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Western Massachusetts Electric Company escapes from Greenfield hearing relatively unscathed

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A hearing called by the state as a result of the October snowstorm resulted in some praise for the power company.

GREENFIELD - Although frustrated after going days without power, speakers at a public hearing arranged by the state Department of Public Utilities had mostly words of praise for Western Massachusetts Electric Company.

The hearing was one of three held across the state Tuesday to solicit public reaction to the power company's response in the wake of the Oct. 29 snowstorm that crippled the region. Commissioner David Cash, who was at Greenfield High School, said his department is conducting 18 such hearings in all.

Greenfield joined a chorus of voices questioning the power companies, particularly Western Massachusetts electric companies, for their handling of the crisis. An estimated 2 million customers, including 672,000 in Massachusetts, lost power for some period of time following the storm. Some were without heat and electricity for more than a week. Earlier this month, Springfield residents unleashed a torrent of criticism during a hearing at the Duggan Middle School, with customers asking why Western Massachusetts Electric Company took so long to get their power back on.

Also on Tuesday, Massachusetts senators Scott P. Brown and John F. Kerry joined a group of senate colleagues writing to the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee asking it to look into the slow response from the power companies.

"I hope the committee will hold this oversight hearing to reveal the extent of our energy reliability issues," Brown wrote, "and help our nation be better prepared for major disuptions to our power supply."

In addition, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha M. Coakley issued a prepared statement Tuesday urging the Department of Public Utilities to penalize companies if it finds they did not comply with the state-approved emergency response plan. Coakley's office said the department can levy penalties up to $25,000 for each violation to a maximum of $20 million.

Assistant Attorney General John Geary, who was at the Greenfield hearing, specifically cited Western Massachusetts Electric Company.

"The attorney general's office wants answers as to why WMECO's restoration effort took as long as if did and why numerous local officials and emergency responders did not feel that they were able to communicate with WMECO," he said.

Geary noted that his office received numerous complaints about the response to the crisis.

"The commonwealth has a sad history of these reviews," he said, adding that there are still open cases from past crises.

There were few words of criticism about Western Massachusetts Electric at the hearing, however.

Gary Longley, chairman of the Greenfield Public Safety Commission, said the company did the best it could under difficult circumstances.

"I've never seen an event that created such obstacles to response," Longely said, adding that Western Massachusetts Electric regularly came through on its promises within an hour of their its response to specific situations.

Robert S. Coates, Jr., the company's vice president of customer operations, said the storm created the worst damage he has ever seen. Workers replaced 200 utility poles, 100 transformers and "miles and miles" of wires, he said.

"They did an outstanding job," said Coates, "working day and night."

Several speakers had concerns about the preparedness of both the power company and the government, however. Stanley Gradwoski of Irving said the state should have culled dead trees and trimmed branches on public land before the disaster.

Patrick Daley, the director of the physical plant at the University of Massachusetts, asked the company to reassess its resources.

"We're worried that the system is maxing out on the region," he said.

Greenfield resident Eric Lapointe said he made repeated calls about downed trees in his neighborhood only to have the power company and the Greenfield Department of Public Works disavow responsibility for removing them.

"Everyone was pointing fingers," he said.

According to hearing officer Marc Tassone, the Department of Public Utilities will collect evidence and question witnesses after the hearings conclude. The deadline for submitting information is Dec. 22.


Springfield-based Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. was misled on $300 million mortgage investment, lawsuit claims

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Thomas C. Rice, representing the defendants, said none of the claims in the lawsuit represented illegal conduct, and thus should be dropped.

Ae  mass mut 2.jpgThis is the exterior of the MassMutual Financial Group's headquarters on State Street in Springfield.

SPRINGFIELD – Defendants in a lawsuit filed by the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. have asked a judge to throw out claims that the Springfield-based company was duped into buying $300 million in mortgage-backed securities before the housing market collapsed four years ago.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court, accuses Minnesota-based Residential Funding Company LLC and four subsidiaries of misrepresenting the high-risk mortgage loans as long-term, stable investments.

The loans “were in blatant disregard of (Residential Funding Company's) disclosed underwriting practices, and any semblance of reasonable and prudent underwriting,” the lawsuit states.

“The loans were often issued on the basis of overstated incomes, inflated appraisals, false verifications of employment or exceptions to underwriting criteria that had no proper justification,” the suit claims, adding that the defendants had abandoned its advertised underwriting standards in an attempt to sell as many high-risk investments as possible.

An unusually high number of mortgages went into default as the bottom fell out of the real estate market in 2007, leaving the initial investment of $295,067,936 with current value of $84 million, according to the lawsuit.

Lawyers for Residential Funding Company and Massachusetts Mutual were in court Tuesday for arguments before Judge Michael A. Ponsor on a defense motion to dismiss the suit.

Thomas C. Rice, representing the defendants, said none of the claims in the lawsuit represented illegal conduct, and thus should be dropped. He said the core allegations were the defendants had an incentive to sell mortgage-backed securities, and that the securities performed poorly in the aftermath of the housing market collapse.

“We’re not talking about prime loans to prime borrowers,” said Rice. “These were the riskiest of loans.”

The insurance company’s lawyer, Philippe Z. Selendy, said there was 80-page complaint was brimming with examples of misrepresentations or omissions by the defendants.

Since the suit was filed in February, Massachusetts Mutual has turned up other evidence of misconduct by the defendants, Selendy said. “Every month we are uncovering new evidence; we could easily come back and present 100s of pages,” Selendy said.

Ponsor said he would review the arguments and issue a ruling in the near future. His options include keeping the case intact, dismissing it or “pruning” some of the allegations, the judge said.

Ludlow assessors announce fiscal 2012 tax rate

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Selectmen said the tax rate increase is too high.

LUDLOW - The Board of Assessors Tuesday night announced a fiscal 2012 residential tax rate of $16.98 per $1,000 of assessed valuation, an increase of 8.2 percent over the current year’s rate of $15.70 per $1,000 of assessed valuation.

Assessors Chairman Beverly Barry told the Board of Selectmen that the new tax rate is based on the budget approved by voters at last spring’s annual Town Meeting.

“I live in Ludlow, and I don’t like to see the increase,” Barry said.

The new tax rate, which still needs approval by the state Department of Revenue, means that taxes on the average $212,000 home in town will increase by $232 from $3,382 last year to $3,613 this year, Barry said.

Selectman John Da Cruz said, “This is a huge increase. My eyes popped out of my head when I imagine the phone calls from residents.”

Selectman Antonio Dos Santos said that in the future the town is going to need to “tighten its belt.”

“We are going to need to spend less at Town Meeting, going forward,” he said. He said the town is going to have to lower personnel cuts even if it means providing fewer services.”

Selectman William Rooney said, “From the perspective of the average taxpayer, we are spending too much.”

Da Cruz said, “People are out of work and laid off. The timing could not be worse.”

Rooney said that for next year the state is projecting a $1 billion budget deficit, so there is not likely to be any increases in state or federal aid next year.

“This is sobering,” Da Cruz said.

Dos Santos said, “The picture is not going to be pretty next year.”

The assessors said the average commercial tax bill next year is going to be increased by $554 from $6,629 to $7,183 on a $423,000 commercial property.



Holyoke High School $22.7 million renovation draws crowd to open house with tours

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The state paid 60 percent of the high school renovation cost and the city 40 percent.

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HOLYOKE – Jaime L. Rodriguez likes that everything is well-lit and the water is drinkable these days at Holyoke High School.

“Everything’s brighter, like, the halls are less gloomy. The water tastes less metallic,” Rodriguez, a senior, said Tuesday.

The $22.7 million in renovations to the school at 500 Beech St. were unveiled for officials and residents with a video and tours in a project whose planning began in 2004.

The state paid 60 percent, or $13.6 million, for the project and the city paid the remaining 40 percent, or more than $9 million, School Maintenance Director Whitney G. Anderson said.

Most of the work is done, so officials decided to have an open house before Christmas break, he said.

Construction on the home of the Purple Knights began in September 2009. The school opened in 1964.

More than 17,000 square feet of windows were replaced, officials said.

New pipes and heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems were installed. Each classroom has its own thermostat, officials said.

Federal handicapped access standards were met throughout the building, including in 17 bathrooms. New fire and smoke detectors were put in, officials said.

The science laboratory was revamped with 10 classrooms getting new floors, wiring, sinks and equipment. A new girls lockerroom was installed and improvements were made to the boys lockerroom and the band room, officials said.

The school has new phones, public address system and surveillance cameras, officials said.

Michael A. Hines, programming and production manager at the high school, did the five-minute video about the renovations with help from video production students, he said.

Renovations included equipping most classrooms with Smart Boards, a white interactive board that hangs in place of a chalk board and allows for projections of images that can be moved with touch-detection.

“I think it’s exciting. I think it’s a great commitment to the kids,” Principal Diane Bauer said.

The school has 1,300 students and 175 teachers and other staff, said Superintendent David L. Dupont, who was principal of the school from 2004 to 2010.

“It’s nice to see this for the students and the staff,” Dupont said.

Before tours were taken to show the renovations, among those praised in officials’ remarks were members of the school building advisory committee: William R. Collamore, Peggy Boulais, Michael J. Moriarty, Aaron M. Vega, David G. Healey, David D’Addario, Brian Beauregard, John P. Brunelle, Diane Bauer, Carol Hepworth and Leonard S. Gibbons.

The general contractor was W.J. Mountford Co., of South Windsor, Conn. The job’s two main architects were Design Partnership, of Cambridge, and Timothy Murphy Architects, of Holyoke, Anderson said.

The original architect, Alderman & MacNeish, went bankrupt.

Strategic Building Solutions Inc., which has offices in Agawam and four other states, was project manager.

Tea-party favorite Christine O'Donnell endorses Mitt Romney

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O'Donnell may be best known nationally for a campaign commercial in which she declared "I'm not a witch."

Christine O'DonnellChristine O'Donnell laughs while talking with family members during her Delaware Senate campaign last year.

WASHINGTON – Republican political figure and tea-party favorite Christine O'Donnell says she's backing Mitt Romney's presidential bid.

O'Donnell cites executive experience as part of her reason for endorsing Romney. She announced her decision Tuesday night during an interview on Fox News Channel.

O'Donnell gained national attention in 2010 with her bid for a Senate seat from Delaware. With tea party backing, she defeated an established Republican for the party's nomination, former governor and longtime congressman Mike Castle. She then lost the general election to Democrat Chris Coons by a margin of 17 percentage points.

O'Donnell may be best known nationally for a campaign commercial in which she declared "I'm not a witch," a response to a statement she'd made years earlier in which she said she'd dabbled in witchcraft.

Snoopy Christmas display saved from foreclosure

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Jim Jordan, more than 40 years ago, created the display that draws over 80,000 people each year to his Costa Mesa, Calif., home – which he lost to foreclosure.

121311 snoopy house christmas foreclosure.jpgSnoopy greets one-year-old Raeghan Thompson, from Newport Beach, Calif., at the "Snoopy House" display that Jim Jordan started 44 years ago, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011, on the lawn outside City Hall in Costa Mesa, Calif. The city of Costa Mesa offered to host the massive, animated display of Charles Schulz's "Peanuts" Christmas characters after Jordan lost the home where the tradition was born and flourished to foreclosure. The move saved a wildly popular Christmas display that Jordan says draws 80,000 people _ including busloads of visitors, school groups and lines of children waiting to see Santa. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

By AMY TAXIN

COSTA MESA, Calif. – Jim Jordan created a heart-warming Christmas display of Charles Schulz's "Peanuts" characters more than 40 years ago at his Southern California home, and it became a holiday tradition as tens of thousands of people showed up each year to see the sparkling extravaganza.

Families trekked to the Orange County suburb of Costa Mesa to sip hot apple cider and share the wonder as seen through their children's eyes amid twinkling Christmas lights, artificial snow and a Santa Claus that whisked through the air and down a chimney for spectators. It became so popular that busloads of visitors and school groups visited Jordan's childhood home each year.

When he lost the house to foreclosure, it looked like the death of a tradition — until the city stepped in to save Christmas.

A week ago, Costa Mesa officials offered to host the display on the lawn outside City Hall. They turned on the lights Tuesday evening in a song-filled ceremony attended by a large crowd of families toting toddlers and cameras. Santa was expected to arrive later Tuesday and then make nightly appearances Dec. 18 to Dec. 23.

The move saved a Christmas display that Jordan says draws 80,000 people each year to see Santa and the nearly 200-foot stretch of characters, colorful cottages and other creations.

"This has been absolutely a Frank Capra movie, where I feel like I'm in the middle of 'It's a Wonderful Life,'" Jordan told scores of people who huddled outside City Hall in the chilly night air, recalling the 1946 classic that is an enduring Christmas favorite.

In some Orange County homes, the tradition has been passed on through generations as those who grew up visiting the so-called "Snoopy House" now take their own children there.

Jordan, 59, said he started the project as a teenager in the yellow, single-story house where he was raised. Little by little, he expanded the display until it reached mammoth proportions, featuring an ice skating Charlie Brown and Schroeder playing piano to an adoring Lucy.

"My wife says I am a frustrated Walt Disney," he said, chuckling.

Several years ago, Jordan's business as a remodeling contractor slumped along with the economy. He sought a loan modification but said he was denied because he was still keeping up with his payments.

Following what he now knows is poor legal advice, Jordan said he stopped paying the mortgage, hoping to qualify for relief.

Instead he lost his family's home, which was foreclosed in November 2010. A tenant who rented from Jordan was allowed to stay until her lease ran out but the house will soon be sold, said Jason Menke, a spokesman for Wells Fargo Home Mortgage.

"We worked with Mr. Jordan for some time to try to find an alternative to foreclosure but we were unable to do so," Menke said.

Though he no longer lived in the house, Jordan was crushed to think about the families that counted on him at Christmas. When neighbors learned the display was in jeopardy, they called news reporters, posted signs and collected donations to try to help Jordan fight to recover the house, Jordan said.

Neighbor Tara Talbott heaved a sigh of relief when she learned the Christmas tradition would carry on, albeit at a new location.

She remembers how her now-grown son helped out as an elf, taking children's requests as they waited in line to see Santa and relaying them via a headset so St. Nick knew what they wanted when their turn came to meet him.

"It's so special to us," Talbott said. "It's so special to the whole neighborhood."

The city of 110,000 has received more than $1,000 in donations, which will help defray the cost of the spectacle's $1,800 electric bill, said Bill Lobdell, a city spokesman.

The city does not anticipate any copyright problems as it is a free, community event that will not generate any income, Lobdell said.

While Jordan said he has filed legal papers to try to get his house back, Costa Mesa hopes to bring the display back year after year to the site temporarily dubbed "Snoopy Hall."

Stephanie Gosselin, 32, said she has faithfully visited the "Snoopy House" every year since her parents took her there as a little girl. Now, carrying her wide-eyed 18-month-old son in her arms, the Costa Mesa resident is continuing the tradition.

"When I first saw it wasn't going to be there, I was like 'oh no,'" Gosselin said, looking at the Christmas lights twinkling atop cottages and a city hall building cast with red and green hues. "Now, I'm so happy."

Feds: States should ban all use of cellphones while driving except for emergencies

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Texting, emailing or chatting on a cellphone while driving is simply too dangerous to be allowed, federal safety investigators declared.

ap_texting_while_driving.jpgA phone is held in a car in Brunswick, Maine. Texting, emailing or chatting on a cellphone while driving is simply too dangerous to be allowed, federal safety investigators declared Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011, urging all states to impose total bans except for emergencies. (AP Photo/Pat Wellenbach, File)

By JOAN LOWY

WASHINGTON – Texting, emailing or chatting on a cellphone while driving is simply too dangerous to be allowed, federal safety investigators declared Tuesday, urging all states to impose total bans except for emergencies.

Inspired by recent deadly crashes — including one in which a teenager sent or received 11 text messages in 11 minutes before an accident — the recommendation would apply even to hands-free devices, a much stricter rule than any current state law.

The unanimous recommendation by the five-member National Transportation Safety Board would make an exception for devices deemed to aid driver safety such as GPS navigation systems.

A group representing state highway safety offices called the recommendation "a game-changer."

"States aren't ready to support a total ban yet, but this may start the discussion," Jonathan Adkins, a spokesman for the Governors Highway Safety Association, said.

NTSB chairman Deborah Hersman acknowledged the recommendation would be unpopular with many people and that complying would involve changing what has become ingrained behavior for many Americans.

While the NTSB doesn't have the power to impose restrictions, its recommendations carry significant weight with federal regulators and congressional and state lawmakers. Another recommendation issued Tuesday urges states to aggressively enforce current bans on text messaging and the use of cellphones and other portable electronic devices while driving.

"We're not here to win a popularity contest," she said. "No email, no text, no update, no call is worth a human life."

Currently, 35 states and the District of Columbia ban texting while driving, while nine states and D.C. bar hand-held cellphone use. Thirty states ban all cellphone use for beginning drivers. But enforcement is generally not a high priority, and no states ban the use of hands-free devices for all drivers.

A total cellphone ban would be the hardest to accept for many people.

Leila Noelliste, 26, a Chicago blogger and business owner, said being able to talk on the cellphone "when I'm running around town" is important to self-employed people like herself.

"I don't think they should ban cellphones because I don't think you're really distracted when you're talking, it's when you're texting," she said. When you're driving and talking, "your eyes are still on the road."

The immediate impetus for the recommendation of state bans was a deadly highway pileup near Gray Summit, Mo., last year in which a 19-year-old pickup driver sent and received 11 texts in 11 minutes just before the accident.

NTSB investigators said they are seeing increasing texting, cellphone calls and other distracting behavior by drivers in accidents involving all kinds of transportation. It has become routine to immediately request the preservation of cellphone and texting records when an investigation is begun.

In the past few years the board has investigated a train collision in which the engineer was texting that killed 25 people in Chatsworth, Calif.; a fatal accident on the Delaware River near Philadelphia in which a tugboat pilot was talking on his cellphone and using a laptop computer, and a Northwest Airlines flight that sped more than 100 miles past its destination because both pilots were working on their laptops.

Last year, a driver was dialing his cellphone when his truck crossed a highway median near Munfordville, Ky., and collided with a 15-passenger van. Eleven people were killed.

The board said the initial collision in the Missouri accident was caused by the inattention of the pickup driver who was texting a friend about events of the previous night. The pickup, traveling at 55 mph, hit the back of a tractor truck that had slowed for highway construction. The pickup was rear-ended by a school bus that overrode the smaller vehicle. A second school bus rammed into the back of the first bus.

The pickup driver and a 15-year-old student on one of the buses were killed. Thirty-eight other people were injured. About 50 students, mostly members of a high school band from St. James, Mo., were on the buses heading to the Six Flags St. Louis amusement park.

Missouri had a law banning drivers under 21 years old from texting while driving at the time of the crash, but wasn't aggressively enforcing the ban, board member Robert Sumwalt said.

"Without the enforcement, the laws don't mean a whole lot," he said.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reported earlier this year that pilot projects in Syracuse, N.Y., and Hartford, Conn., produced significant reductions in distracted driving by combining stepped-up ticketing with high-profile public education campaigns.

Before and after each enforcement wave, NHTSA researchers observed cellphone use by drivers and conducted surveys at drivers' license offices in the two cities. They found that in Syracuse, hand-held cellphone use and texting declined by a third. In Hartford, there was a 57 percent drop in hand-held phone use, and texting behind the wheel dropped by nearly three-quarters.

However, that was with blanket enforcement by police.

The board's decision to include hands-free cellphone use in its recommendation is likely to prove especially controversial. No states currently ban hand-free use although many studies show that it is often as unsafe as hand-held phone use because drivers' minds are on their conversations rather than what's happening on the road.

Hersman pointed to an Alexandria, Va., accident the board investigated in which a bus driver talking on a hands-free phone ran into a bridge despite his being familiar with the route and the presence of warning signs that the arch was too low for his bus to clear. The roof of the bus was sheared off.

The board has previously recommended bans on texting and cellphone use by commercial truck and bus drivers and beginning drivers, but it had stopped short of calling for a ban on the use of the devices by adults behind the wheel of passenger cars.

The problem of texting while driving is getting worse despite a rush by states to ban the practice, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said last week. In November, Pennsylvania became the 35th state to forbid texting while driving.

About two out of 10 American drivers overall — and half of drivers between 21 and 24 — say they've thumbed messages or emailed from the driver's seat, according to a survey of more than 6,000 drivers by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

However, the survey found that many drivers don't think it's dangerous when they do it — only when others do.

At any given moment last year on America's streets and highways, nearly one in every 100 car drivers was texting, emailing, surfing the Web or otherwise using a hand-held electronic device, the safety administration said. Those activities were up 50 percent over the previous year.

Driver distraction wasn't the only significant safety problem uncovered by NTSB's investigation of the Missouri accident. Investigators said they believe the pickup driver was suffering from fatigue that may have eroded his judgment. He had an average of about five-and-a-half hours of sleep a night in the days leading up to the accident and had had fewer than five hours of sleep the night before the accident, they said.

The pickup driver had no history of accidents or traffic violations, investigators said.

Investigators also found significant problems with the brakes of both school buses involved in the accident. A third school bus sent to a hospital after the accident to pick up students crashed in the hospital parking lot when that bus' brakes failed.

However, the brake problems didn't cause or contribute to the severity of the accident, investigators said.

Another issue involved the difficulty passengers had getting out of the first school bus after the accident. Its doors were unusable and passengers had to exit through an emergency window. The raised latch on the window kept catching on clothing as students tried to escape, investigators said. Escape was further slowed because the window design required one person to hold the window up in order for a second person to crawl through, they said.

It was critical for passengers to leave as quickly as possible because a large amount of fuel underneath the bus was a serious fire hazard, investigators said.

"It could have been a much worse situation if there was a fire," Donald Karol, the NTSB's highway safety director, said.

Associated Press writer Karen Hawkins in Chicago contributed to this report.

Emergency repairs underway at Westfield City Hall

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Additional repairs worth $3 million are planned for next spring.

feb 2011 westfield city hall.jpgWestfield City Hall

WESTFIELD – Emergency repairs to prevent additional water damage inside City Hall got underway this week with more extensive repairs scheduled later.

Work began on Monday to repair two sections of the building’s slate roof and brick facade.

City Purchaser Tammy B. Tefft said the $193,000 project is expected to be completed before severe winter weather sets in. Emergency repairs are being done by Greenwood Enterprises of Milbury.

Tefft said work on design for an estimated $3.2 million in extensive repairs to the building, built in the 1800s, are nearing competition and scheduled to be advertised for competitive bidding in February.

Tammy Tefft 2005.jpgTammy B. Tefft

That work will involve full replacement of the building’s slate roof, new gutters and windows.

“The objective is to have this work begin with the start of the new construction season,” Mayor Daniel M. Knapik has said.

The City Council approved bonding $3.4 million for City Hall repairs last month. Several city officials have said the project is the first comprehensive repairs to the building in at least 30 years.

In 2009, the city completed a $32,000 emergency repair to the City Council Chambers to replace a ceiling support beam.

Emergency repairs now underway focus on a rear entrance to the building that leads to the Retirement Board offices and another area above a records storage area.

Knapik said he plans to seek funding later for some interior renovation to several offices once repairs to the exterior of the building is complete.

“We first must stop the water from entering the building before any interior work can be accomplished,” the mayor said.


Belchertown selectmen to seek $1 million bond for road, water and sewer improvements at former State School property

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Weston Solutions, of Pennsylvania, has committed about $2 million for removing asbestos and other contaminants from an 11-acre area of the site.

belchertown state school.JPGView full sizeThe administration building at the former Belchertown State School.

BELCHERTOWN – The Board of Selectmen will seek bonding for infrastructure on the main campus of the former State School, which the Economic Development Industrial Corp. says is necessary for the commercial development of the property.

Weston Solutions Inc. of Pennsylvania has committed about $2 million for removing asbestos and other contaminants from an 11-acre area of the site. The company said it can bring in another developer for construction of an assisted-living facility on six acres.

The town, in return, needs to spend $1 million on roadways and water and sewer lines on the property to make construction possible.

The EDIC owns the land and is responsible for making it commercially viable. The infrastructure would belong to the town.

“We’re very pleased with the support of the town,” said EDIC member Jonathan Spiegel. “We look forward to making something really good happen. ... Everybody, pretty much, wants this to happen.”

Selectmen supported a general obligation bond, which has to be approved by a two-thirds vote at Town Meeting. Chairman Kenneth E. Elstein said the town’s credit rating was recently boosted, which could help keep interest down.

The decision came after several months of wrangling over a funding strategy. A special Town Meeting set for Oct. 17 was canceled when officials said they weren’t ready to answer all potential questions about the state District Improvement Financing, or DIF, program. The development incentive program uses a review process that can take months before any funds are released.

Several selectmen said DIF would take too long and offers too few benefits except peace of mind for other potential developers. The vote for seeking a bond was unanimous.

“The town is making an investment anticipating significant tax revenue,” said Spiegel.

The state Department of Mental Retardation closed the Belchertown State School for the Feeble-Minded in 1992 and the EDIC took ownership in 2002. It has sold parcels along and off Route 202 and transferred land to the town, including the 60-acre Foley Field and Lake Wallace Recreation and Conservation Area.

About 55 to 58 acres of the 200-acre main campus is “not wetlands, depending on how hard it’s raining,” said Spiegel, responding to a question about how much land is available for commercial development.

There are dozens of abandoned brick buildings on the campus contaminated with asbestos. Spiegel said a major roadblock for development is an “astonishing” and “unique” clause in the sale agreement with the state that transfers all liability, past, present and future, for injury claims to the EDIC.

“The challenge is that flows with the deed,” he said, and no developer will take on that headache. The EDIC has asked the state to rescind the clause, but “we don’t have an answer yet.”

In the meantime, the EDIC will try to negotiate a purchase and sale agreement with Weston.

Direct Results honors former office manager, the late Ruth LaBelle of Holyoke, with Toy for Joy donation

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The West Springfield-based company gave $500.

toycoup11.JPGView full size

SPRINGFIELD - Direct Results of West Springfield has boosted the Toy for Joy campaign with a $500 donation in honor of its former officer manager, the late Ruth LaBelle of Holyoke.

John P. Epstein, owner of the company, said LaBelle, who passed away six years ago this month, left an indelible mark on the company, its employees and its customers.

“She would just bring out things in people, she was very wise, very generous and she was giving of herself in many ways that went way beyond money,” Epstein said. “She looked out for people, she looked out for their well-being.”

This marks the 89th annual Toy for Joy campaign; jointly sponsored by the Salvation Army and The Republican, the campaign is working to raise $150,000 by Dec. 23 to bring toys and gifts to children in need this holiday season.

The $500 donation that honors LaBelle is part of a recently-received batch tallying to $2,180. The total raised to date is $28.900. That leaves $121,100 to be raised.

Last year, the holiday toy campaign provided games, toys and gifts for nearly 20,000 children in Hampden, Hampshire and Franklin counties.

Hasbro, Inc. is joining Toy for Joy as a partner, providing some of the toys which will be distributed. Hasbro has a long history of helping families in Western Massachusetts during the holidays and this year is no different.

By teaming with the Toy for Joy campaign, Hasbro, The Republican and the Salvation Army bring over 100 combined years of experience managing programs that help families in need give their children a toy or game to unwrap on their holiday.

Hasbro employees are among the volunteers who have been aiding the Salvation Army with registration of families and with distribution of the toys and gifts. Distribution of toys at the Greater Springfield Citadel started Tuesday and will continue through Friday.

For more information, call 733-1518. To make a contribution to the Toy for Joy fund, write: Toy for Joy, P.O. Box 3007, Springfield 01102. Contributions may also be dropped off with the coupon to The Republican, 1860 Main St., Springfield, weekdays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. through Dec. 23. Here’s a list of the latest contributors:

In memory of Joseph Kolodziejski, $100
In memory of my husband Stanley Janas from wife Irene Janas, $25
In memory of Stella, Vincent and Philip Rzasa, love Julie, $25
In memory of Roger Martin and Fr Thomas Flower, $25
For my friend Mary who loved Christmas, love Bobbi, $25
In memory of my wife Theresa, Merry Christmas, $25
In memory of Earl Carter and Trixie, love FatBoy, $20
In memory of Sis and Phil Sheremeta from the kids, $10
From the Hansen family, $50
In loving memory of Lauretta “Toots” Scott and Raymond “Newt” Scott from their niece Sandy, $20
In honor of Cameron Jackson of Apex, NC, $10
Kathleen, $15
Phil and Felicia, $15
Merry Christmas, $25
In loving memory of Lauretta “Toots and Raymond “Newt” Scott, Ronnie, $30
Happy Holidays from Scott, Maureen, Ryan and Timothy Denault, $100
The members of American Legion Auxiliary Liberty Unit 430, $25
Philip, $25
In loving memory of our only siblings Anne and Tom who died last Christmas from Sandy and Pat, $25
For the memory of my brother Joe who loved Christmas, $25
In memory of my husband John Lenilko from Jean, $10
In memory of Dziadziu and Grandpa, love you both, Caitlin, $25
In loving memory of Michael Jester, $25
In memory of Josephine Gittles my wife from family, $10
In memory of my husband Mike from Vivian, $20
In loving memory of Bill, Eleanor, Billy, Arthur and Hanna, $30
In loving memory of my mother Cecelia from daughter Shirley, $20
Blessed Christmas to all from the Sullivan family, $100
In memory of Robert and Gloria Kemple who so loved Christmas, $200
God bless the children, $10
For Maxie, a fine lady and BFF to Chris Wargo and family, Auntie Susan, $10
Memory of Tessie Lapinski and all we can only hold dear in our hearts, Susan, $10
Brilliant sunsets for “Whoopa” Biziljs and Wargos, Auntie Susan, $10
Seasons to all from Susan Lapinski, $5
Anonymous, $25
Anonymous, $10
Janice, $150
Maurice, $20
Robert, $50
Edward and Marta, $100
In memory of B and R, Merry Christmas, $100
Just wanted to give back and put a smile on a kids face from Scott, $20
Merry Christmas to all, God Bless America from Gallerani Electric Co., Inc., $100
In memory of Ruth LaBelle who brought joy to all she met, from the employees of Direct Results, $500

RECEIVED, $2,180
TOTAL TO DATE, $28,900
STILL NEEDED, $121,100

Poll: Republicans shrug at Mitt Romney's business past

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Republicans are evenly divided on whether a Washington insider or outsider is best-suited to be president.

121411romeny.jpgIn this Dec. 3, 2011 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, speaks to supporters and volunteers during a rally in Manchester, N.H.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Mitt Romney says his business background makes him a better presidential candidate than Newt Gingrich, who has spent decades in Washington. But the argument is not moving Republicans his way, underscoring Romney's challenge in finding a way to stem Gingrich's rise three weeks before the Iowa caucus, a new Associated Press-GfK poll finds.

Republicans are evenly divided on whether a Washington insider or outsider is best-suited to be president. That's a problem for Romney, who cites his private-sector experience as the biggest difference between the two front-runners for the GOP nomination.

The poll also found a significant drop in satisfaction with the overall field of Republicans vying to challenge President Barack Obama next year. In October, 66 percent of Republican adults were satisfied with the field, and 29 percent unsatisfied. Now, 56 percent are satisfied and 40 percent unsatisfied.

Except for four years as Massachusetts governor, Romney, 64, has spent his career in business and management. He ran unsuccessfully for the Senate in 1994 and for president in 2008.

Gingrich, 68, spent 20 years in the U.S. House, including four as speaker. Since 1998, he has had a lucrative, Washington-based career as a consultant, speaker and author.

Both men have earned millions of dollars over the years.

The AP-GfK nationwide poll of Republicans found Gingrich with an edge over Romney as the candidate they'd like to see win the nomination. However, it falls just within the poll's margin of error of plus or minus 6 percentage points.

Voter preferences in early voting states such as Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina do not necessarily match those in national polls. The Iowa caucus is Jan. 3. The New Hampshire primary is one week later.

For months, Romney has hovered at or near the top of Republican polls, while various rivals have risen and fallen. Gingrich's rise is at least as dramatic as the recent plummets of businessman Herman Cain and Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

An October AP-GfK poll of Republicans found Gingrich well behind the leading candidates, with 7 percent. Romney had 30 percent. The new poll finds Gingrich preferred by 33 percent of Republicans and Romney by 27 percent. All other candidates are in single digits.

Jonathan Luers, a software engineer from Chicago, is among those Republicans less than thrilled about the field.

"I guess I'm a little disappointed that it's been so fluid," said Luers, 52. "I was kind of hoping there would've been a more clear choice, without the quick knockdowns and everything." He said he's leaning toward Gingrich.

Romney has built his campaign largely on the argument that his business background makes him better suited for the presidency than anyone else, especially in terms of creating jobs. In a debate Saturday in Iowa, Romney struggled at first to name areas in which he and Gingrich disagree.

After citing Gingrich's support for a mining colony on the moon and changes to child labor laws, Romney said: "The real difference, I believe, is our backgrounds. I spent my life in the private sector. I understand how the economy works."

Among Republicans who say they prefer a non-Washington candidate, Romney has a modest edge over Gingrich. Gingrich has a larger advantage among those who say they prefer Washington experience in a nominee.

Among all people surveyed in the AP-GfK poll, including Democrats and independents, Romney fares better than Gingrich in head-to-head matchups with Obama. Obama and Romney are statistically even. But Obama leads Gingrich 51 percent to 42 percent.

That may give Romney some ammunition with Republicans whose top priority is ousting Obama. Otherwise, Republicans appear to see Romney and Gingrich as similar in many important ways. The two men polled about evenly on the questions of who would be a strong leader, has the right experience, understands ordinary people's problems and can bring needed change.

Romney holds a clear edge on who is most likable. Gingrich leads on the question of who "has firm policy positions." Romney is often asked about his changed positions on abortion, gay rights, gun control and immigration. Gingrich, however, also has shifted views on some key issues over the years.

The poll found sharp drops in popularity for Perry and Cain over the past two months. Cain has suspended his campaign.

Dmitry Kan, a Republican who owns an advertising firm in Acton, Mass., is not enthusiastic about the field.

"There is not much choice," he said. "It looks like it's going to be either Romney or Gingrich."

Kan, who is 24 and emigrated from the former Soviet Union in 1992, said he is leaning toward Gingrich but might change his mind. He said he respects Romney's business background, but "seeing how it works these days, I think Gingrich's ability of political prowess might work better."

Kan said Gingrich "did some difficult stuff back in the 1990s, back in the Clinton administration. Hopefully he will be able to somehow break through the gridlock."

Catherine Sebree, 41, a homemaker from The Woodlands, Texas, likes Romney.

"I appreciate the values that he stands for," she said. "I believe that he is the person that will put family first and will help to strengthen our nation and hopefully help out with the budget deficit."

Sebree embraces Romney's non-Washington background. "I think that the people that are experienced in Washington have screwed up enough that it's time to try some different methods," she said.

The Associated Press-GfK Poll was conducted Dec. 8-12 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,000 adults nationwide and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

The poll included interviews with 460 Republicans and Republican-leaning independents. The margin of error for these results is plus or minus 6 percentage points.

Fire destroys Sibley Avenue home in West Springfield

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Investigators have yet to determine if anybody was home at the time of the blaze.

Gallery preview

WEST SPRINGFIELD — Investigators are still combing the wreckage of 332 Sibley Ave. following a devastating house fire overnight.

Firefighters are still hoping to make contact with residents, said Fire Chief William E. Flaherty. Neighbors didn’t know if anyone was home at the time of the fire. There are usually three cars associated with the residence and only one was parked in the driveway at the time of the fire.

One neighbor reported the blaze via a 911 at 2:20 a.m. Wednesday. On arrival, firefighters found the roof totally destroyed, and parts of the building were starting to collapse into the cellar. The heat had already started to melt the siding on a neighboring home, Flaherty said.

Firefighters didn’t enter the building, instead directing water at the structure from outside. No firefighters were injured.

The West Springfield Police and the state Fire Marshall are investigating along with the fire department itself. All three investigations are standard in these cases.

According to records from the West Springfield Assessor's Department, the 1,248 Cape Cod-style home was built in 1962 and is owned by Michael R. Stump. The building was valued at $117,500 in 2011.

Developer to seek affordable housing permit for Easthampton project

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The Valley Communty Development Corp. will file the application for the Comprehensive Permit later this month.

Parsons Village Plane.JPGThis is an aerial view of the New City neighborhood, including the lot where the proposed affordable housing development Parsons Village, was not allowed by the city to be built (circled in red).

EASTHAMPTON – The developer of the proposed Parsons Village project is putting the finishing touches on a Comprehensive Permit application that will be filed with the city this month.

Valley Community Development Corp. Executive Director Joanne Campbell said the agency will apply for the permit also known as 40 B while various lawsuits play out.

A comprehensive permit allows the Zoning Boards of Appeals to approve affordable housing developments under more flexible rules – essentially to circumvent local zoning when a community has less than 10 percent of its housing as affordable. The city has just 6.3 percent affordable housing.

The agency has filed suit against the Planning Board in Land Court for denying its special permit, while neighbors of the project have appealed the developer's claim that the special permit was approved when the Planning Board waited too long to deny it.

Valley Community Development Corp. had contended the board's decision came eight days too late and the permit was granted by default. That appeal was filed in Hampshire Superior Court.

Campbell said they will be seeking to build 38 units instead of the 37 that had last been proposed for the 4.3-acre lot at 69 Parsons St.

The plan is to build six buildings with between five and seven units in each. There would be four studio apartments, eight one-bedroom units, 18 two-bedroom and eight three -bedroom units. Two units would be completely accessible.

“We think it’s a great neighborhood for the development,” Campbell said. “The development will fit in with the neighborhood.”

The project is aimed at those who earn between $25,000 and $50,000 a year, depending on family size, Campbell said. She said there is no funding available for owner-occupied units.

Neighbors believe the development is too dense for the site and the storm water management system would fail, among other complaints.

Neighbors also oppose ”the segregated nature of the project” and would prefer to have a mix of affordable and market rate units, said Mary Westervelt part of the New City Neighborhood Association.

Westervelt said “it’s unfortunate that we’re not having conversations with the developer.
“This is getting caught up in appeals. There seems like a lot of strategy to get around process hurdles.”

She said neighbors want to see the site developed. And she said neighbors are offended by the claim they oppose affordable housing. “This is a low-income community. People don’t have a lot,” she said.

“We’re going to continue to make sure our voices heard,” she said as the process plays out.

Campbell said that the Zoning Board of Appeals would have to schedule a public hearing within 30 days of the filing of a complete application.

AM News Links: Filmmaker files false tax credits, Arrest in sneaker assault, Patriot's host childrens holiday party, and more

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A Cape Cod filmmaker is accused of defrauding the state of $4.7 million in tax credits for two films.

Children's-Holiday-Party-1__1323865772_9588.jpgTom Brady tries on Santa hat at 18th annual Patriot's children's holiday party

Williams College professors teach math to 10th graders with M&M's, video games [Berkshire Eagle]

$48,815 in disability to Windsor Locks police officer, awaiting trial for interfering in son's case [Hartford Courant]

Cape Cod filmmaker defrauds state of $4.7 million in tax credits for 2 films [Cape Cod Times]

Time magazine names "The Protester" its person of the year [Chicago Sun-Times]

Franklin police arrest Dean College student wanted in sneaker assault [Metrowest Daily News]

Northeastern study calls 2000-10 state's "lost decade" [Metrowest Daily News]

More than 300 children attend 18th annual Patriots Children's Holiday Party [Boston.com Photo Gallery]

Second highest ranking Russian official resigns amidst rumors of election fraud [New York Times]

Farming village along southern Chinese coast erupts in rebellion following death of elected official [New York Times]

Occupy Oakland movement disrupts West-coast ports [New York Times]

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

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

Foxborough to allow Las Vegas gambling mogul to present casino plan

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Steve Wynn has proposed building a resort casino near Gillette Stadium.

121411foxboro.jpgNew England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, right, hosts casino mogul Steve Wynn and his wife, Andrea Hissom, on the field at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., Sunday, Dec. 4, 2011.

FOXBOROUGH — A divided Foxborough Board of Selectmen has voted to allow Las Vegas gambling mogul Steve Wynn to directly pitch his billion-dollar casino proposal to the town.

The board voted 3-2 at a boisterous and sometimes contentious meeting attended by about 500 people on Tuesday to allow Wynn to present his plan to residents on Jan. 10.

Wynn has proposed building a resort casino in partnership with New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft on land near Gillette Stadium owned by Kraft.

Board Chairman Larry Harrington says given the Krafts history with the town, they deserve to be heard.

Casino opponents say the issue is tearing the town apart, with neighbor turning against neighbor and anti-casino signs in town being burned.

Supporters say a casino would bring jobs and revenue.


Time names 'The Protester' as 'Person of Year'

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Time magazine says protesters are reshaping global politics

time person of the yearThis image released by Time Magazine shows the Person of the Year issue featuring "The Protester." The magazine on Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011 cited dissent across the Middle East that has spread to Europe and the United States, and says these protesters are reshaping global politics.

NEW YORK — "The Protester" has been named Time's "Person of the Year" for 2011.

The selection was announced Wednesday on NBC's "Today" show.

The magazine cited dissent across the Middle East that has spread to Europe and the United States, and says these protesters are reshaping global politics.

Last year, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg got the honor.

Time's "Person of the Year" is the person or thing that has most influenced the culture and the news during the past year for good or for ill. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke received the honor in 2009. The 2008 winner was then-President-elect Barack Obama. Other previous winners have included Bono, President George W. Bush, and Amazon.com CEO and founder Jeff Bezos.

Time said it is recognizing protesters because they are "redefining people power" around the world.

Location of groundbreaking for new West Springfield High School changed because of predicted inclement weather

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The groundbreaking for the new West Springfield High School has been moved indoors.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – Because of the inclement weather predicted for Thursday, the groundbreaking ceremony for the newWest Springfield High School will be held in the current high school’s auditorium.

The ceremony will still take place at 10 a.m. The high school is located at 425 Piper Road.



Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin charges Amherst adviser with defrauding investors

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Galvin lodged administrative complaints against three advisors around the state, including Daniel McKenna of Sunderland.

Secretary of State William F. Galvin today accused an Amherst investment adviser of defrauding investors.

Galvin today filed administrative complaints against three advisors around the state including one against Daniel A. McKenna of Sunderland and his firm Principle Profits Asset Management of Amherst, according to a press release from the secretary of state.

"These cases are indicative of the swift and decisive action my securities division will take when we uncover investment advisers who have violated the securities law,” Galvin said.

Galvin charged that McKenna and his firm breached their fiduciary duty by selling clients worthless securities over a 17-year period and entering into borrowing deals with clients.

galvin.jpgSecretary of State William F. Galvin

Principle Profits has more than 100 clients with more than $18 million in assets under management, the release said.

Over the 17 years, McKenna collected $1.042 million by selling unregistered shares in
Principle Profits and solicited clients to make loans to Principle Profits, the release said.

“Instead of putting his clients’ interest first, McKenna preyed on his unsophisticated clients, convincing them to hand their money over to the very entity he drew his salary from,” Galvin's complaint states, “His clients are now left without the over 1.2 million dollars that he took from them through the issuance of worthless stock and unreturned loans.”

Galvin's complaint seeks to revoke the registrations of McKenna and his firm and to force them to cease and desist. He also wants investors to get back any money lost through the wrongdoing, acccording to the release.

Investigators recover body from bedroom of West Springfield home destroyed by fire

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A state trooper with an accelerant-sniffing dog was at the scene late Wednesday morning.

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This updates a story originally filed at 7:39 a.m.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – Investigators, probing the wreckage of a Sibley Avenue home destroyed by fire early Wednesday, have recovered a body from a bedroom on the first floor.

Fire Chief William E. Flaherty said the body was discovered late Wednesday morning in a back bedroom of the raised ranch at 332 Sibley Ave. A deceased dog was also found in the bedroom, he said.

A state trooper with an accelerant-sniffing dog was at the scene late Wednesday morning.

Earlier Wednesday, neighbors had told arriving firefighters they didn’t know if anyone was home at the time of the fire. There are usually three cars associated with the residence and only one was parked in the driveway at the time of the fire.

One neighbor reported the blaze via a 911 at 2:20 a.m. Wednesday. On arrival, firefighters found the roof totally destroyed, and parts of the building were starting to collapse into the cellar. The heat had already started to melt the siding on a neighboring home, Flaherty said. Firefighters didn’t enter the building, instead directing water at the structure from outside.

No firefighters were injured.

The West Springfield Police and the state Fire Marshall are investigating along with the fire department itself. All three investigations are standard in these cases.

According to records from the West Springfield Assessor’s Department, the 1,248 square foot home was built in 1962 and is owned by Michael R. Stump. The building was valued at $117,500 in 2011.

Holyoke Police Sgt. John Hart suspended after losing sniper rifle

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Hart, a 17-year veteran, also has been removed as department firearms inspector.

JOHN-HART.JPGIn a 2002 file photo, Holyoke police officer John Hart, front, participates in a training session for the department's Emergency Rescue Team at Holyoke Community College.

HOLYOKE -- Police Chief James M. Neiswanger said Wednesday he has suspended Sgt. John P. Hart five days without pay and ordered him to repay the city $2,000 for losing a department-issued sniper rifle.

Hart, a 17-year veteran, also has been removed as department firearms inspector, Neiswanger said.

The punishment takes effect Dec. 26 and Hart can appeal the rulings to the department, he said.

Hart, who couldn't immediately be reached for comment, declined to comment when The Republican and MassLive.com reported the original story Nov. 16.

Hart's yearly salary is $70,561, which breaks down to $1,356 for a five-day work week, City Treasurer Jon D. Lumbra said.

The Remington 700 rifle went missing on Sept. 28 about 11 p.m. Hart had placed it in the back of his pickup truck and was en route to an extra-duty job. At Northampton and South streets, a driver at the intersection told Hart the tailgate on his truck was down and that's when Hart saw the rifle was missing, Neiswanger said.

Holyoke Police Chief James M. NeiswangerHolyoke Police Chief James M. Neiswanger

The rifle was in a hard plastic case and was unloaded but ammunition was in the case, he said.

Area police departments were alerted a sniper rifle was missing, said Neiswanger, who said the weapon has yet to be found.

An internal department investigation was done and captains reviewed the case. Neiswanger referred those findings to the office of Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni, who after review referred them back to Neiswanger, he said.

The chief said he found Hart had violated three department rules: conduct unbecoming an officer, improper care and security of department property and improper care and security of a department firearm.

Neiswanger has said Hart is a certified sniper after having been a member of the department’s former special weapons and tactics team, which has disbanded.

According to the website of the American Sniper Association, national standards for police snipers don’t exist. The association, a nonprofit organization incorporated in the state of Florida, was formed to establish such standards. It was unclear if Holyoke officers are certified through the association.

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