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Hartford man arrested on gun charges following disturbance at downtown Springfield nightclub

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Tyrell Young was stopped by police outside Kush High End Complex after an officer watched him get a gun from his car and walk back to the club.

26tyrellyoungcrop.jpgTyrell Young

SPRINGFIELD - Police broke up a fight among patrons at a downtown nightclub early Saturday, but an officer who remained on scene may have prevented more violence when she spotted a man returning to the club after retrieving a handgun from his car, police said.

The man, Tyrell Young, 26, of 2 Driggs Court, East Hartford, was stopped before he could enter Kush High End Complex, 90 Worthington St. He was searched for weapons and police found him with a loaded .38-caliber handgun, said Sgt. John M. Delaney, aide to Police Commissioner William Fitchet.

He was charged with carrying a firearm without a license, and possession of ammunition without a firearms identification card. He is due to be arraigned Monday in Springfield District Court.

Delaney said police were dispatched to the club at about 2 a.m. for a report of a disturbance. After officers broke up the fight, officer Keola Perry watched Young and another man walking to the parking lot and noticed Young appeared very upset.

Perry watched him get a handgun from his car and begin walking back to the club despite his friend tried to talk him out of it, Delaney said. Perry radioed for other police still on scene that Young was now armed and for officers to converge on him before he made it to the club.

"Officer Keola Perry did a great job preventing a shooting and possibly saving a life," Delaney said.

Police will also be filing a report with the city License Commission about the disturbance at the club.


Anti-prostitution sweep nets 5 'Johns' in Springfield's South End

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The arrests were part of an ongoing police crackdown on prostitution in city neighborhoods.

five guys 2.jpgFrom left, top row: Mark Bauman and Daniel Orlik. Middle row: Nelson Morales and Jeffery Comeau. Bottom row: George Alvarez.

SPRINGFIELD - Springfield police arrested five area men Saturday afternoon during an anti-prostitution sweep in the city's South End, police said.

Sgt. John Delaney, aide to Commissioner William Fitchet, said the men were arrested after they approached an undercover female police officer and offered to pay money in exchange for sex.

Arrested were Nelson Morales, 51, of 274 Locust Street, Springfield, Daniel Orlik, 43, of 37 Ducharme Street, Chicopee, Jeffery Comeau, 40, of 51 Van Deene Ave., Springfield, George Alvarez, 45, of 511 Hancock Street, Springfield, and Mark Bauman, 25, of 129 Shaker Road, Enfield.

Each was charged with engaging in sexual conduct for a fee.

They are due to be arraigned Monday in Springfield District Court.

The arrests were made in less than two hours on Saturday afternoon. Detectives with the police Vice Unit under the command of Sgt. Steven Kent deployed to the area of Locust Street and Palmer Avenue as part of the operation.

The detail was part of an ongoing crackdown by Springfield police on prostitution in city neighborhoods.

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Smith & Wesson, city of Springfield tout growth due to tax incentives

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Of the $6.6 million, $6 million was credit on Smith & Wesson's state corporate income tax.

View full sizeSmith & Wesson president P. James Debney, left, speaks at the podium during a press conference Monday at which the company annnounced that it has already created 217 jobs and expects to hit 227 new jobs by the end of the month. Looking on is Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, center, and U.S. Rep. Richard E. Neal, D-Springfield.

SPRINGFIELD – One year ago, Smith & Wesson received $6.6 million in worker-training grants and tax incentives to move production of its Thompson / Center line of firearms to Springfield and create 225 new jobs over five years.

Monday, Smith & Wesson announced that it has already created 217 jobs and expects to hit 227 jobs by the end of February. The 160-year-old Springfield gunmaker had also invested more than $19 million in capital improvements at its sprawling Roosevelt Avenue plant through the end of December 2011.

“We have kept our end of the bargain, we are pleased to say,” said Smith & Wesson president P. James Debney at a news conference Monday afternoon. “We have created the jobs we promised and we kept on going.”

The jobs are all full-time positions with average yearly wages of $47,000 per job plus benefits.

“These are jobs that allow you to raise your family,” Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno said.

Sarno also couldn’t resist invoking Clint Eastwood's "Dirty Harry" character as he brandished a Smith & Wesson revolver.

“We feel very lucky today,” Sarno said.

Of the $6.6 million, $6 million was credit on Smith 7 Wesson’s state corporate income tax. The figure also includes a $600,000 state tax credit and $100,000 in community-development block grant money to support job training at Smith & Wesson.

Smith and Wesson EDIP 2011 Anual Report Media Release


Anti-Scott Brown Rethink PAC backed by Massachusetts teachers & service workers unions

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The Rethink political action committee, which has come out swinging against Republican Sen. Scott Brown in his reelection bid, has done so with the financial backing of two large unions.

rethink brown logo.jpgThe Deedham, Massachusetts-based Rethink PAC, which operates rethinkbrown.com, is primarily funded by two of the country's largest unions.

The Rethink political action committee, which has come out swinging against Republican Sen. Scott Brown in his reelection bid, has done so with the financial backing of two large unions.

The Rethink PAC, which has focused on the incumbent senator through its "Rethink Brown" project, has taken aim at the his voting record since late 2011. It has funded two TV commercials and a recent project it described as an "extensive report" on Brown's record.

According to year-end reports filed with the Federal Election Commission, the Rethink PAC had raked in $626,736, thanks in a large part to the Massachusetts Teachers Union and the Service Workers International Union.

The Massachusetts Teachers Union gave a total of $250,000 in two payments. According to the FEC data, the union gave the PAC $150,000 on Oct. 27 and another $100,000 on Nov. 3.

The Service Workers International Union, based out of New York City, gave the PAC a total of $250,000 in two $125,000 payments on Nov. 21 and Dec. 1.

Individual contributions accounted for only a small portion of the PAC's income in 2011, with a $1,000 contribution from Kasowitz Benson Torres & Friedman LLP, a New Jersey law firm, and a $250 contribution from consultant John Littleford of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

At the end of 2011, the Rethink PAC had spent a total of $477,925, leaving it with $148,811 cash left in its bank account. The PAC, registered in Deedham, Mass., was officially created on Oct. 13.

Brown is in a heated campaign to retain his senate seat, which he won in a 2010 special election following the death of Sen. Edward Kennedy. He currently has three Democratic challengers including consumer advocate Elizabeth Warren, who signed an agreement with Brown in an effort to curb the power of third-party groups in the election.

Signed on Jan. 23, the agreement imposes financial penalties if an outside group advertises to the benefit or detriment of a candidate, although the agreement doesn't include Internet "reports" like the Rethink PAC recently launched or Internet-based videos like the Mass. GOP recently used to go after Warren.

RethinkPAC Year End Report

Few answers in death of sons of missing Utah mom

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Authorities say Josh Powell set fire to his home, killing himself and his two young sons days after he was denied custody and ordered to undergo a psycho-sexual evaluation.

josh powellThe smoldering remains of a house, left, where an explosion killed Josh Powell and his two sons, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012, is shown from the air in Graham, Wash. The explosion occurred moments after a Child Protective Services worker brought the two boys to the home for a supervised visit. Powell's wife Susan went reportedly missing from their West Valley City, Utah, home in December 2009.

GRAHAM, Wash. — Josh Powell's note was simple and short, a farewell to the world after two years of being scrutinized in the media, hammered by police and questioned by judges, prosecutors and social workers, living his life under a microscope since the day his wife vanished.

"I'm sorry, goodbye," Powell wrote in an email to his attorney just minutes before authorities say he set fire to his home, killing himself and his two young sons days after he was denied custody and ordered to undergo a psycho-sexual evaluation.

The Sunday blaze at Powell's home brought yet another twist in the very public scandal that began when Susan Powell vanished in 2009. The case had since spiraled into a salacious saga of finger-pointing and accusations of sex and lies — and now the unthinkable loss of two young lives caught in the crossfire.

A social worker brought the two boys to Josh Powell's home Sunday for what was to be a supervised visit. They rushed toward the home, leaving the social worker behind. By the time she got to the door, Powell had let his sons in but locked her out, Graham Fire and Rescue Chief Gary Franz told The Associated Press.

Pierce County sheriff's Sgt. Ed Troyer said emails Powell sent just prior to the blaze seemed to confirm that Powell planned the deadly fire. He didn't elaborate on the content of the emails.

Jeffrey Bassett, who represented Powell in the custody case, said he received an ominous email from his client just minutes before the fire.

"I'm sorry, goodbye," it read.

Investigators tried to fill in holes Monday in the case with an arson investigation at the home and autopsies on Josh Powell and his sons, said Troyer. Local detectives also are meeting with police from West Valley City, Utah, who have been looking for Susan Powell.

Steve Richards, assistant chief of Graham Fire and Rescue, said crews were assessing the remnants of the home to determine how the fire began and what types of accelerants might have been used. He said responders arrived on scene about three minutes after getting the call and found flames already through the roof.

"It was just devastation," he said.

A candle light vigil was held Sunday night for the boys outside the 7-year-old's school in Puyallup.

The investigation will include a closer looks at Josh Powell's last movements and messages.

Chaplains have been working with the family of Susan Powell.

Josh Powell's father also was informed of the death in the jail in Tacoma where he's being held for investigation of voyeurism. He's on suicide watch, Troyer said.

The Washington Department of Social and Health Services said the social worker who brought the boys to Josh Powell's home for what was to be a supervised visit is "suffering from grave emotional trauma as a result of the horrific event." The department will conduct a formal child fatality review.

She did all she could, Troyer said.

josh-powell-photo.jpgIn this Aug. 23, 2011 file photo, Josh Powell, husband of missing Utah woman Susan Cox Powell, walks to a court hearing in Tacoma, Wash. An explosion at a Washington state home has killed Josh Powell and the couple's two young sons, officials said Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012.


The social worker called her supervisors to report that she could smell gas. Moments later, the home burst into flames, igniting an inferno that neighbors said rattled their houses.

Some sort of accelerant was used to make the house burn faster, Troyer said. "It burned fast and hot."

Susan Powell, a pretty 28-year-old mother of two, was reported missing Dec. 7, 2009, after she failed to show up for her stockbroker job in Utah.

Authorities in the couple's hometown of West Valley City, about 10 miles outside Salt Lake City, quickly turned their attention to Josh Powell. He's been the only "person of interest" in the case, but had repeatedly denied any involvement in her disappearance.

"I would never even hurt her," a tearful, red-eyed Josh Powell told CBS' Early Show in August. "People who know me know that I could never hurt Susan."

About a month later, police spent 12 days in the remote central Utah desert looking for clues, and Josh Powell and his father, Steven, quickly disappeared from the limelight. The search area around Topaz Mountain, a popular spot for rock and gem hunters, was about 30 miles south of where Josh told police he went camping with his two children in the hours before his wife's disappearance — his steadfast alibi.

On Sunday, the lawyer for Susan Powell's parents, Chuck and Judy Cox, told the AP the children had started talking to their grandparents about things they remembered from the night their mother vanished.

"They were beginning to verbalize more," said attorney Steve Downing, whose clients had custody of the children. "The oldest boy talked about that they went camping and that Mommy was in the trunk. Mom and Dad got out of the car and Mom disappeared."

Police turned up no clues in their desert search, but a day before ending it, Steven Powell, 61, was arrested at his Washington state home and accused of secretly videotaping his daughter-in-law, other women, and young girls taking baths and sitting on the toilet in neighborhood homes.

The elder Powell is now jailed and facing child porn and voyeurism charges. He claimed in previous television interviews that he and Susan Powell were falling in love and even implied a sexual relationship had occurred.

"Susan was very sexual with me," Steven Powell said in one interview at the time. "We interacted in a lot of sexual ways because Susan enjoys doing that."

Susan's father denied the allegations and said Steven Powell had been initiating unwanted sexual advances, and that his daughter had no interest in her father-in-law.

The children, 5-year-old Braden and 7-year-old Charles, were ordered by a judge to then go live with Susan's parents as the parallel cases were investigated.

The custody matter got so heated that at one point a court commissioner in Washington state ordered Chuck Cox and Josh Powell to keep 500 feet apart.

Custody hearings continued, with the latest on Wednesday, during which Josh Powell pleaded with a judge to return his children to him.

"For over four months already, my interactions with my sons and many other aspects of my character have been investigated and documented by" social services, he wrote in an affidavit to the court. "I have proven myself as a fit and loving father who provides a stable home even in the face of great adversity. ... It is time for my sons to come home."

But the judge ruled against him, ordering the children to remain with Susan Powell's parents, at least until Josh Powell underwent a psycho-sexual evaluation, a process more often used as an assessment tool by courts to determine whether a defendant, largely in sex crimes cases, is likely to reoffend. In this case, the judge ordered it in light of the explicit material found on computers inside Steven Powell's home that led to his arrest.

Sherry Hill, a spokeswoman for the Washington state Department of Social and Health Services, said the social worker who was with the children Sunday was not a Child Protective Services employee but a contract worker with a private agency that supervises visits for the state.

"The visit supervisor for this particular agency had taken the children to the home. When she does that, she sits through the visit and might take notes on her observations," Hill said. "She pulled up in the car, and the kids ran out ahead of her. He closed the door and locked it. She wasn't able to get in, and that's when she smelled gas."

Downing called it "the most horrifying thing you can imagine happening ...The Coxes are absolutely devastated. They were always very fearful of him doing something like this, and he did it."

Bassett said he represented Powell free of charge because "every parent deserves the right to an attorney." Powell called or emailed him at least once a day, and often more than that, and in their conversations "he never once admitted doing anything regarding Susan. In fact, he denied it."

Sgt. Mike Powell of the West Valley City Police Department in Utah said it was too soon to say how Josh Powell's death may impact their probe.

"Quite frankly, this has obviously quickly unfolded up in Washington and we're obviously just working through the details ourselves here," said Powell, who is not related to the family.

Powell did not return a telephone message later in the evening Sunday regarding the children's assertion that their mother had been in the trunk of the family's car on the night she disappeared.

In a statement Sunday night from West Valley City police, authorities said the investigation will remain ongoing as they work to find Susan Powell. It said Utah police were headed to Washington state to work with investigators there in the continuing probe.

Kirk Graves, 39, of West Jordan, Utah, whose wife is Josh Powell's sister, said they were stunned by the news.

"We never contemplated the idea he would do something like this. You just don't expect it from a father," he said. "His world was falling apart around him and he was going to lose his boys and get arrested for Susan's disappearance. He's a narcissist and he has no love for anyone but himself."

Obituaries today: Kevin Wilson worked at Home Depot Distribution Center

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Obituaries from The Republican.

02_05_12_Wilson.jpgKevin Wilson

Kevin Thomas Wilson, 45, of Southwick, passed away on Thursday. Born in Oswego, N.Y., he was a 1984 graduate of Southwick High School. Wilson was previously employed by Zielinski Brothers in Agawam, and most recently worked for the Home Depot Distribution Center in Westfield. He attended Our Lady of the Lake Church in Southwick. He was an avid sports fan and enjoyed music, especially Bruce Springsteen.

Obituaries from The Republican:

Parsons Village Project set to come before Easthampton Zoning Board of Appeals

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The City Council Finance Committee is slated to talk about whether it could rescind city funding for the housing project.

Parsons Village Plane.JPGView full sizeAn aerial view of the New City neighborhood, including the lot where the proposed affordable housing development Parsons Village could be built (circled in red).

EASTHAMPTON – The Zoning Board of Appeals is slated to consider the Parsons Village project request for a comprehensive permit later this month, while the City Council Finance Committee this week is slated to talk about rescinding city funding for the affordable housing project.

The Northampton-based Valley Community Development Corp. filed plans for the permit, also known as 40B, to build 38 units of affordable rental housing on Parsons Street after the Planning Board rejected it last year. The Zoning Board hearing is slated for 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 21.

A comprehensive permit allows the Zoning Boards of Appeals to approve affordable housing with more flexible rules – essentially to circumvent local zoning when a community's housing stock is less than 10 percent affordable. The city has just 6.3 percent affordable housing.

Justin P. Cobb, City Council President and Finance Committee member, meanwhile, has asked for the committee to talk about rescinding the Community Preservation Act funding, said councilor Daniel D. Rist, who’s also on the Finance Committee. Rist said he has asked the city’s lawyer to look at whether that’s even legally possible for the council to do.

The City Council Finance Committee meeting begins at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Municipal Building.

In 2010, the council voted 6 to 3 to commit $200,000 in community preservation money to the project if all other funding is secured. Community preservation money can be used for affordable housing and historic and land preservation.

Valley Community Development Corp. Executive Director Joanne Campbell said her group has amended the project’s drainage plan in response to residents' concerns voiced during the hearings before the Planning Board. Many residents have spoken out against the project.

The initial plan was to use a more porous pavement, but now they will present a more conventional system, she said.

Neighbors have also opposed the project’s density and have called for the project to be one of homeownership instead of rental property.

“We can’t reduce the density,” Campbell said. She said the Valley CDC can’t build homes for people to buy because “all state resources are in rental housing.”

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

She said if there other concerns, “if there is something we can do, we certainly will listen.”

Tim Tebow: Politics could be part of future plans

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Tebow said he was open to the idea in a recent interview.


He's skyrocketed to the top of lists naming the most popular athletes in America. He's inspired a thriving meme. And he led the Denver Broncos to an unlikely playoff berth and an even more unlikely Wild Card upset of the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Could Tim Tebow's next challenge be a run for office?

Politico reports that Tebow expressed openness to the idea in a recent interview with The Golf Channel's David Feherty.

“For me, it could be something in my future. It’s something I’ll have to think about and pray about. I have no idea right now, but possibly.”

As The Hill noted, Tebow's surge in popularity has not gone unnoticed by politicians, who doubtless would love to count the Denver quarterback among their supporters.

Tebow ranked first in a recent Reuters poll that asked NFL fans to name the quarterback they'd most like to see as President of the United States.


David Fried Oppenheim jury returns with guilty finding

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The jury in the David Fried Oppenheim rape trial moments ago found the Easthampton man guilty on all charges.

David Fried Oppenheim child rape trialDavid Fried Oppenheim

NORTHAMPTON – David Fried Oppenheim, founder of the Pioneer Arts Center of Easthampton, was found guilty Monday raping one of his students beginning when she was 14.

Judge Mary-Lou Rup scheduled sentencing for March 8. She set bail at $5,000.

Fried Oppenheim, 38, was found guilty on all five counts of child rape in connection with one girl, who was 14 when she began an internship at PACE. The girl, now in her 20s, testified that the sex took place while Fried Oppenheim was teaching her his acting method called “primitives” in which she was supposed to keep a journal of her reactions to physical sensations.

The Hampshire Superior Court jury of seven woman and five men deliberated over two days.

Taking the stand in his own defense, Fried Oppenheim told the jury Thursday that he never had sex with an underage girl at PACE, never confessed to such a relationship to two witnesses who said otherwise, and never made sexual advances to another witness.

Five witnesses, including the alleged victim described the defendant having sex at various places in the arts center and at his home with aspiring teenage actresses.

Fried Oppenheim’s wife, Sonia Fried Oppenheim, and his mother, Joan Fried, testified in his defense.

The rape charges involved only one girl.

PM News Links: President Obama leads Mitt Romney in new poll, United States closes embassy in Syria following violence and more

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Gisele Bundchen ripped into the New England Patriots' receivers for the failed plays she believes cost her quarterback husband Tom Brady a fourth Super Bowl ring.

Tom and Gisele 2612.jpgNew England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and his wife, supermodel Gisele Bundchen, leave the stadium after the New England Patriots lost 21-17 to the New York Giants in the NFL Super Bowl XLVI football game Sunday. Click on the link, above left, for a report from WFXT-TV, Channel 25 in Boston about an amateur video capturing Bundchen blaming the loss on Patriots' receivers.

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

UMass dean to review cases of students involved in post-Super Bowl disturbance

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Students face suspensions or expulsions following their arrests.

Gallery preview

AMHERST - A University of Massachusetts dean will review the cases of 13 students arrested during a disturbance following the Super Bowl Sunday evening to determine whether violations of the student code of conduct occurred, a university spokesman said Monday.

The names of the students arrested are expected to be released Tuesday following their arraignments in Eastern Hampshire District Court in Belchertown.

Fourteen people, including one who does not attend the university, were arrested outside of the Southwest residential area on charges of failure to disperse or disorderly conduct when a large crowd gathered after the game.

Once the students are arraigned, police will "provide their information to the dean of students," said UMass spokesman Daniel J. Fitzgibbons.

Dean Enku Gelaye will review the cases under the Code of Student Conduct. Punishments for the students range from suspension to expulsion, he said.

Gallery preview

Prior to the Super Bowl parents and students were sent emails reminding them about proper fan behavior.

A section on a page titled "Acceptable Fan Behavior" posted to the university website reads, "To protect yourself and others, stay out of the roadways and do not commit any crimes, throw any objects, or climb on anything or anyone to get a better view. Listen and obey if you are told by the police to move along or to leave the area, either by an officer or an official public address announcement."

Fitzgibbons pointed out that the 1,500 involved in the disturbance represent a small minority of the 5,000 students who live in the Southwest complex and the 25,000 who attend the university.

UMass police ordered the group to disperse at 10:08 p.m., just minutes after the game ended. The order came after fights broke out and the crowd became unruly. Amherst and additional units from the Massachusetts State Police backed up the university police force, Fitzgibbons said.

Order was restored at about 11:30 p.m., he said. There were no injuries or property damage reported, and the disturbance was contained to Southwest.

Fitzgibbons said the university will review its preparations for and response to the incident. "I think we will take a look at what happened and how it played out," he said. "Things change from year to year. The student body changes every four years. (What happens) is completely unpredictable."

When al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden was killed in May 2011, about 2,000 students celebrated in the Southwest residential area. Police asked students to disperse and they did soon after, he said.

Some students threw bottles and lit fireworks and a bonfire, but there were no reports of injury, property damage or arrests.

Fitzgibbons added: "You have to review -- are there things we can do better? Are their things we can do differently?"

Agawam's Southwest Sewer project moving forward

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The Southwest Sewer project will involve three stream crossings.

AGAWAM – The Conservation Commission is poised to issue an order of conditions for the second phase of the Southwest Sewer project, a $7-million-plus project that has been in the works for the last several years.

The commission is expected to issue the order at its Feb. 9 meeting. The commission closed the last of two public hearings on the project Jan. 26.

“We are researching what we want to put into it,” Conservation Commission Chairman Henry A. Kozloski said Tuesday of the order of conditions.

An order of conditions from the Conservation Commission is needed for the project because work will take place near wetlands along Pine and Barry streets. In addition, it is required because it will involve crossing Still Book at both Pine and Barry streets as well as an unnamed brook on Barry Street.

The Conservation Commission is empowered by the Wetlands Protection Act to set the conditions of projects that involve disturbing areas within 100 feet of a wetland.

The project will involve 21,000 feet of sewer lines being installed starting on Pine Street at South Westfield Street and including parts of Barry Street and the rest of South Westfield Street. Sewer lines will also be installed along Tannery Road, Bradford Drive, Meyers Drive, Oakmont Place and Spruce Circle.

The project will include laying 13,900 feet of 8-inch- through 18-inch-diameter sewer lines, reconstruction of 1,150 feet of Pine Street and pump stations at both Pine and Barry streets. Both pump stations will be within 100 feet of a wetland.

The city through its engineers Tighe & Bond has estimated that the project will involve disturbing about 74 square feet of bordering vegetated wetlands on the east side of Still Brook south of Barry Street. It has proposed restoring the area by planting red maple saplings and seeding the area.

Plans also call for taking erosion and sedimentation control measures during construction, according to papers on file in the Conservation Office.

The project is needed because the southwest area of the city has a lot of old septic systems that are failing. The first phase of the project was completed for $1.7 million last fall. It involved installing sewer lines along Route 57 starting at Shoemaker Lane near the Route 67 Bridge to South Westfield Street and along South Westfield Street to the neighborhood of the former state police academy.

UMass boosts financial aid, but student debt also rising

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The average UMass student graduates with nearly $26,000 in debt.

BOSTON – The University of Massachusetts has increased student aid by $25 million this current year, but student debt has risen as well.

According to a news release, UMass students are receiving $736 million in all forms of financial aid this current year, with $158 million from grants provided by the university, up from $133 million the year before.

The university’s direct spending on financial aid has more than doubled over the past five years, rising from $78 million in 2006 to the current $158 million, according to the release.

But the average student debt upon graduation last year rose to $25,944, up from $25,420, the year before.

For in-state students attending UMass-Amherst, the costs are about $22,124 for tuition, fees and room and board, up from $16,584 in the 2006-07 academic year, about a 25 percent increase.

“We are working hard to maintain affordability during an era of declining state support. Making sure that our students have access to meaningful amounts of financial aid is the single most important step we can take as state funding declines,” UMass President Robert L. Caret said in a statement.

Caret met Monday with the UMass Board of Trustees Committee on Administration and Finance.

Caret wants the state to pay for 50 percent of the funding for the general education programs instead of 45 percent as the state pays now. Student fees pay 55 percent of the cost, according to the release.

Holyoke's lost-and-found sniper rifle to get tested for firing, fingerprints

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Mayor Alex Morse happened to be on a police ride-along when a report came in that the missing sniper rifle was found.


HOLYOKE – Tests will be done on the Police Department sniper rifle that was lost in September and found in an alley Friday to see if it had been fired, police said Monday.

“We don’t know if it’s been used at all. We’re going to send it to ballistics. We’ll probably give it to the state police crime lab,” Capt. Arthur R. Monfette said.

Police have received no reports that the Remington 700 rifle was used in a crime in the more than four months it was gone, he said. Area police departments were alerted the rifle was missing.

Tests also will be done to see if fingerprints can lead to whomever was responsible for taking the weapon. But it was hard to say if such tests would be helpful, he said, because numerous people were known to have handled the rifle. The man who found it and called police brought it into his home and various people touched it, he said.

072911 james neiswanger mug.jpgJames Neiswanger

In December, Police Chief James M. Neiswanger suspended Sgt. John P. Hart five days without pay and ordered him to repay the city $2,000 for losing the rifle.

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

The rifle was in a hard plastic case and was unloaded, but ammunition was in the case. Monfette said the weapon was found with its shoulder sling and scope but without the case and ammunition.

A man taking trash out to an alley near Appleton and Essex streets saw the rifle on the ground under some leaves. He called Officer Victor Heredia, a community policing officer in the Churchill Neighborhood the man has gotten to know, Monfette and Mayor Alex B. Morse said.

Discovery of the rifle was perhaps fortuitous in a few ways for Morse. He happened to be participating in a ride-along in a cruiser Friday when police got the tip about the rifle just after 10 p.m.

010712 alex morse mug.JPGAlex Morse

Also, Morse the day before had officially joined Mayors Against Illegal Guns. The group works to keep guns out of criminal hands and is headed by Boston Mayor Thomas Menino and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

“I joined the coalition on Thursday and on Friday we find the sniper rifle,” Morse said with a grin.

“It just happened. It was a coincidence, obviously. We responded to a phone call and met Officer Heredia there. I’m just happy it’s off the street,” he said.

Asked about the timing of rifle discovery given Morse’s presence on the ride-along, Neiswanger told The Republican and MassLive.com on Saturday, “The reality is my community policing cops got a tip and they followed up on it. There was no set up.”

Monfette and Morse declined to identify the man who found the rifle or the exact location where it was found. They said they want to protect the man from repercussions and encourage people to keep providing such tips to police.

Former Springfield school administrator Olga Amaral charged with misuse of federal funds in San Diego

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The former local educators have denied charges of fraud in separate cases.

SPRINGFIELD – Their court cases are unrelated and 3,300 miles apart, but Olga Amaral and Yolanda Gomez share a bond — both are former Springfield school administrators now facing federal fraud charges.

Amaral, 57, the former director of the Springfield magnet schools program, is among three defendants scheduled for trial on May 22, in San Diego, Calif., accused in a 2010 indictment of fraud in connection with the alleged misuse of federal education grant funds.

Amaral has denied the charges and her bond was initially set at $100,000, according to court records. Her lawyer was not immediately available for comment.

In a separate indictment that was publicized last month, Gomez, 57, a retired principal at Brightwood Elementary School, was among 10 people arrested in San Juan, Puerto Rico in January under a federal grand jury indictment for conspiracy to commit health care fraud.

She has denied the charges and was released on $50,000 bail, according to court records. A trial date is not yet scheduled.

Former Springfield Superintendent of Schools Peter J. Negroni said Monday he remembers both women and promoted both to administrative positions within the school system.

“This, of course, is unfortunate,” Negroni said regarding news of the indictments, but added that everyone is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Negroni recalls appointing Amaral as director of the magnet schools program, and also remembers appointing Gomez as director of the bilingual education program, with both appointments in the mid-1990s.

Negroni left Springfield in 2000, before Gomez was appointed as a vice-principal and then principal in Springfield. He is now senior vice-president with the College Board in New York City.

“Olga, I knew her to be an affable, hard working and very knowledgeable individual,” Negroni said. “I had a great deal of respect for her in terms of her work in Springfield.”

“Yolanda, I remember as a very ambitious, hard working person that wanted to make it in the system,” Negroni said. “This is extremely unfortunate.”

Gomez’s husband, Gilberto Gomez was also arrested in the San Juan case that accused the defendants of “false and fraudulent” claims filed with Medicare allegedly totaling more than $4 million. The claims related to medical equipment that was not medically necessary, according to the U.S. Attorney’s office for the District of Puerto Rico.

In the San Diego indictment, Amaral and another defendant are listed as “former professors at San Diego State University,” and employees of the university’s Research Foundation. The third defendant, Michael Klentschy, is listed as former superintendent of the El Centro Elementary School District.

The three defendants are charged with fraud and conspiracy for allegedly misusing grant funds from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Education, according to court documents. All three defendants had responsibility over federal and state grant money, the indictment stated.

“It was the purpose and object of this conspiracy, knowingly and intentionally, for defendants to enrich themselves by unlawfully diverting grant money to their own use and benefit,” the indictment states.

Amaral left the Springfield school system in August of 1996 with her husband, David Groesbeck, then a principal at Daniel Brunton School. There are no charges against Groesbeck, according to a spokeswoman in the U.S. Attorney’s office in San Diego.

Amaral began her school employment in Springfield in 1993 as a bilingual teacher.

Yolanda Gomez began working for the Springfield school system in 1989, initially as a bilingual teacher. After directing the bilingual program, she became an assistant principal at German Gerena School followed by her appointment as Brightwood’s principal.

Azell M. Cavaan, communications director for the Springfield School Department, said the administration would have no comment on the indictments of the former employees.

Indictment of Olga Amaral and Others


Elizabeth Warren gets nod of support from Rep. Barney Frank during New Bedford campaign stop

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U.S. Rep. Barney Frank supports candidate Elizabeth Warren in the U.S. Senate race in Massachusetts.

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NEW BEDFORD -- U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-New Bedford, was struck by how "thoughtful and able" Democratic U.S. Senate hopeful Elizabeth Warren was during the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Warren's work on the bureau led Frank to show his support for Warren's Senate candidacy when he and Warren met with voters at a campaign stop for Warren on Monday at Cafe Arpeggio in New Bedford.

Frank, who announced in November that he wouldn't seek a 17th term in the House of Representatives, said that he disagrees with incumbent Republican Sen. Scott Brown's stance on issues.

"It's not personal. I'll continue to work with him," Frank said, noting that he disagrees particularly with Brown on economic issues. He pointed out that Brown, and all Republican senators, voted against the financial reform bill.

Brown's a Republican who votes less with his party than other Republicans, but he votes with them more than with Democrats, Frank concluded.

Springfield tax delinquents pay more than $156,000 following threat of liens

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The city advertised a list of tax delinquents on Jan. 13, and began placing liens on properties on Jan. 31.

SPRINGFIELD – The city has collected more than $156,000 in delinquent taxes and interest from the past fiscal year since advertising a list of 735 tax-delinquent properties on Jan. 13.

The city had set a deadline of Jan. 31 for payment of the delinquent taxes, and placed liens on those properties that failed to pay up, Treasurer-Collector Stephen J. Lonergan said Friday.

Lonergan said he is pleased the city was able to collect more than $156,000, “but obviously we would have hoped more people came in.” Those who failed to pay now face added costs to redeem their properties, he said.

“I think we are getting our message out that you do have to pay taxes,” Lonergan said. “People realize it, and try to do the best they can in the tough times we are facing.”

The owners of the 735 properties, initially advertised in The Republican, owed a total of $1.2 million in taxes for fiscal year 2011, plus interest and late fees. The fiscal year ended June 30, 2011.

The number of properties advertised has declined from prior years, Lonergan said.

The largest amount collected from one entity since Jan. 17, was $23,563 in taxes owed by Salgo LLC on multiple properties, plus interest. The company lists Salvatore F. Cangialosi and Hugo S. Bernal as managers.

Those who failed to pay their fiscal 2011 taxes now have liens on their properties and are in tax-title, officials said.

That includes the owners of a building at 8-12 Stearns Square, which housed the former Skyplex nightclub, owing $35,288 in taxes for fiscal 2011, said Assistant City Collector Peter L. Sygnator. Lois Maraia and Michael Kent, of Warwick R.I., are the listed owners of 8-12 Stearns Square LLC.

In addition, they and other delinquents have not paid their fiscal 2012 property tax bills, also overdue, Sygnator said.

The Skyplex building owners also owe $4,506 in Springfield Business Improvement District fees, Sygnator said.

Some of the other major amounts not paid as of Friday for fiscal 2011 include:

Springfield Food System Inc., at 632 State St., the former KFC Restaurant ($30,899 owed);

Colmar Partners LLC, 1099 East Columbus Ave., the Starbucks building ($27,375 owed);

Lyons Real Estate, a building and lot at 60 Brookdale Drive ($34,839 owed), according to city records.

The inventory of tax title parcels will be turned over to the city’s deputy collector, Revenue Services, and the company will begin making collection efforts on behalf of the city, Sygnator said.

Prolonged nonpayment would be followed by foreclosure proceedings, he said.

The city advertises tax-delinquent properties annually as required by law, Lonergan said. He believes it does help in the effort to get people to pay the amounts owed.

The former business owners of the Skyplex decided to close, citing a drop in business, according to their lawyer. The city License Commission voted to not renew their liquor license unless the taxes are paid.

Deval Patrick: UMass post-Super Bowl unrest 'very unfortunate'

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The Massachusetts governor said, "I understand the students will be disciplined and that the police were doing their job." Watch video

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BOSTON – Gov. Deval Patrick on Monday afternoon called unrest at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst following Sunday's Super Bowl "very unfortunate."

"But I appreciate that no one was hurt," Patrick said as he was entering a meeting with legislative leaders. "I understand the students will be disciplined and that the police were doing their job," he said.

Asked whether police had acted appropriately, Patrick said, "I don't know all the details so I'm not going to opine, but I know there were lots of forces pre-deployed because in the past we've seen folks' enthusiasm get the better of them."

After meeting for over an hour with House Speaker Robert DeLeo and Senate President Therese Murray, Patrick said the trio spoke about his proposal to consolidate oversight over the state community college system, health care cost containment legislation and January tax revenue figures that fell short of state budget benchmarks.

Smith & Wesson grows in Springfield hiring veterans, Putnam Vocational students

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Of the $6.6 million, $6 million was credit on Smith & Wesson’s state corporate income tax and $600,000 was a state tax credit.

This is an updated version of a story posted at 1:14 this afternoon.


02/06/12 Springfield- - Smith & Wesson president P.James Debney, left speaks at the podium during as press conference Monday at which they announced that it has already created 217 jobs and expects to hit 227 jobs by the end of the month.Looking on is Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno, center, and Congressman Richard E. Neal, right,

SPRINGFIELD – Brandon L. Vega, a 17-year-old senior at Roger L. Putnam Vocational Technical High School, hopes that his co-op apprenticeship at Smith & Wesson develops into a real job when he graduates in May.

“If I keep doing what I’m supposed to do, arriving on time and doing my work, there is a chance that will happen,” Vega said Monday following a news conference at Smith & Wesson headquarters on Roosevelt Avenue. “At school, sometimes you can slack off. Here, you have to be on point.”

One year ago, Smith & Wesson received $6.6 million in tax incentives and grants money to fund worker training. In return, Smith 7& Wesson promised to bring its Thompson/Center operations here from New Hampshire and create 225 new jobs here in Springfield and invest $14 million in capital improvements.

Smith & Wesson has more than 1,200 employees. Monday, Smith & Wesson announced that it has already created 217 jobs and expects to hit 227 jobs by the end of February. The 160-year-old Springfield gunmaker has also invested more than $19 million in capital improvements at its sprawling Roosevelt Avenue plant through the end of December 2011.

“We have kept our end of the bargain, we are pleased to say,” said Smith & Wesson president P. James Debney at a news conference Monday afternoon. “We have created the jobs we promised and we kept on going.”

The jobs are all full-time positions with average yearly wages of $47,000 per job plus benefits.

“These are jobs that allow you to raise your family,” Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno said. “The payroll taxes, home sales. All that economic activity brings the money back to the state and the city.”

Sarno also couldn’t resist echoing Clint Eastwood as he brandished a Smith & Wesson .44 Magnum revolver in “Dirty Harry”.

“We feel very lucky today,” Sarno said.

Of the $6.6 million, $6 million was credit on Smith & Wesson’s state corporate income tax and $600,000 was a state tax credit and including $100,000 in community-development block grant money to support job training at Smith & Wesson.

That’s the money that pays for Vega to train in the Smith & Wesson machine shop every other week. He takes academic classes on the weeks he’s not at Smith & Wesson.

Vega gets paid for the time he works at Smith & Wesson. Vega has been working there for about a year.

The $100,000 also went to re-train unemployed and underemployed veterans.

“With Smith & Wesson I’d be thinking about filing bankruptcy right now,” said Vietnam veteran Dennis R. Paul of Agawam.

Paul was an installer for various phone companies and at Westover Air Reserve Base before getting laid off. He’d only worked intermittently before starting at Smith & Wesson in March 2011.

He now welds gun barrels for Thompson/Center firearms.

“I like it here, they treat us very well,” Paul said. “I’m working a lot just to recover from when I was unemployed.”

Debney said it wouldn’t have made financial sense to move the Thompson/Center to Springfield without the incentives. But consolidating production made Smith & Wesson a stronger company.

These jobs have moved from New Hampshire. But Debney said Smith & Wesson is also growing its other product lines, especially its M& P series of pistols designed for the police and military.

Thompson/Center firearms are mostly designed for hunters and outdoors enthusiasts, a market that Debney said has been flat for a few years.

“It’s a discretionary purchase for most people. So it tends to follow the economy,” Debney said. “The country did just add a whole bunch of jobs, so maybe the economy is improving.”

“That hunting market has been flat over the past few years,” he said. “

Smith & Wesson Holding Corp. reported net sales of $92.2 million during the three months ending at the end of October, up 10.5 percent from the $83.5 million in net sales recorded during that same time period in 2010. Those are the most recent statistics available.

Sales were strong across all nearly all firearm products but were offset by a decline in hunting firearm sales, the company said. Gross profit was $24.6 million, or 26.7 percent of sales, down from $25.4 million or 30.4 percent of sales in the same time period the year before. Costs associated with moving Thompson/Center cut into profits, the company said. The company pinned that profit decrease on costs associated with moving the company’s Thompson/Center rifle business to Springfield.

Photos: Demolition of St. Ann's Church in West Springfield begins

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Work was held up temporarily because wood beams, not steel, were found inside the columns in front of the structure, so more precautions will be needed before the building comes down.

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WEST SPRINGFIELD – Demolition of the former St Ann's Church started on Monday.

The demolition contractor, Associated Building Wreckers Inc., will continue work on Tuesday morning. Work was held up temporarily because wood beams, not steel, were found inside the columns in front of the structure, so more precautions will be needed before the building comes down.

Frank Colaccino, president of Colvest-West Springfield LLC, recently said the site will be used for retail development. Colaccino’s company, based in Windsor, Conn., bought the church and rectory at 560-576 Memorial Ave. on Oct. 18 for $650,000.

Bishop Timothy A. McDonnell of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield closed the church on Dec. 31, 2008, after a struggle with parishioners who wanted the diocese to keep it open.

The diocese has removed the church’s stained glass windows, as well as all sacred materials, according to spokesman Mark Dupont. The diocese sold the property as part of pastoral planning because it no longer had a use for it, he said.

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