Quantcast
Channel: News
Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live

Lawyer for 1 of "Hells Angels" murder trial defendants steps down, replaced by Donald Frank of Springfield

$
0
0

Pittsfield lawyer Leonard Cohen cited "irrevocable differences" for stepping down as as attorney for murder defendant David Chalue.

hells angels.jpgDavid Chalue, left, Adam Hall, center, and Caius Veiovis, right. The three were arrested and charged with murder in connection with the disappearance of three men in a case against a Hell's Angels member.

PITTFIELD - The lawyer who was chosen to represent one of the three defendants in the “Hells Angels” triple murder trial has been granted permission to step down, and a Springfield attorney has been appointed in his place.

The Berkshire Eagle is reporting that Pittsfield lawyer Leonard Cohen stepped down, citing what he called “irrevocable differences” between himself and defendant David Chalue.

Chalue is charged with Adam Lee hall and Caius Veiovis with the kidnapping and murder of David Glasser, Edward Frampton and Robert Chadwell last August.

Glasser, Frampton and Chadwell were reported missing on Aug. 28 from Glasser’s Pittsfield apartment. There bodies were discovered 12 days later buried in Becket.

The prosecution contends that Glasser was killed to keep from testifying in an upcoming trial against Hall — a reputed member of the local Hells Angels chapter, and Frampton and Chadwell were killed in an attempt to eliminate witnesses.

Cohen was replaced with Springfield-based attorney Donald W. Frank. A May 9 hearing has been set in the case.

Cohen did not elaborate in court why he wanted to step down from the case, but Chalue told the court he agreed that they could not work together.

All motions and documents related to the case have been impounded at the Berkshire District Attorney David F. Capeless, so any motions from Cohen detailing why he wanted out were not available to the public, the newspaper reports.

In earlier court proceedings, Cohen had asked Chalue be moved to a closer jail because of the driving distance required to meet with him in jail in Shirley. But the request was denied.

Chalue, Hall, 34, of Peru, and Veiovis, 31, of Pittsfield, are being held in separate facilities. No trial date has been set in the case.


Wing Memorial Hospital in Palmer seeks Hospice volunteers

$
0
0

Wing Hospice will be holding a nine-week volunteer training program beginning next week.

PALMER – Would you like to make a difference in someone’s life?

Are you looking for a rewarding way to “pay it forward?”

If you answered “yes,” then Wing Hospice (formerly Quaboag Valley Hospice) could benefit by your desire to serve as a hospice volunteer.

Hospice volunteers are part of the hospice care team and serve in various capacities as caring companions and play an important role in enhancing the quality of life for both the hospice patient and their family. Hospice volunteer support includes companionship, respite, errands, transportation, and a general willingness to be a “caring friend.”

Wing Hospice, a part of Wing Memorial Hospital & Medical Centers, will be holding a nine-week volunteer training program beginning April 3 and ending May 29. Each Tuesday session meets for two hours from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Wing Hospice offices located at 4 Spring St., Three Rivers, located in the Palmer Technology Center.

The program orients the participant to the essentials of hospice care and offers comprehensive training in the knowledge and skills that will enable a positive interaction with hospice patients and their families.

Registration is required and further information available by calling the Rev. Domenic Ciannella at (413) 283-9715 weekdays between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.

Suspected gang members shoot off mouths following Springfield gun arrest

$
0
0

When Craig McNair and Matthew Soto started to yell pickup lines to women on the street from the back seat of the cruiser, police had to remind them they had the right to remain silent and they should probably use it.

craigmcnair21.jpgCraig McNair in his 2010 booking photo

SPRINGFIELD - Police advised Craig McNair and Matthew Soto of their right to remain silent -- twice.

The first time was when police read them their Miranda warning during their arrest Friday on gun charges. Officers Daniel Brunton and Edward VanZandt found them with a loaded handgun during a traffic stop on East Columbus Avenue.

The second time they were advised of their right to remain silent was en route to the police station as McNair and Soto began shouting pickup lines to women on Main Street through the open windows of the police cruiser.

According to the arrest report, officer Edward VanZandt noted the pair were yelling for women to give them their phone numbers.

“Come on, give me something. I just got caught with a gun and I’m going away for a long time,” McNair is reported to have said.

VanZandt dryly notes in the report that police rolled up the car windows and again reminded the pair to remain silent.

The arrest on March 23 would almost be comical if it weren’t for a couple of things.

The first is the loaded Colt .38 revolver found under the front seat of their car. Another was McNair’s recent history.

McNair, 22, of 19 Littleton St., had recently been on trial for assault and battery and attempted murder stemming from Sept. 22, 2010 shooting on Liberty Street.

Police alleged that McNair fired 11 shots into a car in a convenience store parking lot, injuring two, including one critically. But the charges against him and three other defendants were dismissed on Dec. 16 after the two victims and another witness failed to come forward to testify.

In the most recent arrest, McNair and Soto, 22, of 113 Haskin St., were (charged) each charged with possession of a firearm without a license and possession of ammunition without a firearms identification card. Soto was also charged with attempted bribery, and McNair threatening to commit a crime.

At their arraignment Monday in Springfield District Court, each denied the charges. They are due back in court April 26 for a pre-trial conference.

VanZandt notes in his report that when he and his partner approached the car, he could see Soto attempting to kick the gun under the front seat of the car.

According to the arrest report, Soto offered VanZandt all the money he had in his pockets — between $115 and $120 — if they would let them walk. When VanZandt asked if he was offering a bribe, Soto revised his approach. “I don’t know what kind of cops you are, but if you won’t do that, will you at least take me to McDonald’s?” he is reported to have said. “It will cost $5 and you can keep the rest.”

After the cops spurned the offer, an angry McNair is said to have threatened to “take care of both you guys and your families” once he makes bail.


Because of its use in real life arrest and in TV cop dramas, the most familiar phrase in the Miranda warning is the opening line: "You have a right to remain silent." The second-most familiar is the very next line: "Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law."

At the court arraignment, police cited the threat, they cited McNair’s and Soto’s association with gangs, and they cited McNair’s prior arrest, and recommended the court set a high bail.

The request was granted, and bail for each was set at $50,000.


West Springfield's new Department of Public Works director Robert Colson to tackle litter problem

$
0
0

Robert Colson grew up in Suffield.

robert j. colson.JPGRobert J. Colson, West Springfield's new Department of Public Works director, is seen in his office.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – The city’s new Department of Public Works director says he is looking forward to dealing with the community’s litter problem.

Robert J. Colson, who went to work for the city earlier this month, talked about his new job during a recent interview in his office in the municipal building.

He said lots of people throw trash on the ground and do not clean up after their dogs while using such city facilities as Mittineague Park.

“It is amazing how people are disrespectful with trash,” he said.

Because his department as well as the Park and Recreation Department are responsible for keeping parks clean, Colson said he often has to dispatch workers to pick up litter.

To deal with the problem, the community has organized a Town Cleanup Day for April 14. Participants will register at Mittineague Park at starting at 8:30 a.m. and do clean up from 9 a.m. to noon. Colson said he hopes to organize lots of similar events.

Another project Colson said he is looking forward to working on is the $6.7 million water transmission line replacement project that will start in April. The line brings water to the city from the Southwick wells, the community’s main source of drinking water.

Colson joined the city’s employ after 24 years with Lane Construction Corp. in Westfield. He is paid $87,915 a year. He is responsible for a $11 million budget and overseeing 65 employees.

A resident of Russell, he had worked for most of his years with the company in Westfield. However, after getting transferred to Horseheads, N.Y., he decided to look for something locally and soon learned of the opening in West Springfield.

As part of being employed with Lane, Colson, 47, often worked with municipalities in the region.

“I always thoroughly enjoyed that part of working with Lane,” he said. “I’ve always had a lot of respect for people who work in the towns.”

Because he has already worked with officials in West Springfield, Colson said he feels like he has been on the job much longer than he really has.

Colson grew up in Suffield and graduated from Suffield High School in 1982. That was followed by studies at Clarkson University in Potsdam, N.Y., where he majored in engineering management.

He plays in the hockey in the Westfield men’s league and enjoys outdoor activities like hiking and biking.

Chicopee downtown development explored by professionals

$
0
0

A priority in redeveloping the downtown would be the long-stalled Cabotville Mill apartment project.

downtown chicopeeWorkers poured new sidewalks last year as part of a project to imrprove downtown Chicopee.

CHICOPEE – Professionals who studied ways to develop the western part of the city’s downtown said they are optimistic about its success.

But it will depend a lot on the plans to convert the former Cabotville mills into apartments – a project that has been stalled for at least five years.

The city received a grant of about $150,000 from the federal Environmental Protection Agency to study the area stretching from Center Street to the Delta Park. The Pioneer Valley Planning Commission was also working with the city and helped hire the Cecil Group in Boston for the study.

“We think we have found some solutions to revitalizing the west end,” said Kenneth Buckland, principal at the Cecil Group in Boston.

Much of the effort focuses on reusing brownfields, former industrial and business properties that might have been contaminated, said Carl F. Dietz, community development director.

The study examined 15 properties, including the former Cabotville Mill, the old steam plant and the former Exxon station on Center Street near the entrance of I-391.

“Some are vacant, some are developed, and all are brownfields,” Buckland said.

The key element in the plan is to see the Cabotville mill project go forward. The owner, Joshua Guttman, manager of 200 Tillary LLC, of New York, proposed to build at least 227 loft apartments there.

“You can make a difference in downtown Chicopee with 100, 200 new households,” said Frank Mahady, an economist and planner for FXM Associated of Mattapoisett, who was also involved in the study.

The approximately 25 residents and business owners who attended agreed one of the problems with the downtown area is that it is a “ghost town” with few people walking around.

Some said the area must be cleaned to attract people and questioned the idea of trying to improve it piecemeal.

The study showed there are people, most of whom are under 35 or over 55, who will be interested in living in Cabotville, Mahady said.

Dietz agreed, saying the neighboring Ames Privilege complex has a waiting list for apartments. But he also agreed there are difficulties getting the project moving because it is privately owned.

It may be possible to work with Guttman and help find a development partner if the project is stalled because of a lack of money. The city may be able to help if there are other reasons, he said.

The group also talked about proposals for other areas. The former steam plant property is difficult to reach through a narrow road near the underpass of Interstate-391. It could be used for a tree farm, solar panels or a ball field, Buckland said.

The group also agreed a canal walk could enhance the Cabotville mill area. The only problem with that is some buildings that are owned privately would have to be demolished, Dietz said.

Mitt Romney jokes during appearance on 'Tonight Show with Jay Leno'

$
0
0

The Republican presidential candidate sat down with the late-night talk show host for the first time since 2010.

Romney Leno.JPEG-0df1c.jpgIn this photo provided by NBC, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney talks with Jay Leno during his appearance on The Tonight Show in Burbank, Calif., Tuesday, March 27, 2012. Romney cracked Tuesday night that he would pick Leno rival David Letterman as his vice president.

BURBANK, Calif. — Mitt Romney doesn’t always wear suits these days, and his hair isn’t always so perfectly coiffed. He shows up at NASCAR events and tweets pictures of himself eating Subway sandwiches. His wife, Ann, gushes in a new online video about the start of their four-decade old “love story.”

The Republican presidential front-runner’s latest efforts to show his more personal — critics would say more human — side were on display Tuesday as he sat down with a late-night talk show host for the first time since 2010.

“I can do you a favor with this,” Romney said on “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno,” as the host pressed him about his list of potential running mates. “I’ll choose David Letterman.”

Expect more attempts at levity in the coming weeks as the likely GOP nominee shifts toward the general election and starts to introduce himself in earnest to voters who don’t know him nearly as well as the Republican primary electorate does.

Aides and allies long have insisted that there’s a likable, personable, even fun Romney underneath the persistent image of a buttoned-down, multi-millionaire businessman that Republican voters got to know during his failed bid for the nomination in 2008. This time, the former Massachusetts governor has sought to shake the rap, even among some supporters, that he’s awkward, boring and overly scripted.

Romney’s advisers downplay any notion of a makeover or a major shift in the campaign. And they publicly insist they are still focused on the primary race even though their boss is all but certain to clinch the nomination.

But aides also are mindful that when he does get the 1,144 convention delegates needed to secure the party nod, the general electorate will start to pay closer attention and some voters will take their first serious look at Romney. The campaign is looking for ways to attract independent voters who will be critical in the campaign against President Barack Obama.

Just 38 percent of independents said they had considerable interest in the primary fight, according to a February AP-GfK poll. The rest had only a passing interest or no interest at all. That’s far lower than partisans - 73 percent of Republicans said they had a great deal or quite a bit of interest in the election.

So, the campaign is discussing possible ways to show Americans a more complete picture of Romney, from giving longer TV interviews with his five sons and 16 grandkids by his side, to having his wife appear on daytime talk or cooking shows.

Ann Romney, whom the candidate introduces as “my sweetheart” at nearly every campaign stop, is likely to play a big role in introducing Romney to a wider audience; aides say her mere presence softens his sometimes rough edges. That’s why she’s been a near constant presence on the campaign trail, taking the microphone to tell the story of how they fell in love and how he’d call while away on business trips to tell her that raising their children was more important than his job.

She defends him, too. Asked Wednesday to name the most common mischaracterization of her husband, she said: “That he’s actually stiff.

Ex-Boston TSA screener sentenced for child porn

$
0
0

A former employee of the U.S. Transportation Security Administration has been sentenced to nearly three and a half years in prison for possessing child pornography.

BOSTON (AP) — A former employee of the U.S. Transportation Security Administration has been sentenced to nearly three and a half years in prison for possessing child pornography.

Federal prosecutors say 34-year-old Andrew Cheever of Lowell was sentenced Wednesday to three years and five months behind bars and two years of probation. He was also ordered to read victim impact statements of six children depicted in the pornography he collected.

He pleaded guilty in December.

Authorities say Cheever had thousands of child pornography images and videos on his home computer and made them available on the Internet using peer-to-peer file sharing software.

Cheever was a security checkpoint screener at Logan International Airport until he was taken into custody in September.

He no longer works for the TSA.

Details of Vermont teacher Melissa Jenkins' death stuns communities

$
0
0

Allen and Patricia Prue are accused of luring single mother Melissa Jenkins from her home by pretending their vehicle had broken down.

allen prue, patricia prueAllen and Patricia Prue are seen in court Wednesday, March 28, 2012 in St. Johnsbury, Vt. The snow plow driver and his wife are being charged in connection with the killing of a Vermont prep school teacher, who police say was strangled.

St. JOHNSBURY, Vt. — A snowplow driver and his wife went to great lengths to dispose of the body of a popular teacher they had just beaten and strangled, putting her nude body on a tarp, pouring bleach on it, weighing the corpse down with concrete blocks and tossing it into the Connecticut River, court documents allege.

Allen Prue, 30, and his wife, 33-year-old Patricia Prue, were riding around when he got the idea "to get a girl," a police affidavit said. They are accused of luring single mother Melissa Jenkins from her home by pretending their vehicle had broken down. Her vehicle was found idling Sunday with her unharmed 2-year-old son inside. The child apparently witnessed at least part of the attack.

The couple pleaded not guilty Wednesday to second-degree murder in the death of Jenkins, a 33-year-old science teacher at the prestigious St. Johnsbury Academy, and unauthorized burial or removal of a dead body. More charges are possible, police said.

People in the close-knit communities of northeastern Vermont had been speculating about the crime and who was responsible.

"But they didn't expect the gruesome" details, said a tearful Marion Beattie Cairns, the owner of The Creamery Restaurant, where Jenkins had worked part-time as a waitress and people had gathered since her disappearance to console each other.

Vermont State Police Maj. Ed Ledo said he hoped the arrests would bring closure for Jenkins' family and friends.

"We can now turn our full attention to healing from this tragic loss, celebrating Melissa's life and mourning her death," said Joe Healy, a spokesman for St. Johnsbury Academy, which will hold a memorial service for her on Friday. The school counts President Calvin Coolidge among its alumni.

melissa jenkinsMelissa Jenkins


Police said the Prues hadn't planned a use of force. But they gave few details on a possible motive in Jenkins' death. The Prues were ordered held without bail.

"They knew Miss Jenkins and had snowplowed her driveway a couple of years ago," Vermont State Police Maj. Ed Ledo said at a news conference announcing the arrests.

A friend told police that Allen Prue had asked Jenkins out a couple of times and that she felt uncomfortable around him, according to the documents. She stopped having him plow, and in autumn 2011 he showed up drunk at her home asking if he could plow her driveway the following year.

After the court appearance, Allen Prue's mother, Donna Prue, said that her son has never been in trouble with the law before and that she has faith he didn't commit the crime.

"I do not believe he would ever do this, because he didn't have it in him. I have nothing against her (Patricia); I don't have nothing bad to say about either one," said Donna Prue, who lives with the couple and her daughter. She said she did not know Jenkins.

Police were called Sunday night after Jenkins' son was found alone in her vehicle. Court documents said the boy tried to tell police what happened to his mother by grabbing the back of his neck and saying "mommy cried."

Her former boyfriend told police she called him saying that she had gotten a weird call from a couple who used to plow her driveway and that she was going to help them. She wanted someone to know what she was doing, the documents say.

When he couldn't reach her two hours later, he went to check on her. He told police he found her vehicle, with her son sleeping in it, and one of her shoes nearby.

Allen Prue later told police that Patricia Prue had called Jenkins and said they were broken down near her home, documents said.

The police affidavit said: When Jenkins got out of her vehicle, Allen Prue grabbed her and strangled her. He then put the body in the backseat of their car, and they drove to their home. At some point, Patricia Prue choked Jenkins in the car "to ensure she wasn't breathing."

Back at their home, he put Jenkins' body on a tarp, removed her clothes and poured bleach on her body. The Prues also removed their clothes and put them on the tarp.

They then drove to a boat access at the Connecticut River, which separates Vermont from New Hampshire, and put Jenkins' body in the water, weighing it down with cinder blocks and concealing it with brush.


Chicopee police arrest Briere Drive resident Ryan St. Andre, 23, after he allegedly hit housemate in hands with fire extinguisher

$
0
0

The incident began when the woman threatened to cut off the suspect's hands, police said.

CHICOPEE – Police charged a 23-year-old Briere Drive man with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon after he allegedly hit a 22-year-old woman in the hands with a fire extinguisher Tuesday morning.

Capt. Steven Muise said the incident began shortly before 9:45 a.m. at 41 Briere Drive when the woman threatened to cut the man’s hands off. “He grabbed a fire extinguisher and hit her in the hands,” Muise said.

Police arrested Ryan St. Andre. The woman did not have a knife in her possession, Muise said.

Both live at 41 Briere Drive.

Video of George Zimmerman in handcuffs following fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin adds to debate

$
0
0

An attorney for the teen's family said it looks to him that Zimmerman doesn't have injuries to his face and head in the video as Zimmerman's supporters have said.

Trayvon Martin George Zimmerman 2012.jpgView full sizeThe late Trayvon Martin, left, is seen in this composite photo with the man who is accused of shooting him to death in Florida, George Zimmerman.

SANFORD, Fla. (AP) — A security video that shows neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman being led in handcuffs from a police car after he fatally shot Trayvon Martin is adding to the debate over whether the shooting was a case of self-defense.

An attorney for the teen's family said it looks to him that Zimmerman doesn't have injuries to his face and head in the video as Zimmerman's supporters have said.

Zimmerman told police he fired in self-defense and he was not arrested, touching off widespread public outrage and protests across the country. Zimmerman's attorney, Craig Sonner, has said in more than one interview that his client's nose was broken during the fight with Martin.

Sanford police Sgt. David Morgenstern on Wednesday confirmed that the video being shown by ABC News is of Zimmerman. The 28-year-old's head and face are visible throughout and he is dressed in a red and black fleece jacket. Police are shown frisking Zimmerman whose hands were handcuffed behind his back. They then lead him into a police station.

"This certainly doesn't look like a man who police said had his nose broken and his head repeatedly smashed into the sidewalk," Ben Crump, an attorney for Martin's family, said in a statement. "George Zimmerman has no apparent injuries in this video, which dramatically contradicts his version of the events of February 26."

Zimmerman said that on Feb. 26, he was pursuing the 17-year-old Martin, who was not armed, because the teen was acting suspiciously. He said he lost sight of the black teenager and Martin attacked him as he headed back to his sport utility vehicle. Zimmerman's father is white and his mother is Hispanic.

In an interview with Orlando station WOFL FOX 35 that aired Wednesday night, Zimmerman's father, Robert Zimmerman, said that despite dispatchers telling his son to stop following Martin, he kept going so he could get an address for police to check. He said his son was suspicious because of several break-ins and thought it was strange for someone to be walking between the town homes on a rainy night.

The Orlando Sentinel, citing anonymous sources, has reported that Martin grabbed Zimmerman's head and banged it several times against the sidewalk. A statement from Sanford police said the newspaper's story was "consistent" with evidence turned over to prosecutors.

Sonner said the gash on the back of Zimmerman's head probably was serious enough for stitches, but he waited too long for treatment so the wound was already healing. Miguel Meza, who identified himself as Zimmerman's cousin, said Zimmerman was in "the fight of his life."

Sonner did not immediately return an after-hours call to his office Wednesday.

Crump called the video "riveting" and "icing on the cake" that Zimmerman should be held accountable for what happened.

Since the shooting, Zimmerman's supporters say he's gone into hiding and that he and his family have gotten death threats.

Martin's supporters, including a host of outspoken celebrities and civil rights leaders who have appeared on television for the past two weeks, don't believe Zimmerman's story. They want him arrested and prosecuted.

Best Buy to close 50 stores

$
0
0

The biggest U.S. specialty electronics retailer posted a fiscal fourth quarter loss partly due to restructuring charges.

Earns Best Buy 91311.jpgA Best Buy worker helps out a customer at a Best Buy in Mountain View, Calif.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Best Buy Co. said it plans to close 50 U.S. big box stores and open 100 small mobile locations in the U.S. in fiscal 2013 and cut $800 million in costs by fiscal 2015. The news came Thursday as the biggest U.S. specialty electronics retailer posted a fiscal fourth quarter loss partly due to restructuring charges.

Despite the loss, Best Buy's adjusted results for the quarter topped Wall Street's expectations. But the company's full year revenue guidance fell slightly short of analysts' expectations, sending its stock down 6 percent.

Best Buy, which has 1,450 locations nationwide and 2,900 globally, is focusing on closing some of its hulking stores to concentrate on smaller Best Buy Mobile outlets because of two emerging trends. Sales of TVs, digital cameras and videogame consoles have weakened, while sales of tablet computers, smartphones and e-readers have increased. And with the rise of competition from Internet rivals like Amazon.com, shoppers aren't flocking to big-box stores like they used to.

Best Buy is trying to avoid the fate of its former rival Circuit City, which went out of business in 2009, in part by shrinking its square footage footprint. Other retailers with large stores are doing the same. Sears Holdings Co., for example, said earlier this month it would close 100 to 120 stores to become nimbler.

Best Buy lost $1.7 billion, or $4.89 per share, for the period ended March 3. That compares with a profit of $651 million, or $1.62 per share, a year ago.

The Minneapolis company said its quarterly results included $2.6 billion in charges. They were mostly related to its purchase of Carphone Warehouse Group PLC's interest in the Best Buy Mobile profit-sharing agreement and related costs, as well as an impairment charge tied to writing off Best Buy Europe goodwill and restructuring charges.

Taking these items out, adjusted earnings were $2.47 per share, above the $2.15 per share that analysts surveyed by FactSet forecast.

Revenue rose 3 percent to $16.08 billion, but missed Wall Street's $17.18 billion estimate.

Best Buy's stock fell 32 cents to $26.30 before the market opened.

Revenue at stores open at least a year — an indicator of a retailer's health — slipped 2.4 percent. But it was a smaller drop than a year earlier when the company reported a 4.7 percent decline.

For the full year, Best Buy lost $1.23 billion, or $3.36 per share, compared with a profit of $1.28 billion, or $3.08 per share, in the prior year. Adjusted earnings were $3.64 per share, which tops the previous year's $3.43 per share.

Annual revenue rose 2 percent to $50.71 billion. Revenue at stores open at least a year fell 1.7 percent. In the prior-year period, the figure dropped 1.8 percent.

Going forward, Best Buy said it expects to reduce about $250 million of its costs in fiscal 2013. The company foresees fiscal 2013 earnings of $2.85 to $3.25 per share and adjusted earnings of $3.50 to $3.80 per share. Analysts expect earnings of $3.67 per share.

It expects fiscal 2013 revenue of $50 billion to $51 billion, with revenue in stores open at least one year falling 2 percent to 4 percent. That fell slightly short of analyst predictions of $51.6 billion.

"The firm is taking incremental steps to address its strategic challenges," wrote Goldman Sachs analyst Matthew Fassler. "That said, the soft close to the quarter, and subdued sales guidance, suggest that competitive pressure may be drifting into market share as well as margin, with Apple stores and Amazon.com the two most likely culprits."

Shares fell $1.68, or 6.3 percent, to $24.94 in morning trading. The stock had been up 14 percent since the beginning of the year.

State panel to recommend further limitations on EBT cards

$
0
0

The government-issued cards function like debit cards and replaced food stamps, but some welfare recipients are misusing the electronic cards, according to officials, who are working to tighten regulations.

food stamp sign.jpg

BOSTON – A state panel charged with reviewing abuse and fraud in the government-issued Electronic Benefit Transfer card program will recommend further bans on EBT card purchases when it meets today in Boston, according to a report by the State House News Service.

The Electronic Benefit Transfer Card Commission is expected to push for new restrictions, including prohibiting welfare recipients from using so-called cash electronic assistance cards at bars, firearm dealers, nail salons, smoke shops, spas or tattoo parlors, the News Service reports.

The EBT Commission will then vote on final recommendations included in a report detailing the proposed changes. A copy of the report obtained by the News Service indicates the commission also is recommending a financial literacy pilot program for families with children who receive transitional assistance.

EBT cards and transitional assistance have replaced food stamps and welfare, respectively. The federal food stamp program officially changed its name to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, in 2008, and EBT cards, which are used like debit cards, function the same as food stamps.

The Massachusetts Department of Transitional Assistance, which administers the electronic EBT card program in the Bay State, and the Office of the Inspector General are expected to order a study on eligibility standards for DTA cash assistance programs. The deadline for completion of that study is July 1, the News Service reports.

Allegations of rampant fraud prompted officials to tighten regulations governing EBT cards. A December 2011 case in Lynn became a lightning rod for criticism and prompted state lawmakers to push through changes. According to law enforcement officials, four Lynn convenience stores were part of a scheme in which EBT cards were used in exchange for cash and crack cocaine. The cards were misused for thousands of transactions dating back to September 2009, officials have said.

A September 2011 investigation by Boston's WCVB-Channel 5 found that out-of-state use of Massachusetts EBT cards resulted in about $2.3 million in spending in 45 states and the Caribbean during a three-month period.

Coca-Cola agrees to surcharges while it upgrades Northampton plant

$
0
0

At Wednesday's meeting, Coke officials said the company would pay the additional costs while it expands its pretreatment facility.

coke.JPGThe Coca-Cola plant on Industrial Drive plans to expand its pretreatment facility.

NORTHAMPTON – Coca-Cola has agreed to pay Northampton a surcharge for treating effluent from its bottling plant while it looks to expand its in-house pretreatment facility to address problems before they enter the city’s sewer system.

Officials from Coca-Cola attended a Board of Public Works meeting on Wednesday to discuss the costs inherent in treating the discharge from its plant near the Industrial Park into the city’s sewer lines. Last year, the company began bottling cold fill products at the plant, a process that added sugar to the effluent.

The addition of the cold fill products enabled the facility to expand and created 100 new jobs at the site. However, the increased sugar content also taxed the city’s wastewater treatment system, creating more sludge and resulting in additional overtime and power costs.

Earlier this month, the Board of Public Works discussed a plan to hike the fee of for treating the discharge by about $7 per 100 pounds of contaminants and create a new fee of $33.90 per hundred pounds for dealing with Total Suspended Solids. The board put off a final vote in the matter, however, saying it wanted to discuss the situation with Coke first.

At Wednesday’s meeting, Coke officials said the company would pay the additional costs while it expands its pretreatment facility. In a statement released Thursday, Coke spokeswoman Maria Pignataro said the company is currently doing design work on the expansion and hopes to have it in place by the end of the year. In theory, the upgraded pretreatment facility would remove most of the contaminants before they enter the city’s sewer system, thus lowering or negating the surcharges for Coke.

“We have a good working relationship with Coke,” said Department of Public Works Director Edward S. Huntley.

Dennis Williams, the plant manager at the Northampton Coke facility, echoed those sentiments.

“Coca-Cola and our 260 Northampton employees take our commitment to sustainability in our community seriously,” he said. “By working with the city we’ve reached an equitable solution that ensures continued operations.”

In a related matter, Huntley said the city is studying its options for increasing the capacity of the effluent from Coke and other businesses in the Industrial Park on the sewer line. The current 12-inch line is operating at capacity, he said, although it is currently able to handle all the discharge from those sources. The city could replace the line with an 18-inch pipe or install a new line parallel to the one already in place, he said.

Police: Pittsfield woman hit neighbor with candle

$
0
0

Police say 57-year-old Vera Allison got into an argument with her neighbor over comments the neighbor made about Allison's brother.

PITTSFIELD — A Pittsfield woman has been charged with assaulting her neighbor with a candle.

The Berkshire Eagle reports that Vera Allison pleaded not guilty in Central Berkshire District Court on Wednesday to charges including assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. She was released on personal recognizance.

Police say the 57-year-old Allison got into an argument on Tuesday with her neighbor over comments the neighbor made about Allison's brother.

The other woman told police Allison walked toward her with a large candle, struck her in the head with it, then pulled her to the ground by her hair and began punching her.

Police say the other woman put Allison in a headlock until she agreed to stop fighting and go back home.

Both women suffered minor injuries.

Obama outspends Republican campaigns by millions

$
0
0

Obama has sunk his cash into an expansive brick-and-mortar operation with offices in nearly every state.

032912obamacampaignhq.jpgIn this May 12, 2011, file photo, staff members work at President Barack Obama's 2012 re-election campaign headquarters during a media tour of the new facility in Chicago.

CHICAGO (AP) — With Republicans locked in a contentious and expensive primary, President Barack Obama has spent a small fortune in recent months to build and maintain a campaign operation that is larger, more diverse and more focused on November's general election than any of his opponents' organizations.

Republican contenders like Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum have surely been watching their expenses during their primary elections: millions here for ad spending, millions there for travel, rallies and consulting fees. What's left keeps the lights on, the phones ringing and the staff paid.

But Obama, who faces no serious challenger for the Democratic nomination, has sunk his cash into an expansive brick-and-mortar operation with offices in nearly every state. His campaign has spent more than $135 million on operations through February, according to an Associated Press analysis of Federal Election Commission records. That's about $3 million more than all his GOP challengers combined.

Republicans bristle over reports that Obama's paid staff exceeds 500, many of whom work in the campaign's Chicago headquarters.

"I think the campaign is single-handedly trying to lower the unemployment rate by hiring field staff," Romney political director Rich Beeson said. "When they point to the fact about how many people they've got hired and how many offices they've got, they're just trying to distract people from the reality of (how) they're going to have a heck of a time finding people to get out and vote for him."


A review of Obama's balance sheets reveals a small army of paid staffers trying to help the Democratic president win a second term. Campaign filings list more than 330 paid staffers in Chicago and 200 more spread across the country — payroll costs that exceed $6.3 million during the last two months alone.

The numbers also suggest signs of stress.

Obama's team has spent more than $7 million since January on fundraising-related expenses like postage, printing and telemarketing, in some cases to contact the same kind of low-dollar donors who supported Obama four years ago. The campaign also spent millions more on expenses like online advertising and consulting, which in some cases can be tied to fundraising.

With offices in nearly every state, the campaign also faces rising overhead. Through the first two months of the year, Obama spent approximately $1.1 million on computer equipment, $435,000 in rent and utilities, $305,000 on telephones, and $19,000 on office supplies, federal filings show.

"We're building the largest grass-roots campaign in history," campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt said. "You can see it here, but it's really happening in the states."

The core of Obama's operation is packed into the sixth floor of Chicago's Prudential building, where 300 staffers sit side by side at long rows of tables, working from laptops and cellphones. Colorful college pennants hang from the ceiling and often represent key swing states: the University of North Carolina, Ohio State and the University of Michigan. Need a designer T-shirt or bumper sticker? A room managed by two staffers houses a swelling collection of campaign memorabilia for sale.

In one corner, more than a dozen workers field questions from journalists scattered across the country. Elsewhere, others coordinate media appearances for Obama's high-profile supporters. Other staffers focus on fundraising, voter identification, social media and campaign-finance reporting.

Beyond the Windy City, Obama's campaign said it's already opened five field offices in Arizona, a state it expects to be increasingly competitive in the fall. The campaign is also taking advantage of party resources there, relying in part on the state's Democratic Party for staffing, phones and computer equipment, records show.

Obama's operation had $84.7 million in cash-on-hand by Feb. 29. But the Romney campaign — which is hardly hurting for cash after raising about $74.8 million — says it's not impressed.

Romney's Boston-based campaign is a fraction of the size of Obama's, although its organization dwarfs its Republican competitors. With around 100 paid staffers, Romney has spent more than $180,000 in rent and utilities since early January in at least 16 states, records show, from Massachusetts to Utah. Santorum, whose national headquarters was technically a post office box until this month, spent just $19,000 since the beginning of the year on rent-related expenses.

Romney's ability to compete against Obama's growing organization has become a selling point on the trail.

"As Republican primary voters in Illinois, we have an opportunity to look at the field of candidates, and look at them and say, 'Who can go toe-to-toe not just with Barack Obama, but the Chicago machine that is his operation?'" Rep. Aaron Schock, a top Romney supporter in Illinois, said recently. "We cannot afford to nominate someone on our ticket who cannot withstand the barrage, who does not have the organizational strength and fortitude to go toe-to-toe with Barack Obama."

Obama's massive campaign is part of what drives supporters to give money to "super" political action committees popping up this election cycle. Major super PACs like American Crossroads, which supports Republicans, and Restore Our Future, which supports Romney, have tens of millions of dollars apiece to help, thanks to federal court rulings that have stripped campaign-finance rules to allow unlimited — and, at times, effectively anonymous — donations from billionaires, corporations and labor unions.

"As a general rule, the big institutional money goes inordinately to incumbents regardless of party, while outside money plays the role of balancing out the party in power or stopping a specific initiative," Crossroads spokesman Jonathan Collegio said. GOP-leaning super PACs have spent more than $50 million on TV ads this election; Crossroads is largely waiting to spend its money until the general election.

Whatever the case, the Democrats' current financial advantage is something Obama's campaign isn't taking for granted. Obama changed course last month in his criticism of super PACs and began encouraging big-money supporters to give to Priorities USA Action, a group working in his favor.

The Republican Party has opened offices in three states this month and plans to expand to four others in April.


Holyoke Flats neighborhood residents discuss closing streets for activities, fixing sprinklers, keeping parks safe

$
0
0

The views will be used to update the city's Open Space and Recreation Plan.

jones.JPGThe Jones Ferry Access Center at the Connecticut River is an example of how residents' ideas for recreation can become reality, officials said.

HOLYOKE – Henry Escobar suggested closing South Canal Street once a week for bicycle riding and other activities to borrow a gesture from his native Medellin, Colombia.

“It’s for community. In Colombia, on Sunday it’s closed in the morning, closed to cars, only people,” Escobar said Wednesday.

Escobar, of North East Street, was among 30 residents of the Flats neighborhood who participated in a sharing-of-ideas meeting to help officials update the city's Open Space and Recreation Plan.

Other ideas involved senior citizens’ access to parks and other open spaces, park safety, the need for lighting of alleys and other areas residents must walk in and fixing playground sprinklers.

Others discussed desires for picnic tables and barbecue grills in parks and the need for improvements to fields for boys and girls to play baseball, volleyball, football and basketball.

Since the solicitation of ideas to update the open space plan began in December, 350 people have completed an online survey. But only 25 were in Spanish, so the idea was to give residents of the mostly Hispanic Flats a chance for input, Conservation Director Andrew Smith said.

The meeting was at the Sargeant West Community Room at East Dwight and West streets.

Besides identifying parts of neighborhoods residents want improved, a state-approved open space and recreation plan makes the city eligible for federal, state and private grants, Smith said.

The updated plan will be submitted to the City Council late next month and then sent to the state Department of Conservation and Recreation, he said.

Ruth Roman, of East Dwight Street, said fixing playground sprinklers at Pina Park on Center Street would be convenient for children.

“A lot of kids have to go to Springdale Park or walk to South Hadley to use their sprinklers,” Roman said.

Julia Rivera, of West Street, a 20-year resident of the Flats, said she hopes officials turn some of the ideas into reality because residents of the neighborhood have seen many promises ignored.

“That’s what’s happened in this community,” Rivera said.

Ward 1 City Councilor Gladys Lebron-Martinez said the more people who declare what they want in the Open Space and Recreation Plan, the better the chances of change.

“Once you are in a number like this, you can make things happen,” Lebron-Martinez said.

Sen. Scott Brown works with Democratic Sen. Mark Warner to push bill to sell underused federal properties

$
0
0

The bill aims to take action in the wake of a Government Accountability Office report that revealed the federal government wastes $1.7 billion each year maintaining 45,000 underutilized properties.

Scott Brown & Mark Warner.jpgSen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., and Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., worked to craft the Civilian Property Realignment Act of 2012 which they say will save an estimated $15 billion over the next ten years.

In an effort to save and potentially make money at the federal level, U.S. Senators from both sides of the aisle have come together to push a bill aimed at disposing of unused government properties across the county.

U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., worked with Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., to craft the Civilian Property Realignment Act which was introduced in the Senate last week. The bill revises a similar proposal authored by Brown in 2011.

The bill aims to take action in the wake of a Government Accountability Office report that revealed the federal government wastes $1.7 billion each year maintaining 45,000 underutilized properties. The Obama Administration pushed the idea of selling off underused property last year following the release of the GAO report, and legislators in Congress have been working on related bills since then.

Brown and Warner say that if passed, the Civilian Property Realignment Act could save an estimated $15 billion over the next decade.

"We have a debt crisis, and despite the very real danger it poses to our economy, we spend billions every year on maintaining empty buildings," Brown said. "The federal government must get smarter with taxpayer dollars. I believe our bill cuts through the red tape and streamlines the disposal process fairly and effectively."

Warner, who worked with Brown to address White House concerns that exemptions for parks and military facilities in the initial bill were too broad, said government needs to take a businesslike approach to the real estate it owns.

"We should be taking a portfolio approach to the way we manage federal real estate," Warner said. "By taking a businesslike approach to our current inventory, and aggressively looking for ways to consolidate and dispose of unneeded real property, we can make a meaningful dent in deficit reduction and reduce maintenance and operating costs for years to come."

The bill would create an independent commission of seven real estate management experts appointed by the White House and Congress to review the federal property portfolio and make recommendations. The commission's proposals would have to be approved by the President and then Congress within 45 days of presidential approval.

Among the exclusions listed in the bill are property owned by the Postal Service, military installations and wilderness study areas.

Approved recommendations would come with a three-year deadline for the affected agencies to comply.

The bill will also require that at least 80 percent of the money made in a sale of government property be put directly toward paying down the national deficit.

The House of Representatives unanimously passed a similar bill, the Excess Federal Building and Property Disposal Act, last week.

GAO report on underutilized federal properties

Ex-Gardner police officer Larry Landry arraigned on child rape charges

$
0
0

The 36-year-old Landry, who resigned in October, is accused of sexually assaulting a now 16-year-old boy several times from January 1999 to December 2007.

WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) — A former Gardner police sergeant has pleaded not guilty to child rape charges at his Superior Court arraignment.

Larry Landry was indicted Feb. 24 by a Worcester County grand jury on six counts of rape of a child with force and three counts of indecent assault and battery on a child.

The 36-year-old Landry, who resigned in October, is accused of sexually assaulting a now 16-year-old boy several times from January 1999 to December 2007 in Winchendon and Gardner.

The Telegram & Gazette reports that Landry was allowed to remain free on $10,000 bail Wednesday and was allowed contact with children under 17 as long as another adult is present.

Landry's lawyer asked that he be allowed to remain free on personal recognizance because he is innocent.

Video from Landry's first court appearance in September

Beef consumers urged to reconsider 'pink slime'

$
0
0

National Meat Association spokesman Jeremy Russell said if consumers insist on eliminating this product from ground beef, prices will go up.

pink slime beefThis file photo shows ground beef containing what is derisively referred to as "pink slime," or what the meat industry calls "lean, finely textured beef," right, and pure 85% lean ground beef, left.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The main producer of "pink slime" and the politicians defending the company will have a hard time persuading consumers and grocery stores to accept the product, even if the processed beef trimmings are as safe as the industry insists.

Three governors and two lieutenant governors plan to tour Beef Products Inc.'s plant in South Sioux City, Neb., Thursday afternoon to show their support for the company and the several thousand jobs it creates in Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, South Dakota and Texas.

Beef Products, the main producer of the cheap lean beef made from fatty bits of meat left over from other cuts, has drawn extra scrutiny because of concerns about the ammonium hydroxide it treats meat with to slightly change the acidity of the beef and kill bacteria. The company suspended operations at plants in Texas, Kansas and Iowa this week, affecting 650 jobs, but it defends its product as safe.

While the official name is lean finely textured beef, critics dub it "pink slime" and say it's an unappetizing example of industrialized food production. That term was coined by a federal microbiologist who was grossed out by it, but the product meets federal food safety standards and has been used for years.

Larry Smith, with the Institute for Crisis Management public relations firm, said he's not sure the makers of pink slime — including Cargill and BPI — will be able to overcome the public stigma against their product at this point.

"I can't think of a single solitary message that a manufacturer could use that would resonate with anybody right now," Smith said.


The politicians who plan to tour the plant — including Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, Nebraska Lt. Gov. Rick Sheehy and South Dakota Lt. Gov. Matt Michels — all agree with the industry view that pink slime has been unfairly maligned and mislabeled.

"Our states proudly produce food for the country and the world — and we do so with the highest commitment toward product safety," the governors said in a joint statement. "Lean, finely textured beef is a safe, nutritious product that is backed by sound science."

All the governors and lieutenant governors taking the tour want to eat some of the meat to demonstrate that it's safe, but Branstad's spokesman Tim Albrecht said it's possible BPI may not be able to serve them burgers Thursday. Regardless of whether the beef is available on the tour, Branstad plans to eat some at a community picnic this weekend.

Russell Cross, who is a former administrator of the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service, said this product is getting a bad rap from a food safety standpoint.

"I'm not saying it's perfectly safe. Nothing is perfectly safe. All food is going to have bacteria in it. But this product has never been in question for safety," he said.

Cross said that ammonia is just one tool designed to reduce bacteria and help make the food safer. The process Cargill uses, by comparison, uses citric acid to achieve similar results to what BPI does with ammonia.

The finished product contains only a trace of ammonia, as do many other foods, and it's meant just to be an additional "hurdle for the pathogens," said Cross, who is now head of the Department of Animal Science at Texas A&M University.

The ammonium hydroxide BPI uses is also used in baked goods, puddings and other processed foods.

National Meat Association spokesman Jeremy Russell said if consumers insist on eliminating this product from ground beef, prices will go up and lean beef trimmings will have to be imported to replace it. The process of creating lean, finely textured beef yields about 12 to 15 pounds of additional meat per animal.

Russell said the pink slime outcry has already hurt BPI and other meat companies, and could eventually hurt the price that ranchers and feedlots receive for cattle.

"It's costing them and other companies a lot of money," Russell said.

BPI did get some good news Wednesday when Iowa-based grocer Hy-Vee said it would offer beef with and without pink slime because some consumers demanded the option. But larger grocery store chains, such as Kroger, have stuck with their decisions to stop offering beef with pink slime.

The real test for the future of BPI and pink slime may come later this year when school districts purchase meat from the U.S. Department of Agriculture for next school year. The USDA said earlier this month that it would give school districts a choice between 95 percent lean beef that contains pink slime and less-lean beef without it.

Russell said school districts will have to decide whether they're willing to spend roughly 16 percent more for beef without pink slime.

The USDA this year is contracted to buy 111.5 million pounds of ground beef for the National School Lunch Program. About 7 million pounds of that is from BPI.

Wilbraham firefighters summoned to house fire at 15 Pleasant View Road

$
0
0

Firefighters from East Longmeadow, Ludlow and Hampden provided mutual aid.


WILBRAHAM - Firefighters were summoned to a house fire on Pleasant View Road at about noon on Thursday.

Abc40 / Fox 6 reported that the home at 15 Pleasant View Road was fully engulfed.

Firefighters from a number of communities, including East Longmeadow, Ludlow and Hampden, were also at the scene.

Firefighters remained at the scene as of about 1 p.m. and additional information was not immediately available.

Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images