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Proposed gas-fired electric plant in Westfield subject of EPA hearing

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The hearing will address the Pioneer Valley Energy Center's request for a federal air quality permit,

WESTFIELD – The federal Environmental Protection Agency will host a public hearing Thursday at North Middle School on Pioneer Valley Energy Center’s proposed construction of a 430 megawatt natural gas-fired electric generating plant on Ampad Road.

The hearing will address the plant’s request for a federal air quality permit, one of two final permits necessary to allow construction of the $400 million facility.

The hearing is scheduled for 6 p.m. and in the event of inclement weather the hearing will be held Jan. 19.


Wilbraham officials plan for using new Minnechaug Regional High School as emergency shelter

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The new high school is set to open its doors in September.

WILBRAHAM - The Board of Selectmen Monday approved the appointment of Fire Chief Francis Nothe, Fire Captain David Bourcier and Building Inspector Lance Trevallion to serve on a subcommittee appointed by the Wilbraham-Hampden Regional School Committee to study using the new Minnechaug Regional High School as an emergency shelter.

Robert Boilard 2007.jpgRobert J. Boilard

“These three have the greatest level of expertise to plan for using the school as an emergency shelter,” Selectman Robert Boilard said.

Scott R. Chapman, chairman of the regional School Committee, said he favored asking selectmen from Wilbraham and Hampden to appoint a representative serve on a subcommittee to make plans to use the new high school as an emergency shelter.

The new high school is set to open its doors in September.

During the pre-Halloween snowstorm which caused some residents to lose electricity for more than a week Wilbraham did not have a building to use as an emergency shelter.

Wilbraham residents were directed to the Hampden Senior Center which has a limited amount of space in the event of an emergency. The Hampden Senior Center was open to residents of both Wilbraham and Hampden.

The current high school does not have a generator large enough to heat the gym. Town officials say they want the new high school to have the capability to serve as an emergency shelter for the two towns.

Chapman said logistics need to be worked out regarding who would operate the shelter. Issues such as capacity, legal liability and operational costs need to be worked out, he said.

Chapman said a subcommittee has been appointed and asked to report back to the School Committee in 60 days.

The regional high school is under the jurisdiction of the regional School Committee, Chapman said.

He said the School Committee, not the towns, must decide whether the building is used as an emergency shelter.

Overnight storm expected to bring more rain than snow to Pioneer Valley

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The hilltowns, however, could see some 2 to 4 inches of snow, plus sleet and freezing rain.

full-moon_7027.jpg01.10.2012 | HOLYOKE - This week's full moon, seen against a streetlight in Veterans Park early Tuesday morning.

SPRINGFIELD - An overnight storm will likely bring more rain than snow to residents of the Pioneer Valley, abc40 / Fox 6 meteorologist Rick Sluben said Wednesday..

Precipitation, initially in the form of wet snow, will start falling in Western Massachusetts sometime after midnight, Sluben said.

“It’s a challenging forecast but most of the data points to a few hours of wet snow that may or may not even stick to the roads,” Sluben said. “I think in the valley it’s going to be pretty much a non-event.”

It could be a bit nastier, however, for those in the higher elevations, particularly in the west towards the Berkshires, he said. Those areas could see some 2 to 4 inches of snow and sleet and freezing rain lingering into the day.

Sluben said expects the Pioneer Valley to see a coating of snow, with what he described as diminishing chances for as much as two inches.

Rain will taper off to drizzle late in the day Thursday and the overnight could see rain and snow showers with the potential for a light accumulation of snow in the hilltowns.

Wind gusts as high as 40 mph or more Friday night into Saturday will bring the potential for scattered power outages, especially in areas where snow and ice remain on the limbs, Sluben said.

Michelle Obama: Tired of 'angry black woman' stereotype

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Mrs. Obama tells CBS News, "I love this job. It has been a privilege from day one."

michelle obama cbs newsIn this photo taken Oct., 11, 2011, first lady Michelle Obama greets local children on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington after their attempt to break the Guinness World Records title for the most people doing jumping jacks in a 24-hour period.

WASHINGTON — First lady Michelle Obama is challenging assertions she's forcefully imposed her will on White House aides, saying she's tired of people portraying her as "some kind of angry black woman."

Mrs. Obama tells CBS News she hasn't read New York Times reporter Jodi Kantor's new book that characterizes her as a behind-the-scenes force in the Executive Mansion, whose strong views often draw her into conflict with President Barack Obama's top advisers.

"I never read these books," she told CBS's Gayle King in an interview broadcast Wednesday. "So I've just gotten in the habit of not reading other people's impressions of people."

In the book, Mrs. Obama is said to have occasionally bristled at some of the demands and constraints of life in the White House.

In the interview, Mrs. Obama said, "I love this job. It has been a privilege from day one."

"Now there are challenges," she added. "If there's any anxiety that I feel, it's because I want to make sure that my girls (Malia and Sasha) come out of this on the other end whole."

The Kantor book portrays a White House where tensions developed between Mrs. Obama and former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and former press secretary and presidential adviser Robert Gibbs. The book, titled "The Obamas," describes Mrs. Obama as having gone through an evolution from struggle to fulfillment in her role at the White House, while labeling her an "unrecognized force" in pursuing the president's goals. Neither the president nor his wife agreed to be interviewed for the book.

"I do care deeply about my husband," Mrs. Obama said in the CBS appearance. "I am one of his biggest allies. I am one of his biggest confidants." But she sought to put aside "this notion that I sit in meetings."

"I guess it's just more interesting to imagine this conflicted situation here," she said. "That's been an image people have tried to paint of me since the day Barack announced, that I'm some kind of angry black woman."

"There will always be people who don't like me," Mrs. Obama added, and said she could live with that.

Mrs. Obama said that she's "just trying to be me, and I just hope that over time, that people get to know me."

Asked specifically about an assertion of dissension between herself and Emanuel, now the mayor of Chicago, the first lady said she has "never had a cross word" with him. The same, she said, applies to Gibbs, whom she described as "a good friend, and remains so."

"I'm sure we could go day to day and find things people wished they didn't say to each other," Mrs., Obama said. "And that's why I don't read these books. ... It's a game, in so many ways, that doesn't fit. Who can write about what I feel? What third person can tell me what I feel?"

Mrs. Obama said that when questions or conflicts arise involving her and the White House staff, her East Wing staff resolves the issue with her husband's staff in the West Wing.

"If there's communication that needs to happen, it's between staffs," she said. "I don't have conversations with my husband's staff."

Mass. company Enterasys relocating to NH by next year

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Enterasys is planning a move from Andover, Mass., to Salem, NH.

SALEM, N.H. (AP) — A Massachusetts computer networking company is relocating to New Hampshire, a move that state officials say will bring 540 jobs.

Enterasys is planning a move from Andover, Mass., to Salem. It plans to occupy 190,000 square feet, with construction to start in April. The company plans to occupy the building by January 2013 and hire about 80 new employees.

Enterasys President Chris Crowell says the move will reduce its costs and allow it to increase investment in strategic initiatives in research and development.

Michael Bergeron, business development manager for the state, said Enterasys will save on real estate costs and taxes by moving to New Hampshire.

Enterasys is a spinoff company from Cabletron Systems, a company founded by former New Hampshire Gov. Craig Benson.

Man killed when tree falls on him at Shrewsbury Christmas tree farm

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SHREWSBURY — Authorities say a man has been killed apparently when a tree he was cutting down at a Shrewsbury Christmas tree farm fell on him. Police and fire personnel responded to Bushey Tree Farm at about 7 p.m. on Tuesday. Fire Capt. William Cummins tells the Telegram & Gazette it appeared the man had been cutting down a storm-damaged...

SHREWSBURY — Authorities say a man has been killed apparently when a tree he was cutting down at a Shrewsbury Christmas tree farm fell on him.

Police and fire personnel responded to Bushey Tree Farm at about 7 p.m. on Tuesday.

Fire Capt. William Cummins tells the Telegram & Gazette it appeared the man had been cutting down a storm-damaged tree when it fell on him.

He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Cummins said the victim appeared to be in his 70s. His name was not released.

Rescue crews used chainsaws to get the tree off the victim.

Holyoke police arrest 5, including 16-year-old and men from Chicopee and Northampton, on heroin charges

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One of the suspects, a 20-year-old woman, was charged with trafficking heroin.

HOLYOKE - A report of drug-dealing in the parking lot of the Friendly’s Restaurant on Northampton Street, led to the arrest Tuesday afternoon of a 16-year-old juvenile and three others, including men from Northampton and Chicopee, on heroin charges.

A hotel room key, possessed by the juvenile, led to the discovery of an even larger stash of heroin, some 800 packets, in a room at America’s Best Value Inn and the arrest of a 20-year woman on a trafficking heroin charge, Police Capt. Arthur R. Monfette said.

The incident began shortly before 2:30 p.m. as narcotics detectives surveilled the Friendly’s parking lot. Police saw what appeared to be a drug transaction between the occupants of a Volkwagen and Mitsubishi Montero, Monfette said.

The juvenile and Denzel E. Rivera, 18, 291 Elm St., Apt. 4A, were charged with possession of heroin, possession of heroin with intent to distribute, conspiracy to violate drug law and violation of a drug-free zone (Community Field), police documents state.

Matthew Sabourin, 30, of 236 College St.; and Andrew T. Cameron, 29, of 86 Pines Edge Drive, Northampton, were charged with possession of heroin and conspiracy to violate drug law, documents state.

The juvenile’s key led investigators to Room 116 at America’s Best Value Inn, 671 Northampton St., where they ultimately discovered the 800 packets of heroin inside a black backpack and $2,900 in cash, Monfette said.

Talyssa Torres, who lives at that address, was charged with a single count of trafficking heroin, documents state.

London Richardson charged with breaking into downtown Springfield 'Sinners & Saints' bar

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Police were investigating a break-in at Sinners and Saints when they say Richardson run out the back door.

118londonrichardson42crop.jpgLondon Richardson

SPRINGFIELD - Police had to use pepper spray to subdue a 42-year-old Georgia man who fought with officers early Wednesday as they tried to arrest him in connection with a break-in with the now-closed Sinners & Saints nightclub in the city’s Entertainment District, police said.

London Richardson of Fairburn, Ga. was taken into custody shortly after 1:30 a.m. near Stearns Square after fighting with officers Jameson Williams and Daniel Billingsley, said Sgt. John Delaney, aide to Police Commissioner William Fitchet.

The officers used pepper spray to control him long enough to place him in handcuffs, Delaney said.

The two officers were chasing him across Stearns Square when he stopped and assumed a fighting stance, Delaney said. Delaney said Richardson is 6 feet tall, weighs 240 pounds and built like a football linebacker.

sinners and saints The Bridge Street nightclub Sinners and Saints is seen here during the City Block Concert Series in July.

Police were investigating a reported break-in at Sinners & Saints when Richardson was spotted running out the rear door, Delaney said.

He was charged with felony nighttime breaking and entering, possession of burglary tools, assault and battery on a police officer, resisting arrest and two counts of threatening to commit murder.

As he was being booked at the station, Richardson is alleged to have threatened the lives of the Williams and Billingsley, Delaney said.

At his district court arraignment Wednesday, Richardson denied the charges. He was ordered held in lieu of $10,000 cash bail, and is due back in court on Feb. 9 for a pre-trial hearing.

Sinners & Saints, has been closed since late last month. The club had its license suspended for six days by the city License Commission after a patron complained of mistreatment by staff.

The club remained closed after the suspension because the owner, David Mitchell of Springfield doing business as DEA Entertainment LLC, did it not apply for a 2012 liquor license renewal.

License Commission chairman Peter Sygnator said the club submitted an application for a new license on Wednesday but it will be at least a month before the commission hears the issue.

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Joshua Lacroix gets suspended sentence in crash that killed Raina Jensen

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Joshua Lacroix must do 98 hours of community service.

Joshua Lacroix mug 2010.jpgJoshua D. Lacroix

SPRINGFIELD – A District Court judge decided Wednesday Joshua D. Lacroix would get no jail time in the 2010 Thanksgiving Day crash in Wilbraham that took a young woman’s life.

Judge Robert A. Gordon, saying “this is a profoundly difficult case,” rejected the prosecution’s recommendation of a 2½-year sentence in the Hampden County Correctional Center in Ludlow, with six months to be served and the rest suspended with two years probation.

He sentenced Lacroix, 25, of Springfield, to one year to the Ludlow jail, but suspended the sentence and put Lacroix on probation for three years.

The small courtroom was crowded with about 30 family members and friends of Raina Jensen, a Portland, Maine, woman who had recently moved to Springfield to be with her boyfriend.

Many of those present were wearing a laminated photo of Jensen around their necks. Also in the courtroom were other passengers in the vehicle struck head on by Lacroix when he crossed into the opposite lane about 1:46 a.m. on Route 20 at Three Rivers Road in Wilbraham.

Lacroix, whose mother was in the courtroom, pleaded guilty to motor vehicle homicide by negligent operation, a misdemeanor.

Defense lawyer Charles E. Dolan, who asked for a sentence of a year’s probation, said of Lacroix, “He doesn’t have any memory. He wasn’t under the influence, he wasn’t speeding.”

Dolan said “the only rational explanation” was that Lacroix fell asleep and lost control of the car.

Gordon said Lacroix must do 98 hours of community service, which could be served speaking in schools about the dangers of driving while overtired. The prosecutor had recommended community service along those lines.

The guilty plea triggers a license suspension for 15 years, according to Assistant District Attorney James M. Forsyth.

The judge said, Jensen “was a very accomplished young woman” who had a great ability to have a positive impact on the world.

The 27-year-old woman had graduated from Saint Michael’s College in Vermont in May of 2006 with degrees in political science and journalism and mass communications and she also was a starting pitcher in softball there.

Her mother, Jeanette Jensen of Portland, said Lacroix should get “the maximum sentence.”

After college, Raina Jensen went to Vorovoro, an island in Fiji, to participate in a project for Tribe Wanted, an online organization that promotes eco-tourism, philanthropy and social networking. She then worked on another project in Fiji.

Her work there had been featured on a BBC series and in National Geographic, Jeanette Jensen said. After Fiji, she taught in Thailand for five months and received her international teaching certificate.

Jeanette Jensen submitted to Gordon a large display of photos of, and articles by and about, her daughter. Forsyth gave the judge a large stack of victim impact statements from people who knew Raina Jensen.

“The connection I had with my daughter was just beyond words,” Jeanette Jensen said, saying her daughter sought adventure and tested herself.

Dolan said Lacroix, who has no criminal record, feels deep remorse and will live his life with the ramifications of taking a human life.

Lacroix, who had lived in Ware, joined the U.S. Army in 2009 and was deployed in Iraq for a year as a combat engineer, detecting and neutralizing IEDs (improvised explosive devices), Dolan said. Lacroix was stationed at Fort Drum, N.Y., at the time of the crash.

Gordon said one of the factors he took into account in his decision was that Lacroix had put his life in jeopardy. “He was on the front lines,” Gordon said.

Nothing wrong with former UMass president Jack Wilson getting full pay on sabbitcal, consultant says

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Trustee Chairman James J. Karam’s asked for the Compensation Committee to review the arrangements with Wilson.

102210 jack wilson.jpgJack Wilson

BOSTON – A University of Massachusetts committee looking at the agreement that allowed former president Jack M. Wilson to continue drawing his $425,000 presidential salary while on a year-long sabbatical has found that the arrangements are consistent with the university practice, according to a prepared statement issued by the university.

Trustee Chairman James J. Karam’s asked for the board’s Compensation Committee to review the arrangements in place with Wilson. The committee determined that they are consistent with university practice and “with standard practice in the world of higher education.”

According to the statement, the committee reached that finding after being briefed by a national expert on higher education compensation, Raymond Cotton, a legal adviser to the university and a partner in the Mintz Levin law firm.

Cotton told the committee that the arrangements “are well within the established norms we see in higher education.”

State Sen. Stephen M. Brewer, chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, last month week questioned the logic of paying $425,000 salaries to the current president and former President Jack M. Wilson at the same time.

Wilson left his position last summer and has been replaced by Robert L. Caret. His base salary is the same.

Wilson will also earn Wilson will also earn $261,000 when he becomes a senior faculty member at UMass-Lowell.

“As for the salary Dr. Wilson will be earning upon his return to the faculty, my research and the data in my study support the view that his rate of pay will be well within in the range of what long-serving, successful presidents of comparable public universities receive when they step down and return to the faculty,” Cotton stated, according to the prepared statement.

In the statement, Karam called the transition arrangements “appropriate and are in keeping with best practices in the world of higher education.

“This is our finding and the finding of one of the nation’s leading experts in this area. We believe that appropriate steps were taken and that we have arrived at an outcome that is fair to all parties.”

Republican presidential primary roundup: Candidates ready to duke it out in South Carolina

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Mitt Romney said he didn't want to be overconfident and expressed doubt that he can win South Carolina; the state spurned him four years ago.

New Hampshire Primary: Mitt Romney's lead turns to victory View full sizeFormer Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney waves to supporters at the Romney for President New Hampshire primary night rally at Southern New Hampshire University in Manchester, N.H., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2012. Behind Romney are his sons Tagg and Craig and his wife Ann. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

WASHINGTON (AP) — A political tip sheet for the rest of us outside the Washington Beltway, Wednesday, Jan. 10:

WHAT HAPPENED:

SOUTHERN COMFORT, OR DISCOMFORT? Former Massachusetts governer Mitt Romney swept into South Carolina in pursuit of a third straight win that would make him next to unstoppable in the race for the Republican presidential nomination. Propelling him forward were his latest electoral triumph (in New Hampshire), a campaign bank account stuffed with millions and warm words from Sen. Jim DeMint, a leading tea party politician. Romney said he didn't want to be overconfident and expressed doubt that he can win South Carolina; the state spurned him four years ago.

DEMINT SPEAKS: DeMint said he thinks Romney will win South Carolina. He said Romney had touched on "a lot of hot buttons," such as balancing the budget, and suggested he was turned off by Republican candidates' criticism of Romney's past work as a venture capitalist. Several of the GOP contenders have lobbied DeMint for his endorsement. So far, he has withheld it. Still, words from a man who sometimes sides with the tea party and not the Republican establishment sent an unmistakable signal that Romney, whose conservative credentials have been questioned, is worthy of the movement's support.

Newt Gingrich speaks at Pinkerton School in Derry, N.H.View full sizeNewt Gingrich speaks at Pinkerton School in Derry, N.H. (Photo by Brian Canova)

NEWT'S AD: Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich promised to take the fight to Romney in South Carolina and he's keeping his word. Gingrich went on the air with a tough new ad highlighting the fact that Romney supported abortion rights before opposing them. The ad is meant to appeal to South Carolina voters, who generally are more conservative than those in New Hampshire and more engaged on social issues, such as abortion. The abortion issue turned out to be a vulnerability for Romney in South Carolina when he campaigned for the GOP nomination in 2008

OBAMA-JOBS: President Barack Obama said he wants to reward companies that bring jobs back to the U.S. and eliminate tax breaks for those that don't. And, he said he's planning new tax proposals to do it. Obama addressed a White House forum on how to boost employment through "insourcing." The White House gave the session a high profile after Romney's win in New Hampshire the night before. Romney has targeted Obama as a foe of free enterprise.

MITT'S MONEY:

— $19 million: Amount Romney's campaign reported having in the bank.

— $24 million dollars: Amount Romney's campaign raised in the last three months of 2011.

— $56 million dollars: Amount Romney's campaign raised for his campaign in 2011.

— $45 million: Amount of Romney's own money he contributed to his 2008 presidential run.

— $0: Amount of personal money Romney contributed to his 2012 campaign.

BARACK'S BUCKS:

President Obama returned to his Chicago hometown to raise money for his re-election campaign. He was to address more than 500 supporters at the University of Illinois at Chicago, with tickets starting at $44 apiece. He also was attending a pair of pricier fundraisers, with tickets beginning at $7,500 for one event and at $35,800 per couple for the other. Obama's campaign and the Democratic Party share the fundraiser proceeds. Obama's campaign has raised more than $150 million through Sept. 30. The campaign has yet to report on its fundraising haul for the final three months of 2011.

THEIR WORDS:

— "It was like Christmas Day. Each new report of votes coming in was like opening another present." — Romney, on waiting for the New Hampshire returns to come in.

— "We ought to mind our own business." — Texas Rep. Ron Paul, arguing for the U.S. to pull out of current wars and stop meddling in the affairs of other countries.

— "I believe that South Carolinians are either going to center in and pick one conservative or, by default, you're going to send a moderate on to the nomination." — Gingrich, on the state's role in the GOP presidential primary.

— "It is going to be different. It is wide open for anyone." — Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, the fifth-place finisher in New Hampshire, on the state of play in South Carolina.

Antoine Watts, charged with helping quadriplegic brother Kenneth Hawkins peddle crack from his bed, sentenced to 3 years in prison

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Watts and Hawkins, his brother, were arrested in April, 2009 after selling 27 grams of crack cocaine to a cooperating witness. Hawkins died in June, 2009, two months after the arrest.


SPRINGFIELD - Antoine Watts, 33, of Springfield was sentenced to three years in federal prison Tuesday for conspiracy and distribution of cocaine base.

U.S. District Judge Michael A. Ponsor also sentenced Watts to six years of supervised release after his release.

Watts was found guilty in June of conspiracy and possession with intent to distribute and distribution of cocaine base

On April 16, 2009, Watts and his brother, Kenneth L. Hawkins, were arrested after they sold 27 grams of crack cocaine to a cooperating witness. Hawkins died in June, 2009, two months after the arrest.

Hawkins had been charged with murder in a Jan. 1, 2007 shoot-out inside Kennedy Fried Chicken on Main Street, a few hours into the new year. Eighteen-year old Kameen Hallett was killed, and five other injured.

Hawkins himself was shot in the neck during the crossfire at the restaurant, and would spend the rest of his life paralyzed from the neck down. State prosecutors declined to take him to trial for the murder, citing the extent and permanent nature of his injuries.

At the time of the arrest in 2009, Hawkins was selling drugs from his bed with Watt's assistance. Unable to move his arms and legs, Hawkins relied on Watts to collect the money and hand out drugs that were stashed under the covers to his bed.

The arrest was the result of an investigation by the FBI's Western Massachusetts Gang Task Force, which is made up of officers from the state police, Springfield police and Hampden County Sheriff's Office.

2 years after earthquake devastates Haiti, Western Massachusetts groups help reconstruction efforts

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Members of the First Church of Christ in Longmeadow, American International College's nursing department and the CRUDEM Foundation of Ludlow are involved in the effort.

AE haiti quake 4.jpgVillagers of Milot, Haiti help expand the Sacred Heart Hospital supported by the Ludlow-based CRUDEM Foundation.

Two years after an earthquake devastated impoverished Haiti, two local organizations are working to improve the country.

Members of a Longmeadow church are rebuilding and enlarging a school which collapsed on Jan. 12, 2010, killing most of its nursing students.

At the same time, a Ludlow-based group is expanding the Sacred Heart Hospital in northern Haiti to offer better health care and many specialized services not offered elsewhere in the country.

“Every time I come down here it is amazing to see the progress,” said Mark H. Pohlman, of Longmeadow, referring to the rebuilding of the CONASPEH School in Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince.

The four-story building that housed a kindergarten through grade 12 school and a nursing and seminary program collapsed during the earthquake. Children had been dismissed for the day, but at least 20 people were killed. Most were nursing students.

Before the earthquake CONASPEH, a council of about 5,000, ministries which helps fund the school, had purchased a plot of land to expand. The earthquake did not end the plans, said Pohlman, who has been involved with the school through the First Church of Christ in Longmeadow, which has been providing scholarships for the school for years.

Pohlman is in Haiti this week at the second anniversary of the earthquake. In a phone interview he said he was delighted at the progress the school has made in 11 months.

“In February (2010) they dedicated the new headquarters buildings on the grounds of the original school,” he said. “Since February they have put up the frameworks for two classrooms.”

All of the buildings are designed to withstand future earthquakes. The complex includes a library, computer laboratories and an auditorium, which were mostly lacking in the original school.

Within six months of the earthquake, the school re-opened under tents, where classes are still being conducted. Despite the conditions, enrollment has expanded from the about 400 before the disaster to at least 750 students this fall, Pohlman said.

The nursing school has also received one of the first accreditation from the Haitian government.

“There has been an effort to launch a standardized curriculum and upgrade health care in Haiti,” he said.

This year American International College’s department of nursing also started working with CONASPEH to develop help the nursing department.

“It has been an unofficial thing,” said Ayesha Ali, associate professor of nursing at the Springfield college. “We have taken a keen interest in the school in the hopes we will be able to develop something over time.”

The department recently raised about $1,000 to purchase copies of French language nursing text books in subjects such as pediatrics, psychiatry, and maternity. Because the books are so expensive, the school was given one copy of each to be used for the school, she said.

“They lost a lot of books in the earthquake,” Ali said.

Ali, associate nursing professor Elizabeth George, and two nursing students, including one who was born in Haiti but grew up in the United States, are now in Haiti with Pohlman. During the trip they have met the nursing school director and some of the students, are discussing their curriculum and comparing the different programs.

Eventually Ali would like to develop a stronger partnership and possibly an exchange program where students from Haiti, who have learned some English, can spend time at American International College.

Despite the encouraging signs that the CONASPEH School is progressing, Pohlman and other Western Massachusetts residents who frequently visit Haiti say the improvements seem like an aberration since so many people are still living in makeshift homes.

“We are seeing new construction but not a lot,” Pohlman said.

Pohlman said residents do seem more hopeful. One told him recently since the elections electricity is more reliable, more students have returned to school and the water supply is improved.

“I go in-and-out of Port-au-Prince all the time and the sense that I get is the rebuilding still has not taken root,” said Timothy Traynor, of Wilbraham, who is working at the Sacred Heart Hospital, operated by the CRUDEM Foundation based in Ludlow. “There is still debris around, it is a slow and arduous process.”

In the months following the earthquake, $486 million was raised through the American Red Cross. About $330 million has been spent in the last two years on emergency services and rebuilding, said Jana T. Sweeny, director of international communications for the American Red Cross.

Some of the money has been spent to rebuild businesses, improving the water, sewer and road infrastructure and repair homes. The American Red Cross has been working with a number of agencies to coordinate the efforts, she said.

Much of the remaining funds are expected to be used to create so-called integrated neighborhoods with good housing, water, sanitation and health care, Sweeny said.

That effort has been complicated by the lack of land records. An imperfect system in the first place, many were destroyed or lost in the earthquake and organizations do not want to build on property where the owner is in question, she said.

In the Pioneer Valley alone an estimated $408,000 was raised much of it through a canister drive from Big Y supermarkets and donations from the family of Chief Executive Officer Donald H. D’Amour. MassMutal Financial Group in Springfield also collected more than $200,000 partly by matching funds that its employees gave. Many organizations and individuals also donated smaller sums, said Richard A. Lee, executive director of the Pioneer Valley Red Cross chapter.

It is hard to tell how much money residents really gave because so many people followed a texting program where they could donate $10 to the national chapter, he said.

“The Red Cross money is being spent in a lot of different ways,” he said. Some of it is being used to provide financing to help people re-start businesses.

The international agency expects to be in Haiti for years. It is especially difficult since it is was already one of the poorest countries in the world and then it was hit with one of the worst catastrophes, he said.

“We know how difficult it was to recover from the tornado” that hit Western Massachusetts June 1. “Imagine the scale in Haiti,” Lee said. The Red Cross was also involved with relief efforts from tornado which hit six communities in Western Massachusetts.

Few donations are still coming for the Haiti relief, although the Pioneer Valley Chapter will accept them. Of every $1 collected 93 cents goes directly to relief, he said.

The Sacred Heart Hospital, operated through the CRUDEM Foundation of Ludlow, was not damaged in the earthquake but quickly became known as one of the places where people could get desperately needed medical care.

The hospital was inundated with hundreds of badly injured patients. It set up large tents as makeshift hospital rooms and took over a school building to help treat patients. Hundreds of trained doctors, nurses and physical therapists flew from the United States to augment its Haitian staff.

National media attention helped the CRUDEM Foundation to raise more than $1 million, most of which went to direct care. Other fund-raising efforts are now being operated to help expand and improve the hospital, located in Milot.

“We have done quite a bit. We have built a number of facilities and we are in the process of putting in a clinic that will serve children,” said Traynor, who travels to the hospital frequently.

AE haiti quake 12.jpgTimothy Traynor, of Wilbraham, talks with residents of Milot, Haiti about efforts to expand the Sacred Heart Hospital.

With the help of some major donations from the Philips Company of Andover, the hospital has been able to add high-tech equipment including medical monitors, a digital X-ray machine and a reliable Internet communications system that allows local doctors to contact specialists in the United States, including those at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, to seek information.

“We have become known for our ability to manage some pretty complex issues,” he said.

Since the earthquake, a fully-staffed prosthetic lab and a therapy center was developed to help people who were seriously injured in the earthquake and continue to need therapy, he said.

It has also added two large power generating systems that triple the electrical power generation since the Haitian electrical grid is unreliable and constant power is needed for critical medical equipment such as the oxygen generator, Traynor said.

Employees reconfigured the hospital to add a maternity and women’s wing to the space and is in the process of building a family center, crucial to the culture of Haiti because relatives stay with ill family members, cook for them and provide otherwise unskilled care such as helping the bathe, Traynor said.

“We need to raise $50,000 to $70,000 for the center,” he said.

Before the earthquake, the CRUDEM Foundation planned to expand the hospital and had purchased land to do so. When the earthquake hit, Traynor was visiting the hospital to begin planning that addition.

The project, estimated at least $4 million, is now taking shape and is expected to double the hospital size to about 150 beds, expand the operating rooms, provide an emergency center and a burn center, he said.

With the expansion of the hospital has come a number of benefits from the desperately poor residents who live around the hospital. Small farms and other businesses have sprung up as residents realize they have a place to sell their goods. Others have been hired to help with the hospital building and are learning a trade as well as earning a paycheck, Traynor said.

“If you take that disaster and you try to find a silver lining .¤.¤. it brought a lot of attention to the problems that are here and there are a lot of good people trying to help,” Traynor said.

Holyokers interested in joining Fire Commission invited to contact Mayor Alex Morse

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The commission is a three-member board of volunteers authorized to hire, fire and discipline.

HOLYOKE – Mayor Alex B. Morse is seeking letters of interest until Jan. 20 from residents who want to serve on the Fire Commission.

“I have made this decision in the spirit of transparency,” Morse said Wednesday.

The commission is a three-member volunteer board appointed by the mayor and authorized under city laws to hire, promote and discipline Fire Department employees. The commission, and not the mayor, has sole authority under the city charter to hire the fire chief.

“In the past, the mayor would appoint new commissioners without a public solicitation of statements of interest,” Morse said.

“I want to open this process up to the community and give new folks an opportunity to be involved in municipal government. Existing fire commissioners are encouraged to submit their interest in retaining their status if they choose to do so,” he said.

Morse said applicants can contact him at morsea@ci.holyoke.ma.us

Current commissioners are Priscilla F. Chesky, the chairwoman, and Jason Garand, who were appointed by former Mayor Elaine A. Pluta. Morse defeated Pluta in the Nov. 8 election and took office Jan. 3.

The commission has a vacancy as the term of former member William N. McCoy expired Dec. 31, Chesky said.

Chesky said she is undecided about whether she will try to stay on the commission. Garand couldn’t be reached for comment.

The commission got more attention than normal in June over the legal problems of William P. Moran, the former acting fire chief, who has since retired.

Moran faces a pre-trial conference Jan. 20 on two misdemeanor charges in which Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni said he put the public in danger by sending a fire truck to a fake call to the Holyoke Mall at Ingleside on June 15. Moran’s lawyer denied the charges in court Dec. 7.

Bristol County DA Sam Sutter explores run for U.S. House

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Sutter, a Democrat, said in a statement Wednesday that the committee is a first step toward a formal announcement of his candidacy that he expects to make next month.

NEW BEDFORD, Mass. (AP) — Bristol County District Attorney Sam Sutter has formed an exploratory committee as he moves closer to a run for the U.S. House in the state's newly-formed 9th Congressional District.

Sutter, a Democrat, said in a statement Wednesday that the committee is a first step toward a formal announcement of his candidacy that he expects to make next month.

Sutter would likely face freshman U.S. Rep. William Keating in the Democratic primary in the new district that was created last year, when state lawmakers redrew congressional district lines to reflect the loss of one of the state's 10 current U.S. House seats.

Sutter said he decided to run because he felt a dramatic change was needed in the current atmosphere in Congress.

"The gridlock, which we all watched with dismay this summer when Congress confronted the national debt ceiling and again this fall when the 'Super Committee' could not reach an agreement, is precluding our ability to address and solve the most pressing issues before us: the economy, job creation, the national debt, the health care crisis, our dependence on foreign oil and other critical problems," Sutter said in his statement.

The new 9th District includes Cape Cod and much of southeastern Massachusetts.

No incumbent lives in the district, but Keating has said he plans to move to Cape Cod, where he owns a home, to run. Keating lives in Quincy, part of a reshaped district that is also home to Democratic Rep. Stephen Lynch, of South Boston.

Sutter, who is in his second four-year term as district attorney, also does not currently reside in the new 9th district. He lives in a portion of Fall River now represented by the retiring U.S. Rep. Barney Frank. Before Wednesday's announcement, Sutter had also been mentioned as a potential candidate in that district.

Joseph Kennedy III, the son of former U.S. Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy II and grandson of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, announced last week he was forming an exploratory committee as a first step toward running for the seat held by Frank.


Tolland voters overwhlemingly approve $72 million school project

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The project still requires an additional vote in each community, scheduled as a town election Jan. 31, to give final approval to funding by excluding the cost from restrictions of Proposition 2½.

tolland seal tolland town seal.jpgView full size

TOLLAND – Voters Wednesday night voted overwhelmingly in favor of a $72 million project to upgrade, expand and realign the three schools operated by the recently expanded Southwick-Tolland and Granville School District.

The votes were 46 in favor, 1 against, and 1 abstention.

Granville voters approved the project Monday night, followed by Southwick voters at a special Town Meeting Tuesday night. The project requires approval by voters of each community.

The project still requires an additional vote in each community, scheduled as a town election Jan. 31, to give final approval to funding by excluding the cost from restrictions of Proposition 2½.

The project will receive slightly more than 60 percent funding from the state’s School Building Authority, which will leave taxpayers here, in Granville and Southwick responsible for just over $29 million.

SBA requires communities to approve funding for the entire project regardless of state reimbursements.

The Jan. 31 debt exclusion vote will allow communities to tax residents the amount needed to finance the project over the next 20 to 25 years.

The project will address long-time space and maintenance issues at the high school, Powder Mill Middle School and Woodland Elementary School, all located in Southwick. Completion of the project will realign class structures at each school with the high school expanding from grades 9 to 12 to include grades seven and eight.

The middle school will convert to a grade three to six facility and Woodland Elementary will serve pre-school to grade two pupils.

Southwick voters approved the project on a 446-183 vote while Granville gave a 102-22 vote approval.

The Battle of Wild Hog? Swine tearing up Civil War battlefield in Vicksburg, Miss., likely to be shot

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The Mississippi River crested at record 57.1-feet in Vicksburg on May 19, forcing many animals, including hogs, deer and alligators, into new areas.

Wild Hogs Vicksburg Civil War Battlefield.jpgView full sizeIn a Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011 photo, Vicksburg National Military Park Superintendent Michael Madell, right, and Natural Resources program manager Virginia DuBowy inspect an area damaged by wild hogs in the VNMP.. According to Madell, there could be up to one dozen wild hogs on the 1,800 acres of the VNMP causing noticeable damage to the ground around several of the monuments. The VNMP is working with Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, (APHIS) an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture, to capture the animals using baited traps. Madell estimated that in the last two years 13 hogs have been trapped and put down. (AP Photo/The Vicksburg Post, Elijah Baylis)

By MARY FOSTER

A pack of unwelcome swine are going wild at the site of one of the pivotal battles of the Civil War, after seeking higher ground from the flooded Mississippi River last year.

Park officials say a pack of wild hogs are rooting up the landscape at Vicksburg National Military Park, an 1,800-acre site where thousands of Union and Confederate troops fought and died in 1863.

They fear the hogs could undermine some of the park's 1,370 monuments, its national cemetery and trenches and earthworks on the bluffs above the river. The hogs could also startle or injure more than 1 million annual visitors.

"It looks like the world's biggest Rototiller has gone through some areas," park Superintendent Mike Madell said. "People think we plowed some of the areas they've been in."

The Mississippi River crested at record 57.1-feet in Vicksburg on May 19, forcing many animals, including hogs, deer and alligators, into new areas.

The hogs are mostly in the northern third of the park, and the dense brush between Graveyard Road and North Union Avenue. Damage to the earth is particularly noticeable around the Indiana Regiment marker.

Madell said rangers have removed 11 hogs since they first appeared in May 2011. He believes about another dozen are still on the loose.

Wild Hogs Vicksburg Civil War Battlefield 2.jpgView full sizeWild hogs are seen in bottom-land just off Graveyard Road in the Vicksburg National Military Park in late Dec. 2011. Vicksburg National Military Park Superintendent Michael Madell, says there could be up to one dozen wild hogs on the 1,800 acres of the VNMP causing noticeable damage to the ground around several of the monuments. The VNMP is working with Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, (APHIS) an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture, to capture the animals using baited traps.(AP Photo/The Vicksburg Post, Sam Andrews)

"I came here two years ago and we had a small population," he said. "I'm pretty sure we got all of them, but the flood drove these in and they are finding plenty of food and good habitat, evidently."

"They could do some real damage to a very historic part of the park," Madell said.

The solution doesn't end well for the hogs. The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service has come in to help the park deal with the problem. Basically, that means killing them and burying them in a discreet area, Madell said.

"The state of Mississippi does not allow transporting them live," he said. "We did look into possibly donating the meat, but health laws prevent that."

Hogs may be shot anytime of the year in Mississippi, Walker said.

"It's an all-out war on them," he said. "But hunting will never get rid of them. They can breed three times a year and a sow can have eight to 10 pigs each time. You do the math."

Wild hogs are a big problem across the Southeast and in many areas of Mississippi, especially around Vicksburg, said Jim Walker, spokesman for the Mississippi Department of Wildlife Fisheries and Parks.

"They are terrible, rooting up crops, digging holes, just tearing things up in general," Walker said. "In Mississippi, if you don't have wild hogs count your blessings."

The pigs, which may have formidable tusks and weigh more than 200 pounds, are usually not dangerous, Walker said, unless they are cornered, or you get between a sow and her piglets. But they can be startling when a park visitor stumbles across them.

"We've had visitors occasionally see them, but (the hogs) have not tried to approach them," Madell said.

The siege of Vicksburg ended on July 4, 1863, with Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's forces defeating Confederate Lt. Gen. John C. Pemberton's forces. The series of battles effectively severed the Confederacy's western states and established Union control of the Mississippi River. President Abraham Lincoln called Vicksburg a key to victory over the Confederacy.

Ford recalls 450,426 minivans and SUVs over problems that could cause crashes, fires

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Ford is recalling 205,896 Freestar and Mercury Monterey minivans made during the 2004 and 2005 model years, because their torque converter output shaft may fail.

DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) — Ford Motor Co. said Wednesday that it's recalling nearly half a million minivans and SUVs because of a pair of mechanical issues.

The automaker is recalling 205,896 Freestar and Mercury Monterey minivans made during the 2004 and 2005 model years, because their torque converter output shaft may fail. If that happens, there could be a sudden loss of power that could cause a crash, Ford said.

Ford is also recalling 244,530 Escape SUVs made during the 2001 and 2002 model years, because their brake master cylinder reservoir cap could leak brake fluid. If the fluid leaks, it could corrode electrical connectors in the vehicle's breaking system and lead to melting, smoke, or a fire, Ford said.

Ford said that with both recalls, it will inform the affected owners, and dealers will replace the parts for free.

In the case of the Escape, Ford said it will begin notifying owners the week of Jan. 23, but because of a parts delay, Ford said it may not be able to fix some of the vehicles right away.

In those cases, Ford said it will tell owners to park their SUVs outside until the parts become available and the vehicles can be fixed.

HUD to speed assistance for homeowners hurt by October snowstorm

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The announcement follows President Obama's disaster declaration last week for Hampshire, Franklin and Hampden counties.

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SPRINGFIELD - The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development announced Wednesday it will speed federal disaster assistance to Massachusetts and provide support to homeowners and low-income renters forced from their homes following a severe snowstorm in October.

Last week, President Obama issued a disaster declaration for Berkshire, Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire, Middlesex, and Worcester Counties. The President’s declaration allows HUD to offer foreclosure relief and other assistance to certain families living in these counties.

HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan said in a prepared statement that "Families who may have been forced from their homes need to know that help is available to begin the rebuilding process.

The agency is ready to help in any way it can, he said.

Among the aid available, HUD is:


  • Offering the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and other entitlement communities the ability to re-allocate existing federal resources toward disaster relief – HUD's Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) and HOME programs give the State and communities the flexibility to redirect millions of dollars to address critical needs, including housing and services for disaster victims. HUD is currently contacting State and local officials to explore streamlining the Department's CDBG and HOME programs in order to expedite the repair and replacement of damaged housing;

  • Granting immediate foreclosure relief – HUD granted a 90-day moratorium on foreclosures and forbearance on foreclosures of Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-insured home mortgages;

  • Making mortgage insurance available – HUD's Section 203(h) program provides FHA insurance to disaster victims who have lost their homes and are facing the daunting task of rebuilding or buying another home. Borrowers from participating FHA-approved lenders are eligible for 100 percent financing, including closing costs;

  • Making insurance available for both mortgages and home rehabilitation – HUD's Section 203(k) loan program enables those who have lost their homes to finance the purchase or refinance of a house along with its repair through a single mortgage. It also allows homeowners who have damaged houses to finance the rehabilitation of their existing single-family home; and

  • Offering Section 108 loan guarantee assistance – HUD will offer state and local governments federally guaranteed loans for housing rehabilitation, economic development and repair of public infrastructure.

  • Information on housing providers and HUD programs -The Department will share information with FEMA and the State on housing providers that may have available units in the impacted counties. This includes Public Housing Agencies and Multi-Family owners. The Department will also connect FEMA and the State to subject matter experts to provide information on HUD programs and programs and providers.


President Barack Obama to campaign donors: 'Change will come' in 2nd term

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"If you stick with me, we're going to finish what we started in 2008," Obama said.

Barack Obama Change Will Come.jpgView full sizePresident Barack Obama pauses as he speaks at a campaign event at the University of Illinois at Chicago Forum, Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012, Chicago. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)

By KEN THOMAS

CHICAGO (AP) — President Barack Obama scooped up hometown campaign cash Wednesday and promised supporters that change can still come if they work even harder this time around.

Coming the day after former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's convincing win in New Hampshire's GOP primary, which established him as the clear front-runner to take on the president in the fall, Obama's visit home was all about summoning his backers' enthusiasm for the fight ahead.

"If you're willing to work even harder in this election than you did in the last election, I promise you, change will come," Obama said at the first of three evening fundraisers, a large event at the University of Illinois at Chicago

"You can't back down — not now. We won't give up — not now," Obama said. "We've got to send a message we are going to keep pushing and fighting for the change that we believe in."

Obama's team has castigated Romney at every turn as a political opportunist willing to alter his views — on abortion, the environment and gay marriage — to serve his political purpose.

Without naming Romney, Obama said he had led an administration of principle that has tried to invigorate the economy and kept its promises.

"I'm not a perfect man. I'm not a perfect president, but I promise you this — and I've kept this promise — I will always tell you what I believe and I will always tell you where I stand."

"If you stick with me, we're going to finish what we started in 2008," Obama said.

Obama's campaign has hauled in more than $150 million through September, but Democrats say they will need to compete with Republican-leaning outside groups that can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money to back specific candidates.

Obama's event at the University of Illinois had ticket prices starting at $44 per person. He was also attending a pair of pricier fundraisers Wednesday, with tickets beginning at $7,500 for one event and $35,800 per couple for the other. Those events were at the homes of Fred Eychaner, a Chicago media mogul, and Stuart Taylor, a Bear Stearns executive.

The White House said Obama wanted to show his appreciation to his campaign staff with a surprise visit to his downtown Chicago campaign headquarters — the president's first — but the White House kept the moment private. Reporters traveling with the president were not allowed to witness the visit by Obama, who has insisted he is focused on governing, not campaigning.

A White House statement said Obama thanked his staffers for their hard work and encouraged them, saying that he hoped to run "a campaign that embodies the values we're fighting for."

Obama's re-election campaign and the Democratic National Committee set a combined fundraising goal of $60 million for the final three months of 2011. The campaign is expected to release its fundraising report before the end of the month.

Romney's campaign said Wednesday it had collected $56 million for the primary through Dec. 31 and has more than $19 million in the bank, far outpacing his opponents' fundraising.

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