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Amherst Sen. Stanley C. Rosenberg to campaign for medical marijuana ballot question

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Rosenberg said the ballot proposal is similar to his bill, but lacks some of the regulatory safeguards. Watch video

SPRINGFIELD – State Sen. and cancer survivor Stanley C. Rosenberg, D-Amherst, plans to campaign for passage of a medical marijuana ballot question this fall.

Rosenberg said the ballot question has effectively eclipsed legislation he sponsored permitting marijuana use for patients diagnosed with cancer, glaucoma and other debilitating conditions.

With the ballot question pending, legislators would rather wait for voters to speak than take a stand on his bill, Rosenberg said during a meeting with The Republican’s editorial board.

“Normally, I hang back on ballot questions, but I’ll be (campaigning) for this,” he said, expressing disappointment that therapeutic marijuana use is allowed in 16 states, including Maine and Rhode Island, but remains illegal here.

“I don’t understand why when there is something that can be helpful, we would deny the help,” the 62-year old lawmaker said.

Ae rosenberg 2.jpgSen. Stan Rosenberg in an interview with The Republican.

“If we were the first state (to consider legalization), I’d understand; but we’re the 17th state,” he added.

Rosenberg’s involvement in medical marijuana politics was not a reflection of his own cancer ordeal, he said. Two weeks ago, he returned to the Statehouse after four months of radiation, chemotherapy and surgery to treat a form of skin cancer.

He was able to manage pain and side effects with conventional techniques, Rosenberg said.

He expressed optimism that voters would support the ballot question, citing passage of a 2010 ballot question decriminalizing possession of small amounts of marijuana.

The ballot question allows people to buy up to a 60-day supply of marijuana for their personal use from a nonprofit center that would grow the plants. The state Department of Public Health would regulate the provisions for medical marijuana.

Rosenberg said the ballot proposal is similar to his, but lacks some of the regulatory safeguards.

The question is one of four expected to be on the state ballot in November. The others involve a new system for evaluating teachers, allowing terminally ill patients access to drugs to end their lives, and the right of independent repair shops to obtain diagnostic information to repair vehicles.




Dem. Sen. hopeful Elizabeth Warren: Stop student rate hike

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Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren is pressing Congress to act ahead of July 1 deadline to block a planned increase in student loan interest rates.

041312 elizabeth warren

By STEVE LeBLANC, Associated Press

BOSTON (AP) — Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren is pressing Congress to act ahead of July 1 deadline to block a planned increase in student loan interest rates.

Rates on federal Stafford loans for low- and middle-income undergraduates are set to double from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent.

Warren, who is challenging Republican U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, said students are already struggling to pay their bills and an increase in interest rates would add to that burden.

Brown said he also supports the lower interest rates.

Congress voted in 2007 to cut the rate in half over four years. The cost of keeping the interest rates frozen could come to $6 billion a year.

Warren also released a new television ad Monday in which she blames Washington for not doing enough to help students.

Wesfield Vocational-Technical High School director leaving for superintendent post in Franklin County Technical School District

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A search for a new director of Westfield Vocational-Technical High School will begin soon.

MW_LAVERTY_10490371.JPGJames M. Laverty

WESTFIELD – James M. Laverty had two goals for his career in education.

“I always wanted to work in Westfield and to become a superintendent,” he said.

Both goals were realized within the past year.

Laverty, director of Westfield’s Vocational-Technical High School since July, 2011, will leave that post on July 1 to become superintendent of schools at Franklin County Technical School District in Turners falls.

“The move will be bittersweet,” Laverty said explaining his career goals.

He sees his new job as more political than educational, adding his primary function will be interaction with member towns, their school leaders and selectmen.

The school district represents 19 communities with a student enrollment around 500, similar to that at Westfield Vocational-Technical High School, Laverty said.

His goals as superintendent will be to “improve enrollment, improve revenue,” he said.

“Like any school or school district alternative sources of funding are needed to enhance the educational programs offered,” said Laverty.

Programs offered through Franklin Technical include the same programs that are offered in Westfield plus three additional training programs that include plumbing and heating, ventilation and air conditioning, welding and cosmetology.

“Vocational education is expensive and funding is always needed for equipment, especially safety equipment,” Laverty said.

His search for alternative funding will include a continuation of efforts in Westfield to earmark at least a portion of vocational-technical student tuition for the school budget.

Tuition in Westfield amounts to about $700,000 annually but those funds are deposited in the city’s general fund.

“We need at least a good size portion of that amount to be placed in a revolving fund for direct school use,” Laverty said.

A Vietnam combat veteran of the Marine Corps, Laverty will continue focus pn Westfield during the next two months planning for senior class graduation and preparing the school for renovations.

Those renovations, about $1 million, will include a new roof, heating system and windows with work scheduled to begin at the close of the current school year.

A Chicopee native, Laverty has been a Westfield resident for the past 33 years. He is a former member of the School Committee and Municipal Light Board during the 1980s and served one term as Ward 6 city councilor from 2002-2004.

He began his educational career in the 1970s as a resource room teacher in the West Springfield school system. He has been involved in vocational-technical education since 1993 including a position as director of the Lower Pioneer Valley Educational Collaborative from 1993 to 2007.

Westfield Superintendent of Schools Suzanne Scallion said the director position for Westfield Vocational-Technical High School will be posted shortly.

“We will miss Jim. But we are excited about the opportunity his new position will bring him,” said Scallion.

James Davis of Springfield admits to brutal beating of girlfriend; domestic violence in the spotlight with high profile incidents

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Earlier this month Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni said two grants totaling $220,000 will improve the response of both prosecutors and service providers for victims of domestic violence.

hampden county hall of justice court icon.jpg

SPRINGFIELD – In a month where several high-profile domestic violence incidents have called attention to the dangers surrounding such crimes, domestic violence cases are heard daily at the Hampden County Hall of Justice.

One such case ended Thursday, when 24-year-old James Davis pleaded guilty in Hampden Superior Court to a violent attack on his girlfriend with a metal stick that left her running for safety leaving their one-month-old baby still inside the apartment.

It was about 15 hours before police located the baby, who Davis had dropped off with his friends when he disappeared from the couples’ Indian Orchard apartment before police got there and found a bloody scene, a prosecutor said.

The recent incidents putting the spotlight on domestic violence include a shooting rampage by Carlos Gonzalez-Laguer in Chicopee April 13 after he broke into the apartment of an ex-girlfriend who had restraining order against him.

Another such incident happened April 7, when Westfield police responded to a call from a woman who said her ex-husband was trying to break into her apartment. That incident left Douglas Musto fatally shot by a police officer, after another officer was stabbed in the leg by Musto, police said.

Earlier this month Hampden District Attorney Mark G. Mastroianni said two grants totaling $220,000 will improve the response of both prosecutors and service providers for victims of domestic violence.

“I understand the widespread ramifications of domestic violence on families, children and the community and in response I have dedicated attention and resources to this critical problem,” Mastroianni said when he announced the grants.

In the Hampden Superior Court case Thursday, a prosecutor said Davis told the woman as he was beating her; “This is what you get for embarrassing me in front of my friends.”

As the woman and the child watched in the courtroom, Judge Peter A. Velis sentenced Davis to three years in state prison followed by three years probation.

Both defense lawyer Nikolas Andreopoulos and the victim asked that Velis recommend Davis serve his sentence in the Hampden County House of Corrections in Ludlow rather than state prison so the woman and baby can visit him.

Velis agreed to recommend that, but not before some harsh warnings for Davis.

Velis told Davis the reason he will recommend the jail location is because “your son persuaded me by virtue of his existence. If you love your son... you will reflect on what you did.”

“You know in the back of your mind he may someday find out what you did to his mother,” Velis said. He said if Davis from now on proves to be a worthy father, maybe his son will forgive him if he ever finds out.

Assistant District Attorney Melissa G. Doran said the plea agreement was reached after a lot of negotiations and difficulty getting the case to trial.

She said at 3:40 a.m. May 24, 2011, the woman called police from a pay phone on Worcester Street and told them about the assault in her apartment and her child still being there.

Officers went to the apartment and found blood on the floor, the sofa and bathroom, but the child and Davis were not there. Davis was located six days later.

Officers found the woman near the pay phone in a sweater and underwear with dried blood on her mouth and bruises on her face, arms and legs. She was treated at Baystate Medical Center.

The woman told police Davis had woken her up and beat her with a broomstick and then a metal stick, also punching her in the face, and she had fled in what she was wearing at the time, Doran said.

Doran said Davis put his own child “in harm’s way. He beat his mother while he (the child) was right there.”

The charges to which Davis pleaded guilty were two counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and one of assault and battery.

On April 13 in Chicopee, Gonzalez-Laguer fired nearly 70 shots, injuring two people, including a state trooper.

The woman who had the restraining order against him and her 8-year-old son were able to escape without injury.

Investigators said Gonzalez-Laguer committed suicide by shooting himself in the head after he had been struck at least twice by police bullets.

Three other women had previously had restraining orders against Gonzalez-Laguer.

In the Westfield incident April 7, the officers were responding to a 2 a.m. emergency call from a woman who said her ex-husband was trying to break down the door to her apartment at 128 Elm St.

When officers arrived at the scene, Musto pulled a knife as an officer tried to handcuff him, according to Westfield police.

Firefighters at scene of blaze on Mill Street in Springfield

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Two tenants who live in the building were displaced.

SPRINGFIELD - No injuries were reported in a fire that broke out at the Odd Fellows Lodge at 185 Mill St. Monday afternoon.

The fire started on a couch in a first floor bedroom and was reported around 2 p.m., said Dennis Leger, executive aide to Springfield Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant.

Leger said two members of the order were staying in the lodge and nobody was there when the fire broke out.

Leger said the firefighting effort was briefly delayed when firefighters, working in the front hall, heard a series of “pops“ — believed to be exploding ammunition — coming from the bedroom.

Firefighters remained at the scene shortly before 3 p.m. Information about the cause of the fire and the extent of the damage to the building was not immediately available.

“I am sure there is significant damage,” Leger said.

Wes Browning, secretary to the fraternal order and one of the tenants, watched as firefighters ventilated the building in the aftermath of the blaze.

“No idea,” he said, when asked if he knew of the damage inside the landmark structure. “You can’t replace that building....My heart’s in my feet.”

Browning said the order has about 20 members and they take turns staying there to guard against break-ins. He said the order is about 100-years-old.

“We have had many break-ins there over the years,” he said, adding he that he kept a loaded, and duly licensed, handgun in his room and believes that is what the firefighters heard exploding.

According to assessor records, the building is owned by Amity Lodge, 1721, I.O.O.F. The 8,556 square-foot building, built in 1910, is assessed at $335,100.

Robert Tangney of East Longmeadow, with 4 OUI convictions, denies new charge

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Tangney is charged as a 4th or subsequent offender.

SPRINGFIELD — A 54-year-old East Longmeadow resident was held in lieu of $10,000 cash bail after pleading not guilty to driving under the influence of liquor, charged as a fourth or subsequent offender.

Robert W. Tangney of 33 Vadnais St., who has four operating under the influence convictions, also pleaded not guilty in Hampden Superior Court to negligent operation of a motor vehicle, leaving the scene of a property damage accident and driving after his license was suspended for driving under the influence of liquor.

East Longmeadow police arrested Tangney near the intersection of Maple Street and Westwood Avenue after a report of hit-and-run incidents just after 1 p.m. on Jan. 13.

If Tangney pays bail and is released from the Hampden County Correctional Center in Ludlow he must have no alcohol and will be randomly monitored, as ordered by Judge Richard J. Carey.

Charles Wilhite's lawyer makes final argument to overturn 1st degree murder conviction

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Nathan Perez, who 16 months ago testified at trial that Wilhite shot Alberto Rodriguez in front of a Pine Street market, testified 2 weeks ago at a hearing that he was lying at Wilhite's trial.

WILHITE.JPGCharles Wilhite

SPRINGFIELD — The prosecution and defense have made their last arguments, and Charles Wilhite’s immediate future is in the hands of Hampden Superior Court Judge Peter A. Velis.

In his final oral argument before Velis on Monday, Wilhite’s lawyer insisted his client’s first degree murder conviction should be overturned, or at least Wilhite should be granted a new trial.

Velis took the matter under advisement.

David A. Lewis, Wilhite’s lawyer, said Velis should believe the recantation of Nathan Perez, who had testified at trial that Wilhite shot Alberto L. Rodriguez in front of a Pine Street market in October 2008.

Perez testified two weeks ago at a hearing that he was lying when he testified against Wilhite, 28, of Springfield, at Wilhite’s trial.

He said he was coerced and threatened to name Wilhite as the shooter by Springfield Police Officer Anthony Pioggia.

Pioggia denied Perez’ allegation at that hearing.

Assistant District Attorney Bethany Lynch argued Monday that Velis should totally discount Perez’ recantation and accept as truth Perez’ identification of Wilhite at trial.

She said since Perez has now told two different stories under oath, he was committing perjury at least one of those times.

Velis asked Lynch her opinion on why Perez would have testified at the hearing that he lied at the trial, particularly because that would put him in jeopardy of being charged with perjury in a first degree murder trial.

“I don’t know. I have no way to answer that,” she said.

Perez said at the hearing he felt he had to do the right thing and admit he lied at the murder trial.

Velis said he wonders why Perez came forward so long after the trial to recant his testimony, risking a possible perjury charge, if the recantation isn’t true.

“I’m plagued with that enigma,” Velis said.

Wilhite and co-defendant Angel Hernandez were sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole after a jury found them guilty of first-degree murder in their December 2010 trial.

Wilhite’s effort to get a new trial, or to get his conviction overturned, has generated an organized effort called “Justice for Charles."

About 30 supporters of Wilhite attended the court session Monday.

US Sen. Scott Brown: Whole Foods policy hurts fishermen

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U.S. Sen. Scott Brown is asking Whole Foods to reconsider a decision to no longer sell seafood that it doesn't consider sustainable.

041012 Scott BrownU.S. Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., talks with Michelle Tassinari as he drops off signature petitions to qualify for being placed on the ballot at the Sect. of the Commonwealth's elections division in Boston,Tuesday, April 10, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

BOSTON (AP) — U.S. Sen. Scott Brown is asking Whole Foods to reconsider a decision to no longer sell seafood that it doesn't consider sustainable.

In a letter to Whole Foods co-CEOs John Mackey and Walter Robb, Brown said Monday he was concerned the decision has more to do with political correctness than sound reasoning.

The Massachusetts Republican questioned what he called "uncertain science," and said the decision will hurt Massachusetts fishermen.

Whole Foods Market announced it will stop selling fish caught from depleted waters or through ecologically damaging methods, including octopus, gray sole, skate, Atlantic halibut and Atlantic cod caught by trawls.

Brown said for the past two years, New England fishermen have been struggling under a strict quota management system that limits fishing, along with limitations on gear types and fishing areas.


Women's Fund of Western Massachusetts seeks nominations of area women whose lives opened doors for other women

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Nominations are due by May 18 for 'Standing on Her Shoulders' awards.

carlaoleska.JPGCarla Oleska of the Women's Fund of Western Massachusetts

As part of its 15th anniversary celebration, the Women’s Fund of Western Massachusetts will present “Standing on Her Shoulders” awards to 15 area women whose lives opened doors for other women but who are not well known as “risk-takers and innovators beyond their immediate circles.”

Nominees must be 70 or older, must be willing to be photographed and interviewed on videotape for the public exhibit on March 14, 2013, and must be a resident of Berkshire, Franklin, Hampden or Hampshire County.

Nomination forms can be found at www.womensfund.net. Deadline to submit nominations is May 18.

In a release, the Easthampton-based fund said it has “chosen to honor elder women because their accomplishments are often overlooked in society.”

Criteria for the award includes “creativity and risk taking on behalf of women, courage and leadership in achieving social change, a willingness to go beyond the norm in their fields, risk taking to pursue goals despite the views of others, and following a vision before her time.”

“Women have made great strides in the last 100 years in this country,” said Carla Oleska, chief executive officer of the fund.

“While we have so much more to do, we know that we owe so much to the women trail blazers who have opened doors for us, who have made it normal for women to be chiefs of surgery, chairwomen of the board, or producers of films.”

She added that the award “seeks to shine a spotlight on bold and inspiring lives marked by significant accomplishments — efforts that not only benefited diverse women and girls, but also played a critical role in bringing about broader social change.”

Nominations of women are sought in 15 fields.

Fields include: Arts; Athletics/Sports; Business; Civil Rights; Education; Environment; Health/Medicine; Law; Media/Communications; Military Service; Non-Profit Leadership; Politics/Public Policy; Philanthropy/Volunteerism; Science/Technology; and Theology/Religion.)

The portraits that accompany the award will be produced by Robert Charles Photography in East Longmeadow. The exhibit will open on March 14, 2013 in conjunction with the 15th Anniversary Celebration of the Women’s Fund. The event will take place at the MassMutual Center in Springfield. Admission to the event will benefit the fund.

The fund is a public foundation that since 1998 has awarded $1.7 million dollars in grants, supporting over 50,000 women and girls.

It advances social change to create economic and social equality for women and girls in Western Massachusetts through grantmaking and strategic initiatives.

Hakam McCoy sentenced to a year in jail for hitting girlfriend with glass in Northampton

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The prosecutor told Judge C. Jeffrey Kinder that McCoy served a state prison sentence for the 2002 death of his infant son, who was deemed to have died from shaken baby syndrome.

041212 hakam mccoy.JPGHakam McCoy, who last week was found guilty of hitting his former girlfriend with a drinking glass, was sentenced Monday to a year in jail.

NORTHAMPTON — A Hampshire Superior Court judge sentenced Hakam A. McCoy to a year in jail Monday for hitting his girlfriend with a pint glass and punching a hole through her armoire.

McCoy, 28, was convicted of the counts last week by a jury. However, the jury acquitted him of two other counts of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, kidnapping and a count of assault and battery.

According to the vitcim in the case, McCoy held her in their Florence apartment against her will when an argument over money escalated into a physical altercation. She testified that McCoy slammed a door into her head, threw her to the ground and bit her on the arm. McCoy, who took the stand in his own defense, said he felt in danger during the fight and that he bit the woman on the arm gently so she would stop scratching him.

Prosecutor Carrie Russell told Judge C. Jeffrey Kinder that McCoy served a state prison sentence for the 2002 death of his infant son, who was deemed to have died from shaken baby syndrome. She asked for a three-year prison sentence followed by three years probation.

Defense lawyer Alan Rubin said McCoy pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter in the case and asked for a suspended sentence. If not for the prior conviction, Rubin said, he would have asked that the current case be continued without a finding.

Because he has been in custody for 286 days, McCoy will complete his sentence in less than three months. Kinder ordered him to undergo one year's probation following his release from jail.

Senate race roundup: What do Elizabeth Warren's former students think of her?, Scott Brown receives campaign funds from Harvard employees and more

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Catch up on your Massachusetts Senate race news with this political grab bag of stories on U.S. Sen. Scott Brown and the chief Democratic rival for his seat, Elizabeth Warren.

Brown WarrenThis composite image of Associated Press photos shows U.S. Sen. Scott Brown and chief Democratic rival Elizabeth Warren handing in signatures to get their names on the fall ballot.

Catch up on your Massachusetts Senate race news with this political grab bag of stories on U.S. Sen. Scott Brown and the chief Democratic rival for his seat, Elizabeth Warren.

Brown and Warren stumped at Fenway Park on Friday, Warren dropped a new campaign ad Monday and it's been reported that Brown accepted campaign cash from Harvard University employees.

If you have anything that you've read on these candidates in the last week, post it below so it can be included here.

Warren’s Former Students See Her As Anything But ‘Elitist’

Boston's NPR news station, WBUR, reached out to dozens of Warren's former students from Harvard University, but none of those they spoke with had negative things to say about her.

She was popular at Harvard, and one former student said that as a law professor, Warren strove to "make sure you understand every single thing about the case" rather than just understanding legal doctrine or rules, the station reported.

To read more of WBUR's piece on Warren, click here.

Scott Brown, Elizabeth Warren offer dueling political pitches from the field at Fenway

Brown and Warren both made live appearances at the Red Sox home Friday for Fenway Park's 100th anniversary, The Boston Globe reported.

Warren addressed concerns she's heard about how families are struggling with college costs, and Brown touted his bipartisan record, according to the Globe, which paraphrased Brown as saying Massachusetts voters "need someone in the otherwise all-Democratic delegation who can communicate with the Republican-controlled House of Representatives."

To read more of the Globe's piece on Brown and Warren's appearances at Fenway, click here.

Scott Brown benefits from Harvard, too

Politico reported Thursday that Brown, whose campaign recently released a press release on "Professor Elizabeth Warren" titled "Elizabeth Warren: Elitist Hypocrite?," has accepted $3,900 in campaign cash from eight Havard University employees, including six professors.

To read more on Politico's post, click here.

More Brown-Warren news from MassLive.com and other outlets:

April nor'easter dumps rain, snow on East Coast

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A nor'easter packing soaking rain and springtime snow churned up the Northeast on Monday, unleashing a burst of winter, closing some schools and triggering power outages in communities that were basking in record warmth a month ago.

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By CAROLYN THOMPSON
Associated Press

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — A nor'easter packing soaking rain and springtime snow churned up the Northeast on Monday, unleashing a burst of winter, closing some schools and triggering power outages in communities that were basking in record warmth a month ago.

The earliest hits were on higher ground, where snow-laden tree limbs pulled down power lines and commuters navigated slushy roads to work and school. Up to a foot of snow or more was forecast for higher elevations through Tuesday morning.

At the peak Monday, utilities reported about 50,000 customers without power in Pennsylvania and central and western New York.

Amy Shaulis, a waitress at the Summit Diner in Somerset, Pa., wondered if the storm was a bit of payback.

"We had a very, very light winter, we had summer in the middle of winter and now we're paying for it," she said.

Gov. Tom Corbett declared a disaster emergency and activated the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency's state operations center. By early afternoon, electricity had been restored to about 8,000 of the 25,000 customers who had been without power in the state and predictions of heavy snow in Pittsburgh melted away as the temperature remained well above freezing.

It was a similar situation in Buffalo, where an alternating mix of rain and wet snow fell throughout the day but did not accumulate on the roads or trees as expected.

The National Weather Service canceled its winter storm warning for the Buffalo area and counties to the north and east in New York and a winter weather advisory for Allegheny and Washington counties in Pennsylvania.

A warning remained in effect through Tuesday for several counties along the New York-Pennsylvania border, where up to a foot of snow was still possible.

George Wallach, of Buffalo, said he'd gone to Home Depot for lawn fertilizer last week — never thinking he might need rock salt. Western New York saw a run of record-heat in March that included a St. Patrick's Day weekend in the 70s and an 82-degree reading in Buffalo March 22.

"I should learn not to plan anything till after May," he said, wet snow falling as he waited with parents outside a Buffalo elementary school to retrieve children after a half day that was scheduled in advance.

Kevin Fitzgerald, a National Weather Service meteorologist in State College, Pa., called the snowstorm "unusual, but not unheard of."

While coming about a third of the way through spring, the storm was reminiscent of an unusual late fall storm that pummeled East Coast cities. But areas hit in October were spared the spring version.

Some schools in western Pennsylvania were closed Monday morning ahead of the storm. Districts in the state's Allegheny Mountains began announcing closings Sunday night.

Farther east, the threat was rain. Much of New Hampshire and western Maine were under a flood watch Monday, with the possibility of some creeks and rivers flooding.

Buffalo-based weather service meteorologist Sean Smith said the slow-moving storm could linger before moving out sometime Tuesday. Sustained winds of 20-30 mph were predicted throughout the Northeast, and gusts of up to 50 mph were expected off Cape Cod.

The snow postponed minor league baseball in Batavia, about 30 miles east of Buffalo, where the Empire State Yankees and Norfolk Tides were supposed to play.

"The field is completely covered in snow, and there's no way to get it all off," Travis Sick said from Dwyer Stadium, where the snow continued to come down.

Finger Lakes Racetrack called off its thoroughbred racing card as heavy wet snow blanketed the central New York track, and the gray skies and the wintry forecast forced the University at Buffalo's dedication of a new solar panel installation indoors.

The weather was suspected in the rollover of a truck in the Chautauqua County town of Westfield. It was unknown if there were any injuries.

In Cortland and Yates counties in central New York, authorities said roads were snow-covered and slippery, and they urged drivers not to head out unless absolutely necessary. Dozens of schools in central and western New York were delayed or closed. The snow and slippery roads stretched into the Adirondacks, which got about 2 inches of slushy accumulation.

National Weather Service meteorologist Jeff Wood said six inches of snow fell by daybreak Monday in the higher terrain of Tug Hill, just southeast of Watertown. The snow was expected to change to rain later Monday.

___

Associated Press writers Michael Hill in Albany, N.Y., Kevin Begos in Pittsburgh, Bob Lentz in Philadelphia and Ed Donahue in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Springfield principal, teachers kiss a pig to reward students for MCAS attendance

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Principal Thomas Mazza told his students that if at least 97 percent of them showed up for their MCAS exams, he would kiss a pig in public.

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SPRINGFIELD – Thomas Mazza made a promise, and on Monday he delivered.

Mazza is principal of Samuel Bowles Elementary School. He had told his students that if at least 97 percent of them showed up for their MCAS exams, he would kiss a pig in public.

Because the kids came through, Mazza and two teachers Monday kissed a baby pig named Peggy, cradled in the arms of Stan Lupa of Lupa Zoo in Ludlow.

Before the big event, Mazza explained the message behind the pig-puckering silliness: “If you guys don’t come to school,” he told the students, “you can’t learn.”

Samuel Bowles has 330 students in grades kindergarten through five. The third, fourth and fifth graders recently took the MCAS (Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System) for English language arts and have the math MCAS coming up, but all the kids were in on the special pig-kissing event.

They sat cross-legged on the floor of the “cafetorium,” with kindergartners wearing pink paper pig headgear they had made in class. They signaled their excitement with an almost constant din.

Faculty good-naturedly warmed up the crowd by enacting the story of the Three Little Pigs. When it turned out that the Big Bad Wolf would be played by their principal, the kids screamed with delight, and became even more vocal each time Mazza “huffed and puffed” to blow down the pigs’ houses.

The domiciles were drawn on long sheets of newsprint, and every time a sheet collapsed, the kids cheered.

“I want to see the principal kiss a pig because I want to see his face!” said Adam Bourassa, 9.

Mazza had sweetened the deal by allowing the kids to vote for a teacher to kiss the pig, too. They elected third grade teacher Renee Kimball for the honor.

Fifth grade teacher Kimberly O’Grady had also volunteered for smooching duty, and teachers Linda Mariani and Lizmyra Theriault joined Kimball and O’Grady on stage for the Three Little Pigs performance.

As she waited in the wings, Kimball tugged on the elastic of a pink plastic snout she was wearing. “Does this nose make me look fat?” she joked.

After Peggy had been returned to her portable pen, Lupa brought out a black-and-white lamb and the children lined up for a chance to pet the baby animal.

West Springfield library trustees organize steering committee to raise $2 million for library project

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Any money raised by the fund drive would decrease the amount of money for which the city must bond.

071210 west springfield library.JPGThe Elm Street entrance to the West Springfield Library.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – The Board of Library Trustees is organizing a steering committee to oversee a drive to raise $2 million to help pay for the proposed $13.4 million library project.

Sharon E. Scott, chairwoman of the trustees board, said Monday that more than a dozen people have joined the effort, but still more are needed to work on the campaign.

The city has been awarded a $6.3 million grant from the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners to build new quarters for the West Springfield Public Library, and officials are working on the wording of a $7.1 million bonding request for the project. That request will be taken up by the Town Council when it meets May 7.

Any money raised by the fund drive would decrease the amount of money for which the city must bond, but for legal reasons, the bond request must be for a full $7.1 million, according to Scott.

Scott and Matthew A. Blumenfeld, the principal of Financial Development Agency Inc. of Amherst, said they are confident they can raise $2 million from the community. Blumenfeld is the city’s fund-raising consultant for the project.

“It is extremely realistic,” Scott said of the fund-raising goal. “We have a lot of support in the community.”

Blumenfeld said if the state allows the city to move the building project from Mittineague School to the current library building on Park Street, there should be even more local enthusiasm for that plan. Because no state funds have been awarded to expand Tatham School to take in Mittineague students, the city is now eyeing renovating and expanding the existing library building.

Scott said if the state agrees to the shift in location, the fund drive will start to take off. Local officials will meet with the state library board in early June.

Plans call for allowing up to five years for pledges to be paid. State, federal and private grant programs will also be approached for money.

Blumenfeld said his experience has shown if there is good community leadership, such a fund drive can be successful. His agency helped raise more than $2.2 million to build the new public library in Chicopee, well beyond its $1.5 million goal. It has also helped raise $1.7 million of the $2.5 million sought to help renovate and expand Holyoke’s public library.

He estimated it could take about a year and a half for West Springfield to meet its campaign goal.

Springfield trash fee hike proposal headed for City Council committee hearings

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City Councilor John Lysak said a proposal to hike the trash fee by as much as $29 annually has triggered some public outcry.

SPRINGFIELD – A proposal to increase the trash fee by as much as $29 a year for five years is headed for a series of public hearings beginning Thursday.

Lysak.JPGJohn A. Lysak

City Councilor John A. Lysak, chairman of the council’s Maintenance and Development Committee, said Monday he has scheduled four committee hearings to allow city officials to explain the fee hike proposal and program changes, and to get feedback from the public before any increases are approved.

The first hearing is Thursday at 6 p.m., at the Greenleaf Community Center at 1188 Parker St., in Sixteen Acres. All city residents are encouraged to attend.

Lysak said he is getting many telephone calls and comments from residents objecting to the fee increase proposal.

“People throughout the city are very upset and irate the trash fee could rise,” Lysak said. “They are sick of seeing fees and taxes going up.”

Mayor Domenic J. Sarno and the Finance Department have asked for a fee increase, saying the city is faced with severe budget hardships and the threat of layoffs and cuts in services. The annual trash fee is currently $75 per barrel.

Future hearings, also scheduled at 6 p.m., are as follows: May 8, at the Pine Point Citizens Council, 335 Berkshire Ave.; May 9, in Room 200 at City Hall; and May 14, at the Frederick Harris School Cafeteria, 58 Hartford Terrace (rear entrance on Whittum Avenue).

Chief Administrative and Financial Officer Lee C. Erdmann, meeting with the council two weeks ago, presented three proposed options for raising the trash fee. Fee increases need council approval.

Erdmann said he favors raising the fee from $75 to $104, effective July 1, an increase of $29, and then continuing to raise the fee by $29 a year for an additional four years until it reaches $220 in 2017. At the rate of $220, trash services would be essentially self-funded, he said.

Sarno said he is concerned that Erdmann’s proposal is too steep. Under two other options presented to the council, the trash fee would increase by $10 on July 1, and then increase by either $5 or $10 a year for the next four years.

There also is a proposal to replace the current 95-gallon barrel with a 65-gallon barrel, to encourage more recycling, and to have recycling collection done weekly rather than on alternate weeks.

Lysak said some residents believe they are being asked to pay more for less services, due to the smaller barrel.

Lysak said he hopes representatives of the administration and Department of Public Works will attend hearings to provide information and answer questions.

Sarno said he can make the tough budget cuts, but he knows that residents want key services maintained. Services are threatened when layoffs occur and program funding is reduced, he said.


U.S. stocks slide on economic tremors from Europe

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A new report showed that European government debt continues to pile up despite severe budget cuts, which have led to unrest and political upheaval across the continent.

By MATTHEW CRAFT | AP Business Writer

042212 nicholas sarkozy election speech.jpgFrench President and UMP candidate Nicolas Sarkozy speaks at his campaign headquarters after the first round of French presidential elections in Paris on Sunday. Socialist Francois Hollande and conservative Sarkozy are heading for a runoff in their race for France's presidency that could alter the European political and economic landscape. (AP Photo/Michel Spingler)

NEW YORK — A collection of worrying news out of Europe sent stocks sharply lower on Monday.

The Dutch government collapsed Monday, a day after French President Nicolas Sarkozy lost the first round of that country's presidential election. A new report showed that European government debt continues to pile up despite severe budget cuts, which have led to unrest and political upheaval across the continent.

Europe's major stock markets plunged. In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average lost 102.09 points to close at 12,927.17. The Dow had dropped as many as 183 points in morning trading then spent the rest of the day climbing back.

"The main concern today is the stability of the euro zone as a whole," said Dan Greenhaus, chief global strategist at the brokerage BTIG.

Figures reported by the European Union's statistics office confirmed the effects of budget-cutting programs on countries that use the euro currency. Even with widespread spending cuts, overall debt rose to 87.2 percent, the highest level since the euro was created. Separately, a survey of the euro zone's manufacturing and services sectors unexpectedly fell in April.

In France, Sarkozy came in second behind Francois Hollande, a harsh critic of the spending cuts prescribed as a way to end the region's debt crisis. Sarkozy and Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel have been the main architects of Europe's efforts to avoid a collapse of the region's shared currency.

"To the extent that Europe has any leaders, it's very much Merkel and Sarkozy," Greenhaus said. "If Sarkozy were to lose, you'd change the leadership of Europe at arguably the worst possible time."

The Dutch government resigned Monday after it couldn't reach agreement with an opposition party to bring its budget deficit within European Union rules. The budget dispute raised the prospect that the Netherlands could lose its top AAA credit rating.

The turmoil roiled Europe's largest markets. Germany's major stock index, the DAX, lost 3.4 percent, its worst day in six weeks. France's CAC-40 index dropped 2.8 percent, wiping away all its gains for the year.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index lost 11.59 points, or 0.8 percent, to 1,366.94.

The Nasdaq composite fell an even 30 points, or 1 percent, to 2,970.45.

Traders shifted money into Treasurys on Monday. The price of the 10-year Treasury note rose, pushing its yield down to 1.94 percent from 1.96 percent late Friday.

David Kelly, chief market strategist at J.P. Morgan Funds, said it looks like investors are looking for a reason to take profits after stocks soared in the first three months of the year. The S&P 500 index rose 12 percent in the first quarter, its best start since 1998. Many investors Kelly talks to see no reason for the market to push higher.

"There's a complete lack of enthusiasm," he said. "And it's making stocks cheap and bonds expensive."

Concerns over Europe pushed the price of West Texas crude oil down 77 cents a barrel to settle at $103.11 per barrel in New York.

Europe's slowing economy also hurt Kellogg Co. The food giant slashed its full-year profit forecast, blaming weak sales in the U.S. and Europe. Kellogg's stock dropped 6.1 percent.

After the closing bell, Netflix reported its first quarterly loss in seven years and its stock plunged 13.6 percent in aftermarket trading.

Among other stocks making big moves:

• Wal-Mart Stores sank 4.7 percent, the biggest drop of the Dow's 30 stocks. A report in The New York Times that said the company shut down an investigation into bribery by executives at its Mexican unit. The retailer said it was investigating for any breach of the U.S Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

• Hasbro fell 5.2 percent after posting a first-quarter loss on falling sales and costs tied to cutting jobs. Weak sales of "My Littlest Pet Shop" miniatures and other girl's toys were partly to blame.

• SunTrust Banks rose 2.8 percent after reporting quarterly earnings that beat analysts' estimates. The regional bank said fewer loans went bad and that it made more mortgage and commercial loans.

Westfield School Department asks for $56.8 million in funding for fiscal 2013

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The School Department will lose nearly $2 million in federal jobs funds and Title I funding next year.

WESTFIELD – Superintendent of Schools Suzanne Scallion told the School Committee on Monday night the School Department needs $4.6 million more than current funding or a total of $56.8 million to maintain present levels of staffing, programs and services for fiscal 2013.

043011 suzanne scallion horz.JPGSuzanne Scallion

Scallion outlined her department's financial needs, explaining the additional funding required represents fixed costs for the city’s educational operations.

The School Committee referred the request to its Finance Committee, which will begin its financial review April 30.

Mayor Daniel M. Knapik told Scallion and the School Committee he expects to provide them with figures representing what the city can afford for its public schools by May 7.

040910 daniel knapik.jpgWestfield Mayor Daniel M. Knapik announced Tuesday night that he would seek a second term in the fall election.

Fixed costs in the School Department represent $388,165 for step and longevity increases for teachers and staff; a projected $840,000 in contract negotiations for staff; $670,220 in special education increases; $296,936 for curriculum and professional development; $137,717 in tuition and leases; $69,094 in increased transportation costs; $120,000 for insurance and unemployment compensation; and a nearly $100,000 increase in utility costs for the new fiscal year, which begins July 1.

Also, the department must absorb nearly $2 million in federal funding that was received this year as part of the federal government’s Economic Recovery Act and in Title I, remedial reading, programs.

“The loss of nearly $2 million in jobs funds and Title I is devastating and very challenging,” Scallion said.

Knapik said all municipal labor unions, including teachers, have been offered new contracts representing a one percent retroactive salary increase to last July 1 and another one percent effective July 1. “Some have been settled, some need ratification and all have a deadline of May 1 to respond,” the mayor said.

Labor groups, including teachers, have not received a contracted salary increase for two years.

The increase in special education costs are primarily attributed to the current 165 enrolled children with autism, Scallion said. In response to School Committee vice chairman Kevin J. Sullivan, Scallion acknowledged the district is investigating the feasibility of engaging the services of autism counseling or the hiring of an autism counselor, dependent upon available funding, for the new fiscal year.

The current School Department budget amounts to $52,190,011. The proposed fiscal 2013 budget of $56,790,456 could force school officials to consider reductions amounting to more than $4 million.

Scallion said her intent is to maintain current staff and program levels and her administrative team, including principals, is looking for ways to curb spending.

Some offsets to next year’s budget could come from use of $1 million in School Choice funds. The superintendent also indicated that the department anticipates a budget surplus this year of about $500,000.

The department will use that surplus to pre-pay tuition for students who attend programs in other school districts which in turn will offset $500,000 in new budget requirements. The department has another estimated $190,000 in its account from Early Childhood tuition.

Turncoat Anthony Arillotta concludes testimony as star witness at Emilio Fusco mob murder trial

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While Fusco faces 20 years to life if convicted of the murders of Al Bruno and Gary Westerman, Arillotta will likely be sentenced to drastically less at a proceeding that will not be scheduled until the conclusion of this trial.

arillotta.JPGAnthony J. Arillotta completed his testimony as the government's key witness in the mob murder trial of Emilio Fusco

NEW YORK — Anthony Arillotta on Monday bolstered his role in the growing ranks of mob turncoats who have taken down legions of their former comrades; not with guns, but from witness stands in federal court.

Following in the footsteps of notorious Mafia “cooperators,” Salvatore “Sammy the Bull” Gravano, Michael “Mikey Scars” DiLeonardo and Michael “Cookie” D’urso, all homegrown gangsters from New York City, Arillotta, of Springfield, concluded four days of testimony in Manhattan as the star prosecution witness in his second mob murder trial.

Like his predecessors, all of whom testified in separate trials against separate Mafia bosses and cohorts, Arillotta offered an unvarnished look at the lifestyle: the mechanics of loan-sharking, beatings, beefs over drugs and other illicit deals, plus contract hits against total strangers, longtime friends and even family members.

Arillotta took the witness stand starting last week in the trial of Emilio Fusco, of Longmeadow, accused in the 2003 murders of onetime Genovese family crime captain Adolfo “Big Al” Bruno, of Agawam, and police informant Gary D. Westerman, of Springfield. Arillotta said Fusco joined him in a violent run while the two were trying to grab absolute power over the local rackets around the time of the killings. Fusco has denied involvement in the killings.

Arillotta turned government informant after his own arrest in the Bruno case in 2010, cutting a deal with prosecutors that has yet to yield fruit. But, as Fusco’s defense lawyer, Richard B. Lind, quoted Arillotta during cross-examination in U.S. District Court: “I don’t want to see my (6-year-old) daughter again when she’s 26 years old.”

Lind was quoting from a recorded 2010 phone conversation Arillotta was having with his now-ex-wife while he was contemplating turning on his co-defendants – two of whom, Bruno shooter Frankie Roche and mob heavy John Bologna – had already turned on him.

“What they did,” Arillotta said on the recordings, referring to prosecutors before he cut a deal, “They wrote a movie based on these liars. I’m the star, almost. If one more person comes forward, they’re gonna write the movie, and it’s gonna be too late for the movie to change.”

While Gravano, DiLeonardo and D’urso took down the most notorious Mafia bosses (think the late John Gotti) and dozens of lesser wiseguys, Arillotta has been prolific in his own right, and essentially helped cripple the mob in western Massachusetts for the time being, according to law enforcement officials.

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Not only did Arillotta help lead the charge in the Bruno murder case, he later implicated his two most feared enforcers and the onetime acting boss in the Genovese crime family who inducted Arillotta through his testimony in a trial in the same courtroom last year.

Fotios ‘Freddy” Geas and Ty Geas, Arillotta’s former henchmen from West Springfield, and Arthur “Artie” Nigro, the former boss from Bronx, N.Y., who sponsored Arillotta’s rise in the Mafia, are serving life sentences in connection with the Bruno plot.

Arillotta was twice required to reveal to jurors the most unflattering details of his life in the Mafia: ambushing with a gun a union official whom he had never met and whose name he hardly knew; sleeping with his former sister-in-law; killing Westerman, his brother-in-law; plotting against his former mentor Bruno; and hatching an unsuccessful ambush against his friend for 20 years, Louis Santos, a suspected informant.

“Louis Santos had been a friend of yours right? Since the 1980s? And at no point did you say a word to try and spare this guy, did you?” Lind asked on Monday.

“No. That’s the life. That’s the Mafia life,” Arillotta responded mildly.

While Fusco faces 20 years to life if convicted of the murders, Arillotta will likely be sentenced to drastically less at a proceeding that will not be scheduled until the conclusion of this trial. However, the sentencing break will be determined solely by U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel, who has presided over both trials.

Of course, there will be some enthusiastic prodding by assistant U.S. attorneys in the case, who will file motions for consideration based on the value of Arillotta’s testimony. And, Arillotta has been a wealth of information.

A crime scene expert from the FBI testified on Monday that Arillotta was so precise when he led investigators to the site where he said he, the Geases and Fusco killed and buried Westerman in a large wooded lot in Agawam, that agents only had to dig one hole to find his remains seven years after the fact.

Arillotta should get a break when he is sentenced, if history is any guide: Gravano was sentenced in 1991 in a New York court to 5 years in prison, despite admitting to 19 murders. Of course, he was the first, most high-profile mob cooperator as an underboss in the Gambino crime family, and sent John Gotti to prison for life.

D’urso in 2007 received five years’ probation and a $200 fine after admitting to one murder, but had covertly recorded hundreds of mob conversations for the government using a rigged Rolex watch.

DiLeonardo put a record 80 gangsters in prison and testified at 14 trials, receiving time served (nine years in federal prison since his 2002 arrest) at his sentencing in federal court, despite admitting murdering three people. However, investigators supporting DiLeonardo at his sentencing lauded his “encyclopedic knowledge” of mob life and help with long-stymied investigations, both of which Arillotta has logged with his cooperation.

Victor Bruno, of Springfield, who has come to watch every day of testimony in both trials of his father’s alleged murderers, snorted at the notion that Arillotta should get a lighter sentence in exchange for his testimony.

“He always had an exit plan ... He was the master manipulator in all of this. Do I think he should get five years or time served? No I do not. I think he should sit in the same cell with Freddy and Ty (Geas),” Victor Bruno said after the conclusion of Arillotta’s testimony Monday afternoon.

The trial is expected to last up to another two weeks.

Proposed Ludlow School Department fiscal 2013 budget shows 2 percent decrease

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The proposed budget calls for the reduction of 10 teaching positions, a guidance counselor, 3 teacher aids and 2 tutors.

LUDLOW — Interim School Superintendent Donna Hogan on Monday night presented a proposed fiscal 2013 School Department budget which shows a decrease of 2 percent, or $579,013, less than the fiscal 2012 budget.

Hogan’s proposed fiscal 2013 school budget is $28,715,818.

The School Committee will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Baird Middle School to discuss the budget request. Final approval of the proposed budget will be by the voters at the May 14 annual Town Meeting.

“I present this budget with reluctance,” Hogan told the School Committee. She said the budget respects the parameters set by town leaders and the concern of taxpayers regarding rising property taxes.

Contracts for next year for administrators and teachers are still being negotiated, Hogan said. She said the budget includes no staff raises.

There are also no fee increases in the proposed budget, she said. Fees for sports, student parking and transportation all will remain the same, she said.

The proposed budget calls for the reduction of 10 teaching positions, a guidance counselor, three teacher aids and two tutors.

Positions that would be reduced at the high school include a family and consumer science teacher, a Portuguese teacher, a guidance counselor and assistant coaches and assistant advisers for clubs, Hogan said.

“I did not cut sports or clubs,” she said, adding, “Activities are part of education.”

Middle school positions that would be cut include a grade six teacher, a reading teacher and a technology teacher. “I left art, physical education and Spanish at the middle school,” Hogan said.

Additional teaching reductions include a grade 2 teacher at Chapin Street School, a kindergarten and grade 1 teacher at East Street School and two tutors at Veterans Park School.

Class size in grades 1 and 2 would go up to 23 or 24 students, Hogan said.

Hogan said two of the town’s elementary schools are projected to have 30 fewer students next year.

School Committee member Michael Kelliher said he wished to thank Hogan for serving as interim superintendent and developing the proposed budget.

Hogan is the retired principal of Baird Middle School.

“You were the right person to have for this,” Kelliher said. “Thank you for your perspective.”

Man rescued after falling from cliff in Monson

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The man's injuries did not appear to be life threatening, Monson Fire Captain David Martin said.

MONSON — Firefighters Monday night rescued a 40-year-old man after he fell 15 feet off a cliff on Chicopee Mountain.

Fire Captain David Martin said the man has serious injuries to his head and shoulders and was transported by Fire Department ambulance to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield.

He declined to identify the man, but said his injuries did not appear to be life-threatening.

The man’s daughter was with him and was able to direct the Fire Department to their location, near the corner of Silva Street and Hospital Road.

The man was rescued some time after 6 p.m. Initial calls came into the Fire Depatment around 5:30 p.m.

Monson, Brimfield and Palmer fire departments helped with the rescue.

The map below shows the approximate location of the rescue:


View Firefighters rescue man who fell from Chicopee Mountain cliff in Monson in a larger map

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