunshot wound, faces a number of charges including attempted murder, receiving a stolen motor vehicle, assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, Delaney said.

Two juveniles in the car were also charged with larceny of a motor vehicle.

Delaney said the incident began about 1:30 a.m. when Benoit and Officer Brendan Curran saw a stolen car in the parking lot of the U-Haul business on Taylor near Chestnut Street.

The vehicle, a 2002 Pontiac Grand Am, had been reported stolen the day before from the parking lot of the Racing Mart on Boston Road. It was occupied by three suspects.

Officers Scott Richard and Ivan Ross came to assist Benoit and Brendan. Police then saw the Grand Am pull out of the lot and head east down Taylor.

Richard and Rosa followed the vehicle down Taylor Street and Benoit and Curran sped east on Worthington, which runs parallel to Taylor, took a left on Kibbe Street and placed their cruiser in the path of the stolen car.

Police said Goffe, boxed-in, gunned the engine in reverse and smashed into the cruiser driven by Richard and Rosa. Then, police said, Goffe put the Pontiac into drive and drove at Benoit and Curran, who were now on foot.

Afterwards, the Grand Am came to stop. Police said the passengers in the front and rear seats refused to unlock the doors, forcing the officers to break the windows to get them out of the car.

Police saw that Goffe suffered a single gunshot wound, they grabbed their first aid kit and treated him until EMTs arrived on the scene.

Both Goffe and Benoit were then taken to Baystate. Benoit suffered lumbar strain, hyperextended knees, lower extremity contusions and he remains on paid administrative leave, Delaney said.

Goffe has a long history with the Springfield Police Department and has been arrested numerous times as an adult and a juvenile, Delaney said.

A mug shot, released by police, stems from a July 25 arrest, Delaney said.


Springfield police seek public's help as they probe homicide of 23-year-old Ramon Lopez

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Lopez, found dead of a gunshot wound to the head early Sunday, is the city's 20th homicide.

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SPRINGFIELD – Police are seeking the public’s help as they probe the city’s 20th homicide of the year which occurred over the weekend in the North End.

Responding to report of a “man down” at 568 Chestnut St., police found the victim, 23-year-old Ramon Lopez, dead at the scene, Sgt. John M. Delaney said.

The Homicide Squad, under the direction of Captain Peter Dillon and Lt. Thomas Kennedy, has been probing Lopez’s death around-the-clock, Delaney said.

Lopez does not have any record of arrest or any other kind of interaction with the Springfield police, Delaney said.

An Oct. 4 shooting death on White Street in the Forest Park neighborhood has since been ruled a homicide, said Capt. Peter J. Dillon, head of the detective bureau, making this weekend’s slaying the 20th of the year.

With almost two months remaining in 2011, Springfield already has matched last decade’s high of 20 murders in 2007 and may be on track to break that record. The city had 16 murders last year, 17 in 2009 and 14 in 2008.

The Oct. 4 homicide of 21-year-old Justin Garrafa was not immediately classified as a homicide. Garrafa officially became the 19th homicide of the year on Oct. 13 when Springfield police requested a warrant for murder against his brother, 25-year-old David Garrafa.

David Garrafa was initially arrested on weapons charges.

Those with information are urged to call the detective bureau at (413) 787-6355.

Those who wish to remain anonymous may text a tip via a cell phone by addressing a text message to “CRIMES” or “274637,” and then beginning the body of the message with the word “SOLVE.”

Massachusetts study: Humans lead grab-and-go gulls to move inland

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Because gulls roost on the region's reservoirs, befouling water with their droppings, wildlife officials have begun a campaign to convince the public not to aid and abet these birds' errant ways by tossing fries from car windows or leaving bread on the asphalt.

ring-billed gulls.JPGRing-billed gulls roost at night on the region's reservoirs, befouling the water with their droppings.

They are birds that don’t know their place.

Gulls are supposed to be coastal birds, diving for their dinner in the ocean waves. But instead, ring-billed gulls have become avians of the asphalt, congregating in great numbers in parking lots hundreds of miles inland.

What brings them there?

You and I - and the food we deliberately or accidentally deposit on the ground, a state study has found.

And, because the gulls roost at night on the region’s reservoirs, befouling the water with their droppings, wildlife officials have begun a campaign to convince the public not to aid and abet these birds’ errant ways by tossing fries from car windows or leaving bread on the asphalt.

“To interrupt this pattern, the public’s help is vital,” said Daniel E. Clark of the Division of Water Supply Protection for the state Department of Conservation and Recreation, which has been tagging and tracking inland gulls since 2008 to determine their habits.

“The reason the gulls remain here is because of the human-based food that is available. Our data suggests that handouts from the public constitute a majority of the available food for gulls during the fall and winter,” he said.

For protection, the gulls roost at night on fresh water, away from predators, sometimes forming roosts in late winter of as many as 7,000 birds on the open waters of major reservoirs, such as Quabbin Reservoir, Clark said. The vast majority are ring-billed gulls, although there are also herring and black-backed gulls roosting.

This fall, state workers will be posting signs and talking to the public in places where gulls congregate to convince people not to feed them in order to protect water supplies.

“We hope hope to eliminate most of the food from some of these parking lots,” Clark said.

Wayne R. Petersen, ornithologist for the Massachusetts Audubon Society and co-author of “Birds of Massachusetts,” said it was not necessarily the rise of fast-food restaurants that led to the movement of ring-billed gulls inland.

“But it hasn’t hurt. There is no question that is their primary foraging source in the winter. The population of ringbills has increased considerably (in the state). However, they don’t nest in Massachusetts, although you can find them virtually year-round here,” he said.

Instead, they nest around Lake Champlain, the Great Lakes and in eastern Canada.

“The ones here in the summer are not breeders. They are sub-adult birds,” he said.

“However, the rest of the year, they regularly use agricultural fields, where earthworms and grubs turn up in the cultivated soil. They also use soccer fields. But they don’t eat fish,” Petersen said.

Massachusetts lawmakers to unveil proposed new congressional district map

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The task of the committee charged with drafting the map was changed by the recent announcement by U.S. Rep. John Olver that he would not seek reelection.

proposed-districts.jpgView full sizeThe proposed 2012 Massachusetts congressional districts.

BOSTON – Legislative leaders are preparing to unveil a new map of the state’s congressional districts.

The committee charged with drafting the map is expected to release the new district lines at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Statehouse.

Massachusetts lost one of its 10 congressional districts after the state’s population growth in the most recent U.S. Census failed to match the growth of other states.

The task of the committee was changed by the recent announcement by U.S. Rep. John Olver that he would not seek reelection. Olver represents the state’s 1st Congressional District in the western part of the state.

That means the committee could draft a map where none of the state’s incumbent members of Congress – all Democrats – would be forced to face off against each other.

Last week, Gov. Deval L. Patrick approved redistricting for the Massachusetts House and Senate.


More details coming on MassLive and in The Republican.

School opening on Tuesday in Monson

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School was closed all last week and today due to a pre-Halloween snowstorm that dumped more than a foot of snow in Monson and other communities, downing branches and power lines.

MONSON - School will resume on Tuesday in Monson, according to Superintendent Patrice L. Dardenne.

"We surveyed the roads in town this morning and there are still some issues here and there, but for the most part I think we're in good shape," Dardenne said.

Dardenne said he will be sending out an automated phone message to parents and guardians this afternoon to let them school will be back in session. School was closed all last week and today due to a pre-Halloween snowstorm that dumped more than a foot of snow in Monson and other communities, downing branches and power lines.

According to the National Grid website, there are less than five customers still without power in Monson.

Pioneer Valley election day polling hours vary

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Some area communities have election races and/or ballot questions

091911_gladys oyola polling place.JPGSpringfield Election Commissioner Gladys Oyola organizes containers to be used at polling places prior to the preliminary election in Springfield.

BOSTON – Secretary of State William F. Galvin is reminding voters that polling hours vary around the state on Tuesday, Election Day.

The polling hours in the region are as follows:

Springfield, Holyoke, Northampton, Easthampton, South Hadley -- 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Chicopee, Westfield -- 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Agawam, West Springfield -- 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

“These communities will be choosing their political leaders and, in some cases, deciding local questions and tomorrow (Tuesday) is your opportunity to have your say in those choices,” Galvin said.

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