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Former Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Robert Massie endorses Elizabeth Warren

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Consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren received another nod of support from a former Democratic challenger in the U.S. Senate race on Saturday as Robert Massie formally endorsed the Harvard law professor in her efforts to unseat Republican Sen. Scott Brown.

2012 Massachusetts Senate Democratic candidates debate in Lowell, Oct. 4, 2011View full sizeRobert Massie waves as he is introduced in Lowell, Mass. Tuesday, Oct. 4, 2011 during a debate between then six Massachusetts Democratic candidates for the U.S. Senate seat held by Republican Scott Brown. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

SOMERVILLE – Consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren received another nod of support from a former Democratic challenger in the U.S. Senate race on Saturday as Robert Massie formally endorsed the Harvard law professor in her efforts to unseat Republican Sen. Scott Brown.

“At this especially challenging time in our nation’s history, we need Elizabeth’s voice and leadership in the United States Senate to fight Wall Street and defend the interests of working families here in the commonwealth," Massie said at an open house phonebank event at Warren's Sommerville office. "I am committed to doing everything I can to ensure she is elected as the next Senator from Massachusetts.”

Massie, a minister, non-profit executive and a one-time Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor, dropped out of the race in October following Warren's entrance into the race.

At the time, Massie said in a statement that he made the decision "because the momentum of the race has shifted so profoundly that I can no longer see a path for me to win the primary and defeat Scott Brown."

Massie, who is known for his social and environmental activism, received kind words from Warren when he dropped out, a sentiment that was echoed as he endorsed her on Saturday.

ElizabethWarrenSommervillePhonebank.jpgU.S. Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren calls supporters at a phone bank in her Somerville offices on Saturday. (Photo courtesy of the Warren campaign)

“Bob’s lifelong dedication to public service and his commitment to social justice are remarkable,” Warren said. “I admire his courage and conviction, and I look forward to working with him to fight for Massachusetts families and rebuild America’s middle class.”

Warren was endorsed earlier this week by former Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Alan Khazei, who also dropped out of the race in October.

“We need game changing leaders in the United States Senate and Elizabeth Warren has proven to be such a leader,” Khazei said in a statement. “At a time when so many powerful forces seemed stacked against the middle class, working men and women need a champion to stand up for them. Elizabeth has changed the national conversation and she will be the champion we need in the Senate fighting for our common interests, progressive values and causes. I am excited to support her and will do everything I can to ensure she is the next senator from Massachusetts.”

Warren's competition from within her own party still includes Middleton immigration lawyer Marisa DeFranco and Boston lawyer James Conye King.


Cruise ship off Italy runs aground; Costa Concordia lying flat off Giglio (photos)

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3 bodies were recovered from the sea, and divers searched the submerged part for any people still unaccounted for in the confusion.

By FRANCES D'EMILIO and NICOLE WINFIELD

Ship aground off ItalyThe luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia leans on its side after running aground in the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 14, 2012. The luxury cruise ship ran aground off the coast of Tuscany, sending water pouring in through a 160-foot (50-meter) gash in the hull and forcing the evacuation of some 4,200 people from the listing vessel early Saturday, the Italian coast guard said. The number of dead and injured is not yet confirmed Coast Guard Cmdr. Francesco Paolillo said. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

PORTO SANTO STEFANO, Italy – Survivors who escaped a luxury cruise liner that ran aground and tipped over off Italy's coast recounted a chaotic and terrifying evacuation through the ship's upended hallways on Saturday, as divers searched the submerged part for any people still unaccounted for in the confusion.

Three bodies were recovered from the sea after the Costa Concordia with 4,234 people aboard ran aground hundreds of yards (meters) off the tiny island of Giglio near the coast of Tuscany late Friday, tearing a 160-foot (50-meter) gash in its hull and sending in a rush of water.

As authorities and port officials carefully matched names on the cruise ship's list of passengers and crew with those of survivors getting off ferries or other boats on the mainland, the number of the unaccounted for steadily dropped to roughly 40.

Passengers described a scene reminiscent of "Titanic", saying they escaped the ship by crawling along hallways, desperately trying to reach safety as the lights went out and plates and glasses crashed around them. Helicopters whisked some survivors to safety, others were rescued by private boats in the area, and witnesses said some people jumped from the ship into the dark, cold sea.

At darkness, the diving operations, involving fire department divers and coast guard divers, was suspended for the night, coast guard officials said. While only a small section of the submerged area was inspected, no signs of any survivors or victims were immediately found, said Capt. Emilio Del Santos, of the port captain's office in Livorno. Helicopters and sea searches of the area were continuing.

The ship was lying virtually flat off Giglio's coast, its starboard side submerged in the water and the huge gash showing clearly on its upturned hull.

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Passengers complained the crew failed to give instructions on how to evacuate and once the emergency became clear, delayed lowering the lifeboats until the ship was listing too heavily for many of them to be released.

An evacuation drill was scheduled for Saturday afternoon, even though some passengers had already been on board for several days.

"It was so unorganized, our evacuation drill was scheduled for 5 p.m.," said Melissa Goduti, 28, of Wallingford, Connecticut, who had set out on the cruise of the Mediterranean hours earlier. "We had joked 'What if something had happened today?'"

Carnival Corp., which owns the cruise line that the ship belongs to, didn't address the allegations in a statement it issued.

"Our hearts go out to everyone affected by the grounding of the Costa Concordia and especially the loved ones of those who lost their lives. They will remain in our thoughts and prayers in the wake of this tragic event."

One of the victims was a Peruvian crew member, a diplomat from the South American country said, adding that a Peruvian woman was also missing. A French Foreign Ministry official confirmed that two of the bodies Frenchmen, both tourists.

Valerie Ananias, 31, a schoolteacher from Los Angeles who was traveling with her sister and parents on the first of two cruises around the Mediterranean, said the experience was like a disaster movie.

"Have you seen 'Titanic?' That's exactly what it was," said. They all bore dark red bruises on their knees from the desperate crawl they endured along nearly vertical hallways and stairwells, trying to reach rescue boats.

"We were crawling up a hallway, in the dark, with only the light from the life vest strobe flashing," her mother, Georgia Ananias, 61 said. "We could hear plates and dishes crashing, people slamming against walls."

She choked up as she recounted the moment when an Argentine couple handed her their 3-year-old daughter, unable to keep their balance as the ship lurched to the side and the family found themselves standing on a wall. "He said 'take my baby,'" Mrs. Ananias said, covering her mouth with her hand as she teared up. "I grabbed the baby. But then I was being pushed down. I didn't want the baby to fall down the stairs. I gave the baby back. I couldn't hold her.

"I thought that was the end and I thought they should be with their baby," she said.

"I wonder where they are," daughter Valerie whispered.

The family said they were some of the last off the ship, forced to shimmy along a rope down the exposed side of the ship to a waiting rescue vessel below.

Survivor Christine Hammer, from Bonn, Germany, shivered near the harbor of Porto Santo Stefano, on the mainland, after stepping off a ferry from Giglio. She was wearing elegant dinner clothes — a gray cashmere sweater, a silk scarf — along with a large pair of hiking boots, which a kind islander gave her after she lost her shoes in the scramble to escape. Left behind in her cabin were her passport, credit cards and phone.

Hammer, 65, told The Associated Press she was eating her first course, an appetizer of cuttlefish, sauteed mushrooms and salad, on her first night aboard her first-ever cruise, which was a gift to her and her husband, Gert, from her local church where she volunteers.

Suddenly, "we heard a crash. Glasses and plates fell down and we went out of the dining room and we were told it wasn't anything dangerous," she said.

Several passengers concurred, saying crew members for a good 45 minutes told passengers there was a simple "technical problem" that had caused the lights to go off. Seasoned cruisers, however, knew better and went to get their life jackets from their cabins and report to their "muster stations," the emergency stations each passenger is assigned to, they said.

Once there, though, crew members delayed lowering the lifeboats even thought the ship was listing badly, they said.

"We had to scream at the controllers to release the boats from the side," said Mike van Dijk, a 54-year-old from Pretoria, South Africa. "We were standing in the corridors and they weren't allowing us to get onto the boats. It was a scramble, an absolute scramble."

Once at their life boat station, crew members directed passengers to go upstairs from the fourth floor deck; Alan Willits said he refused.

"I said 'no this isn't right.' And I came out and I argued 'When you get this boat stabilized, I'll go up to the fifth floor then," he said. Eventually, his lifeboat was lowered down.

But things didn't improve for passengers once aboard the lifeboats or on land.

"No one counted us, neither in the life boats nor on land," said Ophelie Gondelle, 28, a French military officer from Marseille. She said there had been no evacuation drill since she boarded in Marseille, France on Jan. 8.

A top Costa executive, Gianni Onorato, said Saturday the Concordia's captain had the liner on its regular, weekly route when it struck a reef.

"The ship was doing what it does 52 times a year, going along the route between Civitavecchia and Savona," a shaken-looking Onorato, who is Costa's director general, told reporters on Giglio, a popular vacation isle about 18 miles (25 kilometers) off Italy's central west coast. The captain is an 11-year Costa veteran, he said.

The captain was being held for questioning, which was continuing for hours, by Grosseto prosecutors, Italian state TV reported Saturday night. Prosecutors were not immediately available for comment

Patrick Pourbaix of Costa's French arm, said 250 of the 462 French passengers are being brought Saturday night to Marseille. The other French passengers are expected to be brought back by special flights.

Coast guard officials in Porto Santo Stefano, where the survivors disembarked, said it would take hours at least to completely go through the cruise ship's lists. As names of survivors were checked off, they were being communicated to consulates inquiring about the fate of their citizens aboard.

Some 30 people were reported injured, most of them suffering only bruises, but at least two people were reported to be in grave condition. Several passengers came off the ferries on stretchers, but it appeared more out of exhaustion and shock than serious injury.

The evacuees were taking refuge in schools, hotels, and a church on Giglio. Those evacuated by helicopter were taken to the port of Porto Santo Stefano on the nearby mainland.

Passengers sat dazed in a middle school opened for them, wrapped in wool or aluminum blankets, with some wearing their life preservers and their shoeless feet covered with aluminum foil. Civil protection crews served them warm tea and bread, but confusion reigned supreme as passengers tried desperately to find the right bus to begin their journey home.

Tanja Berto, from Ebenfurth, Austria, was shuttled from one line to another with her mother and 2-year-old son Bruno, trying to figure out how to get back to Savona, where they began their cruise a week ago.

"It's his birthday today," she said of her son, rolling her eyes as she held Bruno and tended to her mother, who had grown faint and was lying on the ground. "Happy birthday, Bruno."

Survivors far outnumbered Giglio's 1,500 residents, and island Mayor Sergio Ortelli issued an appeal for islanders — "anyone with a roof" — to open their homes to shelter the evacuees.

Coast Guard Cmdr. Francesco Paolillo said the first alarm went off about 10:30 p.m., about three hours after the Concordia had begun its voyage from the port of Civitavecchia, en route to its first port of call, Savona, in northwestern Italy.

The coast guard official, speaking from the port captain's office in the Tuscan port of Livorno, said the vessel "hit an obstacle."

The cruise liner's captain, Paolillo said, then tried to steer his ship toward shallow waters, near Giglio's small port, to make evacuation by lifeboat easier. But after the ship started listing badly, lifeboat evacuation was no longer feasible, Paolillo said.

Five helicopters, from the coast guard, navy and air force, took turns airlifting survivors and ferrying them to safely. A coast guard member was airlifted aboard the vessel to help people get aboard a small basket so they could be hoisted up to the helicopter, said Capt. Cosimo Nicastro, another Coast Guard official.

Costa Cruises said the Costa Concordia was sailing on a cruise across the Mediterranean Sea, starting from Civitavecchia with scheduled calls to Savona, Marseille, Barcelona, Palma de Mallorca, Cagliari and Palermo.

The Concordia had a previous accident in Italian waters, ANSA reported. In 2008, when strong winds buffeted Palermo, the cruise ship banged against the Sicilian port's dock, and sustained damage but no one was injured, ANSA said.

Frances D'Emilio reported from Rome.

Warren man denies collecting unemployment benefits while working

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According to authorities, Andrew Rivers applied for and received unemployment benefits on two separate occasions between Jan. 2006 and July 2009. During part of that time, Rivers allegedly worked full time for four different employers and failed to disclose his employment status to the state.

BOSTON - A Warren man has been arraigned in connection with collecting unemployment benefits while continuing to work, Attorney General Martha Coakley said.

Andrew Rivers, 47, of Warren, was arraigned on charges of unemployment fraud (50 counts) and larceny over $250 (two counts).

The case was the result of an investigation referred to the Attorney General’s Office by the Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development’s division of unemployment assistance.

According to authorities, Rivers applied for and received unemployment benefits on two separate occasions between Jan. 2006 and July 2009. During part of that time, Rivers allegedly worked full time for four different employers and failed to disclose his employment status to the state. For each of the 50 weeks that Rivers collected unemployment benefits, he allegedly notified the state division of unemployment assistance that he was not working, but that he was able to work and was available for work.

Authorities allege Rivers collected fraudulent benefits totaling $22,262 while working and collecting. According to authorities, during the time of the alleged fraud, Rivers earned approximately $28,629 through his employment.

A Suffolk County Grand Jury returned indictments against Rivers on Dec. 8. Rivers denied charges in Suffolk Superior Court on Jan. 11 and was released on personal recognizance. Rivers is due back in court on Feb. 28, for a pretrial conference.

To report unemployment fraud, call the agency’s toll free fraud hotline at 1-800-354-9927. Callers may remain anonymous.

Massachusetts casinos czar Stephen Crosby urges caution

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The new chairman of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission said he doesn't know how it will work yet, but casino companies and municipal leaders may be jumping the gun if they hold ballot questions on casinos before the commission issues rules to guide the process.

cros.jpgStephen Crosby, left, speaks as Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick looks on during a news conference on Dec. 13 at the Statehouse in Boston. Patrick appointed Crosby as chair of a state gambling commission that will oversee the state's new casino law.

BOSTON – The new casino czar in Massachusetts said local officials are doing the right thing by meeting with casino developers and talking about regional cooperation, but he doubts the state will be ready to seek any bids for casino resorts until next year.

During an interview, Stephen P. Crosby, appointed as the new chairman of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission, said the commission is just starting to get organized. He said the commission needs to do a lot of baseline work over the first year including writing specifications for bids for casino resorts, hiring employees and setting its own ground rules and operating standards.

Ultimately, the five-member gaming commission is to establish regulations, take bids and award licenses for three casinos in the state.

“I’ve said several times that doing this under a sense of urgency to generate money, to generate jobs, or to meet the developer’s wishes, or to meet a community’s wishes – that we can’t do,” said Crosby, a dean at the University of Massachusetts at Boston and former top fiscal aide to two former Republican governors.

Crosby, 66, said the commission is obtaining from other states the criteria they used in soliciting bids from casino companies.

“Towns are doing right thing,” said Crosby, who will receive $150,000 a year as chairman. “They should be thinking about it now, strategizing, talking regionalization, talking to developers, that makes all the sense in the world. But we can’t be rushed by their needs.”

When asked about the casino companies staking claims in Springfield and other communities in Hampden County, Crosby said that is “totally up to them and the people of Western Massachusetts. It sounds like there is a lot of enthusiasm in a lot of communities in Western Massachusetts. That’s good. That’s what this is all about. That’s why the local control is so strong.”

“Communities that want this and can collaborate with developers and figure out how to get this to serve their local interests, as well as the common interests – more power to them,” he said. “I think it’s great that communities are working on this already.”

Michael Bissonnette 2011.jpgMichael Bissonnette

Chicopee Mayor Michael Bissonnette, for example, met a few weeks ago with several other Western Massachusetts mayors to begin planning on a regional basis for a casino. Bissonnette said he expects Chicopee to vote on a casino sometime in the next couple of years, but he said he didn’t believe there is currently a concrete casino plan for Chicopee.

Bissonnette said he would like the commission to pay for legal and economic expertise for communities in Western Massachusetts to properly negotiate mitigation agreements with casinos.

“The casino in Western Massachusetts is the 800 pound gorilla we will all be wrestling with the next couple of years,” Bissonnette said.

Under the state’s new casino law, one casino license is designated for Western Massachusetts. The law authorizes two other casinos – one in the Boston area and one in southeastern Massachusetts – as well as a slot machine facility that could be anywhere.

Crosby said he doubted that the commission would seek any bids for casino resorts this year, but he said it could happen some time next year.

At least four casino developers are planning casinos for Hampden County including MGM Grand for Brimfield, the company that owns the Mohegan Sun for Palmer, Ameristar Casinos for Springfield and Hard Rock International for Holyoke. Hard Rock’s plans are in jeopardy because Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse said he opposes it.

Officials of Ameristar and the Mohegan Sun have said they are hopeful that ballot questions on their proposals will be held this year.

Crosby said he doesn’t know how it will work yet, but casino companies and municipal leaders may be jumping the gun if they hold ballot questions before the commission issues regulations to guide the process. As part of the licensing process, the law requires residents to hold an up or down vote on a casino proposed for their community.

“A proposal can’t really be prepared to come before us until we have said what we are looking for,” Crosby said. “There is a little bit of a chicken and egg problem. Could you have the binding referendum prior to us putting out our specifications? I’m not sure about that. It’s a subtlety in the way the law works. I don’t know for sure.”

Crosby said he had no advice for casino developers. “They know what they are doing,” he said. “They know the law. They can read the law.”

He did say that bids will be awarded on the merits, not on politics.

“One thing that matters is whether local officials want this or not. That is legitimate. Every elected official has every right to be involved in the process and take a position pro or con. We would be respectful of that opinion but only as part of the larger pastiche of issues.”

“There won’t be anything off the record,” he said. “Everything that transpires will be on the record. Our singular most important priority is that the public and participants believe that – that everything is on the record and everything is on the level. That is priority no. 1.”

He said the state could phase in casinos.

“One issue is ... do you do three at once? Do you try one and learn from it? There are different ways to skin this cat.”

He said no casino company has the inside track, despite a widespread perception that the Suffolk Downs horse track would win the Boston license. Crosby pledged “a wide open level playing field” for bidders.

“We wouldn’t want potential bidders to think there is a predisposition. That degrades the value of the bid.”

Crosby, appointed on Dec. 13 by Gov. Deval L. Patrick, said it’s possible the other four members of the commission may not be introduced until mid-March. Crosby said he is still a dean and won’t have a formal position with the commission until there is a quorum.

Crosby said he is still trying to get a handle on many issues. He said it’s possible he would go on a statewide tour to get advice from business leaders, municipal officials and residents.

Crosby said it’s unclear how the commission will structure the bids for casinos. One approach would be to include some bare minimum requirements and then allow companies to take their best shot and be creative, Crosby said.

“We want to see you maximize the economic impact in a community,” he said. “We want to see you maximize the diversity of your work force and your suppliers. We want to see you minimize the negative impacts on surrounding communities. We want to see you adhere to the local culture and historical flavor of your community.”

Under the law, Attorney General Martha Coakley and Treasurer Steve Grossman will each appoint one commission member. The attorney general, the governor and the treasurer will jointly select the final two members with the help of a search firm.

Floyd VanHooser, accuser of ex-Syracuse assistant coach Bernie Fine, admits lying about sexual abuse

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Fine, 66, has denied wrongdoing and has not been charged.

1117 bernie fine.jpgView full sizeSyracuse University assistant coach Bernie Fine was fired after the surfacing of child molestation accusations against him.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) — A prison inmate who was one of four men to accuse a former Syracuse University assistant basketball coach of sexual abuse when they were children has admitted that he made up his claim.

The accuser, Floyd VanHooser, wrote in a letter that he lied to police and in December interviews with The Associated Press and The Post-Standard newspaper of Syracuse. He said he wanted to get back at the coach, Bernie Fine, because Fine did not hire a lawyer to help VanHooser fight a criminal conviction.

Fine had helped raise the 56-year-old VanHooser after his parents died.

Two other men, former Syracuse ball boys in the 1980s, accused Fine late last year of abusing them as children, but the statute of limitations has expired. Fine was fired Nov. 27 after they came forward, ending his 35-plus years as an assistant at Syracuse.

Fine, 66, has denied wrongdoing and has not been charged. Fine's attorney, Karl Sleight, declined to comment on Sunday. A federal investigation is ongoing.

Another man has also accused Fine, though a prosecutor has said that there is evidence that undercuts that claim.

VanHooser told The Associated Press last month that Fine began sexually abusing him when VanHooser was 14 years old. He said the abuse continued as an adult, when the contact included sex acts for money.

VanHooser said both his parents died by the time he was 13 and he moved in with Fine at 14. Though he began running away after six months, VanHooser said he saw Fine on and off for nearly 40 years.

VanHooser said Friday in a prison interview with the newspaper that it's true that he and Fine had a sexual relationship as adults for many years and it continued until last summer. He said Fine first approached him for sex when he was in his 30s. VanHooser said he was usually high on heroin when they had sex.

On Thursday, The Post-Standard received copies of two letters dated Nov. 29 that VanHooser wrote and mailed to Fine. One letter is addressed to Fine and the other "to whom it may concern."

"In a statement I gave, I told a lot of lies about Bernie Fine. None of what I said was true," VanHooser wrote. "Bernie has been nothing but good to me over the years. He was the only thing I had close to a father. He never did anything wrong. He is a good man."

VanHooser confirmed Friday that he wrote the letters and did so without being asked. When asked if his statements to police were true, VanHooser said only parts were.

When Syracuse police detectives questioned him about Fine's relationship with him as a child, VanHooser said he did not offer specifics.

"They suggested things and I went along with it," VanHooser told the newspaper.

The moment the detectives walked out of the room, VanHooser said, he regretted saying Fine had abused him.

VanHooser said he never saw Fine abusing children.

VanHooser said he was still angry with Fine about not helping him hire a lawyer so he repeated the false allegations to the AP and The Post-Standard. He said he wanted "revenge" but did not think "the story would go as far as it did."

Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick said he was not surprised that VanHooser admitted he lied about Fine. Fitzpatrick said he had not seen VanHooser's letters and did not know that he had recanted.

Fitzpatrick had referred last month during a news conference to an unnamed fourth accuser in the Fine case as someone serving a life sentence in prison and a persistent felon. He said that person's claims were not credible.

"There simply is no victim No. 4," Fitzpatrick said at the time.

VanHooser is serving 16 years to life at Clinton state prison near the Canadian border for several burglaries of Syracuse-area homes. He was sentenced in October as a persistent felony burglar.

VanHooser has listed Fine's former Syracuse address as his own in the past, including on a tax lien from 1999. VanHooser did painting and other maintenance work on Fine's home and he also worked for several years at a Syracuse University fraternity house where Fine was an adviser.

Out of tragedy, Pittsfield couple finds way to help children

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On the 20th anniversary of the snowy-road crash that took the lives of their three children, John and Elizabeth Moritz say they've been able to remain strong through the years by dedicating their lives to helping orphans around the world.

Hearts of the Father OutreachSince they founded the outreach in 1995, the couple has raised and distributed more than $3 million. It currently supports more than 225 children in Ghana, Mozambique, Uganda, India and Cambodia. (Photo courtesy of Hearts of the Father Outreach).


BY NED OLIVER, The Berkshire Eagle

PITTSFIELD, Mass. (AP) — On the 20th anniversary of the snowy-road crash that took the lives of their three children, John and Elizabeth Moritz say they've been able to remain strong through the years by dedicating their lives to helping orphans around the world.

"It's you know, amazing to me, in some ways, that we've survived and gotten this far," said John, 55. "Time helps, but we still have a hole in our hearts."

On Jan. 9, 1992, the couple's children, Joshua, 11, Kristen, 9, and Daniel, 8, were riding home from their school in Pittsfield with a carpool driver when the vehicle went out of control on Route 7 in Lee. The three Moritz children died instantly.

Lost in the darkest days of their lives, the Moritzes say they found strength in their faith, through which they rose up and founded Hearts of the Father Outreach, a nonprofit dedicated to helping abandoned children around the world.

"We had a family one morning and after that, they were all gone," said Elizabeth, 54. "We were asking God for direction, why we were still here and what we should do with our life."

John says the answer came: "We felt God asking us if we would go and love other children."

Since they founded the outreach in 1995, the couple has raised and distributed more than $3 million. It currently supports more than 225 children in Ghana, Mozambique, Uganda, India and Cambodia.

While seed money for the organization came from insurance settlements following the accident, ongoing funds have come from donations and from Aquatic Designs, the family's swimming pool business in Sheffield.

The couple says they've been able to move their lives forward since the tragedy. They said they find joy in seeing the children they're helping during regular trips abroad to the orphanages the charity supports.

"Our children are not here, but their legacy continues through the children we help," said Elizabeth.

And the couple that once promised they'd never love another child now lives in Austerlitz, N.Y. — with their adopted daughter, Lily, 15.

But they say as much as they've been able to get past the horrible tragedy that struck their family 20 years ago, the pain is still real.

"The grief comes in waves," said John. "Life goes on for everybody else but you're still in a time warp. It's surreal."

Congressional negotiators look at budget cuts, new fees to afford payroll tax cut, unemployment benefits extension

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House and Senate negotiators are drawing on Obama's budget and the work of the defunct congressional supercommittee on deficit reduction to come up with the $160 billion or so needed to continue the tax cut and federal jobless benefits.

Boehner Payroll Tax Cut.jpgView full sizeSpeaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, joined by, from left, Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, Boehner, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., and Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., talks to reporters just after House passage of legislation to extend Social Security payroll tax cuts, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

By ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans would cut federal employee benefits. President Barack Obama would raise fees for airline passengers and eliminate Saturday mail delivery. Democrats in Congress would charge employers higher premiums for federal pension guarantees.

As Congress returns from a three-week holiday break, those are a few of the ideas for how to pay for extending an average $20-a-week Social Security payroll tax cut through the end of 2012 without adding to the government's long-term debt.

Obama and fellow Democrats insisted on taxing the wealthy to offset the deficit impact of the payroll tax cut and of providing jobless benefits to the long-term unemployed. While still useful as campaign fodder, that idea is largely a bygone one.

House and Senate negotiators are drawing on Obama's budget and the work of the defunct congressional supercommittee on deficit reduction to come up with the $160 billion or so needed to continue the tax cut and federal jobless benefits. Both are set to expire Feb. 29.

Republicans controlling the House took a political drubbing in a December battle that produced a two-month extension of unemployment aid and the 2 percentage point tax cut for 160 million workers.

While House Republicans went after Democratic sacred cows such as federal worker benefits and health care spending, leading senators made progress on a bigger deal before it collapsed because of a lack of time, aides in both parties say.

Health care remains part of the equation. To prevent a 27 percent cut in Medicare payments to doctors under an outdated 1997 formula, negotiators are trying to find $39 billion in cuts elsewhere in health care spending. That would fix the problem for two years.

Some of the money being considered to offset the lost payroll tax revenue is practically free. For example, auctioning portions of the electromagnetic spectrum to wireless companies. That would raise perhaps $16 billion over the coming decade.

Obama wants to raise $4 billion more by selling off surplus federal property. There's an additional $3 billion to be reaped by preventing state and local government workers from improperly claiming Social Security benefits.

One idea seen as likely to make it into the final package is the repeal of a tax break taken by businesses that buy corporate jets. It would raise about $5 billion over a decade.

Other ideas illustrate the uneasy trade-off of big spending cuts or new fees stretched out over a decade to finance only 10 months of a temporary tax cut.

For instance, eliminating Saturday mail delivery and other Postal Service changes could raise enough money to pay for only about two months of the payroll tax cut. That may seem like a bad deal for many Americans, especially retired people who don't get the tax cut. The postal reform plan was proposed by Obama and embraced by the supercommittee, but so far has been left out of the payroll tax legislation.

Similarly, an Obama plan to double the Transportation Security Administration's security fee for nonstop air travel from $5 to $10 a round-trip ticket — a sure bet to anger travelers — would raise only enough money to pay for about one month of the tax cut. It gained currency in supercommittee deliberations but is not being pressed now, according to aides in both parties.

"This is definitely a situation in which there's a lot of pain for not that much gain and that trying to do a lot of these things absent a big, broader budget deal is going to be difficult to do," said Ed Lorenzen, an analyst with the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a Washington-based group that advocates fiscal discipline. "Nickel and diming savings is not easy."

A new $100 per flight fee on airlines and owners of private jets that would bring in more than $1 billion a year seems to be gaining momentum. So is a proposal to raise billions of dollars by making businesses with underfunded defined benefit pension plans pay higher premiums to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, which insures such plans. Many businesses and their GOP allies in Washington are resisting the proposals.

Democrats appear set to fight moves by House Republicans to require federal civilian workers to contribute 1.5 percent more of their salaries toward their pensions and absorb a third straight annual pay freeze. Obama wants to give federal workers a one-half of 1 percent pay increase in 2013.

Republicans' proposal to trim the federal workforce through retirements and attrition faces opposition from Democrats who supported it as part of a big deficit-cutting package. Politically wrenching changes to Medicare appear to be off the table.

"When you're talking about a major $1.2 trillion or more deficit reduction plan, there are some things you're willing to consider that you might not in the context of a much smaller agreement," said one Democratic negotiator, Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland.

Despite powerful opposition from the Democratic-leaning Hispanic community, Republicans appear likely to win a provision that would save at least $9 billion by blocking illegal immigrants from claiming the refundable child tax credit. A separate proposal would raise billions of dollars by imposing Social Security taxes on some foreign temporary workers now exempt from them.

Lawmakers already have snapped up $36 billion in projected receipts over the coming decade to finance the two-month jobless benefits and payroll tax extension enacted just before Christmas. The money comes from a 0.10 percentage point increase in home loan guarantee fees charged by mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that promises to increase the cost of a typical $200,000 mortgage by more than $5,000 over 30 years.

One thing Democrats are loathe to do is revisit the overall cap on day-to-day agency budgets set under last summer's budget and debt limit deal. That makes it more difficult to bank savings from cutting the federal workforce.

House Republicans hope for some victories for conservatives, such as letting states test unemployment benefit applicants for drugs and preventing welfare recipients from using ATMs in casinos, strip clubs or liquor stores to collect their benefits. GOP lawmakers also prefer maximizing spending cuts to raising fees.

Republicans promise to try to make sure the package is funded more with real spending cuts than new fees or easy money such as spectrum auctions. But they don't seem to be spoiling for a fight.

"Given the work that has already been done, there is no reason this bill cannot be completed swiftly and with little acrimony," said Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. "Frankly, the only way this process will not go smoothly and through regular order is if the White House chooses to disrupt it for political reasons."

Blu Homes closes shop in East Longmeadow, moves to California

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The Blu Homes factory in a former aircraft plant had about 40 workers including carpenters, electricians, plumbers and metal fabricators.

04/12/2011- East Longmeadow - Republican Staff Photo Blu Homes - Exterior view from the side of one of the finished units at the Blu Homes company factory in East Longmeadow. The factory closed last month

EAST LONGMEADOW – Blu Homes, a modular home company that touted Western Massachusetts as the perfect place to manufacture its homes, has closed its East Longmeadow factory and moved production to Vallejo, Calif.

“It’s not about what went wrong in East Longmeadow, it’s about what went right in Vallejo,” said Dana M. Smith, a spokeswoman for Blu Homes.

The Vallejo factory opened last month.

The Blu Homes factory in a former aircraft plant at 330 Chestnut St. had about 40 workers, including carpenters, electricians, plumbers and metal fabricators. They assembled sections of Blu’s modern-style homes then used the factory’s huge 250-ton crane to lift the home sections onto truck for shipment to building lots across the Northeast. Some workers will be offered opportunities to continue working at the Vallejo location.

Blu grew from research done at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Rhode Island School of Design. The headquarters is in Waltham.

Blu opened in East Longmeadow in 2010, saying the large industrial space and workforce of skilled tradespeople it needed wasn’t available in Metropolitan Boston.

But Smith said this week that sales have shifted to the West Coast. With demand there it makes more sense to build the homes in California rather than ship them across the country.

“We’re thinking we might one-day need another East Coast factory,” she said. She couldn’t say when the decision will be made and wouldn’t say if Massachusetts sites are candidates for the new factory.

“They still very much feel that they need an East Coast,” she said. “It could be anywhere on the east coast at this point.”

Blu Homes design and sales offices will remain in Waltham.


Late US Sen. Edward Kennedy honored at MLK event in South Carolina

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The late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts is being honored at a Martin Luther King Jr. event in Charleston.

Edward Kennedy.jpgView full sizeThe late Sen. Edward Kennedy was previously honored by the King Center for his dedication to the civil rights movement. AP File Photo

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — The late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts is being honored at a Martin Luther King Jr. event in Charleston.

Kennedy is being posthumously awarded the Harvey Gantt Triumph Award during an ecumenical service Sunday at Morris Street Baptist Church. Kennedy's son, Patrick, is accepting the award on behalf of his father.

The younger Kennedy, a former congressman from Rhode Island, is also being recognized for his contributions to civil rights during his congressional career from 1994 through 2010.

The Gantt award is named for Harvey Gantt, a Charleston native who was the first black to attend Clemson University and the first black elected mayor of Charlotte, N.C.

U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina delivers the keynote address at the event.

GOP candidate Rick Perry defends Marines in video allegedly urinating on Taliban corpses

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No one has been charged in the case, but officials in the U.S. and abroad have called for swift punishment of the four Marines.

010312 rick perry.JPGView full sizeRepublican presidential candidate Texas Gov. Rick Perry gets ready for an interview during a caucus night watch party Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in West Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

By ANNE FLAHERTY

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican presidential hopeful Rick Perry on Sunday accused the Obama administration of "over-the-top rhetoric" and "disdain for the military" in its condemnation of a video that purportedly shows four Marines urinating on corpses in Afghanistan.

Perry's comments put him at odds with Sen. John McCain, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, who said the images could damage the war effort.

"The Marine Corps prides itself that we don't lower ourselves to the level of the enemy," McCain said when asked about Perry's position. "So it makes me sad more than anything else, because ... I can't tell you how wonderful these people (Marines) are. And it hurts their reputation and their image."

No one has been charged in the case, but officials in the U.S. and abroad have called for swift punishment of the four Marines. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said last week that he worried the video could be used by the Taliban to undermine peace talks.

A military criminal investigation and an internal Marine Corps review are under way. The Geneva Conventions forbid the desecration of the dead.

Texas Gov. Perry said the Marines involved should be reprimanded but not prosecuted on criminal charges.

"Obviously, 18-, 19-year-old kids make stupid mistakes all too often. And that's what's occurred here," Perry told CNN's "State of the Union."

He later added: "What's really disturbing to me is the kind of over-the-top rhetoric from this administration and their disdain for the military."

Later appearing on the same show, McCain said he disagreed.

"We're trying to win the hearts and minds" of the Afghanistan population, he said. "And when something like that comes up, it obviously harms that ability."

GOP rivals say a split vote in South Carolina primary would help Mitt Romney win nomination

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No Republican has won the party's presidential nomination without carrying South Carolina.

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)

BY BETH FOUHY

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A splintered conservative vote in South Carolina could pave the way for Mitt Romney to win this week's pivotal primary, some rivals said Sunday, acknowledging an outcome that prominent state lawmakers suggested could end the nomination fight.

"I think the only way that a Massachusetts moderate can get through South Carolina is if the vote is split," said Newt Gingrich, portraying himself as the lone conservative with a "realistic chance" of beating Romney in the first-in-the South contest.

Polls show Romney, the former Massachusetts governors who struggled to a fourth-place finish in South Carolina during his 2008 White House run, with a lead heading into Saturday's vote. The state has a large population of evangelicals and other conservative Christians, and concerns arose four years ago about his Mormon faith.

But Gingrich, Rick Santorum and Rick Perry all said Romney, after victories in Iowa and New Hampshire, continued to benefit from the fractured GOP field and the failure of social conservatives to fully coalesce around a single alternative.

"If for some reason he's not derailed here and Mitt Romney wins South Carolina ... I think it should be over," said the state's senior senator, Republican Lindsey Graham. He added, "I'd hope the party would rally around him if he did in fact win South Carolina."


Santorum said South Carolina is "not going to be the final issue" and spoke of the "need to get this eventually down to a conservative alternative" to Romney. "When we get it down to a two-person race, we have an excellent opportunity to win this race," said the former Pennsylvania senator who won the endorsement of an influential group of social conservatives and evangelical leaders Saturday in Texas.

Perry, the Texas governor, said it was "our intention" to compete in the next contest, Florida's primary Jan. 31, even if he finished last in South Carolina.

Republican debate in Manchester, New HampshireView full sizeFormer Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum points out a member of the audience to former House Speaker Newt Gingrich during a break in the Republican presidential candidate debate at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H., Saturday, Jan. 7, 2012. Texas Gov. Rick Perry stands in the background. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Gingrich said he would "reassess" his candidacy if he lost in South Carolina and acknowledged that a Romney victory would mean "an enormous advantage going forward."

The former House speaker appealed for the support of "every conservative who wants to have a conservative nominee."

"I hope every conservative will reach the conclusion that to vote for anybody but Gingrich is, in fact, to help Romney win the nomination," he said.

To Rep. Tim Scott, R-S.C., the equation is simple: "If Romney wins South Carolina, I think the game's over. This is the last stand for many candidates."

He noted that three candidates are pursuing the evangelical vote "very strongly and without any question that works to the Romney campaign's benefit. It's hard to find a single candidate that rallies all of the Christian voters in South Carolina and therefore that splintered approach will probably have a major impact" in the primary.

Romney took a rare day off from campaigning while his opponents focused on the South Carolina coast. They also attended church services and prayer breakfasts in a state with a large population of evangelicals and other conservative Christians.

At the Cathedral of Praise in North Charleston, Gingrich was cheered by church members as he criticized activist judges who he said had made "anti-American" rulings to keep God out of schools. Santorum spoke at the same church Saturday.

At a prayer breakfast in Myrtle Beach, Perry appealed to religious conservatives to back his candidacy.

"Who will see the job of president as that of faithful servant to the American people, and the God who created us?" Perry said. "I hope each of you will peer into your heart and look for that individual with the record and the values that represent your heart."

The candidates faced a packed week of campaign events and nationally televised debates Monday and Thursday. No Republican has won the party's presidential nomination without carrying South Carolina.

Santorum battled Romney to a virtual tie in Iowa before falling to fifth place in New Hampshire. Gingrich and Perry fared poorly in both states.

All three have the backing of well-financed independent groups known as super political action committee that can help keep their candidacies afloat.

Santorum refused to suggest anyone should drop out of the race as a way to consolidate conservative support behind an anti-Romney candidate. But he said Republicans would have a hard time beating President Barack Obama in November if Romney were the nominee. Santorum cited Romney's push for mandatory insurance coverage in Massachusetts.

Gingrich and Perry used television interviews to focus on Romney's former leadership of the Bain Capital venture firm. Both defended raising questions about Bain's business practices, saying Romney's tenure would come under relentless assault from Democrats in the general election.

jon huntsman, ap mass horizView full sizeRepublican presidential candidate, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, speaks to members of the Greater Manchester Chamber of Commerce, Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011, in Manchester, N.H.

Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman picked up the endorsement of The State, one of South Carolina's leading newspapers. Huntsman came in a weak third in New Hampshire after skipping Iowa, but the paper described him as a "realist" able to appeal to the centrist voters who will decide the general election.

Texas Rep. Ron Paul was returning to campaigning for the first time since Wednesday. He has spent several days at home in Texas after his second-place finish in the New Hampshire primary last week.

Gingrich, Graham and Scott appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press," while Santorum spoke on "Fox News Sunday" and Perry was interviewed on CNN's "State of the Union."

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Associated Press writers Tom Beaumont in Myrtle Beach and Julie Pace in North Charleston contributed to this report.

Obituaries today: Thomas 'Tommy' Ardolino was drummer with NRBQ

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Obituaries from The Republican.

011512 thomas tommy ardolino.jpgThomas 'Tommy' Ardolino

Thomas (Tommy) R. Ardolino, 56, of Springfield died on Jan. 6. He was born in Springfield and graduated from the High School of Commerce. After graduating high school, as a self-taught drummer, he went on to join his favorite band, NRBQ, in 1974. In addition to a lifelong career in NRBQ, Ardolino recorded and performed with such notables as John Sebastian, Bonnie Raitt, Bob Dylan and Brian Wilson. Ardolino was often portrayed on episodes of "The Simpsons" and "SpongeBob SquarePants."

Obituaries from The Republican:

FACT CHECK: All's not well for anti-Mitt Romney film 'King of Bain'

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Just as Romney ignored the negative side of the ledger in his bragging, the film ignores the positive side.

Romney.jpgView full sizeFormer Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney

By CALVIN WOODWARD

WASHINGTON (AP) — It's become a case of the unsubstantiated vs. the discredited.

Mitt Romney's never-supported boast to have created more than 100,000 jobs as a venture capitalist has been countered by an attack film so flawed that the Republican presidential rival it was meant to help, Newt Gingrich, has asked the sponsoring political action committee to correct it or take it out of circulation.

Meanwhile, voters are no farther ahead in knowing whether Romney's work at Bain Capital — a complex record of company start-ups, revivals, flops and shutdowns — cost more jobs than it created, though there is gathering evidence it was not as rosy as he has portrayed.

Into the mix: "King of Bain: When Mitt Romney Came to Town," a dark tale casting Romney as a rapacious profiteer who makes vultures look like songbirds.

The 28-minute film, bankrolled by the Gingrich-friendly Winning Our Future super PAC, blames Romney for company shutdowns he had no part in and twists interviews with laid-off factory workers to convey resentments against him that didn't exist.

Just as Romney ignored the negative side of the ledger in his bragging, the film ignores the positive side. It does not back up its claim that "nearly every US state experienced job loss from the actions of Bain Capital under Mitt Romney." That assertion might be true if the closure of a national toy retailer counts, but Romney left Bain's management before it purchased, much less dismantled, KB Toys.

"King of Bain" presents four case studies of plants or companies shut by Romney and Bain, but three of the closures happened after he left.

Despite Gingrich's appeal to correct or take down the ads, by law he can't direct the actions of a super PAC. Ads drawn from "King of Bain" stand to benefit him — by denigrating Romney — for as long as they are running in the South Carolina primary campaign. The PAC said it will fix any errors if Romney answers several questions to help determine what is wrong, an approach that buys time for the ads.

Absent Romney's response, "we stand by the film" and "absolutely" will keep running it, Rick Tyler, senior adviser to Winning Our Future, said on "Fox News Sunday," even while acknowledging "hyperbole" in one claim it makes.

A look at some of the film's claims and how they compare with the facts.

UNIMAC CORP.: "Romney and Bain upended the company and gutted the workforce."

THE FACTS: Romney left Bain management a year after his company bought the Marianna, Fla., plant and seven years before it was shut. Moreover, Bain didn't do it. Bain sold the plant to a Canadian concern in 2005. A year after that, the new owners closed the plant and moved operations — manufacturing commercial laundry equipment — to Wisconsin, where it remains in business. Romney ceased operational control of Bain in February 1999, when he left to run the 2002 Olympics, and severed remaining legal ties with the company in 2001.

The film has interviews with three former plant workers, who are presented as if they lost their UniMac jobs under Bain. But all three told The Wall Street Journal they received pay raises and multiple promotions while Bain owned the plant and hold no grudge against Romney or his old company. They said they were paid for the interviews, not told of its purpose and had their words taken terribly out of context.

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KB TOYS: "Romney and Bain bought the 80-year-old company in 2000, loaded KB Toys with millions in debt, then used the money to repurchase Bain stock. The debt was too staggering. ... Romney and Bain's profits at the expense of 15,000 jobs was described by the Boston Herald as 'disgusting.'"

THE FACTS: Romney was in no position to plunder the toy company because he left Bain before it bought KB Toys in 2000. The retailer was finally liquidated in 2009, a decade after he moved on. Fierce competition from superstore chains was a factor in KB's collapse, not just debt.

The Boston Herald did not brand Bain's profits "disgusting," as the film claims. Instead, a story in the newspaper quoted a former worker as saying so. He was criticizing another Bain executive-turned-politician, Stephen Pagliuca, who ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination to replace the late Sen. Edward Kennedy in 2009.

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DDi CORP.: Romney and Bain wrung "enormous financial gain" out of the California tech manufacturing and engineering company by firing employees and dumping stock before it went into bankruptcy.

THE FACTS: The transactions charted in the film come after Romney's tenure at Bain, though he is believed to have profited from DDi stock sales after his departure. Viewers aren't told the Anaheim company blamed the bursting of the dot-com bubble for its fall, that it emerged from bankruptcy and is in business today.

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AMPAD: "That hurt so bad, to leave my home, because of one man that's got 15 homes."

THE FACTS: That comment was from an interview in the film with a Marion, Ind., woman identified as a former American Pad & Paper worker, and it captures authentic grievances against Romney and Bain over the closure of the plant there in 1995. But Romney doesn't have anywhere near 15 homes, a fact the filmmakers did not feel obliged to explain.

"It was hyperbole," Tyler said Sunday. "Are we going to fact-check hyperbole?"

Romney says he owns three homes. He also has a Lake Huron cottage in Canada that has long been in the family.

Ampad is the only example in "King of Bain" that substantially overlaps Romney's tenure, and it is one he has needed to deal with before.

After Bain acquired the company in 1992, it cut 385 jobs and closed two U.S. plants, moves that became the subject of Democratic campaign ads against him when he ran unsuccessfully against Kennedy for the Senate in 1994. The episode also was in an issue in his successful 2002 race for Massachusetts governor.

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Associated Press writer Jim Drinkard contributed to this report.

Financially troubled Rhode Island city loses democratic government

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The state-appointed receiver closed the library and community center, laid off the police chief and about 19 others and instituted a five-year "recovery" plan.

Central Falls Rhode Island Democracy Receiver Robert Flanders.jpgView full sizeIn this Thursday, Jan. 12, 2012 photo, former Rhode Island Supreme Court Justice Robert G. Flanders poses at a law office in Providence, R.I., where he works as an attorney. Flanders, the state-appointed receiver overseeing operations of Central Falls, R.I., filed for bankruptcy on behalf of the city in August 2011. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

By ERIKA NIEDOWSKI

CENTRAL FALLS, R.I. (AP) — When the state stepped in to take over financially struggling Central Falls in 2010, Rhode Island's smallest city lost something fundamental: its democratic government.

Mayor Charles Moreau would be forced to give back his key to City Hall, and the City Council was relegated to advisory status — unsure for months whether it was even allowed to convene.

"They're being governed without elected representation," state Sen. Elizabeth Crowley said of Central Falls' 19,000 residents. "That flies in the face of the democratic principle that our country is founded on, not only our little city. Maybe we should have a tea party and dump some tea in the Blackstone" River.

Crowley, a Democrat and lifelong Central Falls resident, uses a twist on Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address to describe government there, under a state-appointed receiver, these days: "of the receiver, by the receiver and for the receiver."

That receiver, former state Supreme Court Justice Robert G. Flanders Jr., is often criticized for sweeping like a dictator into a city he doesn't know, where he doesn't live and where, with the state's blessing, he unilaterally decides matters that go far beyond the fiscal.

The General Assembly passed the "Fiscal Stability Act" in direct response to Central Falls' financial crisis — giving the receiver authority to file for bankruptcy, which city officials did not have. It allows him not only to "exercise the powers of the elected officials" on fiscal issues but says his powers supersede theirs.

With virtually no pushback from the Legislature, the receiver's office has broadly interpreted that law as it works to get the 1.3-square-mile city, just north of Providence, back on sound financial footing.

Flanders sought bankruptcy protection for Central Falls in August, saying it was the only option. He closed the library and community center, laid off the police chief and about 19 others and instituted a five-year "recovery" plan. It balances the city's budget through a combination of tax hikes, cuts to retirees' pensions and benefits and other budget savings.

But the receiver's office has appointed people to non-financial boards; approved business licenses, including, elected city officials say, a "massage parlor" they opposed; instituted new police promotional exams; approved a new ordinance banning overnight street parking; and even issued a congratulatory citation for a new Lions Club.

Initially, the city's business was handled by a "Receiver's Council" consisting of three appointees, including one who had unsuccessfully challenged a sitting council member; the first receiver, former Superior Court Judge Mark Pfeiffer, said it was necessary because the real City Council wouldn't comply with his policies. Last year, that body was replaced by the receiver's "hearing officer," who is Flanders' chief of staff, Gayle Corrigan.

Those meetings are open to the public, but are typically sparsely attended — not unlike regular Council meetings.

Jeff Roter, a resident for 4½ years, said he's never been much involved in Central Falls' affairs: not when the state took over, or when the library closed. But a parking ban imposed by the city's unelected overseer was too much. He had collected nearly 300 signatures ahead of the City Council meeting last week. He wasn't sure who to give them to — the council or the receiver's office — but he thought Flanders had overstepped his bounds.

"We the people won't stand for this," he told the council.

Central Falls Rhode Island Democracy John Osko.jpgView full sizeIn this Monday, Jan. 9, 2012 photo, Central Falls, R.I. resident John Osko, center, voices his frustration about a parking ban during a city council meeting at City Hall, in Central Falls, as R.I. State Rep. James McLaughlin, D-Central Falls, left, looks on. The state of Rhode Island stepped in to take over financially struggling Central Falls in 2010, with a state-appointed receiver filing for bankruptcy on behalf of the city in August 2011. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Council President William Benson Jr. said: "We have no power."

In an unusual about face, Flanders' office suspended the ordinance a day later.

In an interview, Flanders noted that the state Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the receivership law under a challenge by four of the city's five councilors; the judge interpreted the statute to allow him broad authority beyond just finances. He said the city needed to be rescued — from itself — and that everything he's done is related in some way to its fiscal stability anyway.

"The law suspends the usual democratic process because the economic crisis that caused the city to be running out of cash — and having to go file for bankruptcy — needed drastic action," Flanders said.

"I'm sensitive to the fact that I am not an elected official, that I don't live in the city and that people are leery of a situation where one person ... has as much power as one person does to run the city and to try and right the economic ship of Central Falls," he added. "That's the law that the General Assembly passed and I have to say, it's working, from my view, remarkably well."

Central Falls started the current fiscal year with a $6 million deficit, and multi-million-dollar deficits were projected for coming years. Pfeiffer blamed budget problems on "unsustainable" pension and benefits costs and the lack of expected revenue from the Wyatt detention center; he also cited a "culture of government" in Central Falls that let deficits fester.

City officials have said a loss of state aid and declining tax revenues contributed greatly to the fiscal woes; they filed in court for a receiver themselves, saying the city was insolvent.

Outside the bankruptcy proceedings, Flanders has extracted major concessions from police and fire retirees and the city's unions. Gov. Lincoln Chafee, whose administration appointed Flanders, said this week the "fiscal hemorrhaging" has stopped.

Flanders wonders why Central Falls' elected officials aren't grateful for the work his office has done.

"There ought to be a few mirrors held up by some of the people doing the criticism," he said.

Flanders' initial contract, beginning in February, was for not more than $250,000 in compensation for a period of up to 12 months. But he was paid $30,000 a month through June, after which a new contract was signed. He has been paid $300,000 to Dec. 1, according to the governor's office.

The Central Falls mayor made nearly $72,000 annually before the salary was cut under the receivership to $26,000.

Municipal bankruptcies are relatively rare.

In Harrisburg, Pa., a federal judge threw out a petition for bankruptcy filed last fall by the City Council. The state took over the capital's finances, but the mayor still runs the city and a court-appointed receiver is authoring a financial plan that will have to be approved by a judge.

In Alabama, Jefferson County — home to Birmingham — in November filed the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. A receiver runs the troubled sewer system's finances there.

In Central Falls, residents aren't necessarily enamored with the elected leadership; state police are investigating Moreau, the mayor, who has been accused of having an expensive furnace installed in his home for free by an ally who had a no-bid contract to board up houses in the city.

John Osko, a resident for 37 years, said his feelings about the receiver are mixed.

"They're raising taxes without asking anybody," he said. "If it's for the good of the city, let's raise it. If not, let's put an end to it. He chopped everybody's head in the city; he eliminated a lot of people. What extra services are we getting? We're getting less and we're paying more."

Crowley, the state senator from Central Falls, said she wants lawmakers to clarify the receiver's role in non-fiscal matters.

"We may be in bankruptcy, but as far as I remember, I didn't lose my citizenship," she said. "Let's be very cautious about the rights that you're taking away from the governed."

Western Massachusetts communities announce meetings for the coming week

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

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

Agawam

Tues.- Agawam Disability Commission, 4 p.m., Senior Center.
Agawam Housing Authority, 4:30 p.m., 66 Meadowbrook Manor.
City Council, 7 p.m., Roberta G. Doering School.

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

Amherst

Tues.- Public Transportation and Bicycle Committee, 4 p.m., Town Hall.
Amherst Regional School Committee, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Wed.- Planning Board Zoning Subcommittee, 5 p.m., Town Hall.
Planning Board, 7 p.m., Town Hall.

Thu.- Community Preservation Act Committee, 7 p.m., Town Hall.
Human Rights Commission, 7 p.m., Bangs Community Center.

Brimfield

Tues.- Board of Selectmen, 7 p.m., Town Hall annex.

Chicopee

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

Wed.- Ambulance Commission, 5:15 p.m., 80 Church St.

Easthampton

Tues.- Council on Aging, 10 a.m., Municipal Building.
Board of Assessors, 5:30 p.m., Municipal Building.
Agricultural Commission, 6:30 p.m., Municipal Building.

Wed.- Board of Public Works, 4:30 p.m.,

Thu.- Disability Access Committee, 3:30 p.m., Municipal Building.
Community Preservation Act Committee, 6:30 p.m., Municipal Building.

Greenfield

Tues.- Council on Aging, 2 p.m., Senior Center.
Board of License Commissioner, 2 p.m., 14 Court Square.

Wed.- Franklin County Technical School Superintendent Search, 5:30 p.m., Library Conference Room.
Ways and Means Committee, 6 p.m., Police Department.
Town Council, 7 p.m., 393 Main St.

Thu.- School Committee, 6:30 p.m., High School Library.
Planning Board, 7 p.m., 321 High St.

Hadley

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

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

Hatfield

Tues.- Rescue/Pumper Committee, 7;30 P.M., Memorial Town Hall.
Housing Authority, 6:30 p.m., @ School St.
Selectmen, 10:30 a.m., Memorial Town Hall.

Thu.- School Improvement Council, 6:45 p.m., Smith Academy.
School Committee, 6:30 p.m., Smith Academy.

Holyoke

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

Wed.- Council on Aging, building committee, 10:30 a.m., new senior center job site trailer, 291 Pine St.
Charter School finance and facilities meeting, 5 p.m., 2200 Northampton St.
School Committee, Curriculum and Instruction Committee, 6 p.m., Dean Technical High School, 1045 Main St., Fifield Community Room.

Thu.- Holyoke Geriatric Authority, board of directors annual meeting, 6 p.m., 45 Lower Westfield Road.
Holyoke Geriatric Authority, board of directors, 6:15 p.m., 45 Lower Westfield Road.

Monson

Tues.- Planning Board, 7 p.m., Hillside School.

Wed.- Board of Health, 6 p.m., Hillside School.
Conservation Commission, 7 p.m., Hillside School.

Northampton

Tues.- Smith Vocational High School Board of Trustees, 5 p.m., Smith Vocational High School.
Charter Committee, 5 p.m., Council Chambers.
Agricultural Commission, 7 p.m., City Hall.
Parking and Transportation Commission, 4 p.m., City Hall.
Northampton Community Partnerships for Children, 5:15 p.m., Bridge Street School.

Wed.- School Vocational School Council, 3:30 p.m., Smith Vocational School.
Youth Commission, 7 p.m., City Hall.
Community Preservation Committee, 7 p.m., Council Chambers.
Board of Assessors, 1 p.m., Council Chambers.

Thu.- Board of Health, 5 p.m., City Hall.
City Council, 7 p.m., Council Chambers.
Triad Committee, 1 p.m., 67 Conz St.

Palmer

Wed.- School Committee, 6 p.m., Palmer High School.

Springfield

Tues.- City Council Public Health and Safety Committee, 4 p.m., Room 200, City Hall.
Springfield Parking Authority board, 5:30 p.m., authority office, 150 Bridge St.

Wed.- Pioneer Valley Transit Authority, noon, special meeting, PVTA office, 2808 Main St.
School Committee Buildings and Maintenance Subcommittee, noon, School Department, 1550 Main St.
Planning Board, 6 p.m., Room 220, City Hall.
Public Health Council, 6 p.m., 95 State St.

Thu.- School Committee, 6:30 p.m., Room 220, City Hall.

Warren

Wed.- Planning Board, 6 p.m., Shepard Municipal Building.
Sewer Commissioners, 8 a.m., Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Thu.- Capital Planning Committee, 7 p.m., Shepard Municipal Building.

West Springfield

Tues.- Board of License Commissioners, 7 p.m., municipal building.
Planning and Construction Committee, 7 p.m., municipal building.
Town Council, 7 p.m., municipal building.


Jon Huntsman campaign says he will drop bid for Republican presidential nomination, endorse Mitt Romney

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Campaign officials tell The Associated Press Huntsman will endorse Mitt Romney at an event in South Carolina on Monday morning.

jon huntsman, apView full sizeRepublican presidential candidate former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman listens to a speakers before a town hall event at Norton's Classic Cafe in Nashua, N.H., Monday, Nov. 21, 2011.

By KASIE HUNT and PHILIP ELLIOTT

WASHINGTON (AP) — Jon Huntsman will withdraw Monday from the race for the Republican presidential nomination.

Campaign officials tell The Associated Press Huntsman will endorse Mitt Romney at an event in South Carolina on Monday morning.

The former Utah governor placed third in last week's New Hampshire primary despite devoting much of his campaign resources to the state. He had already acknowledged that expectations for him in South Carolina's primary this week will be "very low."

Huntsman was routinely at the bottom of national polls, barely registering at 1 or 2 percent.

The campaign officials spoke on condition of anonymity because Huntsman plans to make the official announcement Monday.

Cape Cod plane crash claims 2 lives

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Authorities searched from the sky, sea and land for a small Piper aircraft that crashed into Cape Cod Bay, killing the pilot and his flight student.

brewster plane crash.jpgRescue crews searched the shores of Cape Cod Bay for a small plane that crashed off of Brewster Sunday morning.

BREWSTER – Authorities called off their search for a two-man crew of a small airplane that crashed in Cape Cod Bay Sunday morning after the bodies of the pilot and a flight student were found Sunday afternoon.

Firefighters recovered the first body after it washed ashore on a beach in Brewster, a North Side town located on lower Cape Cod. The second body was spotted floating offshore by a MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew from Air Station Cape Cod, the U.S. Coast Guard said in a release.

"The search conditions were challenging, but we had good communications with the Dennis Police Department and other ground crews, which enabled us to direct ground crews to the second person when we located him in the surf," said Lt. j.g. (junior grade) Jared Carbajal, a co-pilot in the helicopter that spotted the body.

The National Transportation Safety Board said the plane, a 50-year-old Piper Comanche, crashed in the bay around 10 a.m. Sunday after the pilot reported smoke in the cabin. Authorities said they were unsure precisely where the plane crashed. Wreckage from the plane, which is believed to be under water, was not located, but the bodies were recovered on beaches off of Saint's Landing and Cemetery Road, streets located north of Main Street (Route 6A) in Brewster.

The plane was en route from Martha's Vineyard to Hyannis when it crashed, authorities said. The Federal Aviation Administration received a call about smoke in the cabin around 10 a.m., but FAA officials lost contact with the plane a short while later, Patch.com reported.

A full-scale air, land and sea search was launched around 10:30 a.m.

Officials said the identities of the victims – two men, ages 73 and 68 – would not be released until their families were contacted by the Brewster Police Department.

The names were still unavailable as of Sunday night, but Sean Flynn, manager of Martha's Vineyard Airport, told the Cape Cod Times that both men lived locally. Flynn said the 73-year-old pilot was a part-time resident of Edgartown on the Vineyard, and his 68-year-old flight student lived in the upper Cape town of Falmouth.

"It's a sad way to end a flight. It's certainly not the outcome we were hoping for, but I just hope the families will be able to have some closure," Carbajal said.

Lt. Joe Klinker, public affairs officer for the Coast Guard's First District, which includes Cape Cod, offered his condolences to the crash victims' families.

"We could see it on the faces of all the first responders," he said. "Everyone was hoping the search would end very differently."

In addition to the Coast Guard, state police and law enforcement officials and firefighters from Brewster, Dennis and Yarmouth, among other agencies, took part in the search-and-rescue effort.

The Associated Press reported that federal records indicated the 1961 four-seat Piper plane was owned by a man and woman from East Falmouth.

Emergency responders had to contend with rough seas and bitterly cold temperatures as they retrieved pieces from the wreckage, including plane parts and other items that washed ashore in Brewster.

"The search conditions were challenging," Carbajal said.

The Coast Guard helicopter located the second body in the water shortly after the Brewster Fire Department discovered the first body on shore.

FAA spokesman Jim Peters told the Cape Cod Times that the Piper was simulating the holding pattern for Barnstable Airport in Hyannis, which was a practice scenario for the aircraft being unable to land. After initially reporting smoke in the cabin, the pilot told air traffic controllers the problem had subsided and continued the training exercise. That was the last FAA communication with the plane.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

Material from the Associated Press, Boston Globe, Cape Cod Times, Patch.com and the U.S. Coast Guard was used in this report.



THE MAP BELOW indicates the approximate locations of where two plane-crash victims' bodies were found on beaches just north of these marked roads in the town of Brewster, Cape Cod:


View Saint's Landing, Brewster, MA 02631 in a larger map

Thomas Gleason, final defendant in Macedonia Church of God arson case, to be sentenced in federal court in Springfield

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Gleason (pictured), a 24-year-old Springfield resident, admitted to his role in the Nov. 5, 2008, fire that destroyed the Tinkham Road church. Federal prosecutors said the predominantly black church was targeted to protest the election of Barack Obama.

SPRINGFIELD – The last of three defendants convicted of burning down the Macedonia Church of God in Christ, a crime that prosecutors said was racially motivated and a reaction to Barack Obama being elected the nation's first black president, is scheduled to be sentenced Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Springfield.

Thomas Gleason, 24, has admitted to his role in the Nov. 5, 2008, incident, which occurred only hours after Obama made history by defeating U.S. Sen. John McCain. Gleason pleaded guilty last year to conspiracy against civil rights and other charges for destroying the predominantly black church on Tinkham Road in Springfield's Sixteen Acres neighborhood.

His co-defendants, Benjamin F. Haskell, 25, and Michael F. Jacques Jr., 27, are already serving nine- and 14-year prison sentences, respectively, in connection with the civil rights case, which gained national attention.

The church was under construction and no one was injured in the fire.

Gleason and Haskell, the latter of whom agreed to where a police wire to help implicate his friends, admitted to creeping through the woods between their homes and the nearby church and torching the structure to protest Obama's victory.

But Jacques didn't go down without a fight, denying his involvement. Jacques, who was convicted after a trial last month, accused investigators of obtaining a false confession from him as he underwent withdrawal from addiction to painkillers.

Thousands of volunteers helped Bishop Bryant Robinson Jr., pastor of Macedonia Church of God in Christ, and his congregation rebuild the Tinkham Road church. The congregation celebrated the opening of the church on Sept. 24, 2011.

Woman arrested in connection with Springfield stabbing

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The incident occurred at a Liberty Street residence in the Hungry Hill section of the city, police said.

a href="http://topics.masslive.com/tag/springfield/index.html">SPRINGFIELD – A city woman has been arrested in connection with an early Monday stabbing in Liberty Heights, according to police and media reports.

Springfield Police Sgt. Richard Labelle told 22News that police responded to a Liberty Street residence in the neighborhood's Hungry Hill section just after midnight Monday.

Labelle said a man who lived at the address was stabbed in the chest and taken to Baystate Medical Center for treatment of a non-life-threatening wound.

The woman, whose name and age were not immediately available, lives at the same address and is expected to be arraigned Tuesday in Springfield District Court. Massachusetts courts are closed Monday in recognition of Martin Luther King Day.

Belchertown Planning Board continues public hearing on solar array at New England Small Farm Institute

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Judith F. Gillan, executive director of NESFI, said questions from residents and the town are "legitimate" and can be addressed in the design.

031710_judith_fuller_gillan_crop.jpgView full sizeJudith Fuller Gillan is the director of the New England Small Farm Institute in Belchertown.

BELCHERTOWN – A solar array planned for the New England Small Farm Institute is under scrutiny from residents who say it will impact the view at the corner of Hamilton and George Hannum roads and wonder if it would be hazardous.

The Planning Board heard their concerns at the project’s second public hearing on Jan. 10.

Judith F. Gillan, executive director of NESFI, said questions from residents and the town are “legitimate” and can be addressed in the design.

NESFI has partnered with Amherst-based solar company Hyperion Systems to install a 3-acre dual-use array on a 5.5-acre hay field. The panels would be elevated several feet and spaced out to allow crops to grow and animals to graze.

NESFI leases the land from the state and operates it on behalf of the Department of Agricultural Resources. Selling the array’s energy would bring in some money for education and outreach programs.

“It’s an opportunity to harvest energy from land while keeping it in agriculture,” said Gillan. “This project encourages, in fact requires, agricultural activity to continue.”

The Board of Selectmen in December unanimously voted to ask the Planning Board to deny the site plan. Selectman George D. “Archie” Archible said it would be a “sin” to “ruin” the scenic vista and Selectman Ronald E. Aponte said the array could affect the view from the State School property, potentially turning off interested developers.

“We want to make sure we mitigate (impacts on the view) with buffers and screens” and other methods, Gillan said.

At the Jan. 10 hearing, Gillan said some people wondered if the system can impact human health, while a resident asked if it would hurt the area’s salamander population. Another concern is the possibility that the panels would be reflective and pose a danger to drivers.

Gillan said NESFI is also looking for answers and the team would provide them at the next hearing, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 28. The board meets at Town Hall at 2 Jabish St.

Gillan said the number of panels has not been decided and project officials are “still open to shaping the design to the dialogue that is ongoing.”

She said people generally agree that there is a need to move away from coal-burning plants toward safer and more sustainable energy sources, but she understands the reluctance to try something new and relatively unknown.

“This encourages all of us to become more informed about alternative energy sources,” she said.

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