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High winds knock out power to thousands of Western Massachusetts residents

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A high wind warning remains in effect until 9 a.m.

hendrick-st-suchocki_6250.jpg 01.31.2013 | EASTHAMPTON -- A line worker repairs a blown transformer on Hendrick Street Thursday morning.  

SPRINGFIELD - Nearly 4,000 homes and businesses remain without power Thursday morning as gusty winds blow through Western Massachusetts.

Western Massachusetts Electric Co. reported nearly 3,000 customers were without power as of 7:30 a.m. Springfield and Easthampton were among the heaviest hit with 1,264 and 533 outages, respectively.


National Grid
reported 533 outages in Hampden County and 115 in Hampshire County.

Springfield police Lt. Henry Gagnon, speaking shortly after 7 a.m., said affected areas include the "X". Officers have been posted there to keep traffic moving through.

An Easthampton police dispatcher said a blown transformer in the area of 104 Hendrick Street forced police to close the roadway between Plain Street and Holyoke Street. Police did not have an estimate for when the road would reopen.

In Longmeadow, Shaker Road is closed to all through traffic from Laurel Street to Hazzardville Road. A large limb landed on power lines this morning around 6 a.m., sparking a fire, said police Capt. John Stankiewicz. WMECo crews are at the scene removing the limb and repairing the lines.

Stankiewicz said the road is expected to reopen at 1 p.m.

In East Longmeadow, emergency personnel are dealing with a downed tree near 378 Parker St. Police Sgt. Patrick Manley said the road will likely be blocked until about 9 a.m.

“I am hearing it’s a pretty substantial tree,” he said.

A downed tree also closed Springfield Street in Wilbraham. Residents have been advised to use either Tinkham Road or Boston Road as alternate routes.

Chicopee mayor Michael Bissonnette said shortly after 8 a.m. that the city's municipal utility had restored power to all of the city's residents.

A high wind warning remains in effect for Western Massachusetts until 9 a.m., according to CBS3 Springfield, media partner of The Republican / MassLive.com.


Newtown residents urge stricter gun control

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One after another, Newtown residents stepped to the microphone and urged Connecticut lawmakers to stop another tragedy like the deadly shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School and take action, such as banning high-powered, military style rifles and high-capacity magazines.

By SUSAN HAIGH, Associated Press

NEWTOWN, Conn. (AP) — One after another, Newtown residents stepped to the microphone and urged Connecticut lawmakers to stop another tragedy like the deadly shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School and take action, such as banning high-powered, military style rifles and high-capacity magazines.

While a General Assembly bipartisan task force heard Wednesday from some residents concerned about their Second Amendment rights, the vast majority of the several hundred people who turned out for the public hearing — including parents of children killed at Sandy Hook and local officials — appeared to support greater gun control.

"Make this the time that change happens. Don't give up because it's too hard or too difficult. Make a promise to honor the lives lost at Sandy Hook and elsewhere in America by turning this tragedy into the moment of transformation that benefits us all," said Nicole Hockley. Her 6-year-old son, Dylan, was among those killed by 20-year-old Adam Lanza, who fatally shot his mother in their home before driving to the school to carry out the massacre before killing himself.

Jennifer Killin, a Newtown mother, said there's a national misperception that Newtown residents want to repeal the Second Amendment. Rather, she said, Newtown residents want to protect people's rights while also protecting children and their safety.

"It's in everyone's best interest to work together," she said, receiving loud applause from the crowd.

Bill Sherlach, whose wife, Mary, a school psychologist, died in the rampage, said he respects the Second Amendment but it was written in a long-ago era where armaments were different.

"I have no idea how long it took to reload and refire a musket," he said. "I do know that the number of shots fired in the Sandy Hook Elementary School in those few short minutes is almost incomprehensible, even in today's modern age."



School Shooting Legislature


From the left, Connecticut State Senate Majority Leader Martin Looney, Speaker of the House Brendan Sharkey, Senate President Donald Williams Jr., State Senate minority leader John McKinney, and House minority leader Lawrence Cafero, listen to residents of Newtown testify during a hearing of a legislative task force on gun violence and children's safety at Newtown High School in Newtown, Conn., Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2013. Connecticut lawmakers are in Newtown for the hearing, where those invited to give testimony include first responders and families with children enrolled at Sandy Hook Elementary. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)





 

Wednesday's hearing was in sharp contrast to a legislative subcommittee hearing held Monday at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford on gun laws, which lasted hours into the night and attracted hundreds of gun rights activists statewide. Many in the crowd at the Newtown High School auditorium, the site where President Barack Obama addressed residents after the shooting, wore stickers urging gun law changes.

Many voiced support for more background checks, annual gun permit renewals and increased availability of mental health services.

Michael Majeski of Newtown called it a "kneejerk reaction" to the shooting by focusing on gun laws. Rather, he said, they need to address mental illness, pointing out how the state has closed a nearby psychiatric hospital.

"If there is any commonsense or wisdom among the members of this committee, I would humbly ask you to focus on the underlying causes of these murders and not these symptoms," he said.

David Wheeler, whose 6-year-old son, Benjamin, was killed at Sandy Hook, said a more comprehensive system of identifying and monitoring individuals with mental distress needs to be created.

"That a person with these problems could live in a home where he had access to among the most powerful firearms available to non-military personnel is unacceptable," he said. "It doesn't matter to whom these weapons were registered. It doesn't matter if they were purchased legally. What matters is that it was far too easy for another mentally unbalanced, suicidal person who had violent obsessions to have easy access to unreasonably powerful weapons."

But Newtown resident Casey Khan warned that further restrictions on gun rights leave "good and lawful citizens at risk."

The public hearing was organized by the General Assembly's task force on gun violence prevention and children's safety. Lawmakers hope to vote on a package of new measures around the end of February.

One mother spoke of how her daughter survived the shooting.

Susie Ehrens said her daughter, Emma, escaped from Sandy Hook with a group of other first-graders when the shooter paused. She said Emma saw her friends and teacher slaughtered before she ran past lifeless bodies and half a mile down the road.

"The fact that my daughter survived and others didn't haunts me. That a spot where they were standing at that moment decided their fate that day, when evil (that) could have been stopped walked into their classrooms," Ehrens said.

Mary Ann Jacob, a Sandy Hook teacher, recalled hearing "hundreds of hundreds of gunshots that seemed to last forever" and crawling across the floor with 18 children to hide from the shooter.

Some in the audience didn't testify but said they felt it was important to attend.

Trish Keil and her twin sister, Helen Malyszka, two music teachers in Sandy Hook who knew many of the slain children, said they believe the tragedy will lead to change and won't be forgotten. Both support more gun control measures.

"I think it happened in Newtown for a reason, and I think there is going to be major change because Newtown will not stand by and let this go," Keil said. "This is just, it's too horrific. When it's starting to affect our children, something has to be done and it's going to change."

Republican Chuck Hagel faces GOP critics at hearing

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Republican Chuck Hagel, President Barack Obama's nominee for defense secretary, is facing GOP critics who have challenged his past comments on Israel, Iran and nuclear weapons.

By DONNA CASSATA, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Chuck Hagel, President Barack Obama's nominee for defense secretary, is facing GOP critics who have challenged his past comments on Israel, Iran and nuclear weapons.

The former two-term senator from Nebraska is the lone witness at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing Thursday that could be crucial in determining whether he will win Senate confirmation to succeed Defense Secretary Leon Panetta in Obama's second-term national security team. Two former committee chairmen — Democrat Sam Nunn and Republican John Warner — will introduce the nominee.

If confirmed, Hagel, a decorated Vietnam combat veteran, would be the first enlisted man and first Vietnam veteran to serve as defense secretary.

Hagel has the announced backing of about a dozen Democrats and the tacit support of dozens more who are unlikely to embarrass the president by defeating his Cabinet pick. One Republican — Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi — has said he will vote for his former colleague.

Six Republicans, including four members of the Armed Services panel, have said they will oppose Hagel's nomination. Sen. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma, the top GOP lawmaker on the committee, has said he and Hagel are "too philosophically opposed" on issues such as defense spending, nuclear weapons and the Middle East.

Crucial for Hagel will be the questioning by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. Hagel and McCain are fellow Vietnam veterans who once had a close relationship during their years in the Senate, but politics and Hagel's opposition to increased troop numbers in Iraq divided the two men.

McCain has praised Hagel's military service but said he had serious concerns about positions the nominee has taken on various issues. He said he is reserving judgment until after the hearing. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., earlier this month described Obama's selection as an "in-your-face" pick but was a bit less critical this week.

"Who are we getting — the guy today or the guy who said things before?" Graham said Tuesday after a 20-minute meeting with Hagel. Graham said he doesn't doubt Hagel's "personal integrity, but I do have real concerns about his policy positions."

The hearing will be the first time Hagel publicly addresses the barrage of criticism that he is not sufficiently pro-Israel or tough enough on Iran. In the past, Hagel has questioned the efficacy of unilateral sanctions on Iran, arguing that penalties in conjunction with international partners made more sense. He has also been criticized for his comments about the influence of a "Jewish lobby" and his view of gay rights.

He addressed several of the issues in a 112-page questionnaire to the committee in which he said his wartime experience would shape his decisions about using military force.

"I understand what it is like to be a soldier in war," wrote Hagel. "I also understand what happens when there is poor morale and discipline among the troops and a lack of clear objectives, intelligence and command and control from Washington. I believe that experience will help me as secretary of defense to ensure we maintain the best fighting force in the world, protect our men and women in uniform and ensure that we are cautious and certain when contemplating the use of force."

In his responses, Hagel adopted a hard line on Iran and its possible pursuit of a nuclear weapon. He echoed Obama's view that all options are feasible to stop Tehran, praised the rounds of penalties and warned of "severe and growing consequences" if Iran balks at international demands.

Questioned about all options, Hagel said, "If confirmed, I will focus intently on ensuring that the U.S. military is in fact prepared for any contingency."

He said that he would continue to put in place the "smart, unprecedented and effective sanctions against the Iranian regime" that Congress and the Obama administration have adopted in recent years.

The criticism of Hagel has surprised some of Hagel's strongest backers.

"This idea that's being propagated that he might be soft on adversaries. Chuck Hagel's not soft on anybody, particularly himself," said Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., a member of the Armed Services Committee, in a conference call with Hagel allies. "He drives hard. He's someone who searches for the right approach and the right policy."

Holyoke gets $325,000 from state to help students learn English in summer school; Springfield shares $45,000 grant

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The grants are necessary spending to invest in students, legislators said.

patrick.dean.JPG Gov. Deval L. Patrick, left wearing safety glasses, who announced education grants for Holyoke, tours Dean Technical High School in this 2009 photo.  

HOLYOKE -- The city has received a $325,000 state grant to run an accelerated summer program to help students for whom English isn't their first language to learn the language.

Springfield also is a partner with other organizations in a $45,000 state grant to run an English Language Learners’ Healthcare Career Academy at Commerce High School.

The grants are part of Gov. Deval L. Patrick's Gateway Cities Education Agenda, an effort to eliminate gaps that affect students living in poverty, students of color, students with disabilities, and those who are learning to speak English, a press release said.

Holyoke's English Language Learners Enrichment grant will provide instruction in English all day, four days a week, for four straight weeks.

The grant should help turn around data that show learning can be lost with the summer break in trying to acquire the English language, said Mayor Alex B. Morse, chairman of the city's School Committee.

"I think it's fantastic," Morse said. "I think it's a good piggyback on the (recent) increase in the graduation rate."

Holyoke's four-year graduation rate rose to 52.8 percent in 2012 from the previous year's 49.5 percent.

The grant is to be used to lead students in small groups, specific-project workshops, and weekly field trips to institutions of higher education and community organizations, the state press release said.

Partners in Holyoke's grant are the Connections 21st Century after School Program, the Enchanted Circle Theater, and the Western Massachusetts Writing Project, the press release said.

Holyoke also received a $45,000 Career Academies Planning Grant from the state to develop a program at Holyoke High School focused on health, information technology, and financial and business planning, the press release said.

Partners with Holyoke in that grant are Holyoke Community College; the University of Massachusetts at Amherst; Mount Holyoke College, in South Hadley; Hampshire College, in Amherst; and Westfield State University.

State Sen. Michael R. Knapik, R-Westfield, and state Rep. Aaron M. Vega, D-Holyoke, said the grants were necessary investments in students.

“As we continue to concentrate on the task of job creation here in the commonwealth, it is crucial that we remember a state’s economy is only as strong as its ability to prepare a relevant workforce,” Knapik said in a press release with Vega.

"This grant money is critical to achieving the results our parents, educators and students demand," Vega said.

In Springfield, the English Language Learners’ Healthcare Career grant is intended to "help meet the growing needs of the local healthcare workforce and promote diversity within the allied science and healthcare fields in the greater Springfield area and Western Massachusetts," the press release said.

Partners in that grant are the Regional Employment Board of Hampden County, the Healthcare Workforce Partnership of Western Massachusetts, Springfield Technical Community College, and American International College, in Springfield, the press release said.

Beyonce to finally face media in New Orleans

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Beyonce is expected to face the media Thursday as she previews her halftime performance at the Super Bowl. But the focus will likely be on her performance at that other big event earlier this month.

By NEKESA MUMBI MOODY, AP Entertainment Writer

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Beyonce is expected to face the media Thursday as she previews her halftime performance at the Super Bowl. But the focus will likely be on her performance at that other big event earlier this month.

The superstar hasn't spoken publicly since it was alleged that she lip-synched her rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at President Barack Obama's inauguration last week. Her critically praised performance came under scrutiny less than a day later when a representative from the U.S. Marine Band said she wasn't singing live and the band's accompanying performance was taped. Shortly after, the group backed off its initial statement and said no one could tell if she was singing live or not.

It's expected that the halftime performance will be a main focus of her afternoon press conference, even though she'd likely rather concentrate on questions about her set list for Sunday and her upcoming HBO documentary, "Life Is but a Dream." The documentary is being shown for the media just before Beyonce speaks and takes questions, as expected.

There has been plenty of speculation about Beyonce's Super Bowl performance, including reports there would be a Destiny's Child reunion with Michelle Williams and Kelly Rowland (Williams has shot down such speculation). Some are also curious about whether her husband, Jay-Z, will join her onstage, as they often do for each other's shows.

Beyonce has teased photos and video of herself preparing for the show, which will perhaps be the biggest audience of her career. Last year, Madonna's halftime performance was the most-watched Super Bowl halftime performance ever, with an average of 114 million viewers. It garnered more viewers than the game itself, which was the most-watched U.S. TV event in history.

Democratic US Rep. Stephen Lynch kicks off Massachusetts Senate bid in Springfield

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Assuming both Lynch and Ed Markey stay in the race, they will face off in a Democratic primary on April 30 to determine who will move on to face the Republican challenger.

SPRINGFIELD -- O'Brien's Corner pub in East Springfield may be a haul from the streets of South Boston, but it was the backdrop Democratic Southie native Stephen F. Lynch chose Thursday for the kick-off of his bid for U.S. Senate.

Speaking to members of the media, U.S. Rep. Lynch officially threw his hat into the race to serve out the remainder of Secretary of State John Kerry's term representing Massachusetts in the U.S. Senate.

Lynch, who represents the 8th Congressional District, said his blue-collar roots and his moderate positions make him a more viable candidate than fellow Congressman Ed Markey of the 5th congressional District, who has already won some mainstream Democratic endorsements. Lynch also said he believed he had a better shot at the seat than former Republican Sen. Scott Brown.

"You have a polarized system; being a moderate democrat and a common-sense democrat, I think that can help," Lynch told those who gathered for the event.

Lynch acknowledged that some believe he has an uphill battle against Markey to win his party's nomination. "But the fight is worth fighting," Lynch told reporters. "We have a lot at stake."

Lynch said his strong record on environmental and labor issues should appeal to progressive Massachusetts voters.

Former Ward 7 chairwoman Kathleen Murphy of Springfield, who said she has yet to make up her mind in the young race, said Lynch's blue-collar background appealed to her.

"I have great respect for humble beginnings," she said, adding that she is wary of the support Markey has already garnered from Massachusetts Democrats. "I don't like anybody to be canonized for the job."

While Markey is considered a liberal Democrat, Lynch is classified as a more moderate member of his party.

Lynch opposes abortion and supported the 2005 Republican fight to compel the courts to intervene in the case of Terri Schiavo, to keep the woman alive in a Florida hospital.

Although he has been an advocate for health care reforms, Lynch opposed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) as he felt it didn't do enough to compel insurance companies to drive down costs. Lynch also broke party ranks to support the Iraq War in 2002, and is an overall advocate of U.S. intervention in the Middle East.

Assuming both Lynch and Markey stay in the race, they will face off in a Democratic primary on April 30 to determine who will move on to face the Republican challenger.

As far as the GOP is concerned, former Sen. Scott Brown, who lost his seat to Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren in November, is considered a likely contender. Brown has not yet officially entered the race.

A survey released by the Democratic Public Policy Polling group indicated that while Brown's name recognition is higher than that of Markey or Lynch, the two men could boost their favorability rankings through a well-played campaign over the next few months.

From Springfield, Lynch took his tour back east with stops in Worcester, a rally at the Ironworkers Local 7 hall in South Boston and an appearance at Kerry's farewell speech to be delivered at Boston's historic Faneuil Hall.



Staff Writers George Graham and Robert Rizzuto contributed to this report.

Fact check: Gun-control claims miss target

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The intensifying gun-control debate has given rise to sloppy claims on both sides.

By CALVIN WOODWARD, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The intensifying gun-control debate has given rise to sloppy claims on both sides.

Here's a sampling, with the first two examples from the Senate Judiciary Committee's hearing on guns Wednesday, and the third from Vice President Joe Biden's online video chat last week during a Google Plus forum.

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IOWA SEN. CHARLES GRASSLEY, the top Republican on the committee: "The 1994 assault weapon ban did not stop Columbine. The Justice Department found the ban ineffective."

THE FACTS: The 2004 study conducted for the Justice Department did not conclude the decade-old ban was a failure or a success. The nuanced report found that the effects of the ban "have yet to be fully realized" and it might take years to see results directly attributable to the prohibition on certain weapons and large capacity magazines. The ban expired later in 2004.

The study's author, Christopher S. Koper, then of the University of Pennsylvania, considered the restrictions modest and speculated that they would have similarly measured results — perhaps as much as a 5 percent decline in gunshot victimization over time if the ban were kept in effect.

His main finding: There were not enough statistics and time to understand the impact of the ban and "it may take many years for the effects of modest, incremental policy changes to be fully felt, a reality that both researchers and policy makers should heed."

The study made no recommendation whether the ban should be renewed. But it said that if the ban expired, it was "possible, and perhaps probable" that new assault weapons and large capacity magazines coming into the market "will eventually be used to commit mass murder."

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WAYNE LaPIERRE, executive vice president of the National Rifle Association: "I think without any doubt, if you look at why our Founding Fathers put it (the Second Amendment) there, they had lived under the tyranny of King George and they wanted to make sure that these free people in this new country would never be subjugated again and have to live under tyranny. I also think, though, that what people all over the country fear today is being abandoned by their government. If a tornado hits, if a hurricane hits, if a riot occurs, that they're gonna be out there alone. And the only way they're going to protect themselves in the cold and the dark, when they're vulnerable, is with a firearm. And I think that indicates how relevant and essential the Second Amendment is in today's society to fundamental human survival."

SEN. DICK DURBIN, Illinois Democrat: "Well, Chief Johnson, you've heard it. The belief of NRA is, the Second Amendment has to give American citizens the firepower to fight back against you, against our government."

THE FACTS: Durbin mischaracterized LaPierre's statement in this exchange, which also involved James Johnson, Baltimore (Md.) County police chief.

LaPierre drew a distinction between what he saw as the original purpose of the Second Amendment and a contemporary fear that the government will abandon citizens, so that they must be able to protect themselves against criminals after a disaster. His statement was not a call to arms against the government.

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Congress Gun Control


In this Jan. 25, 2013, photo, Vice President Joe Biden gestures during a round table discussion on gun violence at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Va. The panelists included officials who worked on the aftermath of the Virginia Tech shootings. Michelle Obama has a new look, both in person and online, and with the president's re-election, she has four more years as first lady, too. The first lady is trying to figure out what comes next for this self-described "mom in chief" who also is a champion of healthier eating, an advocate for military families, a fitness buff and the best-selling author of a book about her White House garden. For certain, she'll press ahead with her well-publicized efforts to reduce childhood obesity and rally the country around its service members. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)





 

BIDEN: "Let me give you an example: 98 percent, according to a New York Times poll, 98 percent of the American people believe that there should be tighter controls on who can own a gun."

THE FACTS: It would be a miracle if 98 percent of Americans agreed on anything. And by any measure, that many don't agree on guns.

In a New York Times/CBS News poll, 54 percent said "gun control laws should be made more strict," 34 percent said they should be left as they are and 9 percent said they should be less strict. The poll also found that 92 percent would favor "a federal law requiring background checks on all potential gun buyers," a result on par with the level of support that proposal gets in other polls. Biden made the comment last week at a Google Plus forum.

How elusive is 98 percent agreement?

Americans came close after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. In October 2001, Gallup found that 9/11 mastermind Osama bin Laden had an unfavorable rating of 97 percent.

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Associated Press writers Jennifer Agiesta and Alicia A. Caldwell contributed to this report.

How realistic should school shooting drills be?

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"I want to see my kids! Bang! Bang!" the man shouted as he stormed into the front office of a South Carolina elementary school and pointed a handgun at a secretary and custodian.

By CAROLYN THOMPSON, Associated Press

"I want to see my kids! Bang! Bang!" the man shouted as he stormed into the front office of a South Carolina elementary school and pointed a handgun at a secretary and custodian. Both went limp at the verbal gunshots, and the "shooter," a police officer taking part in a school safety drill, continued his rampage.

While an assistant principal dialed 911, the gunman took aim at two students and their principal. All fell to the floor with bloody, fake wounds.

"We are in lockdown," announced a woman over the public address system at Howe Hall Howe Hall Arts-Infused Magnet School in Goose Creek, S.C. Students and teachers hunkered silently in darkened classrooms away from closed blinds and locked doors, while police officers with rifles worked their way through hallways decorated with student art.

This is the extent to which safety is being practiced in schools today. While the end of the Cold War removed the duck-and-cover exercises that had students crouching beneath desks under threat of an atomic bomb, the intent is the same: to protect against the unimaginable. But not all experts agree on how realistic the exercises need to be.

"It's kind of scary. At least the kids know they're preparing for it," said parent Brandee Davidson, whose 6- and 10-year-old daughters took part in the Howe Hall intruder drill.

Most states started to require school emergency management plans after the 1999 shooting at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., though the types of scenarios and preparation vary widely, according to data compiled by the Education Commission of the States, which tracks state policy trends.

North Dakota, for example, added lockdown drills to the required fire, tornado and other disaster drills in 2011, while Minnesota has required at least five yearly lockdown drills since 2006. Various districts in Illinois, Tennessee, North Carolina and Washington are among those that have used mock shooters to heighten the reality.

St. Bernard School in New Washington, Ohio, was eerily quiet as the police chief and principal walked the halls checking doors during a January lockdown drill on the one-month anniversary of Newtown. The children sat cross-legged in darkened coat closets before returning to their lessons.

In the upstate New York town of Hudson Falls, police in body armor carried unloaded weapons and negotiated with an acting hostage-taker Monday during a drill at an elementary school, including younger students, in what had been a middle- and high-school exercise before December's shooting of 20 first-graders and six adults in Newtown, Conn.

On Wednesday, an intruder drill at Cary-Grove High School in Illinois featured a blank fired from a starter pistol.

Rather than frighten, the drills are intended to reassure students and their parents that everyone in the school would know what to do in an emergency, administrators and safety experts said.

A study in the School Psychology Review examined the effects of crisis drills on students and found that they increased their knowledge of what to do — but not their anxiety levels or perceptions of safety.

The 2007 study, which involved fourth-, fifth- and sixth-graders, measured reactions after a relatively calm lockdown drill that didn't use guns and props, co-author Amanda Nickerson said Wednesday. She's not convinced extreme realism would yield the same results.

"I don't think that's necessary, and I would think it could raise people's anxiety unnecessarily," said Nickerson, an associate professor of educational psychology at the University at Buffalo.

Lockdowns and evacuations can be explained in a manner that does not create fear and panic, said consultant Kenneth Trump, president of the National School Safety and Security Services.

"We don't need to teach kids to attack armed intruders by throwing pencils and books at a gunman or to have a SWAT team at the kindergarten doors, but it's not unreasonable for school leaders to make sure that students, teachers and support staff know what to do in an emergency," he said.

Brandee Davidson's 10-year-old said she and her classmates were startled when two police officers burst through the door with guns at the October exercise at Howe Hall, even though they were told about the lockdown drill in advance.

"Whoa, we did not expect that at all," Rylee Davidson said during a phone interview with her mother's consent. "It was kind of scary."

Her 6-year-old sister, Harper, said that she "was a little nervous" when she saw the fake wounds on the boys who were part of the drill, but that both she and her sister got the point: "So we would know what to do if it really happened, if an intruder came to our school."

The Howe Hall exercise ended in a flurry of fake gunfire created by officers yelling "bang-bang-bang" and a "suspect's down" radio dispatch.

"Unfortunately, it's a sign of the times," said principal Christopher Swetckie. Pupils are told it's like hide-and-seek, he said, and a placard system is used to notify law enforcement if there is an injured person in the room.

"I hate that in this day and age that you have to prepare for these types of events," he said.

Brandee Davidson said she didn't talk much with her daughters about their school's drill in October. But two months later, after Newtown, it suddenly left the realm of routine.

"We sat down and said it's important that if they ever have another intruder drill, please make sure they do whatever their teacher says because their teacher will keep them safe," she said.

She said she believes every school should have such run-throughs.

"On the one hand, you don't want to scare the children," said Dr. Ronald Stephens, who advises districts as executive director of the National School Safety Center, "but many things you would do for a fire drill would be consistent with what would be done for a crisis drill."

"I've rarely seen anyone reach for the plan in the middle of a crisis," Stephens said. "They have to know it."

Trump concurred, recommending lockdowns be practiced at least twice a year at different times during the day.

"School crisis plans that sit upon a shelf," he said, "are not worth the paper they are written upon."

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Thompson reported from Buffalo, N.Y.


Amherst Zoning Board allows Gilreath Manor's appeal of unrelated tenant bylaw to be withdrawn

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Zoning board agrees to the withdrawal but member questioned whether the fines could be greater.

122112 gilreath manor apartments.JPG Amherst officials had discovered violations of town bylaws at Gilreath Manor Apartments on Hobart Lane.  

AMHERST - The Zoning Board of Appeals agreed to the withdrawal of an appeal but not before discussing the issues surrounding the case.

Lawrence Faber ,representing Grandonico Properties, requested that his appeal of fines levied against his client for violating a town bylaw that bans more than four unrelated people from living together be withdrawn.

Farber had initially said that tenants, not his client, were responsible and a hearing on his appeal opened in December.

But in a letter to the Zoning Board of Appeals, Farber wrote, “As we are now acknowledging that said fines could be assessed to the landlord under current bylaws, nothing is left to appeal.”

But it was not an automatic vote to allow the appeal to drop, said Senior Planner Jeffrey Bagg. Instead, information submitted to the board was discussed and board chairman Eric Beal questioned whether the landlord could be fined additionally because he thought “the evidence was pretty egregious.”

Based on emails and documentation submitted to the board, it appeared that the landlord knew about and encouraged tenants at Gilreath Manor to hide evidence they were violating the town bylaw.

But other board members said that the fines had already been paid. The company had paid $2,400 in fines to the town, according to the collectors office.

The vote to allow the appeal to be withdrawn had to be unanimous. Eventually it was, Bagg said.

Building Commissioner Robert Morra had been looking at the case as a kind of test to determine whether the Zoning Board of Appeals agreed with his enforcement measures.

“I feel the board fully supported my efforts - the hearing process clearly revealed that the facts in this case were indisputable,” Morra wrote in an email. “This was a very successful enforcement action.”

He said meanwhile, that he has settled an agreement with Grandonico “that calls for substantial improvements to all 14 units at Gilreath Manor and puts into place procedures for Grandonico to inform current and future residents of the town regulations regarding occupancy limits.”

He said tenants from a couple of units that were in violation of the bylaw have since moved off the property.

The violations of the town bylaw, in existence for decades but largely unenforced, were discovered after firefighters responded to a Sept. 13 fire in a basement apartment at found five unrelated people living there.

Morra said after a subsequent inspection he found similar violations in six of the 14 units at Gilreath Manor on Hobart Lane.

Springfield Schools Superintendent Daniel Warwick appoints Patrick Roach and Anthony Soto to top finance positions

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Roach was promoted to the chief financial officer position, while Soto was named the School Department's new acting budget director.

020113 patrick roach anthony soto.jpg Patrick Roach, left, and Anthony Soto  

SPRINGFIELD — Superintendent of Schools Daniel J. Warwick has announced the appointment of a new acting chief financial officer and a new acting budget director from existing personnel.

Patrick A. Roach, of Springfield, was promoted to the chief financial officer position, replacing Timothy J. Plante. Plante recently left the job due to his appointment by Mayor Domenic J. Sarno as the city’s acting chief administrative and financial officer, replacing Lee Erdmann.

Anthony W. Soto was appointed as the School Department’s new acting budget director.

Roach’s annual salary is $105,446. He previously worked for three years for the School Department, including serving as assistant chief financial officer since 2011, and previously as budget director.

Prior to the School Department, Roach worked for the city’s Finance Department as a senior financial analyst and project manager (2009-10), as a business process analyst (2008-09) and as a financial accountant (2005-08).

Warwick said he is confident in Roach’s ability to financially lead the district.

“He has worked side-by-side with T.J. (Plante) and I am confident that we will have a seamless transition,” Warwick said. “He is skilled, knowledgeable and possesses a talent and passion for the work he does. I am thrilled to welcome him as acting CFO.”

Roach, in the School Department’s prepared release, said he is “proud of our team and look forward to continuing the work.”

Soto has worked for the School Department since 2007 as a senior financial analyst. His annual salary is $80,582.

The School Department resurrected the position of budget director this year by eliminating the position of assistant chief financial officer at an overall savings, School Finance Chairman Christopher Collins said.

Roach, as chief financial officer, oversees the School Business Department and has the lead role in developing the annual budget and linking with City Hall and state and federal agencies, among other duties, according to the job description. Soto, as budget director, oversees daily operations and regularly monitors revenues and expenditures, among other duties.

“I look forward to continue improving business procedures that help facilitate increases to our district-wide priority of high academic achievement,” Soto said in the prepared release.

Soto has a master's of science degree and a bachelor's of science in accounting degree from the University of Massachusetts Isenberg School of Management.

Gardner Whitney of Westfield fails to get bail lowered in child pornography case

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The prosecutor wanted bail increased to $100,000 cash.

SPRINGFIELD – A defense lawyer for Gardner A. Whitney Jr. tried unsuccessfully Friday to get the 61-year-old former Melha Shriners official’s bail reduced from $25,000 cash or $250,000 surety.

Whitney, of Westfield, was the local Melha Shriners chapter’s 2011 potentate, or president.

gardner whitney.jpg Gardner A. Whitney Jr. 

He has pleaded innocent in Westfield District Court to four counts of possession of child pornography and seven other related charges.

When police first searched Whitney’s home, they discovered hundreds of images on electronic devices of girls from 7 to 16 years old, some posed, some thought to be taken of girls unaware, prosecutors said.

Other charges include assault and battery on a child under 14; three counts of lasciviously posing or exhibiting a child in the nude; and three counts of photographing an unsuspecting nude person.

The grand master of the Masons Grand Lodge in Boston has suspended Whitney’s membership pending the resolution of the matter in court, according to Allen G. Zippin, a spokesman for the Melha Shriners.

The Melha Shriners are a division of the Masons fraternal organization.

Westfield District Court Judge Philip Contant on Jan. 23 had set bail at $25,000 cash or $250,000 surety, despite prosecutors asking for bail of $50,000 cash.

Although Whitney has not been indicted in Hampden Superior Court and the case remains in Westfield District Court, the law allows for anyone to appeal a District Court bail decision to a Superior Court judge.

Defense lawyer Dean Goldblatt asked Hampden Superior Court Judge C. Jeffrey Kinder to reduce bail for Whitney, who is being held in the Hampden County Correctional Center in Ludlow, to $10,000.

Assistant District Attorney Melissa Doran asked Kinder to increase the bail amount to $100,000.

She said since Whitney’s arrest it appears he has been withdrawing money from joint funds he held with his wife. She said if Whitney posts bail and is released, he could be a flight risk.

Goldblatt said Whitney is not a flight risk and has deep roots in the community and no history of violence or drugs.

Kinder, in keeping the bail the same, noted Contant had ordered if Whitney posts bail, he must surrender his passport.

White House says Obama will watch Super Bowl, but doesn't say who he's rooting for

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Obama hasn't said who he's rooting for when the 49ers and the Ravens square off.

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is hoping for a close game in this year's Super Bowl.

White House spokesman Jay Carney says the president will watch Sunday's game and expects it to be highly entertaining, even though his beloved Chicago Bears aren't playing.

Obama hasn't said who he's rooting for when the 49ers and the Ravens square off. Last year, when Obama was running for re-election, he didn't pick sides, although he honored the victorious Giants later at the White House, as the president does with championship teams.

Carney says he's not sure who else may watch the game with Obama. In previous years, elected officials and prominent entertainers have joined Obama and the first lady at the White House to watch the big game.

West Springfield Hard Rock casino project officials to make presentation including new traffic details

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More information regarding traffic at the casino resort project planned for an undeveloped section of the Big E grounds is expected to be released.

WEST SPRINGFIELD — Developers of a $700 million to $800 million casino resort project proposed for the Eastern States Exposition fairgrounds will make a presentation before the Town Council on Feb. 11 that will include new information on traffic.

“We’ll have some new information on traffic and some of the work we have done,” Mark Rivers, president of the Bronson Companies, the developers and consultants on the project, said Friday.

Residents as well as officials in neighboring Agawam have raised questions about whether a casino at the fairgrounds would draw so much traffic during the Big E that it will create more traffic tie-ups. Developers of the project have pledged they will come up with a proposal that will alleviate existing traffic problems.

Town Council President Kathleen A. Bourque said Friday that casino developers approached the council about making a presentation. She has set a special council meeting for the presentation on Feb. 11 at 7 p.m. in the municipal building.

She said representatives from Hard Rock International, the Bronson Companies and the Eastern States Exposition will make a presentation similar to what they unveiled during the rollout of the project, which took place in mid-January, but may include some new information as well.

“I think it is really important. I hope we have a lot of people there,” she said.

In addition, Hard Rock Hotel & Casino of New England will make a presentation during a Wicked Wednesday social event hosted by the West of the River Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Chez Josef in Agawam. The event will be free for chamber members and $10 for nonmembers.

The Wicked Wednesday gatherings are hosted by various businesses and restaurants to bring members and nonmembers together for social networking. For more information about the chamber event, call it at (413) 426-3880 or email it at info@ourwrc.com.

South Hadley orders halt to repairs on Senior Center after inspectors identify problems with construction

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In a letter to selectmen South Hadley Town Planner Richard Harris alleges that the engineering firm has displayed “a lack of respect for” South Hadley building commissioner Brenda Church who began work on December 3 - when she almost immediately found problems with the project.

South Hadley town seal.jpg  

SOUTH HADLEY - The town has ordered a halt to the half-million dollar construction job at South Hadley Senior Center after state and town inspectors discovered problems with the work of the private engineering and architectural firm overseeing the project, Town Planner Richard Harris told selectmen at Tuesday’s meeting.

He has characterized the problems as suggestive of “negligence.”

And in a letter to selectmen Harris alleges that the engineering firm has displayed “a lack of respect for” South Hadley building commissioner Brenda Church who began work on December 3 - when she almost immediately found problems with the project. The town had been without a building inspector since Steve Reno’s departure in April.

Russo Barr Associates, Inc. of Burlington is the engineering consulting firm that designed the plans to repair the senior center. Russo Barr is in charge of the construction work being done by M D M Engineering Company, Inc. of Dudley.

The company did not respond to multiple calls placed Thursday and Friday to their Burlington office.

Construction had been projected to be completed this month. Harris now says work would not begin anew until March. The center is currently in use.

The building “is currently safe for use,” Harris told the board. In response to a question by selectmen about when the work would resume, Harris said: “I hope work would resume [by] March.”

In his memorandum to selectmen Harris said the town’s building commissioner “and the state Inspector have identified numerous building code and permitting issues which have also led to identification of a number of construction and management/inspection concerns.”

Among the concerns are work done without obtaining permits, incomplete and incorrectly prepared permit applications, improper installation of roof heating, ventilation and air conditioning units and failure to provide all site visit reports, Harris told selectmen.

“The failure to check on the permits suggests negligence,” he told selectmen in the memorandum.

Most of the $561,000 repair project to replace the roof, perform structural repairs and upgrade the heating, ventilation and air conditioning system is from government block grants. Town meeting approved $100,000 for the work and to date $10,000 of that is expected to underwrite the work, Harris said.

The senior center is housed at the former Woodlawn School, built in 1924. There was an addition to the 12,000 square foot one-story wood structure in 1956. The 89 year old building was last renovated in the 1990’s.

When selectmen asked if any work might have to be re-done, Harris said: “We don’t know."

He also told selectmen the construction company often leaves the senior center a mess and fails to pick up after itself.

"Examples include. . . leaving the project site with a half doezn piles of debris sitting on the floor and pool tables, etc.," Harris wrote in his memorandum to selectmen.

Haiti is improving slowly said Western Massachusetts residents who have been assisting the country

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One local organization is supporting a hospital in Haiti while another is assisting to rebuild a school destroyed in the earthquake.

CONASPEH school Students stand in front of new classrooms at the CONASPEH School in Port-au-Prince Haiti  

Three years after an earthquake devastated Haiti, a school assisted by Western Massachusetts residents has been rebuilt, a hospital supported by an area organization is expanding and more local residents are getting involved in helping the country.

As the anniversary of the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake passed, Western Massachusetts volunteers said rebuilding in Haiti is sporadic, with many still living in tents and in need of food and medical care. But they have seen some improvements and their organizations are thriving.

One of the most noticeable improvements is at the CONASPEH School, in Port-au-Prince, which has been rebuilt and is bigger and better. During the earthquake the four-story building collapsed killing at least 20 people including a number of nursing students.

At the same time the Ludlow-based CRUDEM foundation, which supports the Hospital Sacre Coeur in Milot has expanded the facility. A number of cottage industries have also popped up around the hospital, improving the quality of life for people who live in surrounding villages.

Meanwhile volunteers from American International College, Westover Air Reserve Base and others have started to assist the country.

The earthquake killed about 316,000, according to government estimates, and destroyed countless buildings in the capital city of Port-au-Prince, devastating what was already one of the poorest countries in the world.

“To some extent that (improvements) came from the crucible of the earthquake. We were there to save lives but now it is to create a future,” said Timothy Traynor, of Wilbraham, a volunteer for the CRUDEM Foundation who has worked in Haiti for months at a time since the earthquake.

Traynor was in Haiti on Jan. 12, 2010 developing a plan to expand the hospital, which had been established at least 20 years ago. Milot was not hit hard by the 7.0 magnitude earthquake but the hospital soon became inundated as people learned it was one of the few places in the country where medical care was available. It set up large tents and took over a nearby school to increase its space and hundreds of doctors, nurses and other medical personnel flew from the United States to Milot to augment the Haitian staff.

Three years later the hospital has seen major changes.

“We have begun a pretty serious upgrading of the facility and improving the infrastructure issues,” Traynor said. “There is a bigger focus on women’s health which is a little unique in Haiti.”

In the past year a new electrical plant with diesel generators has been installed which can power the hospital at all times, since the delivery of electrical power is so sporadic in Haiti. CRUDEM also dug a 150-foot-deep well to will provide potable power to the complex. Most of the wells in Haiti are hand dug and 40 to 50 feet deep so they are easily contaminated, Traynor said.

278.jpg American International College Professor Ayesha Ali and one of her nursing students Amanda Flowers work with a CONASPEH nursing student working at a well child assessment clinic in the school.  

The agency runs the hospital completely on donations and a small amount it raises in fees for patients. One big change this year is the Holy Name Medical Center in New Jersey has agreed to manage the hospital in Haiti, he said.

“We don’t survive without donations. It doesn’t have any government support,” he said. “We spend $3 million annually and a study shows the equivalent cost in the states is $85 million,” he said.

CRUDEM this year additionally raised about $400,000 to create a new maternity ward that includes a surgical area for Cesarean sections and has also raised $100,000 to expand a free-standing clinic attached to the hospital, he said.

At the same time the organization is finishing construction on a new 2,500-square-foot children’s center which will focus on improving nutrition and working with parents and other non-governmental organizations to attack the problem, he said.

“The other thing we are contemplating this year is we are looking at building a family center, something like a Ronald McDonald center, but not as fancy, for 40 to 50 people,” he said. “It would be a facility where people can bathe and they can cook.”

Traditionally when a family member is being treated at the hospital, relatives accompany them and provide meals and basic services such as helping the patient bathe. But is there is no place for families to stay so they end up sleeping outside on the ground. The new facility is estimated to cost between $100,000 and $150,000 to build, he said.

Perhaps it’s biggest and most unique effort is the help local residents create small businesses that allow them too make goods they can sell to others in the country. The idea for the effort grew up around the hospital as local farmers began growing and selling food to the facility and others were hired and trained in construction skills, Traynor said.

The organization is receiving a donation of old shipping containers that can be used to house equipment and as shops for small village businesses. In some cases the villages will operate businesses as a co-op where residents work together and share profits.

Haiti chicken farm A small chicken farm created in Port-au-Prince through micro loans provided to CONASPEH School graduates.  

One business idea is to provide a mango grower with a dehydrator and generator to preserve excess fruit for sale later, Traynor said.

“The concept is they can take things that are common in Haiti and produce a product and it will be sold in the society,” he said.

Because of government corruption, it works best to have people trade in their own country than to try to arrange sales overseas, he said.

Traynor said he believes the cottage industries would be best set up in villages so Haitians can keep their strong traditions and avoid moves to the cities where there are few jobs.

Mark H. Pohlman, a retired physician and a member of the First Church of Christ in Longmeadow, visited Haiti in early January to see the progress made on the CONASPEH School. The school, which has kindergarten through grade 12 and college nursing and seminary programs, is supported by a council of about 5,000, ministries.

There is no free public education in Haiti so First Church got involved years ago by providing scholarships for families who could not afford to send their children to school. Since then volunteers have been visiting and donating needed equipment. Some with medical backgrounds have also taught classes and offered their expertise to help the nursing school.

Pohlman has visited at least once a year and returned from a trip days before the third anniversary. He said he saw some improvements including the rebuilt airport and the razing of the presidential palace, which had been seriously damaged in the earthquake.

More rubble has been removed, tent cities have been moved from the airport and land surrounding the presidential palace and streets are cleaner, he said.

“There are still pockets of tent cities but they are smaller and scattered through Port-au-Prince,” he said.

Far more progress has been made within the school. After the earthquake students were taught under large tents. Now the school has been rebuilt and is larger than it ever was. It enrollment, which was about 400 before the earthquake now has about 750 students and they hope to grow to as many as 1,300, he said.

One of the recent focuses is to get the nursing school licensed as a baccalaureate program through the equivalent of the Department of Health in Haiti, Pohlman said.

“We are assisting the director to get it licensed. There have to be certain things in place,” Pohlman said.

To meet the standards the school has to have a library with appropriate books, a cafeteria and rest rooms, which the new school has. Volunteers are now working to get medical beds delivered, science equipment for the nursing lab and other things to improve the training, he said.

During the group’s recent visit, volunteers helped set up computers and taught high school seniors and others how to use them, Pohlman said.

Similar to CRUDEM’s work in starting cottage industries, CONASPEH has started offering micro loans of $500 to help some of their high school graduates start small businesses. He said he toured a small chicken farm that one graduate had started.

“We are really looking to do self-projects,” he said. “One started a fish farm and another started a mango tree plantation.”

American International College associate professor Ayesha Ali, whose expertise is in public health nursing, started getting involved with the CONASPEH school shortly after the earthquake and visited the school for the third time on the trip with Pohlman. Having gone through multiple accreditation processes in Springfield, Ali said she is advising the director on how to go through the approval process.

While Ali is acting as an individual, she has taken students with her twice including this January, to visit the country and share their experiences with the Haitian students. She and volunteers in the Springfield nursing program have also been running “cafe Haiti” to raise money which recently purchased the needed hospital beds for the school.

This year she and the two groups of students ran a pediatric health clinic where they did growth and development screenings collected health data, did vision tests and other things for 60 younger children in the school to help teach the students as well as provide health care to the children.

They brought down equipment such as scales to be used in the clinic. When they left, they donated the medical supplies to the school so the work can continue, she said.

Ali said she would like to see student and even faculty exchanges. She now uses Skype monthly to share information with the nursing director and she said she sees it being used in the future to deliver lectures to students oversees.

“I think over time I would love to develop a partnership (between AIC and CONASPEH) but that is all in the future. It is in the very early stages,” she said.


Dow Jones industrial average closes above 14,000 for 1st time since 2007

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It was just a number on a board, but it was enough to raise the hopes of some investors and cause others concern about an overheated market.

By CHRISTINA REXRODE

NEW YORK — The Dow Jones industrial average closed above 14,000 on Friday for the first time in more than five years.

It was just a number on a board, but it was enough to raise the hopes of some investors and cause others concern about an overheated market. And it brought reminders of a different era, back before the financial crisis rocked the world economy.

The Dow, a stock market index that is traditionally considered a benchmark for how the entire market is faring, had been rising fairly steadily for about a month. On Friday, strong auto sales and optimism about U.S. job growth pushed it over the mark. The Dow is now just 155 points away from its record close.

"There's a newfound enthusiasm for the equity market," said Jim Russell, regional investment director at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis.

But market watchers were divided over what the Dow milestone — or even what a potential new all-time high — really means. To some, it's an important booster to hearts and minds, making investors feel optimistic and thus more willing to bet on the market.

"The Dow touching 14,000, it matters psychologically," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital in New York. "It attracts smaller investors."

And those investors, until recently, had been shying away from stocks. Since April 2011, investors have pulled more cash out of U.S. stock mutual funds than they've put in, according to the Investment Company Institute. In the past three weeks, though, that trend has reversed, which could make January the first month in nearly two years where stock-focused funds had a net inflow.

To others, though, Dow 14,000 is nothing but a number, a sign more of how traders feel than of the economy. And it's not even the best number on the board, some traders say. Professional investors usually pay more heed to the Standard & Poor's main index, which tracks 500 companies compared to the Dow's 30. The Dow garners attention, they say, because it's more familiar to the general public.

Joe Gordon, managing partner at Gordon Asset Management in North Carolina, wasn't celebrating Friday. He thinks the gains won't last. The fact that small investors are finally piling back in the stock market, he said, is not a reason for optimism but a sign that it's getting overhyped and due to fall.

After the Dow hit its all-time record in 2007, it fell almost steadily for the next year and a half. It lost more than half its value before starting to tick back up again.

"It is good trivia to talk about on television and the radio," Gordon said, referring to the 14,000 mark. "It's meaningless to the average professional." And for workers still unemployed by the financial crisis, he said, "it really means nothing to them."

If there is dissent over what Dow 14,000 signifies, what's undeniable is that it's a rarefied event. Before Friday, the Dow had closed above 14,000 just nine times in its history. The first time was in July 2007; the rest were in October of that year.

The last time the Dow closed that mark was Oct. 12, 2007, when it settled at 14,093.08. It had reached its all-time record, 14,164.53, three days before that.

For the average investor, that was all back when the stock market still seemed like a party. Housing prices were starting to ebb but hadn't cratered. Jobs were abundant, with unemployment at 4.7 percent — compared to 7.9 percent now. Lehman Brothers still existed. So did Bear Stearns, Wachovia and Washington Mutual.

The Dow ended Friday 149.21 points higher to 14,009.79. The other indexes were also up. The S&P 500 rose 15.06 to 1,513.17. The Nasdaq composite index was up 36.97 to 3,179.10.

Auto sales helped. Toyota, Ford, GM and Chrysler all reported double-digit gains for January.

The government jobs report that pushed stocks forward was mixed, but traders chose to focus on the positive. The U.S. said it added 157,000 jobs in January, which was in line with expectations. Unemployment inched up to 7.9 percent from 7.8 percent in December. Many economists, though, were encouraged because the government now says that hiring over the past year was higher than originally thought.

The jobs number is based on a survey of employers. The unemployment rate is based on a separate survey of households, which is why they can diverge.

Among stocks making big moves:

—Drugmaker Merck fell more than 3 percent, down $1.42 to $41.83. Its fourth-quarter profit suffered because of competition from generic medicines against its blockbuster allergy drug Singulair.

— Insurance company MetLife rose more than 2 percent, up 86 cents to $38.20, after saying it plans to buy the largest private pension fund administrator in Chile.

— Zoetis, an animal health business that Pfizer just spun off, made its debut on the stock market. It shot up 19 percent, rising $5.01 to $31.01.

AP Business Writer Matthew Craft contributed to this report.

Christopher Perrier gets 3 years probation after admitting he set fire in Westfield apartment building

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Prosecutor Max Bennett asked for a three to 3 1/2 year state prison sentence.

SPRINGFIELD - Christopher Perrier, of Westfield, pleaded guilty Friday to setting a fire in a multi-family apartment building at 12 Franklin Ave. in Westfield on Jan. 26 of last year.

Hampden Superior Court Judge C. Jeffrey Kinder sentenced Perrier, 25, to three years probation.

Kinder said he had been the judge at a pre-trial motion hearing and had come to know something about Perrier’s cognitive difficulties.

He said he had watched how Perrier interacted with investigators in a videotaped interview.

Kinder said the criminal conduct was very serious and could have been tragic.

He ordered Perrier to have a mental health evaluation set up through the Probation Department and have any counseling probation thought necessary.

Assistant District Attorney Max Bennett asked Kinder to sentence Perrier to three to 3 1/2 years in state prison.

He said the three story building was entirely filled with smoke and two people had to be taken to the hospital for smoke inhalation.

Perrier first reported the fire, saying he had discovered it in the basement of his apartment building, Bennett said.

He then admitted he lit items in the basement, Bennett said.

The fire displaced a dozen residents, some of whom have still not been able to move back in their apartments because the landlord is still repairing damage, Bennett said.

Defense lawyer Thomas E. Robinson said Perrier, who has no prior record, has been on pretrial probation since the fire and has done well on probation.

Robinson said Perrier’s cognitive difficulties make it difficult for Perrier to keep in mind the consequences of actions.

New York inmates help build ice palace in Adirondacks for Saranac Lake Winter Carnival

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'Shock' prison-camp crew helps volunteers in effort that also builds prisoners' self-esteem and discipline.

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SARANAC LAKE, N.Y. - It's a far cry from breaking rocks in the hot sun on a chain gang. In New York's Adirondack Mountains, inmates break ice on a frozen lake to make a giant winter palace.

A work crew from an area "shock" prison camp once again this year helped local volunteers create this mountain village's lakeside ice palace – the shimmering centerpiece of the annual Saranac Lake Winter Carnival, starting Friday.

Under snowy skies this week, inmates marched onto the frozen lake in military formation in winter-weight prison greens and hard hats. Working alongside the volunteers, they were handed poles to break off blocks or head-high saws to cut through the ice. Others in the boot camp-style incarceration program were dispatched to the tall walls of the palace with buckets of slush to fit between blocks like mortar.

"Sir, yes sir! This is an experience of a lifetime, sir," said inmate Patrick O'Donnell. The 24-year-old from Long Island, like all inmates at Moriah Shock Incarceration Correctional Facility, answers questions like a new military recruit.

"Sir, where I live there's not much snow, so to see something like this is an experience, sir."

Moriah, about 45 miles from Saranac Lake through twisting mountain roads, houses a six-month shock program designed to build character and self-esteem.

Prisoners convicted of nonviolent offenses like burglary, forgery or drug sales can shave months or years off their sentences by successfully completing a shock program – but it's tough. Inmates wake up at 5:30 a.m. for intense days of exercise, academics and substance abuse treatment.

And they work. Moriah began sending crews to help build the ice palace in 2009, after the closing of a prison closer to Saranac Lake that had sent workers since 1984.

The inmates move about the snow and ice without shackles, but under the watch of corrections officers. Officer Mike Maloney said the labor on the lake helps inmates get ready to go back to "the real world" when they graduate from the program.

"It's actually great, sir. It makes the day go by fast – get away for a little while, get a little peace of mind, sir," said Norman Bloom, who is from Rochester. Bloom, 25, worked with a heavy metal pole to break ice blocks into the frozen water.

Ice palaces have been a winter feature of Saranac Lake since 1898, fitting for a quaint mountain village where winter temperatures can plunge to minus 30 during cold snaps. Festival organizers say the palace tradition stems from the days when ice from local lakes was harvested for refrigeration.

Volunteers were out on the village-side lake the weekend before the festival, cutting out big ice blocks. The footlocker-size ice cubes are plucked from the water by crane and fitted into the walk-in palace on the shore.

This year's palace is about 70 feet wide and 50 feet deep inside and requires as many as 2,000 blocks, said ice palace committee chairman Dean Baker. So every hand helps.

"We could do it without them, but it would be a lot more work," Baker said. "We're glad they're here."

Warm weather and rain complicated palace construction this week, and work was suspended for a couple of days. Volunteers were back to work Friday to fix up damaged parts of the palace. Baker said they would work through the weekend if needed.

The festival's theme this year is "under the sea," and the organizers planned nautical touches to the palace, such as an octopus ice sculpture and a throne shaped like a scallop shell. The palace is lit up at night with multi-colored lights.

Moriah inmates do other outdoor work, such as clearing trees at state campsites, but like this job in particular.

"Sir, we've done everything from work on Fort Ticonderoga, built campsites, but this job is probably the most exciting just because it's part of something bigger, sir," O'Donnell said.

Jared Ridner, of Albany, said "this inmate loves it, sir." Ridner, 22, is scheduled to graduate from the shock program Thursday, so he plans to visit the festival before it ends Feb. 10.

"This inmate, his parents are coming up," Ridner said, "and we're going to take a ride down here to show this inmate's parents what he did, sir."

Republican Richard Tisei hints at run in Massachusetts special Senate election after Scott Brown's exit

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Tisei, the former state Senate minority leader, narrowly lost a race for U.S. House in November to Democratic Congressman John Tierney.

081810 richard tisei.JPG Richard Tisei  

Former Massachusetts Senate Republican minority leader Richard Tisei announced on Friday he will consider running in the special election to replace former U.S. Sen. John Kerry, who was confirmed as Secretary of State this week.

Tisei, who was narrowly defeated by Democratic U.S. Rep. John Tierney this past November, said he was surprised when Republican former U.S. Sen. Scott Brown announced he would not seek to fill the post.

Democratic U.S. Reps. Edward Markey and Steven Lynch, of Malden and South Boston, respectively, are currently the only official challengers in the race.

While many Republican names have been floated in the wake of Brown's announcement, Tisei is considered a solid candidate by GOP insiders. During the election to represent the 6th Congressional District, Tisei ran a strong campaign against Tierney, who was embroiled in a controversy involving a family member's illegal off-shore gambling ring that landed his wife in jail.

Tisei, an openly gay Republican, also found much national support in his run for Congress. In addition to super PAC money spent toward Tisei's advantage, nationally-known talent flocked to his campaign, including Christian Berle, the former deputy director for the pro-LGBT Log Cabin Republicans.

Tisei and Brown are former colleagues and friends who even campaigned jointly on a couple occasions in 2012, including when former New York City Mayor Rudy Guiliani visited the Bay State.

Tisei released the following statement about the Massachusetts special election:

"The news that Scott won't be running again came as a surprise to me, as to many others. I've known him for many years and served with him in the state senate. I have great respect for his independence and bi-partisan record in the Senate. His decision not to be a candidate in the special election for the U.S. Senate is a great loss for the Commonwealth.

Today, our country faces many challenges. It's a time when we need to find common ground in order to begin to address the very real problems that threaten our future.

Scott's exit from the race was obviously unexpected. That said, in the coming days I will be talking with family, friends, and supporters to consider the best role that I can play in helping to bring new, alternative leadership to Washington.

Whoever our party puts forward as its nominee in this special and critically important election needs to embody the change that the people want and deserve. The American people want to see our government work again and our nation prosper. More of the same is not an option."

Grynn and Barrett photography to leave Holyoke, move to Enfield

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G&B plans to make the move in March and then open a small "pop-up" studio in Holyoke to handle walk-in traffic for senior portraits.

01.05.2006 | HOLYOKE -- The brothers Grenier from left in front of their Grynn and Barrett Studios: Chris, Marc, Dan and Larry Grenier,  

HOLYOKE — G&B Photography, also known as Grynn & Barrett or as The Greniers, is moving from its current location at 404 Jarvis Ave. to Enfield, Conn.

The Enfield location at Anngina Drive is the former Precision Camera and Video Repair. G&B’s current location in Holyoke has been sold to Holyoke Community College, which plans to expand its nursing and health technology program.

“We have too much space here,” Daniel E. Grenier, director of sales and marketing for G&B Photography, said during a telephone interview from the Holyoke building. “Photography is all digital now. We no longer have darkrooms. We don’t need space to put together proof portfolios. All our proofing is done online now.”

He plans to make the move in March. Then G&B will open a small “pop-up” studio in Holyoke to handle walk-in traffic for senior portraits, he said.

“Most of our business is in the schools,” Grenier, whose father started the business in 1948, said.

He said Enfield is a central location. His company does a lot of photography in schools all over Connecticut.

Holyoke Community College bought the Jarvis Street building for $1.925 million. HCC has sold $7 million in bonds to finance the purchase and renovation of the 22,000-square-foot building.

HCC plans to turn the building into a high-tech health science center for its nursing and radiological technology programs.

The 13,690-foot Enfield building sold for $425,000, according to Sentry Commercial Real Estate in Hartford, which brokered the sale.

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