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

Is it just the economy? Other issues may play role

$
0
0

As the economy colors and polarizes voters' attitudes, the Election Day outcome for President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney may be decided on the margins by narrower issues that energize small but crucial slivers of the population.

barack-obama-rain-071412.jpgPresident Barack Obama campaigns despite the pouring rain at the historic Walkerton Tavern & Gardens in Glen Allen, Va., near Richmond, Saturday, July 14, 2012.

WASHINGTON — As the economy colors and polarizes voters' attitudes, the Election Day outcome for President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney may be decided on the margins by narrower issues that energize small but crucial slivers of the population.

For three months, the economy by most measures has faltered. Yet the White House contest has remained locked in place, with the incumbent holding on to a slight national lead or in a virtual tie with his rival. Analysts from both parties have no doubt that absent a defining, unpredictable moment, the race will remain neck and neck until November.

That, several strategists say, means secondary issues such as health care, immigration, education, even little mentioned social issues such as abortion, guns or gay rights could make a difference when targeted to the right audiences. Under those conditions, the advantage, these strategists say, rests with Obama.

"Part of the power of the presidency, part of the power of incumbency, is having the ability with an executive order to make rules, make effective law that is deeply satisfying to a large group of supporters," said Steve Schmidt, Republican John McCain's presidential campaign manager in 2008 and top aide in President George W. Bush's re-election operation. "Being able to deliver if you're an incumbent president for really important parts of the Democratic party coalition, that's an enormously important thing."

Obama already has moved to shore up his support with certain voting blocs, with directives on birth control and immigration. He's given his backing to gay marriage and brawled with congressional Republicans on behalf of lower student loan rates. Each issue won praise from disparate groups of voters, many of whom had voiced frustration with the president or whose enthusiasm for Obama had been waning.

"In every single state there will be micro-targeted advertisement, direct mail, or online campaign to get voters out there to kind of hit them on those personal issues that are important to them," said Rodell Mollineau, president of a pro-Obama political organization, American Bridge. "Whether you're pro-choice or anti-choice, pro-immigration or anti-immigration, you will be touched one way or the other."

The role of these secondary issues is similar to the part that gay marriage ballot initiatives played in the 2004 contest between President George W. Bush and Democratic nominee John Kerry. That election was dominated by the war in Iraq and national security issues. Though the extent to which 11 ballot issues, especially ones in Michigan and Ohio, helped turn out Bush voters eight years ago is a matter of debate, many analysts believe the initiatives at least primed the vote for the incumbent.

As for Romney and Obama, "neither of them seems to be delivering a knockout blow on the economy, and that's what does raise these issues and their salience," said Daniel Smith, a political scientist at the University of Florida who researched the role ballot initiatives played in the 2004 election.

For three months, the economy has created jobs at a snail's pace and the unemployment rate has inched up from 8.1 percent to 8.2 percent. Economic growth has slowed, consumer confidence is down, and a strong majority of the public views the country heading in the wrong track.

For all that, an Associated Press/GfK poll last month had Romney and Obama in a statistical tie and a Washington Post-ABC poll this week had them even at 47 percent each. More remarkable, a majority in both polls — 56 percent in the AP poll and 58 percent in the Post-ABC survey — said they believed Obama would win re-election.

The Romney camp says the contest is still taking shape and Romney is just now beginning to garner a national profile.

"You still have a president who is enjoying the benefits of incumbency," said Kevin Madden, a senior Romney adviser. "He gets a lot more attention, and has a higher profile with voters."

Ever disciplined, Romney has kept his campaign message exclusively on economic themes, casting the election as a referendum on Obama's economic stewardship. Even when he has strayed into side issues such as health care and the Supreme Court's decision to uphold Obama's signature law, Romney has kept his argument focused on the economics of the law.

At Obama campaign headquarters in Chicago, the election is being framed as one of choices between Romney and Obama on economic themes.

"The fact that Romney hasn't gotten traction is not a reflection that there is stasis on economic issues," said Obama senior political adviser David Axelrod. "It's a reflection of the fact he hasn't offered a plausible alternative. I think that's why he's running into problems."

Still, Axelrod said: "There's no doubt that people will consider other things, and if it's a close call for them I think some of these other things matter."

Axelrod cited education as an important factor, particularly with women, and he contrasted Obama's desire to finance education programs with Romney's wish to cut taxes for millionaires. "For these folks, it's part of the economic discussion, not separate from it," Axelrod said.

Axelrod also mentioned Romney's position on immigration and his pledge to defund Planned Parenthood as issues that are important to certain groups of voters. "How Romney has handled himself on those issues is meaningful," he said.

"People have broad concerns, and some of these issues will be influential," he added. "Other issues may move some who are on the bubble, but rebuilding the economy and the middle class is the overwhelmingly the top concern."

No side issue stands out more than immigration in its ability to energize and mobilize a bloc of voters. Obama had promised a comprehensive overhaul of the immigration system when he ran in 2008. But Obama put the issue on the back burner after support for immigration changes failed to gel, and Hispanic voters grew resentful.

But last month he acted on his own, expanding the authority of the federal government to exempt certain immigrants from deportation and making them eligible for work permits. The stance contrasted sharply with Romney's. During the Republican primaries, he took a hard line against illegal immigration.

One ad this past week aired in Nevada by the Service Employees International Union and the pro-Obama Priorities Action political action committee states that Romney "has not demonstrated that he respects the Latino community."

Romney is running Spanish language ads himself and Madden says the challenge for Obama is that until he issued an administrative directive five months before the election Obama had not acted on his promise to Hispanics.

But Schmidt says Republicans are in a bad position with Hispanics these days.

"Nevada and New Mexico are going to be very, very important states," he said. "The numbers aren't where you want them to be if you're a Republican wanting Mitt Romney to win."


Missing Barre teen exits Hardwick woods after seven hour ordeal

$
0
0

Police in Ware, West Brookfield and Petersham helped search for several hours for the teen who became lost while looking for a party in the woods.

7-14-12-ware-town-police.JPGThe town hall in Ware, where police Saturday helped search for a lost teen in Hardwick.

HARDWICK – A Barre teenager looking for a party in the woods on Friday night became lost - and was missing for seven hours until he exited the forest on Turkey St. near Hardwick Pond at about 6 a.m. Saturday morning, Hardwick Police Cpl. Kevin Landine has confirmed. Authorities did not release the 19-year old’s name.

The individual was in the woods for two hours before he finally called police at 1 a.m.; after a 30-second cell telephone call to dispatch, the battery on the young man’s phone died -making it impossible to locate him using a ping, as the individual did not remain in that location, Landine said.

Assisting the town’s police and fire departments were state police, including two canine units; and the Ware, West Brookfield and Petersham police, including three all terrain vehicles. The teenager was evaluated by Hardwick’s ambulance squad and released to his parents shortly after 6 a.m. Saturday morning.

Chicopee fire officials still investigating Debra Drive blaze

$
0
0

No one was injured, but eight families were displaced after the fire early Saturday morning.

7-14-12-chicopee-fire.jpgThe fire was contained to the top floor unit, but there is smoke and water damage to several nearby units.

CHICOPEE - Officials are still investigating a blaze that broke out on the top floor of an apartment complex at the corners of Debra and Memorial drives early Saturday morning.

No one was injured, but eight families were displaced after the fire. The fire broke out in the top floor of the complex. Officials said no one was home at the time. Smoke and water damage seeped into seven other nearby apartments.

Construction workers were seen tending to the charred roof on Saturday afternoon and fire officials remained on the scene to guarantee the safety of the site for the remaining residents.

Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen silenced at London concert

$
0
0

The Hyde Park show violated curfew and the power was shut off on the superstars.

paulbruce.jpgPaul McCartney, left, and Bruce Springtseen

Bruce Springsteen may be The Boss and Paul McCartney a British knight, but that apparently means little when your set runs too long in London.

At the climax of his three-hour set at Hyde Park, Springsteen introduced the former Beatle.

“I’ve been waiting for this for 50 years,” Springsteen told the cheering throng.

McCartney and Springsteen, backed by the E Street Band and Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello, played a storming rendition of "I Saw Her Standing There."  According to CNN, the superstars segued into "Twist and Shout" as a "drably dressed man with sensible hair" could be seen waving frantically at the back of the stage, indicating it was time to call it a night.

The rock and rollers did not act quick enough and the power was shut off before "Twist and Shout" was over.

The three-day Hard Rock Calling festival has a nightly noise curfew imposed at 10.30 p.m. and Springsteen, who had been playing with his E Street Band, was due to play only from 7 to 10.15 p.m., according to Britain's Telegraph.

E Street Band guitarist Steve Van Zandt shared his thoughts on Twitter and blamed British police.

 “One of the great gigs ever in my opinion. But seriously, when did England become a police state? We break curfews in every country but only English cops needs to “punish us” by not letting us leave until the entire crowd goes. Is there just too much fun in the world? We would have been off by 11 if we’d done one more. On a Saturday night! Who were we disturbing? The cops got nothing more important to do? How about they go catch some criminals instead of (expletive) with 80,000 people having a good time? English cops may be the only individuals left on earth that wouldn’t want to hear one more from Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney! I’m sorry but I have to be honest I’m (expletive). Like I said, it didn’t ruin the great night. But when I’m jamming with McCartney don’t bug me!”


Family fears for Massachusetts pastor abducted in Egypt

$
0
0

The son of Rev. Michel Louis told The Associated Press that his father was on a church trip to retrace Jesus' steps through the Holy Land with 23 other members of the clergy and worshippers when he was abducted.

Egypt Kidnapping PastorThis undated photo released Saturday, July 14, 2012 by the Free Pentecostal Church of God in Boston shows the church's pastor, the Rev. Michel Louis, abducted with two others in Egypt while touring with a church group. (AP photo/Free Pentecostal Church of God, Boston)

BOSTON — The family of a Boston Pentecostal pastor abducted in Egypt on Saturday appealed to his captor to release the 61-year-old man, saying he is a diabetic and the family fears for his health.

The son of Rev. Michel Louis told The Associated Press that his father was on a church trip to retrace Jesus' steps through the Holy Land with 23 other members of the clergy and worshippers when he was abducted. Along with him, a 39-year-old Boston woman in the group and a tour guide were kidnapped in broad daylight Friday.

Jirmy Abu-Masuh, an Egyptian Bedouin, told the AP he was armed when he stopped the bus on a road linking Cairo to Mount Sinai, ordered the three to get off and took them captive. He said they would be released only after police release his uncle from prison, and he vowed to take more hostages of different nationalities if his demands were not met.

Louis' son, Rev. Jean Louis, said his father was making his annual mission trip to the Holy Land.

"He's been doing it for the past four years now, and this just turned out to be a little different from any other year," said the younger Louis, who works as a youth pastor at a church founded by his father. "He's a diabetic, so we'd like the person that, or the people that have him in captivity, to know that. We're just concerned for his health. But we know that the governments are working very hard negotiating."

U.S. Embassy spokesman David Linfield said the embassy was looking into the kidnapping and working closely with Egyptian authorities who were doing everything to ensure their safe release.

The abduction took place along the road linking Cairo to the sixth-century St. Catherine's Monastery, located at the foot of Mount Sinai where the Old Testament says Moses received the stone tablets with the Ten Commandments. The route is a frequent target by Bedouins who abduct tourists to pressure police to meet their demands, which is usually to release a detained relative they say has been unjustly arrested.

Friday's abduction was the latest in a series of kidnappings in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula over the past year. Abducted tourists are rarely harmed and usually released within days.

Louis' son said the family is concerned about all three captives and does not want to discuss communications with the U.S. government so as not to jeopardize the chances for their release.

"Any other family or anybody that has loved ones that are in a situation like that can feel ... a bit uneasy," Louis said outside the family home in Boston's neighborhood of Mattapan. "In spirit, we are confident, we believe in God and we know that our God is active and is real and is gonna intervene on our behalf."

The Louis family gathered at the elder pastor's home Saturday to pray and comfort each other. The elder Louis is pastor of the Free Pentecostal Church of God.

"We have a little command center, crisis command center inside and we are trying our best to do what we can do and be very calm in our action also," Louis said. "... we have some good people that are praying for us across the country, across the world ... we thank everybody that's working on our behalf."

Abu-Masuh, of the Tarbeen tribe in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, told the AP that Egypt's Prime Minister Kamal el-Ganzouri called him personally and asked him to release the Americans "who are guests in our country." He said his uncle called him from prison pleading the same and fearing police might arrest his children or wife to pressure Abu-Masuh.

But Abu-Masuh insists that police release his 62-year-old uncle, who he said suffers from back and heart problems and diabetes. He said his uncle was arrested a week ago after refusing to pay a bribe to police who stopped him along the way.

21-year-old escapes serious injury after truck collides with utility pole in Southampton

$
0
0

Kristi Roberts, 21, of Easthampton Road in Holyoke, got out of the truck before emergency responders arrived on the scene. She was the only person in the vehicle.

SOUTHAMPTON - Police have released details of a truck vs. pole accident from early Saturday morning.

Kristi Roberts, 21, of Easthampton Road, Holyoke, escaped serious injury after the Chevy pickup she was driving struck the utility pole on Route 10 after midnight Saturday.

"Upon arrival responding officers discovered a 1988 Chevy pickup truck rolled over on its side," Sgt. Ian Illingsworth said in a statement.

Roberts got out of the truck before emergency responders arrived on the scene. She was the only person in the vehicle.

The collision split the pole and sent electrical wires falling onto the truck.

Southampton police received multiple 911 calls about the crash around 12:18 a.m.

Roberts was transported to Baystate Medical Center with non-life threatening injuries.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

Route 10 was closed between High Street and Fomer Road until noon Saturday while utility workers put up another pole and restored power.

Artist paints over Paterno's halo on Pennsylvania mural

$
0
0

Michael Pilato had put a halo over Paterno's image after the beloved coach's death in January, but said he felt he had to remove it Saturday after a report that Paterno, former university president Graham Spanier and others buried allegations of child sex-abuse against ex-assistant Jerry Sandusky.

Penn State Abuse Paterno Halo GoneThis combination of two photos shows a detail of a mural by Michael Pilato in State College, Pa. depicting a halo over the late Penn State football coach Joe Paterno on Monday, Jan. 23, 2012, left, and the halo removed by the artist on Saturday, July 14, 2012. Pilato had put a halo over Paterno's image after the beloved coach's death in January, but said he felt he had to remove it Saturday after a report that Paterno, former university president Graham Spanier and others buried allegations of child sex-abuse against ex-assistant Jerry Sandusky. Paterno's family denies the claim. (AP Photo/Centre Daily Times, Nabil K. Mark, Abby Drey)

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — An artist has removed a halo from a mural of Penn State football coach Joe Paterno amid the school's child sex-abuse scandal.

Michael Pilato had put a halo over Paterno's image after the beloved coach's death in January, but said he felt he had to remove it Saturday after a report that Paterno, former university president Graham Spanier and others buried allegations of child sex-abuse against ex-assistant Jerry Sandusky. Paterno's family denies the claim.

Pilato added a large blue ribbon, instead, on Paterno's lapel symbolizing support for child abuse victims, a cause the artist said Paterno had endorsed.

Pilato earlier removed Sandusky from the downtown mural. He said he hasn't made a decision on Spanier's image. Spanier has not been charged. Sandusky has been convicted and is awaiting sentencing.

Unattended pan on stove caused fire in Sixteen Acres apartment; 5 to receive Red Cross aid

$
0
0

One of the apartment's residents left a pan of oil on the stove and later fell asleep, according to Dennis Leger, aide to Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant.

SPRINGFIELD - Dennis Leger, aide to Fire Commissioner Joseph Conant, says human error caused this morning's fire at 79 Beacon Circle in the city's Sixteen Acres neighborhood.

One of the apartment's residents left a pan of oil on the stove and later fell asleep, according to Leger.

The fire gutted the apartment and caused $45,000 worth of damage, Leger said.

It was reported at 1:21 a.m.

The two residents of 79 Beacon Circle, and three residents of a neighboring apartment at 77 Beacon Circle will be receiving assistance from Red Cross Pioneer Valley. The fire did not spread beyond 79 Beacon Circle, but there was smoke damage next door.

The apartments are part of the Colonial Estates housing complex.


View Larger Map


Television writer Don Brinkley dies at 91

$
0
0

His credits included "Trapper John, M.D.," and such 1950s and 1960s staples as "Wanted: Dead or Alive," ''The Untouchables," ''Ben Casey," ''Rawhide," ''The Fugitive," ''The Man from U.N.C.L.E." and "Medical Center."

NEW YORK — Don Brinkley, a noted television writer and the stepfather of supermodel and actress Christie Brinkley, has died. He was 91.

A spokeswoman for Brinkley said her stepfather died on Saturday in Sag Harbor, N.Y.

Don Brinkley was a television writer and producer whose career spanned more than 50 years.

His credits included "Trapper John, M.D.," and such 1950s and 1960s staples as "Wanted: Dead or Alive," ''The Untouchables," ''Ben Casey," ''Rawhide," ''The Fugitive," ''The Man from U.N.C.L.E." and "Medical Center."

In 1988, he was honored by the Museum of Broadcasting in New York.

He also was a journalist for CBS Radio News.

He is survived by his second wife, Marge, and two children — Christie, who was adopted by Don — and Greg. He had two children with his first wife Lois. His grandchildren include musician Alexa Ray Joel.

Massachusetts doctor wins Green Party nomination

$
0
0

Jill Stein, an internist from Lexington, Mass., blasted both Romney and President Barack Obama, saying both had become too dependent on donations from corporations in order to acquire office at the expense of the nation's citizens.

Jill SteinFILE - In this Oct. 24, 2011 file photo, Jill Stein of Lexington, Mass. speaks during a news conference outside the Statehouse in Boston. Stein, a Massachusetts doctor who ran against Mitt Romney for governor a decade ago is the Green Party's candidate for president. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

BALTIMORE — A doctor who ran against Mitt Romney for Massachusetts governor a decade ago won the chance to challenge him again on Saturday, this time as the Green Party's presidential nominee.

Jill Stein, an internist from Lexington, Mass., blasted both Romney and President Barack Obama, saying both had become too dependent on donations from corporations in order to acquire office at the expense of the nation's citizens.

"We need real public servants who listen to the people — not to the corporate lobbyists that funnel campaign checks into the big war chests," Stein told applauding supporters at a Holiday Inn in Baltimore. "That's what brought me to the Green Party, the only national party that is not bought and paid for by corporate money."

Stein acknowledges that her candidacy is a super long shot. Still, she notes that a growing number of people are expressing frustration with the two major political parties and she cites the Occupy Wall Street movement as an example of that.

"We are in it to win it, but we're also in it to build it, and those are both wins in my book," Stein, 62, said in an interview before her acceptance speech at the convention.

Stein won 193.5 delegates, compared to 72 for comedian Roseanne Barr, who did not attend.

Stein hopes the party will qualify in at least 40 states, but the total now stands at 21 and does not include state hosting the convention. Stein also notes that the Green Party has qualified for federal matching funds for the first time in its 11-year history.

"It is yet another sign that we are in a different historical moment right now — that people are taking the stakes here very seriously and understanding that it is we, ourselves, who are going to get us out of this mess, we, the American people," Stein said. "The corporate-sponsored political parties — the establishment — isn't going to change the status quo for us. We've got to do it."

Stein has been running for office in Massachusetts over the past decade. In the 2002 race against Romney, she only won 3 percent of the vote.

"I entered that race in desperation as a medical doctor and a mother seeing things unraveling and the political system incapable of responding to it," Stein said.

She says she doesn't worry that even a marginal performance in a single state could tip the scales against President Barack Obama. Many viewed Green Party candidate Ralph Nader's showing in Florida in 2000 as a big factor in Democrat Al Gore's loss to Republican George W. Bush.

"You don't get democracy by silencing the voice of the public interest," Stein said.

Stein also made unsuccessful runs for secretary of state in 2006 and governor again in 2010.

She is highlighting what she describes as a Green New Deal as the main focus of her platform. She calls it an emergency program designed to create 25 million jobs and jump-start a green economy for the 21st century to help address climate change and make wars for oil obsolete.

Yesterday's top stories: Sage Stallone, son of Sylvester Stallone, found dead; man stabbed in Springfield; and more

$
0
0

At New Hampshire Motor Speedway, the hot NASCAR topic was AJ Allmendinger's drug suspension.

Gallery preview

These were the most-read stories on MassLive.com yesterday. If you missed any of them, click on the links below to read them now.

1) Son of Sylvester Stallone dies in LA [Associated Press]

2) Man stabbed in the back in Springfield [Doron Tyler Antrim]

3) More than 2,600 customers without power in Springfield [Lori Stabile]

4) AJ Allmendinger's drug suspension is the hot topic among NASCAR drivers at New Hampshire Motor Speedway [Jason Remillard]

5) Obama campaign worker Alex Okrent, 29, collapses and dies at campaign headquarters in Chicago [Robert Rizzuto]

Roxbury russet among vintage apples growing in Massachusetts orchards

$
0
0

The University of Massachusetts Cold Spring Orchard is among the places where the heirloom varieties of apples are being grown.

CLARKDALE_FARM.JPGThomas G. Clarkdale stands by a Roxbury russet tree on his farm, The Clarkdale Fruit Farm, in West Deerfield. Part of the apple orchard, along with peaches and plums is up high on a drumlin located on his property. The drumlin is created by glaciers and when receding leaves a natural elevated terrace.

In fact, apples do fall far from the tree – in the genetic sense.

A seed from the Roxbury russet, America’s first named apple, will not produce more Roxbury russets, any more than human parents produce offspring identical to themselves.

So since its discovery in 1696 in what is today a neighborhood in Boston, the small yellowish apple, a favorite of cider and pie makers, has survived through successive grafts over the years that began with a branch of the original.

Clarkdale Fruit Farm in Deerfield is one of the few orchards in the state where the vintage apple is still cultivated.

“Lately, there’s been more interest in heirloom varieties of apples, just like there’s been more interest in heirloom tomatoes,” says Thomas G. Clarkdale, who cultivates more than 60 varieties of apples on 25 acres at the fourth-generation farm.

ROXBURY_RUSSET.JPGA Roxbury russet, one of the first named apple varieties in America.


“The Roxbury russet is fairly dry, but it’s got a good flavor. You can see what people used to think good apples were. Many apples wouldn’t keep very long, but the Roxbury russet would. They could dry them over the fire, store them and use them late in the winter. They’d keep pretty well in a barrel in a root cellar,” he said.

Unfortunately, Clarkdale said, “They are not very pretty, so as American tastes went to redder larger fruit (and winter storage became less of an issue), they kind of died out.”

Apple varieties often took on the names of the places in which they were first discovered. For instance, Westfield produced the Westfield seek-no-further, a variety that appeared in the 1700s that has also survived.

“I guess it was so good you didn’t need to look for any other kind of apple,” Clarkdale said.

A combination of luck and the foresight of apple growers to continue certain lines through the years have allowed some of these older varieties to survive.

However, grafting was the key to continuing the life of a particularly well-liked apple.

Duane W. Greene, the director of University of Massachusetts’ Cold Spring Orchard in Belchertown, where the Roxbury russet is also grown, said grafting begins with the rootstock, the young plant that will become the host root system for a branch of an adult tree.

“Rootstocks are specifically bred and used to serve as the root systems for fruit trees. There are nurseries that grow them. A rootstock is a shoot that is about 12 to 15 inches long and has a few roots on it,” he said.

The grafts are typically done in late summer. The rootstock is planted in April, grows a bit and produces leaves to conduct photosynthesis. Then, in August, a budding stem from a mature Roxbury russet tree is clipped and grafted onto the growing rootstock.

There are many ways the graft can be accomplished, Greene said. One method is to insert the clipped end of the russet into a notch that is cut on the side of the rootstock, then the area is taped for protection. Just like when a tree branch is cut, new bark and cambium (the wood beneath the bark) will grow to cover the wound and join the two pieces.

The fledgling Roxbury russet is allowed to grow over the winter, then the area above the graft is clipped in the spring.

“You do this before things starts to grow. The presence of these upper parts inhibited the growth of the grafted part. But once you cut those leaves and buds above the graft, the inhibition will disappear and the Roxbury russet will start to grow,” allowing the portion above the graft to begin to grow up as the trunk of a productive tree, Greene said.

Afternoon thunderstorms, very humid, high 86

$
0
0

Scattered thunderstorms this afternoon, with dewpoints in the 70s.

Showers and thunderstorms will return to the region today, mainly for the second half of the day. A system approaching from the west is going to draw in very moist air from the south (allowing those dewpoints to jump into the oppressive 70s). This moisture will fuel the atmosphere for developing thunderstorms in the afternoon and into the evening. High temperatures reach the mid-80s.

Hazy, hot and humid weather continues for Monday, Tuesday and part of Wednesday. High temperatures through the first half of the workweek remain in the low-to-mid 90s with excessive humidity still in the region. A line of showers and thunderstorms will move through the region around Wednesday, which will then usher in a cooler, less humid air mass for the end of the week.

Sunday: Afternoon showers and thunderstorms, very humid, high 86.

Monday: Hazy, hot, and humid, high 93.

Tuesday: Hazy, hot, and humid, high 94.

Area communities talk trash as Springfield considers fee increase

$
0
0

Communities such as Chicopee, Holyoke, West Springfield and Agawam do not charge a fee for trash.

trash collection montage trash fee.jpgClockwise from top left: A Belchertown resident tosses a an orange "pay-as-you-throw" trash bag at the town's transfer station; Chicopee DPW personnel pick up trash at a residence; Springfield garbage and recycling containers.

As communities across Western Massachusetts struggle with the cost of trash collection and disposal, the strategies range from those communities that cover costs with property taxes to those that levy annual fees and per-bag charges.

In Springfield, the issue is as hot as a mid-summer day as city officials have debated recently if the current flat fee of $75 per year per barrel should rise by $15.

While proponents of the increase have argued that the current fee is too low, falling far short of the city’s trash collection costs, opponents say the fee itself is a tax and that trash collection should be among the myriad of city services covered through property taxes.

They point to cities such as Chicopee, Holyoke, Agawam and West Springfield that provide curbside collection at no charge, sometimes referred to as “free” trash collection.

Springfield Mayor Domenic J. Sarno said trash is anything but free.

Trash collection and disposal costs approximately $10.4 million annually in Springfield, including $6.5 million covered by general funds including property taxes, and nearly $4 million by the trash fee, according to city estimates.

“It’s a budget buster,” Sarno said last week. “We are going to continue to try to be fair and look for cost-effective ways to manage trash refuse. Unfortunately, it’s an issue other cities and towns are going to face or are facing.”

Springfield charged no fee for trash until July 2007, when a $90 annual fee was established by the former state-imposed Finance Control Board. The board was established in 2004 to restore the city to fiscal stability.

Sarno, as a first-time candidate for mayor in 2007, repeatedly criticized the trash fee as an added tax and burden on homeowners and said he would eliminate it. However, upon election, Sarno joined the control board in keeping the fee in place, saying he realized it was not financially feasible to eliminate the fee.

Sarno did reduce the fee twice during his first four years in office, reducing it to the current $75 fee, but said he was forced by the city’s financial hardships in proposing a $10 increase this year, to reduce the tax subsidy of the program.

The City Council is considering a $15 increase instead, with the added $5 intended to help reopen three closed library branches in Springfield.

The council will consider a second-step vote on the fee increase Monday, and final consideration at a future special meeting, officials said.

Sarno said that whether you build the fee into the municipal tax bill, or impose charges, “it’s just the cost of doing business.”

In Chicopee, Michael D. Bissonnette said there is no fee charged for trash collection, and there is no consideration of charging the fees.

Chicopee is a host community to a private landfill operated by Waste Management. As a result, the city can dump all trash there at a reduced cost that is passed on to residents, Bissonnette said.

“Our actual disposal costs are very minimal and our sanitation budget is for personnel and equipment,” Bissonnette said. “It is estimated that without such an agreement, our sanitation costs would be an additional $3-4 million per year.”

In addition, the city has stepped up its recycling efforts and improved its system to help extend the life of the landfill and continue to save the city money, Bissonnette said.

In Belchertown, the system of charging an annual fee and a per bag charge has been in place and is working well, according the Public Works Director Steven J. Williams.

“It does operate in the black and our revenues cover expenses,” Williams said.

There are approximately 1,600 users, representing 20 percent of the town’s residences, Williams said. The revenues versus expenses are reviewed annually to see if adjustments need to be made.

Last year, the fee for large trash bags was raised 25 cents, but the sticker price (annual trash fee) remained the same.

In Springfield, the city’s Chief Administrative and Financial Officer Lee C. Erdmann proposed that the trash fee rise by as much as $29 a year for five consecutive years.

The suggested increase of $29, rejected by the council, would have raised the fee to $220 by 2017, at which time trash services would be essentially self-funded, Erdmann said.

Sarno said he would “find it difficult in an urban setting” to ever favor such a large increase in the trash fee. In addition, he has included a discount for senior citizen homeowners since the fee was established.

Improvements in recycling, including the city’s single stream recycling program where all recyclables are placed by homeowners in a single large barrel, have helped to reduce trash costs and increase revenue, Sarno said.

The city will also begin to see lower rates charged for disposal, beginning in 2014, as negotiated, Sarno said.

Staff reporters Jeanette Deforge, Lori Stabile, Fred Contrada, Diane Lederman, Ted LaBorde, Sandra Constantine, Mike Plaisance and Elizabeth Roman contributed to this report.

Fire tears hole in roof of Chicopee home

$
0
0

All the home's residents were able to get out safely.

Seen here from across the street, firefighters shoot water onto the roof.

CHICOPEE - Firefighters are battling a fire at a home at 98 Mt. Vernon St. that looks to have started in the attic.

Flames have torn a hole in the roof.

The fire was reported at around 5:45 a.m. Within minutes, black smoke rising from the area was visible on Route 391.

All the home's residents were able to get out safely. WWLP-22News reports that a woman and two children live there.

A fire investigator is on the scene.


View Larger Map


1,500 without power in West Springfield

$
0
0

The current outage follows one yesterday affecting more than 2,600 customers in Springfield.

WEST SPRINGFIELD - About 1,500 Western Massachusetts Electric customers in West Springfield are currently without power, according to the utility's outage map.

This follows an outage yesterday that left more than 2,600 without power in Springfield.

It's unclear what has caused today's outage.

A utility spokesperson could not immediately be reached for comment.

AM News Links: Former Massachusetts top cop reflects on career, man reunites with classic car stolen 42 years ago, and more

$
0
0

A story to be featured in the July 23 issue of ESPN The Magazine goes into depth about the rampant sexual activities among athletes at The Olympic Games.

April 13, 2012 - Chicopee, Mass. - Republican staff photo by Michael S. Gordon - Massachusett State Police Col. Superintendent Marian J. McGovern speaks during a press conference following the end of a shoot out and stand off at 102 West St.

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

Water restriction in effect for Ware residents

$
0
0

Water restriction in effect from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.in Ware.

Ware town seal.jpg

WARE - A water restriction has been issued for the town of Ware until further notice.

Ware Public Works Director Thomas Martens issued a memo to the Board of Selectmen Friday informing them that residents are required to restrict non-essential water use between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Martens said restrictions include irrigating lawns with sprinklers or automatic irrigation systems, washing cars and washing driveways, sidewalks or the exterior of buildings. The restriction does not apply to businesses.

Martens said the ban will be lifted when Water Management Act requirements for stream flow in the Ware River are met for at least seven consecutive days.

Right-wing French political party to file complaint against Madonna

$
0
0

A video shown at a Paris concert contained an image of the party's leader with a swastika on her forehead.

MadonnaMadonna

PARIS (AP) — France's far-right National Front plans to file a complaint against Madonna after the singer showed a video at a Paris concert that contained an image of the party's leader with a swastika on her forehead.

The video has been shown at other concerts on the singer's tour, and the party has expressed its outrage before, warning that it would take action if the video were shown in France. On Saturday night, Madonna played at the Stade de France.

National Front spokesman Alain Vizier said Sunday that the party would file a complaint in French court next week for "insults."

Marine Le Pen, who was pictured in the video, tried to shed the National Front's image as racist and anti-Semitic during her recent failed bid for president.

Obituaries today: Doreen Collings was native of London, England; worked at MassMutual

$
0
0

Obituaries from The Republican.

071512_doreen_collings.jpgDoreen Collings

Doreen E. (Leach) Collings, 83, of Springfield, passed away on Wednesday. She was born in Barking, London, England, and was educated in London. She immigrated to the United States in 1963, and settled in Springfield. She was employed for many years at MassMutual Insurance Company and retired in 1986.

Obituaries from The Republican:


Viewing all 62489 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images