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East Longmeadow's Blu Homes is building a business in prefabricated houses

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Blu homes raised $12 million to get started and is currently raising another $13 million to grow the business.

04/12/2011- East Longmeadow - Blu Homes - Exterior of one of the finished units at the Blu Homes company factory in East Longmeadow

EAST LONGMEADOW – Walk into one corner of a cavernous former aircraft factory at 330 Chestnut St. in East Longmeadow and it feels like a neighborhood – a sleekly designed modern neighborhood where the homes environmentally-sensitive bamboo floors.

The homes are model homes for Blu Homes, a maker of environmentally-sensitive prefabricated homes that does its design and administrative work in Waltham but its manufacturing in a 80,000-square-foot factory across the street from Lenox American Saw.

Besides hosting Pratt & Whitney during World War II, the space was also once home to a packaging machinery company and to a Hasbro warehouse

Blu moved in about a year ago and had 15 employees by July 2010. Now it has 40 workers including electricians, plumbers welders and carpenters. The company has plans to expand its work force.

“We have had a surprising number of sales,” said Maura G. McCarthy co-founder and vice president of sales. “It feels there is a lot of pull from the market right now.”

The company sold 16 homes in the first quarter and expects to sell about 70 by the time the year is over.

That sounds like a lot, McCarthy said. But she pointed out that there are about 250,000 new home starts a year nationwide.

“So we are only capturing 70 of them,” she said. “It’s a small number in that context, but it is big for us.”

McCarthy said the recession has made smaller homes and energy savings trendy.

“It’s cool now to raise chickens,” she said. “There is a back-to-basics mentality.”

Founded in 2007, Blu boasts 60 homes built already, about 30 on each coast of the United States, according to Blu’s press materials. They’ve recently placed one in Berkshire County and there are Blu homes in upstate New York.

Blu Homes are built with steel frames that fold out, allowing for larger more open spaces and more windows. They are heavily insulated with homeowners often saving 50 percent on energy costs.

“These houses are like tanks,” McCarthy said. “When you close the door, it feels solid.”

Prices vary according to size and design. The Origin model, which ranges from 18-feet-by-24-feet to 18-feet-by-48-feet in size sells for $95,000 as a shell or $125,000 for a fill home.

The Breezhouse model which is 2,295 square-feet and can have three-to-four bedrooms and three bathrooms on one level sells for $495,000. Two-level homes are also available as are add-on rooms for use as offices, studios or bedrooms.

Blu grew from research done at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Rhode Island School of Design, she said. The brain trust is in Waltham. But the space to manufacture is not available there.

She said Blu came to East Longmeadow because the site has a 250-ton crane left over from a past tenant making it easy to ship out completed homes. There is also a competent and skilled work force.

“A lot of factories failed because the workers didn’t care and couldn’t show up,” she said.

McCarthy, who comes form a venture capital background, said Blu raised $12 million to get started and is currently raising another $13 million to grow the business.


Climate change case reaches Supreme Court, arguments to be heard Tuesday

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The court is taking up a climate change case for the second time in four years.

Lisa Jackson.jpgView full sizeIn this photo taken Feb. 9, 2011, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lisa Jackson testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington before the House subcommittee on Energy and Power hearing on the "Energy Tax Prevention Act of 2011. As the EPA considers rules to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from power plants, Republicans in Congress lead an effort to strip the EPA of its power to regulate greenhouse gases. Arguments will be heard Tuesday, April 19, before the U.S. Supreme Court over the ability of states and groups such as the Audubon Society to sue large electric utilities and force power plants in 20 states to cut their emissions. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration and environmental interests generally agree that global warming is a threat that must be dealt with.

But they're on opposite sides of a Supreme Court case over the ability of states and groups such as the Audubon Society that want to sue large electric utilities and force power plants in 20 states to cut their emissions.

The administration is siding with American Electric Power Co. and three other companies in urging the high court to throw out the lawsuit on grounds the Environmental Protection Agency, not a federal court, is the proper authority to make rules about climate change. The justices will hear arguments in the case Tuesday.

The court is taking up a climate change case for the second time in four years. In 2007, the court declared that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are air pollutants under the Clean Air Act. By a 5-4 vote, the justices said the EPA has the authority to regulate those emissions from new cars and trucks under that landmark law. The same reasoning applies to power plants.

The administration says one reason to end the current suit is that the EPA is considering rules that would reduce carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. But the administration also acknowledges that it is not certain that limits will be imposed.

At the same time, Republicans in Congress are leading an effort to strip the EPA of its power to regulate greenhouse gases.

The uncertainty about legislation and regulation is the best reason for allowing the case to proceed, said David Doniger, a lawyer for the Natural Resources Defense Council, which represents Audubon and other private groups dedicated to land conservation.

"This case was always the ultimate backstop," Doniger said, even as he noted that the council would prefer legislation or EPA regulation to court decisions. The suit would end if the EPA does set emission standards for greenhouse gases, he said.

The legal claims advanced by six states, New York City and the land trusts would be pressed only "if all else failed," he said.

When the suit was filed in 2004, it looked like the only way to force action on global warming. The Bush administration and the Republicans in charge of Congress doubted the EPA's authority to regulate greenhouse gases.

Federal courts long have been active in disputes over pollution. But those cases typically have involved a power plant or sewage treatment plant that was causing some identifiable harm to people, and property downwind or downstream of the polluting plant.

Global warming, by its very name, suggests a more complex problem. The power companies argue that any solution must be comprehensive. No court-ordered change alone would have any effect on climate change, the companies say.

"This is an issue that is of worldwide nature and causation. It's the result of hundreds of years of emissions all over the world," said Ed Comer, vice president and general counsel of the Edison Electric Institute, an industry trade group.

The other defendants in the suit are Cinergy Co., now part of Duke Energy Corp. of North Carolina; Southern Co. Inc. of Georgia; Xcel Energy Inc. of Minnesota; and the federal Tennessee Valley Authority. The TVA is represented by the government and its views do not precisely align with those of other companies.

Eight states initially banded together to sue. They were California, Connecticut, Iowa, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wisconsin. But in a sign of the enduring role of partisan politics in this issue, New Jersey and Wisconsin withdrew this year after Republican replaced Democrats in their governor's offices.

Another complication is that the administration and the companies may be on the same side at the Supreme Court, but the power industry is strongly opposing climate change regulation. The Southern Co. is a vocal supporter of GOP legislation to block the EPA from acting.

"It's two-faced for them (the companies) to come into court and say everything is well in hand because EPA is going to act," said Doniger, the NRDC lawyer.

Comer said the key point is that judges should not make environmental policy. "This has important implications for jobs. If you raise energy costs in the U.S., does that lead industry jobs to go elsewhere and if it does, do you get the same emissions, just from another country?" Comer said. "These judgments are properly made by elected officials."

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who was on the federal appeals court panel that heard the case, is not taking part in the Supreme Court's consideration of the issue.

The case is American Electric Power Co. v. Connecticut, 10-174.

Western Massachusetts meetings listed for the week

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Here is a list of major municipal meetings for the coming week: Agawam: Tues.-City Council, 7 p.m. Roberta G. Doering School. Thu.-Planning Board, 7 p.m., Agawam Public Library. Amherst: Mon.-Town Meeting Coordinating Committee, 11 a.m., police station. Tues.-Public Transportation and Bicycle Committee, 4 p.m., Town Hall. Local Historical District Study Committee, 5:30 p.m., Town Hall. Wed.-Committee on Homelessness, 10...

springfield seal

Here is a list of major municipal meetings for the coming week:


Agawam:

Tues.-City Council, 7 p.m. Roberta G. Doering School.

Thu.-Planning Board, 7 p.m., Agawam Public Library.

Amherst:

Mon.-Town Meeting Coordinating Committee, 11 a.m., police station.

Tues.-Public Transportation and Bicycle Committee, 4 p.m., Town Hall.

Local Historical District Study Committee, 5:30 p.m., Town Hall.

Wed.-Committee on Homelessness, 10 a.m., Bangs Community Center.

Select Board, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall.

Thu.-Board of Health, 7 p.m., Bangs Community Center.

Zoning Board of Appeals, 7:30 p.m., Bangs Community Center.

Chicopee:

Tues.-City Council, 7:15 p.m., City Hall.

Wed.-Golf Commission, 6 p.m., Municipal Golf Course, Burnett Road.

School Committee, 7 p.m., 180 Broadway

Thu.-License Commission, 6 p.m., City Hall.

Conservation Commission, 6:15 p.m., City Hall.

East Longmeadow:

Tues.-Board of Assessors, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall.

Recreation Commission, 6:30 p.m., Pleasantview Senior Center.

Easthampton:

Mon.-Agricultural Commission, 6:30 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Community Garden Committee, 6 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Tues.-Council on Aging, 10 a.m., 19 Union St.

Wed.-Assessors, 5:30 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Board of Public Works, 4:30 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

City Council, 6 p.m., White Brook Middle School.

Thu.-Community Preservation Committee, 6:30 p.m., Municipal Building.

Development and Industrial Commission, 4 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

School Committee Policy Subcommittee, 5:45 p.m., 50 Payson Ave.

Granby:

Tues.-Board of Health, 6:30 p.m., Town Hall Annex, 215-B West State St.

Planning Board, 6:30 p.m., Aldrich Hall, upstairs, 257 East State St.

Selectboard, 7 p.m., Senior Center, 10 West State St.

Charter Day Commission, Public Safety Building, 7 p.m.

Greenfield:

Tues.-Council on Aging, 2 p.m., Senior Center.

Board of License Commissioner, 6 p.m., 14 Court Square.

Wed.-Ways and Means Committee, 6 p.m., Police Department Meeting Room.

Town Council, 7 p.m., 393 Main St.

Thu.-Planning Board, 7 p.m., 114 Main St.

Hadley:

Tues.-Board of Health, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Planning Board, 7 p.m., Senior Center.

Hatfield:

Tues.-Board of Health, 9:30 a.m., Memorial Town Hall.

Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m., Smith Academy.

Holyoke:

Tues.-Holyoke Contributory Retirement Board, 9 a.m., City Hall Annex, Room 207.

Board of Public Works, Sewer Commission, Stormwater Authority, 5:30 p.m., Department of Public Works, 63 Canal St.

City Council, special meeting, 6:30 p.m., City Hall, City Council Chambers.

City Council, 7:30 p.m., City Hall, City Council Chambers.

Wed.-City Council Redevelopment Committee, 6:30 p.m., City Hall, City Council Chambers.

Thu.-Council on Aging, board of directors, 10 a.m., War Memorial, 310 Appleton St.

Huntington:

Wed.-Zoning Board of Appeals, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall.

Longmeadow:

Tues.-Town Meeting Rules Committee, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Zoning Board of Appeals, 7:30 p.m., Police Department.

Thu.-Council on Aging, 9:30 a.m., 231 Maple Street.

School Building Committee, 7 p.m., Police Department.

Select Board Financial subcommittee, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Monson:

Mon.-Keep Homestead Museum, 7 p.m., 35 Ely Road.

Tues.-Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m., Town Office Building.

Planning Board, 7 p.m., Town Office Building.

Wed.-Board of Health, 6 p.m., Town Office Building.

Thu.-Parks and Recreation, 6:30 p.m., Town Office Building.

Northampton:

Tues.-Transportation and Parking Commission, 4 p.m., Council Chambers.

Smith Vocational High School Board of Trustees, 5 p.m., Smith Vocational High School.

Wed.-Redistricting Committee, 5 p.m., Mayor’s Office.

Zoning Revisions Committee, 6:30 p.m., City Hall.

Thu.-City Council, 7:15 p.m., Council Chambers. Forbes Library Trustees, 4 p.m., Forbes Library.

Board of Health, 5;30 p.m., City Hall.

Retirement Board, 1:45 p.m., Council Chambers.

Palmer:

Tues.-Town Council, 7 p.m., Town Building.

South Hadley:

Tues.-Council on Aging Policy Committee, 10 a.m., Senior Center.

Veterans’ Services Board, 11 a.m., Town Hall.

Appropriations Committee hearing, 7 p.m., Town Hall auditorium.

Wed.-High School Council, 4 p.m., High School Library School Building Committee, 6:30 p.m.

Town Hall Tri-Board, 7 p.m., Town Hall auditorium.

Thu.-Prudential Committee, 6 p.m., Fire Station 1.

Water Commissioners, 6:30 p.m., Water Department Office.

Canal Park Committee, 7 p.m., Old Firehouse Museum.

Southwick:

Tues.-Planning Board, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Southwick-Tolland Regional School Committee, 7 p.m., Powder Mill Middle School.

Parks and Recreation Commission, 7 p.m., Town Beach.

Wed.-Board of Selectmen, 6 p.m., Town Hall.

Springfield:

Tues.-Springfield Housing Authority, 4:30 p.m., conference room, 18 Saab Court.

Parking Authority, 5:30 p.m., authority office, 150 Bridge St.

City Council Government, Public Health and Safety, Race/Civil Rights Committees, 6 p.m., council chambers, City Hall.

Wed.-School Committee, 4:30 p.m., special meeting, School Department, 1550 Main St.

Thu.-City Council Planning and Economic Development Committee, 3:30 p.m., Room 200, City Hall.

Warren:

Wed.-Planning Board, 6 p.m., Shepard Municipal Building.

Thu.-Finance Committee, 7 p.m., Shepard Municipal Building.

West Springfield:

Tues.-West Springfield Retirement Board, 7:30 a.m., Sullivan Paper Co. at 58 Progress Ave.

Town Council, 7 p.m., municipal building.

Planning and Construction Committee, 7 p.m., municipal building.

Westfield:

Tues.-Planning Board, 7 p.m., City Hall.

Wed.-Flood Control, 7 p.m., City Hall.

Thu.-City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall.

Fire tears through historic Brooks House in downtown Brattleboro Vermont

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A six-alarm fire ripped through the historic Brooks House in downtown Brattleboro, Vt. Sunday evening.

216961_10150178770903769_95528383768_6775073_7052363_n.jpgFirefighters from across Southern Vermont and Western Massachusetts were called to High Street in Brattleboro Sunday night to battle what is being described as a six-alarm fire at the historic Brooks House building.

UPDATE- 3 AM: The fire has been downgraded to a five-alarm scenario and crews remain at the scene working on what's left of the building, according to a report by commonsnews.org. The news website reported that the building housed at least 80 tenants who authorities were making efforts to locate to make sure everyone got out safely. The Green Mountain Chapter of the American Red Cross has established a temporary shelter and is attending to the immediate needs of the displaced residents as well as the first responders. To monitor communications from emergency personal at the scene, click here.

Brattleboro, Vt. - Several Massachusetts fire departments were called upon Sunday night to help battle a blaze at the historic Brooks House building on High Street in downtown Brattleboro, Vt.

The six-alarm fire at the former hotel was first reported around 9 p.m. and crews remained on the scene into the morning trying to stay ahead of the fast-moving flames.

Video of the blaze by the crew at The Brattleboro Reformer

No one from the Brattleboro Fire Department was immediately available to comment, but a report from Fireground 360's Facebook page indicated that crews were beginning to get things under control around 2 a.m.

The Brooks House is considered a landmark building in Brattleboro as well as Southern Vermont. Originally built in 1871, the building most recently housed 59 apartments, 15 storefronts and one radio station, according to a real estate website marketing living spaces in the complex.

Brooks House Postcard.JPGThis undated postcard shows the building when it was considered one of the largest hotels in New England.

According to an article about the building written by the Brattleboro Community Brain Trust, the building is 175 long on Main Street, 120 feet long on High Street and has a depth of 70 feet. The building forms nearly a right angle and the total length is almost 300 feet.

It is unknown if anyone was injured in the fire or how extensive the damage to the building is.

More information will be published as it becomes available.

Springfield mayoral preliminary likely with 'very high-profile' candidates: incumbent Domenic Sarno, Jose Tosado and Antonette Pepe

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2 other residents, Jeffery Donnelly and Michael Jones, have also taken out nomination papers for mayor.

sarno tosado pepe 2011 springfield mayor preliminary.jpgLeft to right, Mayor Domenic Sarno, City Council President Jose Tosado and School Committee member Antonette Pepe.

SPRINGFIELD – For the first time in over a decade, there could be a preliminary election slugfest for mayor in Springfield, with three political veterans already saying they will be in the fray.

It sets the stage for a preliminary contest in September to reduce the field to two candidates for the Nov. 8 municipal election ballot.

Mayor Domenic J. Sarno is seeking re-election to a third term, City Council President Jose F. Tosado is already waging an active campaign for the top job and a second challenger is ready to announce next week.

School Committee member Antonette E. Pepe is due to announce her candidacy for mayor on April 26 in an event at the John Boyle O’Reilly Club.

The last time there were more than two candidates for Springfield mayor was in 2001, when then-incumbent Mayor Michael A. Albano beat challengers Paul Caron, a former state representative, and Ni Cole Jones. Jones, however, was a first-time candidate and finished a distant third.

Prior to that, there was a preliminary in 1995, when incumbent Robert Markel had four opponents – Albano, Frederick Hurst, Chelan (Jenkins) Brown and the once and future mayor, Charles V. Ryan. Markel lost in the preliminary, and Albano won the general election over Ryan. Brown is now working as an advisor to Tosado in his bid for mayor.

Election commissioner Gladys Oyola says this year’s mayoral race could draw a lot of interest from voters.

031811_gladys_oyola.jpgGladys Oyola

“Pepe, Tosado and Sarno are very high-profile candidates, and each has a strong base of support from very different constituencies,” Oyola said. “I believe that a mayoral primary featuring these individuals will spark interest in the primary election and draw out more voters.”

Timothy Vercellotti, an associate professor of political science at Western New England College, agrees. A potential field of at least three known candidates adds to voter interest and makes the outcome more difficult to predict, said Vercellotti, who oversees the college’s polling institute.

“In this field, now we have some suspense,” Vercellotti said.

Sarno, though, says he is focused on doing the job of mayor, particularly on the city’s budget challenges, rather than the business of a campaign.

If money talks, however, Sarno has the lead, having $39,545 in his campaign coffers as of March 31, followed by Tosado with $25,385.

Pepe’s most recent campaign report from January shows $5,487 in campaign funds, but she said it was her choice not to seek contributions in between campaigns for School Committee, prior to her decision to run for mayor.

Tosado announced his candidacy on Jan. 27, at Champions Sports Bar at Tower Square. He is casting himself as the candidate who can deal best with the city’s economic woes, its landscape violence and a “broken” school system; he’s hired well-known regional marketing consultant Darby O’Brien to assist in the development of his campaign.

The first Hispanic elected to the City Council in 2003, Tosado has praised the diversity of his supporters and his campaign committee. Along with Brown who is his field director, some of Tosado’s key advisors include Ernesto Cruz, campaign manager, Edgar Alejandro, who is campaign chairman, Marshall Moriary, fund-raising chairman, and Aron Goldman, chief strategist.

Tosado followed up the announcement of his candidacy with an ongoing series of “urban study tours.” The tour has included meetings with officials in Worcester, Newark, N.J., and San Juan, Puerto Rico. He also plans trips to strategize with leaders in Lowell, Boston and Providence, R.I.

The intent of the tour is to gather “best practices and innovative approaches to urban transformation,” Tosado said in one of his press releases.

Less than two weeks after Tosado’s announcement of his candidacy, Sarno presented a formal “State of the City” address in which he pointed out challenges being confronted in the City of Homes. But, he added, “Our beloved city of Springfield is strong and is steadily improving.”

Sarno calls the mayor’s job “one of the most rewarding positions anyone can have,” but he won’t say when he’ll make a formal announcement of his candidacy.

“That’s the furthest thing from my mind,” Sarno said. “I continue to do the job and get the job done. My major focus, rightly so, should be and will be dealing with the budgetary challenges we face.”

Sarno’s touted his administration’s accomplishments as including: maintaining the city’s financial stability in the aftermath of a finance control board and despite the recession and cuts in general state aid; maintaining public safety as his top priority, including new academy classes for police and firefighters; and providing incentives to help save jobs at businesses like Titeflex and Smith & Wesson.

Pepe, a seven-year member of the School Committee, says she decided to run for mayor at the urging of many people.

“I know I can do a better job than is being done now,” Pepe said. “It’s not personal. I have great respect for both of them.”

She said she’s planning a campaign that will be “hard-fought, serious and issue-oriented.”

“Honesty and integrity are my hallmarks,” Pepe said. “As a member of the School Committee, I have a record of accomplishments. Everyone who knows me knows I don’t make promises that I can’t keep.”

With Pepe added to the mix of candidates, Tosado said he’s expecting a lively race. “I say that with all due respect,” he added.

Two other residents, Jeffery P. Donnelly and Michael Jones, have also taken out nomination papers for mayor. There is a July 26 deadline to file nomination papers, and candidates must have at least 500 certified signatures of registered voters to be on the ballot.

Tosado said he sees the key issues facing Springfield as mirroring those which are being confronted by urban communities across the country: public safety, the economy and education.

In a recent press release, he said the drop-out rates in three Springfield high schools “is catastrophic” and in need of urgent action, referring to the high schools of Commerce, Science & Technology, and the Academy for Excellence. Resources and services are already there to address the issue, but, Tosado said, it will take “commitment, leadership, and the courage to hold ourselves accountable.”

In San Juan in February, a trip which Tosado described as a work vacation, he met with several senators, and during one meeting said he promoted a plan to create a teacher exchange program “to help repair the broken Springfield school system.”

In his recent trip to Newark, Tosado said he met with Mayor Cory Booker’s administration to share strategies on economic opportunity, police reform and supporting the arts. In his five years as mayor of New Jersey’s largest city, Booker has earned national attention for his leadership in fighting crime, improving educational opportunities and other issues.

Pepe’s campaign is to be headed by Teresa E. Regina, a former assistant superintendent of the Springfield Public Schools. Others on her leadership team are to include attorney Michael T. Kogut, who ran unsuccessfully last year for Hampden district attorney, and community activist Karen Powell. Pepe’s treasurer will be Daniel V. Walsh, who worked on Kogut’s campaign.

New UMass code of conduct draft released for comment

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The UMass commission was appointed last spring when students were upset because a student accused of rape was still enrolled at the university and the victim had no recourse to appeal the ruling.

UMass campusUniversity of Massachusetts at Amherst.

AMHERST - The University of Massachusetts has created a draft of a new Code of Student Conduct that includes a change in the judicial review process after an outcry on campus last year following a student rape.

The Special Commission on the Code of Student Conduct was appointed last spring when students were upset because the student accused of rape was still enrolled at the university and the victim had no recourse to appeal the ruling.

The student reported being raped in November of 2009, but did not press criminal charges. The accused student was given a deferred suspension, meaning that he could be suspended for any further violation of the university’s code of conduct. The student, who lived off campus, was expected to graduate last May

With the new code, a complainant would be allowed to appeal the decision and the process would allow the chancellor or designee to review sanctions under certain circumstances. It also changes the composition, appointment process and training of hearing boards, to encourage students to take more responsibility.

Previously, students could be on the appeal boards, but now it is a requirement, said Susan Pearson, associate chancellor and co-chairwoman of the commission. According to the document, the board would include at least 21 undergraduates, at least six graduates and at least 12 faculty and staff members. All members must participate in training that is more comprehensive than in the past.

The code has not been rewritten since 1995, said UMass spokesman Edward F. Blaguszewski. He said it has been amended in some places.

The new code would apply to all students, undergraduate and graduate, and to all student behavior, on and off campus. Pearson said excluding graduate students had been an oversight. But she said “there aren’t as many who live on campus.”

The university had the ability to apply the code off campus, but now it is officially part of the code, pending approval.

Pearson said “what guided the approach (to creating the code was) it shouldn’t be a means of laying out violations. It should be about education, educating students about maintaining standards of behavior in the community rather than punishment for punishment’s sake.”

The campus is soliciting feedback on the draft until April 22. Comments and questions should be sent to screport@stuaf.umass.edu. The committee meets April 28 to review the comments and hopes to submit it to the Board of Trustees in time to be included in the June 8 agenda for adoption.

The goal is to have it in place for the fall.

Dad appeals for NH journalist's release from Libya

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With two weeks passing since NH native James Foley was kidnapped by Gaddafi's forces, the journalist's family & friends continue efforts to bring their loved one back home.

James Foley.jpgThis undated still image from video released Thursday, April 7, 2011 by GlobalPost, shows James Foley of Rochester, N.H., a freelance contributor for GlobalPost, in Benghazi, Libya. GlobalPost said it has been told Foley was taken prisoner in Libya on Tuesday, April 5, 2011.

ROCHESTER, N.H. (AP) — The father of a Boston-based freelance correspondent from New Hampshire who's missing in Libya is appealing for his son's release.

John Foley says Monday marks the 14th night his son James Foley has been a prisoner of the Libyan government. He appeals to Libya and to leader Moammar Gadhafi (MOO'-ah-mar gah-DAH'-fee) to release the 37-year-old Rochester, N.H., journalist.

Foley was covering the conflict in Libya for the Boston-based GlobalPost and was taken prisoner April 5 by forces loyal to Gadhafi. Rebel forces have been trying to end Gadhafi's four-decade rule.

GlobalPost reports Libyan authorities haven't confirmed the whereabouts of Foley and three other journalists captured while reporting on the outskirts of the key oil town Brega, where fighting has been continuous.

Journalist CapturedGrandmother Olga Wright, left, Diane Foley, mother, and John Foley, father, attend a vigil Sunday, April 17, 2011 in Rochester, N.H. for the release of their son and grandson James Foley, 37, a freelance contributor for GlobalPost, who was taken prisoner in Libya along with three other journalists by forces loyal to Moammar Gadhafi. (AP Photo/Foster's Daily Democrat, EJ Hersom)

The other reporters kidnapped on April 5 include Clare Gillis, U.S.;Manu Brabo, Spain; and Anton Hammerl, London.

GlobalPost says a candlelight vigil was held at the Foley family's church in Rochester on Sunday night.

For more information about James Foley and to sign a petition calling for his release, visit http://freefoley.org.

Download, print and post the James Foley poster below

Nuclear power plant owners paid billions for spent fuel facility that never opened

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Part II of a series on the spent fuel crisis: Nuclear power plant owners and their ratepayers face intensifying costs for storage of spent fuel now that the Obama administration has tabled plans for a federal dump.

Editor's note: This series is a collaboration between the Hearst Connecticut Media Group and the New England Center for Investigative Reporting (www.necir-bu.org), a nonprofit investigative newsroom based at Boston University.

By MAGGIE MULVIHILL, SHAY TOTTEN, and MATT PORTER
New England Center for Investigative Reporting

NukeLogo0418.jpg

New England’s electricity consumers and nuclear plant owners have poured close to $1 billion into a federal waste fund for the past three decades, honoring their end of a 1982 bargain with the government to finance the permanent storage of thousands of tons of spent fuel from the region’s reactors.

The payoff?

A cavernous empty $11 billion hole in a Nevada mountainside, a broken promise from the U.S. government to remove the radioactive waste and mounting bills that could still saddle New England with at least five mothballed plants and dozens of dry spent fuel casks, turning communities into mini nuclear waste dumps for decades, if not forever.

“It’s the most expensive dry hole we’ve ever built,” said David Lochbaum, a nuclear engineer and director of the Union of Concerned Scientists Nuclear Safety Project. “Who would trust the government with a dollar after they’ve wasted billions? We’ve messed this up as bad as we possibly could.”

As the nuclear calamity in Japan has resurrected debate about government and industry promises of the energy’s cost effectiveness, a review of regional costs by the New England Center for Investigative Reporting and the Hearst Connecticut Media Group has found:

2001 yucca mountain.JPGFILE PHOTO – An employee of the Yucca Mountain Project walks through a tunnel inside the project near Mercury, Nev.

• New England plants, among the nation’s oldest, have already generated over 4,200 tons of spent fuel, data from the Nuclear Energy Institute, an industry policy organization, shows, but the plants have no clear financial plan on how to pay for long-term storage. The spent fuel sits at or near the nine regional reactors in either pools of water or dry cement fortifications known as “dry casks,” which cost between $6 to 8 million annually per plant to secure.

• At least one New England plant is seeking U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission approval to raid funds set aside to decommission to cover mounting spent fuel costs, raising concerns about its plans to pay for the future dismantling and cleanup costs.

• New England’s continuing federal bill for the waste generated to date tops $2.1 billion, including interest, NEI data shows. Millions more will be needed to house the additional 20 metric tons plants are generating annually.

• Regional plants have a bleak history of underestimating decommissioning costs by hundreds of millions, shifting those unanticipated costs onto taxpayers and ratepayers far into the future.

• Operators or owners of some New England plants have a limited liability corporate structure, meaning taxpayers could be financially responsible for a plant disaster.

• Taxpayers in New England and the rest of the nation have paid out $750 million in settlements or judgments for generator lawsuits against the federal government for defaulting on its promise to remove the spent fuel to Nevada. The U.S. Department of Energy has estimated its potential liability at $13.1 billion, a November 2010, DOE report shows.

The cost bleed is not unique to New England. Plant owners and the ratepayers they charge are grappling with intensifying spent fuel storage bills now that the Obama administration - even as it touts industry expansion - has tabled plans for a federal dump at Nevada’s Yucca Mountain.

“The real story here is the failure of the government to remove the fuel,” said David Tarantino, spokesman for the Pilgrim Nuclear Generating Station in Plymouth, whose pools will reach maximum capacity in 2014. “We don’t want to store fuel, but we have to.”

Political opposition has currently sunk the proposal that would have moved, beginning in 1998, up to 70,000 metric tons of waste to the Yucca site 90 miles from Las Vegas.

While safety, not finances, has been at the core of the intense debate about the industry following the Japan calamity in March, analysts, anti-nuclear activists, New England politicians and even plant operators said the cost issue sorely needs public attention.

“If a nuclear renaissance were to take place - if it were not just a figment of wishful thinking - we would need another Yucca Mountain every few years,” said Ray Shadis, a Maine environmentalist and anti-nuclear activist. “When you grasp the scale of what is proposed, the cost is astronomically high and I don’t know that in the public debate that is really being considered.”

As the question of whether nuclear energy will ever be affordable is debated, the federal government continues to spend money to support it on a vast scale. To date, $11 billion has been spent to excavate and prepare the now-abandoned Yucca site, leaving about $20 billion in the fund, industry experts said.

It could cost $10 billion to find another site and prepare it if Yucca is canceled, said Arnold Gundersen of Fairewinds Associates, an industry consultant and former licensed nuclear operator based in Vermont.

Beyond the unexpected storage costs, taxpayers and ratepayers could also be on the hook for billions in additional costs ranging from proposed federal subsidies and loans, as well as the possibility owners won’t have enough money to decommission the plants and clean up the hazardous sites.

At least one New England plant is seeking an exemption from federal law that would allow it to use its decommissioning fund to pay for storage costs.

041411 vermont yankee.JPGVermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant as seen from the Hinsdale, N.H., side of the Connecticut River.

Vermont Yankee - whose fund is already short millions - wants the NRC to allow them to use the money to pay for fuel storage, according to a 2008 plan it filed with the agency.

In 2009, the NRC required Entergy Nuclear Operations Inc., which owns Vermont Yankee, a limited liability corporation, to put up a $40 million loan guarantee because its decommissioning funds are off track, said NRC spokesman Neil Sheehan

In its NRC proposal, Entergy estimated it would need about $220 million - about half the current fund - to deal with spent fuel, seeking permission to draw from the decommissioning fund built up with ratepayer money.

“Entergy VT will periodically revisit the cash contribution required for the decommissioning fund to ensure that spent fuel management withdrawals would not inhibit the ability of the licensee to complete radiological decommissioning,” the proposal states.

The NRC can’t act on the proposal until decommissioning begins.

Because of the limited liability corporate structure of some New England plants, like Vermont Yankee, and Seabrook in New Hampshire, industry critics worry the public will have to pick up the tab to clean up sites if the firms go bankrupt.

“Decommissioning is a real problem in New England,” said Gundersen.

NRC spokesman Neil Sheehan disagrees.

“The corporation would not be off the hook. We could always go after the parent company, “Sheehan said.

Still, history is not on the side of New England plant operators when it comes to properly estimating decommissioning costs.

“The colossal failure of nuclear power is really seen in decommissioning,” said Deborah Katz, who runs the Massachusetts-based Citizens Awareness Network, an anti-nuclear group.

“When you have to engage in cleanup, then this notion of being a clean, technologically advanced form of generating power is really put to the test. These are basically nuclear pigsties,” Katz said.

A 2006 audit by the NRC’s own internal financial watchdog found in a review of 13 nuclear plants that the actual on-site estimate to decommission was 16 percent higher than was what set aside in funds.

“What they have found at these sites again and again is there has been an underestimation by hundreds of millions of dollars of what it will cost,” Katz said. “That is why the investment community won’t get behind new reactors. They have no faith in what it is going to cost.”

yankee rowe before and after.jpgView full sizeTop photo shows the Yankee Rowe nuclear power plant in Rowe before demolition began. Below, the former site of the plant after it was decommissioned and removed.

The estimated cost to decommission Yankee Rowe in Rowe was $306 million in 1995 dollars. The actual costs were $600 million, a company report states.

Decommissioning was completed in 2007.

Similar problems occurred in Maine and Connecticut.

Connecticut ratepayers will contribute to Yankee Connecticut’s decommissioning costs until 2015 because the NRC and Yankee underestimated the cleanup costs by about $300 million, plant critics said.

“It wound up costing a billion to decontaminate Connecticut Yankee,” Gundersen said. “All of the ratepayers in Connecticut got nailed for 10 years to pay that off.”

Yankee spokesman Bob Capstick put the decommissioning cost closer to $800 million. He said plant owners will return funds to ratepayers if they are successful in their lawsuits against the government for the fuel storage bills.

Both the NRC and New England plant owners said they are on target to pay the decommissioning bills.

Ken Holt, a spokesman for Dominion Resources Inc., which owns the Connecticut plants, known as Millstone 2 and 3, said it has about half of what it expects it will need to dismantle the two plants in 2035 and 2045 respectively, when their licenses expire, and any shortfall won’t fall on ratepayers.

“The company is responsible for making up any difference in the funds to decommission the unit,” he said.

Sheehan said the NRC has changed the decommissioning formula to make sure owners are on track. Funds must gain 2 percent annually and be invested in conservative financial vehicles to ensure dependable growth.

Plants without the funds can “mothball” the plant for up to 60 years - a process known as SAFESTOR - to give them time to finance decommissioning, he said.

The public’s contributions are far from reaping the promised benefit of affordable, clean energy to consumers, according to a February report by the Union of Concerned Scientists in Cambridge.

“Government subsidies to the nuclear power industry over the past 50 years have been so large in proportion to the value of the energy produced that in some cases it would have cost taxpayers less to simply buy kilowatts on the open market and give them away,” the report summary states.

And after 40 years of operation, the plants still can’t stand on their own financial footing, the Union of Concerned Scientist’s report states.

“The financial story is that nuclear power is not viable without subsidies,” said Ellen Vancko, who runs UCS’s nuclear energy division. “The waste issue is just one example.”

New England politicians continue to raise the fairness of the public tab. Last year, U.S. Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., asked the General Accounting Office to review the NRC’s oversight of plants, in part because of the industry’s history of fiscal problems.

In a March 18 letter to President Obama, U.S. Sen. Bernard Sanders, I-Vt., asked the administration to revisit both a federal law providing taxpayer subsidized insurance to the nuclear industry as well as giving federally backed loans to build new plants.

Congress has authorized $18.5 billion in existing loan guarantees authority to new nuclear plants, and the Obama Administration, in its budget proposal, has asked for another $36 billion to expand the nuclear power industry.

“Independent analysis suggests that new nuclear power is more expensive than nearly every other energy source, including solar, wind, biomass and geothermal energy,” Sanders wrote. “Given that reality, I cannot understand why we would continue to pour massive taxpayer subsidies into nuclear power.”

The Yucca debacle has opened up a financial chasm that will take decades to resolve, industry critics said.

“We are taxing our grandchildren. Capitalism kicks these liabilities down the road, so we are kicking the can down the road,” Gundersen said. “We get the benefit while our grandchildren get the liability.”


Pediatric study: suicide among gay and straight teens higher in politically conservative regions

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Suicide attempts by gay teens — and even straight kids — are more common in politically conservative areas where schools don't have programs supporting gay rights, a study involving nearly 32,000 high school students found.

Gay Teens SuicideZachary Toomay, 18, poses near his home in Arroyo Grande, Calif., Saturday April 16, 2011. (AP Photo/Phil Klein)
By LINDSEY TANNER, AP Medical Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — Suicide attempts by gay teens — and even straight kids — are more common in politically conservative areas where schools don't have programs supporting gay rights, a study involving nearly 32,000 high school students found.

Those factors raised the odds and were a substantial influence on suicide attempts even when known risk contributors like depression and being bullied were considered, said study author Mark Hatzenbuehler, a Columbia University psychologist and researcher.

His study found a higher rate of suicide attempts even among kids who weren't bullied or depressed when they lived in counties less supportive of gays and with relatively few Democrats. A high proportion of Democrats was a measure used as a proxy for a more liberal environment.

The research focused only on the state of Oregon and created a social index to assess which outside factors might contribute to suicidal tendencies. Other teen health experts called it a powerful, novel way to evaluate a tragic social problem.

"Is it surprising? No. Is it important? Yes," said Dr. Robert Blum of Johns Hopkins' Bloomberg School of Public Health.

The study "takes our relatively superficial knowledge and provides a bit more depth. Clearly, we need lots more understanding, but this is very much a step in the right direction," he said.

Blum serves on an Institute of Medicine committee that recently released a report urging more research on gay health issues. Blum said the new study is the kind of research the institute believes has been lacking. The independent group advises the government on health matters.

The new study was published online Monday in the journal Pediatrics.

Previous research has found disproportionately high suicide rates in gay teens. One highly publicized case involved a Rutgers University freshman who jumped off a bridge last year after classmates recorded and broadcast the 18-year-old having sex with a man.

The study relied on teens' self-reporting suicide attempts within the previous year. Roughly 20 percent of gay, lesbian and bisexual teens said they had made an attempt, versus 4 percent of straight kids.

The study's social index rated counties on five measures: prevalence of same-sex couples; registered Democratic voters; liberal views; schools with gay-straight alliances; schools with policies against bullying gay students; and schools with antidiscrimination policies that included sexual orientation.

Gay, lesbian and bisexual teens living in counties with the lowest social index scores were 20 percent more likely to have attempted suicide than gays in counties with the highest index scores. Overall, about 25 percent of gay teens in low-scoring counties had attempted suicide, versus 20 percent of gay teens in high-scoring counties.

Among straight teens, suicide attempts were 9 percent more common in low-scoring counties. There were 1,584 total suicide attempts — 304 of those among gays, lesbians and bisexuals.

Hatzenbuehler said the results show that "environments that are good for gay youth are also healthy for heterosexual youth."

The study is based on 2006-08 surveys of 11th-graders that state health officials conducted in Oregon classrooms; Oregon voter registration statistics; Census data on same-sex couples; and public school policies on gays and bullying.

The researchers assessed proportions of Democrats versus Republicans; there were relatively few Independents. Information on non-voters wasn't examined.

Zachary Toomay, a high school senior from Arroyo Grande, Calif., said the study "seems not only plausible, but it's true."

The star swimmer, 18, lives in a conservative, mostly Republican county. He's active in his school's gay-straight alliance, and said he'd never been depressed until last year when classmates "ostracized" him for being vocal about gay rights.

Toomay said signs of community intolerance, including bumper stickers opposing same-sex marriage, also made him feel down, and he sought guidance from a school counselor after contemplating suicide.

Funding for the study came from the National Institutes for Health and a center for gay research at the Fenway Institute, an independent Harvard-affiliated health care and research center.

Michael Resnick, a professor of adolescent mental health at the University of Minnesota's medical school, said the study "certainly affirms what we've come to understand about children and youth in general.

"They are both subtly and profoundly affected by what goes around them," he said, including the social climate and perceived support.

Western Massachusetts students and companies make use of internships

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Companies are expected to bring on 7 percent more interns this year than they did in 2010, according to a survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers.

Kamila E. Misiak in the Westfield office of Tighe & Bond, an engineering firm.

WESTFIELD – Kamila E. Misiak says she started noticing manholes once she started her internship with the Westfield-based engineering firm Tighe & Bond.

“There is so much underground. You don’t think about what is underneath the street,” the 20-year-old civil engineering major at Northeastern University said. “It’s interesting how it all comes together.”

She’s in the second year of a five-year program at Northeastern and has been doing a paid six-month co-op, or internship, with Tighe & Bond since January. One of the projects she’s working on will improve Chicopee’s sewer system.

“I’m definitely getting more responsibility as things go on,”


she said. “I haven’t had that many civil engineering classes so it’s all new. I’m absolutely loving this.”

Companies are expected to bring on 7 percent more interns this year than they did in 2010, according to a survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers in Bethlehem, Pa. Intern demand tends to follow the job market and the economy as a whole, said Edwin W. Koc, director of strategic and foundation research for the association. He said companies that responded to the survey reported a 19 percent increase in full-time hiring from the graduating class of 2011 compared with the graduating class of 2010

“It’s a better year this year,” he said. “We hear that from all our members. In 2009 full-time hiring was down 20 percent. Last year it bounced back a little bit and gained 5 percent.”

But Koc cautioned that the number of job-seeking college graduates and intern-seeking college students rises each year.

Fewer internships are paid in the post-recession economy, said Stephanie B. Kelly a professor and the internship coordinator for the geography and regional planning program at Westfield State University.

“When we land them for pay, it is particularly exciting” she said. “Often times they just have to chalk it up to getting experience.”

Kelly said her students work in obvious places – private commercial developers and the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission – and in roles that would not leap to mind, like police departments and emergency preparedness agencies.

“If something goes wrong, how do you get people out of an area?,” she said. “We have a lot of people in emergency planning.”

The goal is to prepare students for the workplace, she said.

“It differentiates the students ,” she said. “They don’t want to have an academic transcript. They have more going for them than just the typical student who just sat in the classroom.”

Koc said 57 percent of companies told his organization that they plan to convert at least some of their interns into full-time hires.

David E. Pinsky, president of Tighe and Bond, said the internships are a proving ground.

“With any luck it might result in a permanent hire once they graduate from school,” he said.

Mass. robot in Japan nuclear reactors detects high radiation levels

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Readings Monday from a Massachusetts-built robot that entered two crippled buildings at Japan's tsunami-flooded nuclear plant for the first time in more than a month displayed a harsh environment still too radioactive for workers to enter.

Japan EarthquakeIn this image released by Tokyo Electric Power Co., a radio-controlled PakBot robot advances after opening a door by itself inside housing for the reactor of Unit 3 during inspection of the tsunami-damaged facilities at the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant Sunday, April 17, 2011 in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture, northeastern Japan. (AP Photo/Tokyo Electric Power Co.)

By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press

TOKYO (AP) — Readings Monday from a Massachusetts-built robot that entered two crippled buildings at Japan's tsunami-flooded nuclear plant for the first time in more than a month displayed a harsh environment still too radioactive for workers to enter.

Nuclear officials said the radiation readings for Unit 1 and Unit 3 at the tsunami-flooded Fukushima Dai-ichi plant do not alter plans for stabilizing the complex by year's end under a "road map" released by the plant operator Sunday.

With the public growing increasingly frustrated at the slow response to the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crises, parliament grilled Prime Minister Naoto Kan and officials from plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co.

"You should be bowing your head in apology. You clearly have no leadership at all," Masashi Waki, a lawmaker from the opposition Liberal Democratic Party, shouted at Kan.

"I am sincerely apologizing for what has happened," Kan said, stressing that the government was doing all it could to handle the unprecedented disasters.

TEPCO's president, Masataka Shimizu, looked visibly ill at ease as lawmakers heckled and taunted him.

Workers have not gone inside the two reactor buildings since the first days after the plant's cooling systems were wrecked by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Hydrogen explosions in both buildings in the first few days destroyed their roofs and littered them with radioactive debris.

A U.S.-made robot that looks like a drafting lamp on treads haltingly entered the two buildings Sunday and took readings for temperature, pressure and radioactivity. More data must be collected and radioactivity must be further reduced before workers are allowed inside, said Hidehiko Nishiyama of Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.

"It's a harsh environment for humans to work inside," Nishiyama said.

Yukio EdanoChief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano, second right, gets briefed during his inspection in Minamisoma, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, Sunday, April 17, 2011. It was his first visit to the area hit by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, HONG KONG, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND FRANCE

Officials said the radiation findings should not hamper the goal of achieving a cold shutdown of the plant within six to nine months as laid out in a timetable TEPCO announced Sunday. Rather, the new information would help the company in figuring out how to push ahead with the plan.

"We have expected high radioactivity inside the reactor buildings, which was confirmed by data collected by the robot," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said. "Even I had expected high radioactivity in those areas. I'm sure TEPCO and other experts have factored in those figures when they compiled the roadmap."

TEPCO official Takeshi Makigami said the robots must pave the way for workers to be able to re-enter the building.

"What robots can do is limited, so eventually, people must enter the buildings," Makigami said.

The robot was set to investigate Unit 2 later Monday.

As work continues inside the plant to reduce radiation levels and stem leaks into the sea, the Defense Ministry said it would send about 2,500 soldiers to join the hundreds of police, outfitted with protective suits, who are searching for bodies in tsunami debris around the plant.

Around 1,000 bodies are thought to be buried in the muddy piles of broken houses, cars and fishing boats. As of Sunday, searchers had located 66 bodies and recovered 63, police said.

The combined earthquake and tsunami have left more than 27,000 people dead or missing.

The robots being used inside the plant, called Packbots, are made by Bedford, Massachusetts company iRobot. Traveling on miniature tank-like treads, the devices opened closed doors and explored the insides of the reactor buildings, coming back with radioactivity readings of up to 49 millisieverts per hour inside Unit 1 and up to 57 millisieverts per hour inside Unit 3.

The legal limit for nuclear workers was more than doubled since the crisis began to 250 millisieverts. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recommends an evacuation after an incident releases 10 millisieverts of radiation, and workers in the U.S. nuclear industry are allowed an upper limit of 50 millisieverts per year. Doctors say radiation sickness sets in at 1,000 millisieverts and includes nausea and vomiting.

The robots, along with remote controlled miniature helicopters, have enabled TEPCO to photograph and take measurements of conditions in and around the plant while minimizing the workers' exposure to radiation and other hazards.

TEPCO's plan for ending the crisis, drawn up at the government's order, is meant to be a first step toward letting some of the tens of thousands of residents evacuated from the area around the company's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant return to their homes.

Warren police charge Rebecca Sturtevant, 29, of Brimfield with dealing drugs

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Warren police arrested 29-year-old Brimfield resident Rebecca Sturtevant on drug charges Sunday afternoon, following what authorities described as a "lengthy investigation."

warren police dept exterior

WARREN - Warren police arrested 29-year-old Brimfield resident Rebecca Sturtevant on drug charges Sunday afternoon, following what authorities described as a "lengthy investigation."

Warren police said that Sturtevant was arrested after allegedly being caught selling a half-pound of marijuana to another person in the Village Plaza parking lot.

Police said she was found in possession of marijuana hidden in granola bar packaging as well as approximately $1,860 in cash.

She was charged with possession of a Class-D substance with the intent to distribute, conspiracy to violate the drug laws and violation of a drug-free school zone. Police also seized her 1999 Dodge Caravan in accordance with state laws regarding property forfietures in relation to drug sales arrests.

The investigation lead by Det. Mark Chase with officers LaFlower and Gajewski, reportedly yielded information that Sturtevant allegedly made illegal drug sales in Warren and the surrounding towns over an unspecified period of time.

She was taken into custody and held awaiting arraignment.

Two teens rescued from flooded Connecticut River

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A photographer from Bloomfield is credited with alerting police Sunday that two teenagers were stranded in the middle of the flooded Connecticut River.

Hartford, Conn. - A photographer from Bloomfield is credited with alerting police Sunday that two teenagers were stranded in the middle of the flooded Connecticut River, according to a published report by the Hartford Courant.

 Shortly after 1 p.m. Sunday, a 12 and 14 year old were walking along the train tracks adjacent to the Connecticut River in Hartford when one of them fell into the rushing water. The second youth then went in the water for the rescue, but both ended up stranded in the middle of the river standing on a tiny patch of land comprised of a tree root, according to police.

The teens were in a remote area and the situation could have easily had a sad ending if not for the presence of photographer Cecil Gresham.

Gresham told Connecticut news outlets that he was planning on attending the UConn parade but instead decided to head out to the tracks to take some pictures.

"I was just in the right place at the right time," he told the Courant about his part in the rescue.

Hartford police and fire responded to the scene and through teamwork and technology, the teens were pulled to safety, which wasn't easy considering the high level of the river from snow melting and recent rain.

The youths were cold but alright, police said. They were treated at Connecticut Children's Medical Center and released to their families later in the day.

AM News Links: Patriots' Day celebrated, Cuba marks uprising anniversary and more

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Patriots' Day given new life with theatrics in Worcester, Canadian govt. sanctioned heroin injection facility saves lives, $6,300 toilet includes surround sound, feet warmers & more of the morning's headlines.

Celtics.jpgBoston Celtics' Delonte West saves the ball from a back court violation during the fourth quarter of Boston's 87-85 win over the New York Knicks in Game 1 of a first-round NBA playoff basketball series in Boston on Sunday.

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

Sunrise report: Flood warning continues, today's poll and more

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Today's poll: If Springfield's mayoral election were held today, who would get your vote?

oxbow_4381.jpg04.17.2011 | NORTHAMPTON - A flooded field at the Oxbow Marina Sunday night, with the river at approximately 112.53 feet.

The Forecast

The National Weather Service's flood warning for the Hatfield-Hadley-Northampton stretch of the Connecticut River continues through Tuesday morning, or until the warning is canceled. The river was observed at 112.81 feet at 3 a.m. today; flood stage is 112 feet.

The latest projections show the river receding to 111.7 feet by 2 a.m. Tuesday.

As for the rest of the weather: There's a whole lot of sky-blue sky right now, but the forecast calls for "increasing clouds" this afternoon. Today's high should be around 60.

There's a 50-50 chance of rain this evening, most likely after 7 p.m.

Find the full forecast here.





Today's Poll

A lively mayoral race is shaping up in Springfield, with several high-profile candidates already campaigning.

So far, the field includes Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, who is seeking re-election to a third term; City Council President Jose F. Tosado; and School Committee member Antonette E. Pepe, who is due to announce her candidacy April 26 in an event at the John Boyle O’Reilly Club.

Other potential contenders include city residents Jeffery P. Donnelly and Michael Jones, who have both taken out nomination papers for mayor. The deadline for filing nomination papers is July 26.

If all candidates remain in the race, a preliminary contest would be held in September to reduce the field to two for the Nov. 8 municipal election ballot.

What do you think -- if Springfield's mayoral election were held today, who would get your vote? Vote in our poll, and check back tomorrow for the results.

Friday's results: Yesterday, we asked, "Do you agree with councilor John O'Neill's request for an accounting of city funds and resources used to plan Police Chief Anthony Scott's retirement roast?" 16 people voted. 62.5% said "no"; 37.5% said "yes."




Sunday's Top 5

The top 5 headlines on MassLive.com on April 17 were:

  1. 58th Annual Westfield River Wildwater Races Day One 4/16/11

  2. Springfield's Western New England College to become Western New England University

  3. Annual Extravaganja festival lights up in Amherst

  4. You know you were wrong, Kobe, so just pay the fine and learn

  5. On day 2, pro-pot Extravaganja festival called "a Renaissance of freedom"




Quote of the Day

“We share the frustration with the federal government’s failure to meet it obligations.”

— Robert Capstick, spokesman for Yankee Atomic Electric Co., on the fact that 16 casks containing 533 spent fuel assemblies are still being stored at the site of the former Yankee Rowe nuclear power plant.Read Fred Contrada's article here.


Amherst police charge 2 men, dressed in black and carrying masks, with break-in at College Street tire store

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One of the suspects is from Amherst, the other lives in South Hadley.

thanncrop.jpgRathana K. Thann

AMHERST - Police, responding to a burglar alarm at a College Street tire store Saturday night, found two men inside all dressed in black and carrying masks.

Arrested were: Rathana K. Thann, 20, 0f 91 Main St., Amherst; and Athony O. Wilson, of 11 Hildreth Ave., South Hadley; according to a press release issued by Amherst Police Lt. Ronald A. Young.

The suspects, charged with breaking and entering in the nighttime and trespassing, are slated to be arraigned Tuesday in Eastern Hampshire County District Court in Belchertown.

wilsoncrop.jpgAnthony O. Wilson
Police arrested the suspects at the Amherst Tire Center, 332 College St., shortly after 9:30 p.m. Police continue to probe the alleged break-in.

Republican budget includes overhaul of food stamps

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The food stamp component is similar to changes Republicans proposed as part of the welfare overhaul signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996.

2011-04-05-ap-GOP-Budget.JPGHouse Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., touts his 2012 federal budget plan during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington.

WASHINGTON — House Republicans resurrected a 1990s-era fight over food stamps in their budget approved last week, arguing that any serious attempt to cut spending must include an overhaul of government programs that help needy families pay for food.

Congress already has started cutting some food programs, including reducing the Women, Infants and Children Program by $500 million as part of a deal on this year's budget. And last year, more than $2 billion in future funding for food stamps was redirected to other programs.

On Friday, the House approved a Republican proposal to overhaul the $65 billion food stamp program — known officially as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP — by replacing it with capped block grants to states, which would pay for the aid but make it contingent on work or job training. That proposal was included in a 2012 budget plan put forward by Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis.

His plan lays out a fiscal vision for cutting $6.2 trillion from yearly federal deficits over the coming decade and has drawn widespread attention for its call for transforming Medicare into a voucher-like system that subsidizes purchases of private health insurance. It is likely to meet strong opposition is the Senate, where Democrats still have a majority.

The food stamp component is similar to changes Republicans proposed as part of the welfare overhaul signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996, and Ryan echoed arguments from 15 years ago in his proposal, saying "America's safety net does not become a hammock that lulls able-bodied citizens into lives of complacency and dependency."

But back then, farm-state Republicans like Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts, who was then chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, blocked the reform effort.

Congress authorizes spending on hunger and agriculture programs in a massive farm bill every five years, and farm-state members have typically supported food programs in exchange for urban support for agriculture.

The next farm bill is due to be written next year, and it's unclear whether Republicans will take a different approach this time around because of pressure from constituents clamoring for budget cuts. A spokeswoman for Roberts, now the top Republican on the Senate Agriculture Committee, said Friday that he hasn't decided whether he would support an overhaul of the food stamp program.

Although many Republicans have enthusiastically supported Ryan's budget on the House floor, few have mentioned food stamp issue in their speeches.

They may be hearing from constituents like 66-year-old Connie Downey of Omaha, Neb., a former real estate agent who saw her savings erode when she was diagnosed with lung disease. Downey is on the cusp of qualifying for food stamps, though her $3,000 in savings still puts her above Nebraska's $2,000 asset limit for eligibility.

If her savings drop and she qualifies for federal food aid, Downey said she'd buy the nutritional drinks recommended by a visiting nurse as well as fruits and vegetables. Right now, she's relying on a daily $2 delivery from Meals on Wheels.

"I had saved this money, because I thought if I got sick, I'd have it to back me up," Downey said. "I didn't know it would keep me from being able to eat."

The Agriculture Department says the food stamp program is designed to expand and contract with the economy. The average stay on the program is nine months, and half of the recipients are children.

Anti-hunger advocates said they worry that funding cuts by Congress coupled with rising food costs could devastate families struggling in the sluggish economy. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said last week that his department, which oversees SNAP and other food programs, is increasingly concerned that Congress is depleting the reserves.

Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., who has long sought more money for anti-hunger programs, said the suggested overhaul would dismantle the food stamp program by limiting money for it.

"Budgets are moral documents. They reflect our values," he said. "There is a very real risk that we could lose some of these programs that provide a circle of protection to people who are poor."

Conservatives said that may be necessary.

Ryan has argued states are encouraged to add people to the rolls because greater participation means increased funding. The program serves roughly 44 million people today, more than double the number a decade ago, he noted.

Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, has been working on welfare issues since Ronald Reagan was president. He said Ryan's proposal could be seen as conservatives' opening shot in a debate about overall assistance to the poor.

"You don't just want to do it with a meat cleaver, and the Ryan approach with work incentives is a good approach," Rector said.

Opponents of the Ryan plan say food stamps not only help low-income people, they benefit farmers and the retailers who sell food.

"These are people in grocery stores, they are farmers, they are all the people around the supply chain who support this program," said Vicki Escarra, president of the anti-hunger group Feeding America. "I think people are really concerned about the budget and the deficit, and I understand that . . . but there are lots of ways we can do this without the vast majority of cuts being focused on programs that really need help right now."

Poll: Students optimistic despite money doubts

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A majority of young people expect to have a harder time buying a house than their parents did.

041811studentmoney.jpg

WASHINGTON — For young people who came of age in the recession, the American dream of life getting better for each new generation feels like a myth.

A majority expect to have a harder time buying a house and saving for retirement than their parents did. More than 4 in 10 predict it will be tougher to raise a family and afford the lifestyle they want, according to an Associated Press-Viacom poll of Americans ages 18 to 24.

Only about a fourth expect things to be easier for them than the previous generation — a cherished goal of many hardworking parents.

"I just don't really see myself being able to obtain the kind of money my parents could when they were my age," said Mark McNally, 23, who earned a history degree from the University of Minnesota a year ago and now works part-time in a liquor store.

San Francisco State University nursing student Ashley Yates is confident she'll build a career in health care but expects money to be tighter in her lifetime. "Social Security may not even exist when I'm older," said Yates, 23. "Health insurance is going up. Everything just costs more."

Sounds like a bummer, right? Yet most young adults are shrugging it off. Despite financial disappointments, they overwhelmingly say they're happy with their lives, much more so than older folks in similar surveys.

Youthful optimism — with perhaps a touch of naivete — lives on. A whopping 90 percent expect to find careers that will bring them happiness, if not wealth.

Linka Preus, who's taking a year off her career track to work in an Ithaca, N.Y., bagel bakery, figures every generation has its own struggles, and bad economies eventually improve.

"Even if it never gets better permanently, we'll adjust to whatever it is," said Preus, 22, a linguistics and cognitive science grad from Cornell University who plans to pursue her passion for science in graduate school.

McNally, the history major, says he's enjoying life as a part-time clerk in the Minneapolis suburb of Edina before he gets tied down in a research or analyst job.

"I'll be able to find one in the future, I'm sure of it," McNally said. "I'll find one or go back to school."

High unemployment has left lots of young lives in limbo. Among students who don't plan to go to work right after college, three-fourths say the limited number of open jobs in their field was important to their decision. Riding out the tough times in grad school is a popular choice for those with the means.

But for some without such options, optimism is hard to muster.

Nathan Watkins, out of work in rural Epworth, Ga., has little job experience, no car and no access to public transportation.

"I'm literally stuck and there's nothing I can do about it. At least I feel that way," said Watkins, 23, a high school graduate who lives with his mother and tries to compensate her by doing chores.

He's seeking work of any type. "Honestly, at this point, I wouldn't care. In this economy, you take what you can get."

Young people today are more pessimistic about their economic futures than young adults in a similar poll in April 2007, eight months before the recession began. And most say they cannot afford the things they want or are struggling at least a little to make their money last through each week. About half are dependent on family members for financial support.

Seventy-five percent say the economy is in poor shape, on par with older people surveyed in a recent AP-GfK poll.

And they're not just worried about themselves; 7 out of 10 fret about their parents' finances. About 20 percent saw a parent laid off during the past year and a half, according to the AP-Viacom study, conducted in partnership with Stanford University.

Money troubles are steering the course of young lives. A majority say finances were a key factor in deciding whether to continue their educations past high school and, if they did, which college to attend, and what kind of career to seek.

Lucas Ward couldn't keep up with the tuition in community college, despite working three jobs at once — at a gas station, a hotel and a restaurant in scenic and touristy Hood River, Ore.

With youthful pluck, he found opportunity elsewhere.

Ward fell into a job doing a bit of everything for a small outdoor clothing company, and the business took off. The housing collapse that busted so many baby boomers made prices suddenly affordable, so Ward bought a home. At 23, he's about to invest in a second house and building his own clothing company.

"A lot of stuff in the news is telling everyone that they can't, that the economy is crumbling and there's no room for anyone to do anything," Ward said. "But I'm watching that being disproven every day."

The AP-Viacom telephone survey of 1,104 adults ages 18-24 was conducted Feb. 18-March 6 by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Corporate Communications. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Stanford University's participation in this project was made possible by a grant from The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

115th Boston Marathon starts in Hopkinton

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Over 100 runners from Western Mass. are taking part in the race.

Boston MarathonThe elite women start the 115th running of the Boston Marathon, in Hopkinton, Mass., Monday, April 18, 2011. (AP Photo/Stew Milne)

HOPKINTON, Mass. (AP) — Thousands of runners are gathered in the small and normally quiet town of Hopkinton for the 115th running of the Boston Marathon.

The wheelchair field was first across the finish line Monday morning, followed by the elite women. Then the clock started on the elite men and the sold-out field of 26,964 other runners who are running the 26.2 miles from Hopkinton to Boston's Back Bay.

It was 46 degrees in Hopkinton at the start with a tailwind of 14 mph. Temperatures were expected to climb into the high 50s and low 60s — perfect weather that could put the course record in jeopardy.

More coverage:

Buses carrying the athletes began arriving shortly after dawn Monday. Most runners leave at 10 a.m. with the finish line 26.2 miles away in Boston's Copley Square.

Police have been shutting down roads along the route, which also winds through Ashland, Framingham, Natick, Wellesley, Newton and Brookline.

Defending champions Robert Kiprono Cheruiyot of Kenya and Teyba Erkesso of Ethiopia have return to defend the men's and women's titles, respectively. But they will face plenty of competition along the way.

Defending men's wheelchair champion Ernst Van Dyk is seeking an unprecedented 10th Boston title.

The race forecast calls for temperatures in the 50s with a tailwind that could help the runners.

Business Monday from The Republican, April 18, 2011

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Western Massachusetts businesses are part of nationwide trend towards more internships.

041811zipcar.jpgZipcar Chairman and CEO Scott Griffith, outside of NASDAQ in Times Square on Zipcar's first day of trading, April 14, 2011.

In this week's Business Monday from The Republican.

Western Massachusetts students and companies make use of internships
Companies are expected to bring on 7 percent more interns this year than they did in 2010, according to a recent survey. Read more »

New Massachusetts law allows people to establish trusts to care for pets after owner dies
Local trusts and estates lawyers say that while their clients weren’t exactly clamoring for a law like this, it will give pet owners peace of mind about the care of their pets, should they die. Read more »

Eric Carle Museum, Simmons College collaborate on children's literature MFA program
The master’s programs help students learn “how to study children’s literature as works of art,” Mercier said. A benefit of the programs, she said, is that students learn to evaluate their own writing and the children’s works that are being produced. Read more »

Most Massachusetts hospitals exceed industry benchmark for good financial health
Hospital CEOs say margins are necessary not just to invest in buildings and technology, but also to implement quality improvement programs that will eventually bring down costs. Read more »


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