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Recent West Springfield arrests: Drug arrest on Riverdale Street; A&B on a police officer on City View Avenue

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In a third incident, a 16-year-old suspect was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

The following arrests were recorded for Monday, Nov. 28, in the West Springfield Police Department's call for service log:

  • Officers responding to a 1:17 p.m. report of a disturbance on West School Street arrested two adults and a juvenile. Brenda Medina-Pedrazza, 18, whose address is listed in police documents as a PO box in Springfield, was charged with disorderly conduct. Ramon Caraballo, 36, of 41 West School St. Apt. 2, was charged with assault with a dangerous weapon. A 16-year-old suspect was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.

  • A disturbance reported at 7:17 p.m. on City View Avenue led to the arrest of Jonathan Fitzgerald, 18, of 229 City View Ave., on charges of assault and battery on a police officer.

  • A log item listed as a narcotics investigation on Riverdale Street was recorded at 10:07 p.m. Monday. Mathew B. McKenzie, 24, of 17 Highland Ave. Apt. 6 in West Springfield, was arrested on charges of possession of a Class B drug and possession of a Class D drug with intent to distribute.
Additional details about the above arrests were not immediately available Wednesday.



Northampton benefits from good bond rating

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The new rating will pay dividends when the city begins making payments on the $19 million bond it will seek.

NORTHAMPTON – Thanks to sound financial practices and the generosity of its taxpayers, the city has received a clean bill of health from a financial rating service that will save it money in the long run.

Moody’s Investors Service has bestowed upon Northampton an Aa2 rating that is several steps up from its previous financial rating by Standard & Poor’s, another rating service. Because ratings affect borrowing rates, Northampton can expect to save on interest on the $19 million bond the City Council is expected to approve for several major projects.

“In order to go to the marketplace, you have to have a rating,” said Finance Director Susan Wright. “It provides information to investors. You get a better interest rate with a higher rating.”

In the sometimes Byzantine world of finance, it’s somewhat difficult to assess the latest rating in terms of the city’s recent financial history. In 2007, Moody’s gave Northampton an A1 rating, which is below the current rating on its latest scale. However, Moody’s recalibrated its scale a few years ago, so the Aa2 rating is equivalent to the old A1 rating.

Last year, Northampton went to Standard and Poor’s for its rating and received an A+ grade, which is lower than the current Moody’s rating. Wright said the city went to Moody’s this time on the advice of First Southwest, the company that serves as its financial advisor.

Several factors played into the latest rating, most notably the $2 million override passed by voters in 2010, the $10 million debt exclusion for the new police station and the overwhelming decision by voters to keep the Community Preservation Act during the November election. Moody’s also liked that the city is rebuilding its Stabilization Fund, Wright said. Upon the recommendation of Mayor-elect David J. Narkewicz, the City Council recently put $268,000 in late-arriving state aid into that fund.

The new rating will pay dividends when the city begins making payments on the $19 million bond it will seek. Nearly $1 million of that will go towards the purchase of the Bean/Allard property, with another $16 million paying for the police station. The Community Preservation Committee, which funded the Bean/Allard project, will pay the principal and interest on that item, but that money also comes out of the property tax rolls.

3-judge panel refuses to suspend relicensing process for Pilgrim nuclear power plant in Plymouth

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Attorney General Martha Coakley asked federal regulators to suspend the relicensing process until the implications of the Fukushima Dai-ichi disaster in Japan could be fully assessed.

Nuclear Worries MassA tower at Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station, in Plymouth is seen near the coast of Cape Cod Bay in March 30 (Photo by Steven Senne)

PLYMOUTH – A three-judge panel has rejected a request by the Massachusetts attorney general to suspend the relicensing of the Pilgrim nuclear power plant in Plymouth.

Attorney General Martha M. Coakley asked federal regulators in May to suspend the relicensing process until the implications of the Fukushima Dai-ichi disaster in Japan could be fully assessed. Pilgrim has a similar design to the Japanese plant heavily damaged by an earthquake and tsunami.

The panel overseeing Pilgrim’s relicensing review for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission denied Coakley’s request Monday.

A spokeswoman for Coakley told The Patriot Ledger of Quincy that while disappointed with the decision, the office is reviewing its options. Coakley can appeal to the full Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

U.S. Rep. Edward Markey also says the Japanese situation should be considered when weighing Pilgrim’s relicensing.

Slaying trial begins for Stephen Morgan of Marblehead, accused of killing Wesleyan University student Johanna Justin-Jinich

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Morgan’s lawyer is pursuing an insanity defense.

Wesleyan Shooting 2009.jpgStephen Morgan

MIDDLETOWN, Conn. – A police captain said officers found a slain Wesleyan University student lying in blood behind the counter of the off-campus bookstore where she worked.

Capt. Sean Moriarty testified Wednesday in the trial of a Massachusetts man charged with killing 21-year-old Johanna Justin-Jinich of Timnath, Colo., in 2009.

Stephen Morgan’s case is being heard by a three-judge panel in Middletown, home of the small liberal arts university. As testimony began, Morgan at times leaned forward in his chair, and rocked back and forth. His lawyer is pursuing an insanity defense.

Police say the 32-year-old Marblehead native wrote in his journals about killing Justin-Jinich and going on a campus shooting spree targeting Jews.

The two apparently met in a New York University summer class in 2007, when Justin-Jinich filed a harassment complaint against him.

Morgan’s lawyer is pursuing an insanity defense.

Supporters of medical marijuana, life-ending medication initiatives say they have enough signatures to move proposed Massachusetts ballot questions forward

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Ballot campaigns were required to file 68,911 valid signatures with city and town clerks by last week, the toughest, most expensive hurdle to placing a policy question before voters.

By KYLE CHENEY

BOSTON - Massachusetts voters may be asked next year to settle policy standoffs over legalizing marijuana for chronically ill and suffering patients, permitting certain terminally ill residents to self-administer life-ending medication and forcing auto dealers to send diagnostic information to repair shops, according to campaign organizers who say they’ve gathered enough signatures to advance their proposals closer to the ballot in 2012.

Ballot campaigns were required to file 68,911 valid signatures with city and town clerks by last week, the toughest, most expensive hurdle to placing a policy question before voters. Activists need to bring those signatures to Secretary of State William Galvin’s office by next week for final certification. A successful signature drive opens a six-month window for state lawmakers to support their own versions of any of the proposals if they wish to prevent them from moving toward the ballot.

Advocates for these proposals, as well as a plan to attach consequences to teacher evaluations and eliminate seniority as a factor in teacher hiring and placement decisions, say they hope a successful collection of signatures will influence lawmakers to act favorably on their preferred policies, avoiding expensive, divisive and often unsuccessful ballot box fights.

“At this point, we would prefer that the Legislature take this up and pass it. We still think it’s a good vote for them, for their constituents,” said Art Kinsman, spokesman for the car repair question. “We are prepared to go all the way with the ballot if necessary, but I really think the best solution is always that the Legislature takes a vote.”

“We’re fully ready to go to the ballot and we’re always open to working with the Legislature and lawmakers to address it through the legislative route,” said Sam Holdren, communications director for Stand for Children, sponsor of the proposal concerning teachers. “It’s something that we’re still pursuing and still discussing.”

Already this year, two ballot campaigns – one to permit more food stores to sell beer and wine, another to bar auto insurers from basing premium rates on customers’ credit scores – were called off after lawmakers brokered compromises proposals.

A proposal to add a 5-cent deposit to the cost of beverage bottles that may be redeemed upon recycling was also called off when backers suggested they had the votes in the Legislature to pass the plan this session. Legislative leaders have given no indication that the plan is on their upcoming agenda.

Should lawmakers opt to allow the proposals to head to the ballot, supporters would be required to collect another 11,500 signatures, clearing the way for their proposals to come before voters. The last time voters were asked to resolve more than three policy questions in one election cycle was in 2000, when an income tax cut was one of eight policy questions on the ballot.

Equally of note is a proposal derailed by the signature requirement: a plan to repeal the mandate that all Massachusetts residents obtain health insurance. That requirement is a cornerstone of a 2006 law signed by Gov. W. Mitt Romney intended to provide near-universal access to health insurance. The law also served as a model for a 2010 federal law signed by President Barack Obama that has been attacked by Republicans as costly and disruptive.

The ballot question to repeal the individual mandate failed to collect enough signatures, according to campaign treasurer Bridget Fay, who works with Massachusetts Citizens for Life. Fay said Citizens for Life will turn its attention to defeating the so-called Death With Dignity ballot proposal. She said she’s spoken with “a few state legislators” who she said may introduce legislation to repeal the individual mandate or ban penalties for residents who obtain insurance that doesn’t meet existing coverage requirements.

Fay said supporters of this year’s question are eying 2014 as a chance to renew their effort.

“We did get some heavy national interest, but it was about a week before signatures were due,” she said.

Supporters of the “Death with Dignity” question say permitting terminally ill and suffering patients – with no other medical recourse – to end their lives is humane and can save patients and families months of anguish. Opponents argue that it is error-prone and lacks safeguards.

Proponents of the medical marijuana question say it, too, is a human course of treatment for cancer patients or those suffering from debilitating and chronic diseases. Opponents say it could result in greater availability of illegally sold marijuana, could cause crime and might subject Massachusetts to federal prosecution.

Backers of the auto repair question say auto manufacturers routinely withhold key diagnostic repair information for increasingly complex and computerized vehicles, forcing consumers to go directly to the manufacturers for repairs. But auto manufacturers counter that the proposal is a ploy by aftermarket auto parts dealers to produce cheap replicas of car parts.

Supporters of the teacher evaluation questions say they will attach consequences for teachers who fail to demonstrate their students are improving and will deemphasize seniority as a factor in hiring, layoff and placement decisions, guaranteeing that high-quality teachers will be rewarded. But opponents, including the Massachusetts Teachers Association, say teacher evaluation criteria were approved by a state board a few months ago and should be tested without sharp consequences first to ensure they are reliable.

Advocates for a ballot question to limit the annual increase in water and sewer rates did not respond to a request for comment. Proposals to sanction three casinos for Massachusetts, to forbid no-bid energy contracts and to force voters to present identification at the polls were scratched in August when Attorney General Martha M. Coakley determined they failed to meet the legal criteria to advance.

Former Springfield Mayor Charles Ryan, basketball star Rebecca Lobo to be honored by Springfield Rotary Club, Basketball Hall of Fame

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The two will be honored at the second annual ‘Service Above Self’ luncheon later this month.

Charles Ryan Rebecca Lobo.jpgFormer Springfield Mayor Charles V. Ryan and basetball star Rebecca Lobo will be honored at the 'Service Above Self' luncheon Dec. 9.

SPRINGFIELD – The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and the Springfield Rotary Club will honor former Mayor Charles V. Ryan and former WNBA and University of Connecticut basketball star Rebecca Lobo at the second annual “Service Above Self” luncheon on Dec. 9.

The event will begin at noon at Center Court at the hall of fame and is open to the public. Tickets are $40.

“We are honored to work in conjunction with our friends at the Springfield Rotary to honor two individuals who have had a major impact on our community, the game of basketball and the basketball hall of fame,” said John L. Doleva, the hall’s president and chief executive officer.

Ryan served as mayor of Springfield from 1962 to 1967 and again from 2004 to 2008. Known for his civic service throughout his four-decade career, he helped to redraft Springfield’s charter to its current form of government and fought the closure of the Springfield Armory during his first stint as mayor. He has been an active fund-raiser and contributor for Elms College and the Sisters of St. Joseph.

Lobo, a Southwick native, was the Massachusetts state scoring record-holder with 2,740 points in her high school basketball career for Southwick-Tolland Regional High School. She helped lead the UConn Huskies to the 1995 national championship with an undefeated 35-0 record. In her senior year, she won the 1995 Naismith and College Player of the Year awards. She has since gone on to a successful WNBA career, an Olympic gold medal and an ESPN broadcasting career. She is also an advocate for breast cancer awareness; her late mother, RuthAnn Lobo, had breast cancer.

The Lobos founded “The RuthAnn and Rebecca Lobo Scholarship in Allied Health” in 2001 at UConn. It is awarded annually to students studying health sciences in an effort to encourage diversity in the health professions.

“Both Charles and Rebecca truly represent our motto of ‘service above self,’ and we are extremely honored to thank them for their work throughout their careers,” said Ed Sunter, president of the Rotary Club of Springfield.

The luncheon will be followed by the Basketball Hall of Fame Holiday Showcase at the MassMutual Center, which will tip-off with Division II schools American Internaitonal College and Philadelphia University at 3 p.m. A Division III matchup between Springfield and Trinity colleges will follow at 5 p.m., and the show will finish with a Division I doubleheader. The 7 p.m. game will feature the University of Massachusetts and Siena with the final game between Fairfield and Old Dominion University starting around 9 p.m.

For more information on tickets to the luncheon, contact Jason Fiddler, director of museum sales, (413) 231-5540 or by email to jfiddler@hoophall.com.

Police: 2 kids call 911, ask for Santa

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No, Virginia, you can't call 911 and ask for Santa Claus.

KINGSTON, N.Y. — No, Virginia, you can't call 911 and ask for Santa Claus.

That's what two young children in New York's Hudson Valley have learned.

The Daily Freeman of Kingston reports that around 11 a.m. Sunday, police in the city of Kingston responded to a home after two children, ages 4 and 6, called 911 asking to speak to either the police chief or Santa Claus.

Police say officers interviewed the family and kids, and instructed the youngsters on the proper use of emergency services. It wasn't clear what the kids wanted to ask Santa.

Horses could soon be slaughtered for meat in US

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The last U.S. slaughterhouse that butchered horses closed in 2007 in Illinois, and animal welfare activists warned of massive public outcry in any town where a slaughterhouse may open.

horsemeat-us.jpgCheri White Owl, founder of Horse Feathers Equine Rescue, is pictured with one of the 33 horses she is currently caring for in Guthrie, Okla., Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. Slaughterhouses could be ready to kill horses within a month if the U.S. Department of Agriculture provides funding for meat inspectors, days after Congress quietly opened the door to the practice by lifting a 5-year-old ban on spending federal money on such inspections.

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Horses could soon be butchered in the U.S. for human consumption after Congress quietly lifted a 5-year-old ban on funding horse meat inspections, and activists say slaughterhouses could be up and running in as little as a month.

Slaughter opponents pushed a measure cutting off funding for horse meat inspections through Congress in 2006 after other efforts to pass outright bans on horse slaughter failed in previous years. Congress lifted the ban in a spending bill President Barack Obama signed into law Nov. 18 to keep the government afloat until mid-December.

It did not, however, allocate any new money to pay for horse meat inspections, which opponents claim could cost taxpayers $3 million to $5 million a year. The U.S. Department of Agriculture would have to find the money in its existing budget, which is expected to see more cuts this year as Congress and the White House aim to trim federal spending.

The USDA issued a statement Tuesday saying there are no slaughterhouses in the U.S. that butcher horses for human consumption now, but if one were to open, it would conduct inspections to make sure federal laws were being followed. USDA spokesman Neil Gaffney declined to answer questions beyond what was in the statement.

The last U.S. slaughterhouse that butchered horses closed in 2007 in Illinois, and animal welfare activists warned of massive public outcry in any town where a slaughterhouse may open.

"If plants open up in Oklahoma or Nebraska, you'll see controversy, litigation, legislative action and basically a very inhospitable environment to operate," predicted Wayne Pacelle, president and chief executive of The Humane Society of the United States. "Local opposition will emerge and you'll have tremendous controversy over slaughtering Trigger and Mr. Ed."

But pro-slaughter activists say the ban had unintended consequences, including an increase in neglect and the abandonment of horses, and that they are scrambling to get a plant going — possibly in Wyoming, North Dakota, Nebraska or Missouri. They estimate a slaughterhouse could open in 30 to 90 days with state approval and eventually as many as 200,000 horses a year could be slaughtered for human consumption. Most of the meat would be shipped to countries in Europe and Asia, including France and Japan.

Dave Duquette, president of the nonprofit, pro-slaughter group United Horsemen, said no state or site has been picked yet but he's lined up plenty of investors who have expressed interest in financing a processing plant. While the last three slaughterhouses in the U.S. were owned by foreign companies, he said a new plant would be American-owned.

"I have personally probably five to 10 investors that I could call right now if I had a plant ready to go," said Duquette, who lives in Hermiston, Ore. He added, "If one plant came open in two weeks, I'd have enough money to fund it. I've got people who will put up $100,000."

Sue Wallis, a Wyoming state lawmaker who's the group's vice president, said ranchers used to be able to sell horses that were too old or unfit for work to slaughterhouses but now they have to ship them to butchers in Canada and Mexico, where they fetch less than half the price.

The federal ban devastated "an entire sector of animal agriculture for purely sentimental and romantic notions," she said.

Although there are reports of Americans dining on horse meat a recently as the 1940s, the practice is virtually non-existent in this country, where the animals are treated as beloved pets and iconic symbols of the West.

Lawmakers in California and Illinois have banned the slaughter of horses for human consumption, and more than a dozen states tightly regulate the sale of horse meat.

Federal lawmakers' lifting of the ban on funding for horse meat inspections came about in part because of the recession, which struck just as slaughtering stopped. A federal report issued in June found that local animal welfare organizations reported a spike in investigations for horse neglect and abandonment since 2007. In Colorado, for example, data showed that investigations for horse neglect and abuse increased more than 60 percent — from 975 in 2005 to almost 1,600 in 2009.

The report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office also determined that about 138,000 horses were transported to Canada and Mexico for slaughter in 2010, nearly the same number that were killed in the U.S. before the ban took effect in 2007. The U.S. has an estimated 9 million horses.

Cheri White Owl, founder of the nonprofit Horse Feathers Equine Rescue in Guthrie, Okla., said she's seen more horse neglect during the recession. Her group is caring for 33 horses now and can't accept more.

"A lot of the situation is due to the economy," she said, "People deciding to pay their mortgage or keep their horse."

But White Owl worries that if slaughterhouses open, owners will dump their unwanted animals there instead of looking for alternatives, such as animal sanctuaries.

Animal rights groups also argue that slaughtering is a messy, cruel process, and some say it would be kinder for owners to have their horses put to sleep by a veterinarian.

"Euthanasia has always been an option," Pacelle said. But "if you acquire a horse, you should be a responsible owner and provide lifetime care."

The fight over horse slaughtering has pitted lawmakers of the same party against each other.

Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., said the poor economy has resulted in "sad cases" of horse abandonment and neglect and lifting the ban will give Americans a shot at regaining lost jobs and making sure sick horses aren't abandoned or mistreated.

But U.S. Rep. Jim Moran, D-Va., is lobbying colleagues to permanently ban horse slaughter because he believes the process is inhumane.

"I am committed to doing everything in my power to prevent the resumption of horse slaughter and will force Congress to debate this important policy in an open, democratic manner at every opportunity," he said in a statement.


Holyoke homicide victim Jefforey Johnson's brother and mother deny charges in connection with shooting death

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Damion Johnson, who faces murder and firearm charges, was ordered held without right to bail.

photo1.jpg11-30-11 - Holyoke - 20-year-old Damion Johnson denied murder and firearm charges in connection with the shooting death of his 19-year-old brother, Jefforey Johnson, during his arraignment Wednesday in Holyoke District Court

HOLYOKE – Damion Johnson denied murder and weapons charges pertaining to the Sunday shooting of his younger brother, Jefforey Johnson, early Wednesday afternoon in District Court and was ordered held without right to bail.

Joanne Couture, meanwhile, the 45-year-old mother of the victim and suspect, denied a charge of wilfully misleading police during the investigation.

Judge Bethzaida Sanabria-Vega ordered the 20-year-old Johnson to be held without right to bail and Couture to be held in lieu of $1,000 cash or $10,000 personal surety.

The fatal shooting occurred about 8:30 p.m. inside the apartment at 101 Beech St., where Couture and the late Johnson, 19, lived.

Damion Johnson’s address is listed as 68 Essex St.

The younger Johnson was taken to the Baystate Medical Center, but later died of his wounds.

Hampden Assistant District Attorney Joan M. Dietz told Sanabria-Vega that both Couture and Johnson gave investigators several different versions of the events surround the shooting.

photo1.jpg11-30-11 - Holyoke - Joanne Couture, mother of 19-year-old homicide victim Jefforey Johnson, denied a charge of wilfully misleading police Wednesday in District Court.

Johnson initially told police that that he had been inside the house when his brother was fatally shot outside. He was that he saw the flash of a gun, heard a shout and saw four men in dark clothes running down the street, Dietz said.

Dietz said that Couture told detectives the following day that the victim had been holding a gun inside the home “messing around with it,” and that the shooting occurred when her elder son tried to take it away.

Couture also told police that she had not been aware that guns were being kept inside her home.

The elder Johnson was also charged with two count possession a firearm without a license, two counts of possession of ammunition without an FID card.

Pre-trial hearings for both mother and son were set for Dec. 22.

PM News Links: Joseph Kennedy III might run for Congress, Boston pushes for right to oust 'Occupy' camp and more

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Blue Heron Farm, the Chilmark estate that President Obama and his family have rented for the past three summers, was sold last week for $21.9 million.

Massachusetts CorruptionThe flag flies in front of the Federal Medical Center in Lexington. Ky., where former Massachusetts House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi reported to begin his eight-year sentence on corruption charges Wednesday. Click on the link, left, for an interview with DiMasi from WCVB-TV, Channel 5 in Boston. (Photo by James Crisp)

  • Joseph Kennedy III refuses to rule out run for U.S. Rep. Barney Frank's seat [Boston Herald]

  • Menino administration pushes for right to end Occupy Boston encampment [Boston.com]

  • President Obama's vacation retreat on Martha's Vineyard sold [Vineyard Gazette]

  • Former Massachusetts House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi expresses worries for family as he heads to prison (video) [WCVB-TV, Channel 5, Boston]

  • Officials say father from left children home alone while he went to rob home in Hull [WFXT-TV, Fox 25, Boston]

  • Dad arrested for robbery, kids found home alone in Hull: MyFoxBOSTON.com

  • Federal Reserve Board's move to raise liquidity helps stocks soar [Christian Science Monitor]

  • Judith Phillips, Darren Alston sworn in to top Hampshire County court posts [Daily Hampshire Gazette]

  • Commentary: Don't call a Christmas tree a 'holiday tree' (audio) [CBS Boston.com]

  • Twitter posts tagged #westernma in Western Mass. [MassLive.com]

  • Read more News Links »

  • Do you have News Links? Send them our way or tweet them to @masslivenews
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    Obituaries today: Jan Bellows, 64, of Longmeadow; devoted teacher, died unexpectedly Thanksgiving morning

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    Obituaries from The Republican today.

    Jan Bellows 113011.jpgJan C. Bellows

    LONGMEADOW- Jan Carpenter Bellows, 64, died unexpectedly at her home in Longmeadow Thanksgiving morning. She was born in Fort Worth, Texas, on Sept. 22, 1948, a daughter of the late Granville Carpenter and the late Elizabeth Carpenter Gleckler. She was devoted to her profession of teaching. A memorial fund, the Jan Bellows Memorial Fund, has been set up in her name to benefit the students of the Williams Middle School in Longmeadow.

    Obituaries from The Republican:

    Obama: 'Massive blow to the economy' if GOP blocks payroll tax extension

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    The full payroll tax of 6.2 percent would be restored if Congress does not act by year's end, increasing taxes on 160 million Americans.

    113011obama.jpgPresident Barack Obama waves as he takes the stage prior to speaking at Scranton High School, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011, in Scranton, Pa.

    SCRANTON, Pa. (AP) — On the attack, President Barack Obama warned Wednesday of a "massive blow to the economy" if Republicans oppose him over extending a payroll tax cut, as he campaigned for more money in the pockets of U.S. workers — and in his campaign treasury.

    Obama pressed his case at a campaign-style rally in working-class Scranton, Pa., where he said Republicans had to choose between lower taxes for the wealthy, or a payroll tax cut that would help working Americans.

    "Are you going to cut taxes for the middle class and those who are trying to get into the middle class or are you going to protect massive tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires?" he said. "Are you going to ask a few hundred thousand people who have done very, very well to do their fair share, or are you going to raise taxes for hundreds of millions of people across the country?"

    "We need to get wealthy Americans to pay their fair share," the president said.

    Obama was traveling later Wednesday to donor-rich New York City to raise money for his already flush re-election bid, in a day illustrating the dual policy and political demands on the president as the 2012 campaign season nears.

    Meanwhile on Capitol Hill, Republicans indicated they were prepared to extend the temporary payroll tax cut, but said any extension must be paid for with savings from elsewhere in the budget, even as they opposed Democrats' plan to pay for it by taxing incomes over $1 million. That set up a showdown over how to find mutually acceptable savings before any extension could become law.

    The full payroll tax of 6.2 percent would be restored if Congress does not act by year's end, increasing taxes on 160 million Americans.

    "If Congress doesn't act to extend this tax cut then most of you, the typical middle-class family, is going to see your taxes go up by $1,000 at the worst possible time," Obama said.

    Obama was welcomed warmly by a crowd of nearly 2,000 in the Scranton High School gym. At one point the president said that Republicans have sworn an oath not to raise taxes, prompting one man in the crowd to yell loudly: "Give us some names!"

    In making a case for the consequences of letting the tax cut lapse, Obama offered a bleak assessment, telling his audience: "It would be tough for you. It would also be a massive blow for the economy because we're not fully out of the recession yet."

    Technically, though, the recession ended in June 2009, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research, the nonprofit group that determines the beginning and end of recessions. The downturn began in December 2007 and was the longest and deepest since World War II, costing the country about 7.5 million jobs.

    The recovery has been unusually weak, but the economy is growing again. It expanded 2 percent in the July-September quarter.

    In selecting Scranton to make his appeal, Obama ventured to the birthplace of Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bob Casey, the Pennsylvania Democrat who is the author of the payroll tax cut plan expected to come up for a vote in the Senate later this week.

    Before making remarks, Obama sought to put a face on the beneficiaries of the payroll tax cut by stopping at the home of third-grade teacher Patrick Festa and his wife Donna, a graphic designer, in working-class South Scranton. The three chatted in the family's Christmas-decorated dining room, Obama inquiring about their work and their two high school-aged children.

    Obama won Pennsylvania with 54 percent of the vote in 2008, but the fragile economy could put the state in play in 2012. Its proximity to Washington and its political importance have made it a favorite stopping place for Obama and Biden. The trip comes as Obama steps up his re-election campaign, rolling out two ads that call on supporters to begin to mobilize.

    White House press secretary Jay Carney, while conceding that the re-election effort is under way, played down politics as a factor in Obama's Scranton visit.

    "It's part of his responsibility, serving the American people, to get out and be among them and to speak with them about his agenda or her agenda," he said.

    In New York, Obama was to attend three fundraisers: one at the home of businessman Jack Rosen, chairman of the American Jewish Congress, where tickets begin at $10,000; one at the Greenwich Village restaurant Gotham Bar and Grill at $35,800 per ticket; and a reception at the Sheraton Hotel, where tickets begin at $1,000. The money will be split between the Democratic National Committee and the Obama re-election campaign.

    Obama also was scheduled to attend a reception celebrating progress on gay rights and the six-month anniversary of New York's approval of gay marriage. Obama has been supportive of gay and lesbian causes but has stopped short of declaring support for gay marriage.

    Al Gore to speak at Hampshire College President Jonathan Lash's inaugural in April

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    Lash has been serving as Hampshire president since July.

    Al Gore 2011.jpgAl Gore

    AMHERST - Former Vice President Al Gore will speak at the
 inauguration of Hampshire College President Jonathan Lash on April 27, according to a statement from the college.

    In the statement, Lash called 

the two-term vice president under Bill Clinton a visionary advocate for broad and innovative change. Gore won the Nobel Prize with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 2007 and an Oscar for his documentary “An Inconvenient Truth”

    Lash has been serving at the college’s sixth president since July, coming from the Washington D.C. –based World Resources Institute, which focused on providing solutions to global challenges of environment and sustainability.

    While there, he Clinton appointed him 
co-chairman of the President’s Council on Sustainable Development.

    Hillary Clinton tests reforms on historic, diplomatically risky visit to Myanmar

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    Clinton's trip is meant to test whether Myanmar's new civilian leaders are truly ready to throw off 50 years of military dictatorship.

    113011clinton.jpgU.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, center, is greeted by Myanmar Deputy Foreign Minister Myo Myint, right, upon her arrival in Naypyidaw, Myanmar, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011.

    NAYPYIDAW, Myanmar (AP) — Looking to cement a foreign policy success and prod reform in one of the world's most isolated and authoritarian nations, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Wednesday she was hopeful that "flickers of progress" would burst into flames of reform in Myanmar.

    Clinton's diplomatically risky trip to a nation that receives few outsiders and still heavily restricts what its people can see and read is meant to test whether new civilian leaders are truly ready to throw off 50 years of military dictatorship. U.S. officials said she would also press the leadership on severing military and suspected nuclear ties with North Korea.

    "I am obviously looking to determine for myself and on behalf of our government what is the intention of the current government with respect to continuing reforms both political and economic," Clinton told reporters before her arrival here. It is the first trip by a secretary of state to the country also known as Burma in more than half a century.

    She is to meet senior Myanmar officials including President Thein Sein in the capital Naypyidaw on Thursday before heading to the commercial capital of Yangon. There she will see opposition leader and Nobel peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who is returning to the political scene after decades of detention and harassment.

    Successive military regimes canceled 1990 elections that Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy party won. She has said she plans to run in upcoming elections.

    "We and many other nations are quite hopeful that these flickers of progress ... will be ignited into a movement for change that will benefit the people of the country," she said. President Barack Obama used the same description — "flickers of progress" — when he announced he was sending Clinton to Myanmar.

    Clinton declined to discuss specific steps that she would suggest to the military-backed government or say how the U.S. might reciprocate for positive change.

    Clinton was greeted at Naypyidaw's small airfield by a deputy foreign minister, several other officials and a large contingent of international press who were granted rare visas to cover her visit. But her presence here appeared to take second stage to the expected arrival Thursday of the prime minister of Belarus and his wife, to whom two large welcoming signs were erected at the airport and the road into the city. Belarus is often criticized for its poor human rights record and is subject to U.S. sanctions similar to those Myanmar is under.

    No signs welcoming Clinton were visible as her motorcade bounced from the airport to the city on a bumpy cement road that was largely devoid of vehicles, with traffic police stopping small and scattered groups of cars, trucks and motorbikes at intersections.Officials say Clinton will be seeking assurances from Myanmar's leaders that they will sign an agreement with the U.N. nuclear watchdog that will permit unfettered access to suspected nuclear sites. The U.S. and other Western nations suspect Myanmar has sought and received nuclear advice along with ballistic missile technology from North Korea in violation of U.N. sanctions. A U.S. official said missiles and missile technology are of primary concern but signs of "nascent" nuclear activity are also worrying.

    The Obama administration also hopes to loosen Chinese influence in a region where America and its allies are wary of China's rise. Myanmar has historic ties with China, but has pulled back from a major dam project sought by China amid signs the new leaders are sensitive to criticism that China is taking unfair advantage of its much smaller but resource-rich neighbor.

    U.S. officials are cautious about what Clinton's three-day visit can accomplish beyond being a symbolic stamp of approval for the small steps of political and social reform under way since elections last year. They are careful to point out that there are no immediate plans to lift heavy U.S. sanctions on Myanmar imposed because of an abysmal human rights record.

    That could come in time, if Myanmar proves serious about reform. Other steps being contemplated include upgrading diplomatic relations that would see the two countries exchange ambassadors.

    Some members of Congress have expressed concern that the trip is an undeserved reward for the regime.

    "I am concerned that the visit of the secretary of state sends the wrong signal to the Burmese military thugs," said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. "Secretary Clinton's visit represents a monumental overture to an outlaw regime whose DNA remains fundamentally brutal."

    Suu Kyi said Wednesday that she still supports U.S. sanctions against her country's government, but will have a better idea of the chances for reform after she meets with Clinton.

    The trip is the first major development in U.S.-Myanmar relations in decades and comes after the Obama administration launched a new effort to prod reforms in 2009 with a package of carrot-and-stick incentives. That effort failed, but rapprochement sped up when Myanmar held elections last year that gave power to a new government that pledged greater openness.

    The administration's special envoy to Myanmar has made three trips to the country in the past three months, and the top U.S. diplomat for human rights has made one.

    Those officials pushed for Clinton to make the trip, deeming a test of the reforms as worthwhile despite the risks of backsliding.

    Last week, Myanmar's parliament approved a law guaranteeing the right to protest, which had not previously existed, and improvements have been made in areas such as media and Internet access and political participation. The NLD, which had boycotted previous flawed elections, is now registered as a party.

    But the government that took office in March is still dominated by a military-proxy political party, and Myanmar's commitment to democratization and its willingness to limit its close ties with China are uncertain.

    Corruption runs rampant, hundreds of political prisoners are still jailed and violent ethnic conflicts continue in the country's north and east. Human rights activists have said Clinton's visit should be judged on improvements in those conditions.

    Myanmar's army continues to torture and kill civilians in campaigns to stamp out some of the world's longest-running insurgencies, according to rights groups. They say ongoing atrocities against ethnic minorities serve as a reminder that reforms recently unveiled by the country's military-backed government to worldwide applause are not benefitting everyone.

    Aid groups have reported atrocities that occurred as recently as last month: A village leader was killed, allegedly by soldiers, for helping a rebel group, his eyes gouged out and his 9-year-old son buried beside him in a shallow grave. The boy's tongue was cut out.

    Wall Street: Dow closes up nearly 500 points following world banks' moves to lower cost of borrowing

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    The central bank’s decision eased fears of a global credit crisis similar to the one that followed the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers.

    Christine Lagarde, Agustin CarstensChristine Lagarde, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, IMF, left, talks to Agustin Carstens, Governor of Mexico's Central Bank during a press conference in Mexico City, Wednesday. Lagarde said the IMF has no plans to bail out Italy and Spain in response to fears they may default on their debts. A move by the world's central banks to lower borrowing costs, however, caused work markets to react positively. (Photo by Alexandre Meneghini)

    NEW YORK – A move by the world’s central banks to lower the cost of borrowing exhilarated investors Wednesday, sending the Dow Jones industrial average soaring 490 points and easing fears of a global credit crisis similar to the one that followed the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers.

    It was the Dow’s biggest gain since March 2009.

    Large U.S. banks were among the top performers, jumping as much as 7 percent. Markets in Europe surged, too, with Germany’s DAX index climbing 5 percent.

    “The central banks of the world have resolved that there will not be a liquidity shortage,” said David Kotok, chairman and chief investment officer of Cumberland Advisors. “And they have learned their lessons from 2008. They don’t want to take small steps and do anything incrementally, but make a big bold move that is credible.”

    Wednesday’s action by the banks of Europe, the U.S., Britain, Canada, Japan and Switzerland represented an extraordinary coordinated effort.

    But amid the market’s excitement, many doubts loomed. Some analysts cautioned that the banks’ move did nothing to provide a permanent fix to the problems facing heavily indebted European nations such as Italy and Greece. It only buys time for political leaders.

    “It is a short-term solution,” said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank. “The bottom line on any central bank action is that it papers over the problems, buys time and in some respects takes pressure from politicians. ... If nothing’s done in a week, this market gain will disappear.”

    Banks stocks soared as fears about an imminent disaster in the European financial system ebbed.

    American and European banks are connected by contracts, loans and other financial entanglements, meaning that a European financial crisis would punish U.S. bank stocks. The brighter outlook that emerged Wednesday relieved some investor concerns.

    JPMorgan Chase & Co. jumped 7.7 percent, the most of the 30 Dow components. Morgan Stanley rose 10 percent and Citigroup Inc. 8.2 percent.

    Banking worries – and the reluctance of the European Central Bank to intervene – have caused borrowing rates for European nations to skyrocket. Wednesday’s decision greatly alleviated fears by cutting short-term borrowing rates to banks, giving them much easier access to money. But borrowing costs remain extremely high for indebted countries such as Italy and Spain.

    The euro rose sharply, while U.S. Treasury prices fell as demand weakened for ultra-safe assets.

    The Dow rose 4.2 percent to close at 12,045. It has more than gained back the 564-point slump it had last week and is up 7 percent so far this week. The last time the Dow closed up more than 400 points was Aug. 11.

    The Standard & Poor’s 500 closed up 52, or 4.3 percent, at 1,247. The Nasdaq composite index closed up 105, or 4.2 percent, at 2,620.

    Seven stocks rose on the New York Stock Exchange for every one that fell. Volume was heavy at 5.7 billion shares.

    Surging commodity prices lifted the stocks of companies that make basic materials such as steel. United States Steel Corp. gained 14 percent, the most in the S&P 500. AK Steel Holding Corp. added 11 percent. Energy stocks also leaped. Alpha Natural Resources Inc. rose 14 percent, Peabody Energy Corp. 13 percent.

    The move by the banks takes some pressure off the financial system, which has signaled in recent days that banks were losing faith in their trading partners. Banks need dollars to fund their daily operations, and they need to trust each other to maintain healthy flows of credit. Access to dollars has dried up as American money market funds reduced their lending to European banks.

    But the banks’ most recent steps do little to solve the long-term debt problem in Europe.

    “People are taking comfort that it’s globally coordinated,” said Peter Tchir, who runs the hedge fund TF Market Advisors. “In itself, it does nothing. But the bulls are anticipating that this is just the beginning of central bank and other actions” to ease market pressures.

    Any successful plan would have to reduce borrowing costs for Italy and other indebted nations, Tchir said. Italy’s borrowing costs edged lower Wednesday, but the nation was still paying more than 7 percent interest for 10-year borrowing – a dangerously high level.

    European finance ministers in Brussels have been meeting since Tuesday but have failed to deliver a clearer sense of how the currency union will proceed. More leaders gather next week for a summit.

    In another attempt to free up cash for lending, China on Wednesday reduced the amount of money its banks are required to hold in reserve. It was the first easing of monetary policy in three years, and analysts are expecting more.

    Growth in China, which has the largest economy after the European Union and the U.S., could be crucial to sustaining any recovery after the debt crisis.

    A string of positive U.S. economic news also propelled the market higher. An index measuring manufacturing in the Midwest surged to a seven-month high; private company hiring jumped in November to the highest level this year, according to payroll company ADP; and the number of contracts to buy homes jumped in October to the highest level in a year.


    Jean-Babets brothers sentenced in Sunderland police station attack

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    As conditions of their probation, Kenneth and Patrick Jean-Babets must remain drug and alcohol free, submit to random screens, undergo mental health counseling and have no contact with police officers.

    BABETS.JPGKenneth and Patrick Jean-Babets (left to right).

    GREENFIELD – Brothers Kenneth and Patrick Jean-Babets were sentenced to jail Wednesday for their attack on two police officers in the Sunderland Police Station.

    Their sentencing came almost three weeks after a Franklin County jury convicted the brothers of two counts each of assault and battery on a police officer and threatening to commit a crime. Kenneth and Patrick Jean-Babets arrived at the police station on Feb. 21 of this year, shortly after a third brother, Steven Jean-Babets, was arrested for marijuana possession and a traffic violation. Police Chief Jeffrey Gilbert testified at their trail that Kenneth and Patrick stormed the room after Gilbert opened the door, attacking him and police officer Gary Sibilia.

    Gilbert said Kenneth Jean-Babets brandished a knife at him during the attack, but Gilbert was able to knock it to the floor. The jury found Jean-Babets not guilty of assault with intent to murder, however. The officers subdued and arrested the brothers after a brief struggle.

    Franklin Superior Court Judge Richard Carey sentenced Kenneth Jean-Babets, 26, to 2½ years in jail followed by three years of probation. Patrick Jean-Babets, 24, was ordered to serve a one-year jail sentence followed by three years probation. As conditions of their probation, the brothers must remain drug and alcohol free, submit to random screens, undergo mental health counseling and have no contact with police officers.

    Kenneth, Patrick and Steven Jean-Babets, along with a fourth brother, are biological siblings who were adopted by David Jean and Donald Babets. The couple had previously sued the state over its foster care regulation, claiming they discriminated against same-sex parents. The suit paved the way for gay couples to adopt in Massachusetts.

    Vocational high schools in Western Massachusetts could offer associate degree programs in the future

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    Many vocational schools already work with businesses to offer evening technical training programs.

    Taking an eight-week machinist technology class at Chicopee Comprehensive High School with instructor Robert Cantin is left to right, Greg Nash, Kham Siphanoum and Neil DiBiasco all from Litron Laser Process Specialists in Agawam, Tony Gomes from Ludlow, Matt Hagopian of Hoppe Tech in Chicopee and William Griffin of Kidder Tool in Agawam. Here, Matt programs the HAAS TL1 Lathe. The class is one of several night courses held at the vocational technical high school. Michael Beswick

    When students go home for the day, Chicopee Comprehensive High School fills with electricians studying to renew their licenses and adults updating their skills in machine technology.

    That after-school activity may be expanded dramatically if the state Legislature adopts a bill that would give vocational high schools more flexibility and allow them to offer associate’s degrees.

    “I think it could be a big boost,” says Kenneth R. Widelo, vocational director for Chicopee Comprehensive. “Our instructors are super, and we have a beautiful state-of-the-art facility.”

    The legislation, filed by state Rep. Martha Walz, D-Boston, would allow expanded offerings of so-called service programs beyond the four that are permitted now: hospitality, culinary arts, cosmetology and child care.

    It also calls for vocational schools to have a seat on different professional licensing boards so they can help remove some barriers now in place for recent high school graduates to secure a job, she said.

    The most controversial proposal for some and most promising for others calls for a commission to study if vocational schools should be able to offer associate’s degrees.

    Many vocational schools have incredible resources in the equipment and instructors, and they are only used six hours a day. Offering associate’s degrees could allow high-school students to continue studying in their fields after they earn a diploma and would give older people an affordable option to learn a trade, the legislator said.

    “I’m sure there would be challenges to this,” Walz said. “Let’s really look at it in depth and examine what are the things that would make it successful and what are the barriers to the success.”

    Career technical instructors at Chicopee Comprehensive have been working with the Regional Employment Board and area businesses to offer programs to existing employees to help update their skills in machining and drafting. The classes, taught by the high-school instructors, are funded through grants, Widelo said.

    When Chicopee built a new Comprehensive High School about five years ago, it also purchased modern equipment for its shops, making it a popular place for people to study, he said.

    Several years ago the school also changed its night courses to offer more programs for professionals. One of the more popular ones allows electricians to amass credits so they can renew their licenses, Widelo said.

    A number of other high schools, including Smith Vocational Agricultural in Northampton, Pathfinder Regional in Palmer and Franklin County Regional Technical also offer adult programs, said David Cruise, director of business and employer services for the employment board.

    “It allows us to operate programs that are very cost-effective, and the need is critical,” Cruise said. “Technology is changing rapidly, and it is critical that employees have the skills they need.”

    Vocational schools have done a good job responding to the needs of the community, but Cruise says he questions if they should take on the work of community colleges, which already do a good job offering associate degrees and one-year certificate programs.

    Joan Schuman also questions the idea of vocational high schools offering associate-degree programs. She is executive director of the Northampton-based Collaborative for Educational Services that now helps run William J. Dean Technical High in Holyoke and also offers vocational programs for the Department of Youth Services and for youth with learning disabilities.

    “I’m not so sure it should be in our purview. I think community colleges do a good job,” she said.

    But, Schuman said, she does believe the law that dictates what programs can be taught is too restrictive and does not allow schools to easily make modifications so they can prepare students for new, evolving types of jobs.

    “I think the more we can open up vocational education and career opportunities for young people, the better, as long a there are jobs and actual careers that are available in the course of study,” she said.

    David Ferreira, executive director of the Massachusetts Association of Vocational Administrators, says the law governing vocational high school programs was written in 1960 and does not give schools flexibility to create new courses of study, so it needs to be modified. For example, one of the newer and growing occupations is data mining, which cannot be taught under the existing law.

    “The state wanted us to start a criminal justice program, but because it is under the definition of service occupation, we could not,” he said. “Ironically, one of the occupations we cannot teach is barbering, but we can teach cosmetology.”

    Ferreira supports the idea of at least studying associate’s degree programs, especially since there are few community colleges outside of Springfield Technical Community College that offer associate’s degrees in applied science.

    Many community colleges do not have the expensive equipment that vocational-technical high schools do, so it makes sense to maximum the use of the schools, he said.

    “We don’t need to duplicate. We need to maximize our programs,” Ferreira said. “We think it would help the Massachusetts economy move forward.”

    In Springfield, Roger L. Putnam Technical High School works closely with Smith & Wesson and other businesses to train students in high-need occupations. If students could continue the program after graduation and earn an associate’s degree, it would be even better for the businesses, he said.

    James Laverty, principal of Westfield Vocational-Technical High School, called the trades allowed by state law restrictive and said he supports the provision of the bill that would change that.

    “We have a lot of emerging occupations. People want to run technical programs for fire safety and law enforcement,” Laverty said.

    Laverty said he would like to see the results of the commission’s study on the associate’s degree programs.

    Like many vocational schools, Westfield Technical has some articulation agreements with Holyoke Community and Springfield Technical Community colleges. The agreements exempt students from having to repeat courses a teenager may have studied in vocational school.

    Westfield Mayor Daniel Knapik to replace City Planner Lawrence Smith

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    The Community Development post is not expected to be filled until July.

    Lawrence Smith 2000.jpgLawrence B. Smith

    WESTFIELD – City Planner Lawrence B. Smith will leave his position, including that of community development director, effective Monday, Mayor Daniel M. Knapik announced Tuesday.

    Knapik said he plans to replace Smith, planner since 2000 and community development director since 2008, when Smith’s term of appointment ends on Dec. 5.

    “The mayor is entitled to put his own team in place,” Knapik said of his reason not to re-appoint Smith.

    City Council President Christopher Keefe called smith “an excellent city planner, someone who will be hard to replace.”

    At-Large Councilor John J. Beltrandi III said Smith “is a capable planner.”

    Ward 4 Councilor Mary L. O’Connell said Smith’s “expertise has been invaluable. He always considered what was best for Westfield.”

    Knapik said he plans to contract with Pioneer Valley Planning Commission for 90 days to allow time to advertise the position.

    “This will allow time to advertise and select a new city planner,” the mayor said.

    Knapik said he will address the position of community development director “in the city’s next budget cycle” indicating that post will remain vacant until at least July 1. Smith’s current salary as planner and community development director is $84,500.

    Smith is the third city official not re-appointed since Knapik became mayor in 2010.

    Knapik dismissed Donald C. York as superintendent of buildings in September, 2010 and earlier this year did not re-appoint Richard A. Merchant as personnel director.

    Jonathan S. Flagg was recently confirmed by the City Council to serve as superintendent of buildings and former School Department human resources director Stephen A. Hagen is serving as part-time interim personnel director.

    A former senior planner for Northampton, Smith served as town planner in Palmer before assuming that position here.

    A Leeds resident, Smith started his career as a planner in Belchertown in 1977.

    Retired Holyoke Police Chief Anthony Scott wants to represent Belchertown on Western Massachusetts Casino Task Force

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    Scott, who retired in April after 10 years as Holyoke's police chief, said he would have Belchertown's best interests at heart even though he isn't a resident.

    Retired Holyoke Police Chief Anthony Scott.JPGView full sizeHolyoke Police Chief Anthony Scott before a roast honoring his retirement. Scott wants to represent Belchertown on the Western Massachusetts Casino Task Force.

    BELCHERTOWN – Retired Holyoke Police Chief Anthony R. Scott wants to fill the town’s vacancy on the Western Massachusetts Casino Task Force, saying he would have Belchertown’s best interests at heart even though he isn’t a resident.

    Fourteen towns are part of the task force, which assesses the potential local and regional impacts of a casino. Belchertown’s seat has been vacant since May 2010, when former selectman Michael J. Reardon left office.

    The task force examines the possible effects of a casino on traffic, crime, job creation, property values, gambling addiction and other issues in the individual towns and throughout the region.

    Scott declined to speak with The Republican about his interest in the seat.

    In a letter to the Board of Selectmen, Scott said the town’s “values, concerns and wellbeing would be at the forefront of my concerns and recommendations to the Board.”

    Scott retired in April after 10 years as Holyoke’s police chief. He was in law enforcement for 44 years.

    Legislation signed last week by Gov. Deval L. Patrick allows three casinos, one somewhere in the western half of the state, and one slots parlor. Casino companies are jockeying for the sole Western Massachusetts project and have proposed building in Palmer, Holyoke and Springfield.

    Scott notes in his letter that he was chief of police for eight years in a city that has a casino and “crimes decreased during my tenure in this city.” He doesn’t specify where. Besides Holyoke, he was chief of police in Athol, which does not have a casino, for three years, and in Rock Island, Ill., home of Jumer’s Hotel & Casino, for 10 years, according to the city’s website.

    “I believe I possess the necessary experience and expertise to represent the best interest of the Town of Belchertown as it relates to the impact of gambling and gambling related issues,” Scott wrote.

    Board Vice-Chairman William R. Barnett praised Scott at Monday’s meeting, saying, “I have no doubt about whatever he does, he does it well.”

    Chairman Kenneth E. Elstein said he knew of “a number of different people from different backgrounds” who were interested in the seat and an appointment could be discussed at the Dec. 12 selectmen meeting.

    Belchertown, Brookfield, Brimfield, Hampden, Holland, Ludlow, Monson, Palmer, Sturbridge, Wales, Ware, Warren, West Brookfield and Wilbraham are members of the task force.

    Western Massachusetts Electric Co. rates expected to rise $5 per month for average customer

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    An average residential customer, defined as using 700 kilowatt-hours of power a month, pays $109 a month now, spokeswoman Sandra Ahearn said.

    SPRINGFIELD – Western Massachusetts Electric Co. electricity bills could go up about $5 a month for an average residential customers assuming a pair of rate adjustments go into force in early 2012.

    An average residential customer, defined as using 700 kilowatt-hours of power a month, pays $109 a month now, spokeswoman Sandra Ahearn said Wednesday. Under the new rate structure, that will increase to about $114 a month.

    The rate changes are still under review by the state Department of Public Utilities, said Catherine Williams, a spokeswoman for the department. Williams said she had no timeline for a decision.

    Ahearn said electric delivery rates, the cost of wires and equipment that gets power to homes and businesses, will decrease Feb. 1 for all customers. But, for customers who also buy power from Western Massachusetts Electric Co., that decrease will be offset by an increase in the cost of electricity that will go into force Jan. 1, Ahearn said.

    From January 1 to June 30, Western Massachusetts Electric Co. residential customers on basic service will see a supply rate of 7.741 cents per kilowatt hour, compared with 6.998 cents per kilowatt hour for the previous six-month period.

    Small commercial and industrial customers will see a supply rate of 8.264 cents per kilowatt hour, compared to 7.498 cents per kilowatt hour for the previous six month period.

    National Grid, the region’s other large investor-owned power utility, said its rates have already gone up. Effective Nov. 1, National Grid’s new rate is 8.2 cents a kilowatt hour, up from 7.3 cents a kilowatt hour in the previous six months.

    Investor-owned utilities in Massachusetts are required to go to the electricity market and bid for power twice a year, according to both companies. Deregulation of electricity utilities meant that the investor-owned utilities cannot own generating capacity except for a limited amount of renewable generating capacity, such as solar panels.

    “This rate change is driven primarily by the supply rates that we don’t have any control over,” Ahearn said. “A lot of this is seasonal changes. As the price of natural gas changes, so does the cost of power.”

    Natural Gas prices drive electricity costs because about half the region’s power is generated by burning natural gas.

    Municipal utilities can avoid those seasonal changes by buying power on longer contracts and maintain ownership stakes in power-generating plants, said Sean P. Fitzgerald, energy specialist and customer liaison for Westfield Gas & Electric.

    “That’s the problem with investor owned utilities. They have to buy twice a year in big chunks,” he said.

    Electricity rates in Westfield won’t change next year, he said.

    David F. Touhey, director of communications for the Ludlow-based Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Co., said the cooperative has been getting good deals for its member municipal utilities for power in 2012, 12013 and 2014.

    “Now we are working to fill in the gaps for 2015,” he said.

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