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Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin predicts low turnout for special U.S. Senate primary

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One factor in a low turnout could be the tragedy at the Boston Marathon, Galvin said.

BOSTON — Secretary of State William F. Galvin today predicted that only about 17 percent of the state's registered voters will go to the polls for the U.S. Senate special primary on Tuesday, partly because of the Boston Marathon explosions.

Galvin compared Tuesday's primary with the December 2009 U.S. Senate special primary.

Galvin said about 200,000 voters will cast ballots in the three-way Republican primary on Tuesday, up from 165,000 in 2009 for the GOP.

He said about 550,000 people will vote in Tuesday's two-man Democratic primary, down from 669,000 in 2009.

There are about 4.250 million registered voters in Massachusetts including inactive voters.

Galvin said the bombings at the April 15 Boston Marathon could be a factor in keeping down turnout.

"The tragedy of April 15 certainly has people's minds elsewhere," he said.

Galvin said people in Massachusetts also are not used to a spring statewide election.

During a press conference at the Statehouse, Galvin said absentee ballots are also down 20 percent from the 2009 primary.

The three Republicans in the primary are former U.S. Attorney Michael J. Sullivan of Abington, businessman Gabriel E. Gomez of Cohasset and state Rep. Daniel Winslow of Norfolk.

The two Democrats are U.S. Reps. Stephen F. Lynch of Boston and Edward J. Markey on Malden.

The general election is June 25.



After being released from New York Jets, Tim Tebow is looking for the chance to make an impact with another NFL team

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Although he is now without a team, former New York Jets' backup quarterback Tim Tebow may be picked up by several organizations in need of a quarterback to compete for a starting (or backup) role.

Tim TebowIn this Sunday, Dec. 30, 2012 photo, New York Jets quarterback Tim Tebow (15) warms up before an NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills in Orchard Park, N.Y. The New York Jets say, Monday, April 29, 2013, they have waived Tebow. (AP Photo/Gary Wiepert) 
The tumultuous one-year marriage between the New York Jets and backup quarterback Tim Tebow came to an unceremonious end on April 29. The team dumped the popular, yet controversial quarterback after the completion of the NFL Draft, leaving him in a poor position to latch on with another team. The Jets may have been trying to salvage a draft pick for Tebow instead of releasing him without any compensation, but if that was the case, no teams were willing to bite.

Although the move puts Tebow in a tough situation, his chances may have actually improved now that he is no longer mired in a quarterback controversy in New York. The Jets never really gave the former starter a chance, despite the horrendous play of Mark Sanchez, who will now be fighting for his job with second-round pick Geno Smith. Tebow will also be benefited by the fact that the 2013 NFL Draft had a weak quarterback class. Only one quarterback was selected in the first round, EJ Manuel by the Buffalo Bills at No. 16 overall, and he is expected to be a long-term project.

Due to this, there are still some teams looking for a quarterback to at least compete for a starting spot. Teams will have until 4 p.m. on Tuesday to pick Tebow up off waivers. Here are a few of the possible destinations that Tebow could end up in as a starter, backup or in a role other than quarterback.

Buffalo Bills:
The Bills were the first team to take a quarterback in the 2013 NFL Draft, but it wasn't Geno Smith. The team shocked everyone with their selection of EJ Manuel, who is most likely a long-term project. Although Manuel will certainly be given every opportunity to start in 2013, he is not the starter from day one. The other quarterbacks on the roster are underwhelming, led by former Arizona Cardinal Kevin Kolb and Tarvaris Jackson. Tebow could be a temporary placeholder for Manuel because of his ability to win, something that both Kolb and Jackson have not demonstrated as starters.

Tennessee Titans:
With unproven Jake Locker as the clear-cut starter, the Titans are wide open for the No. 2 spot. Tebow's biggest competition would come from former Bills' starter Ryan Fitzpatrick, who is very beatable. Tebow is a possibility, because if Locker falters mightily, it wouldn't hurt to keep fans interested for a season by putting in Tebow and seeing what he can do.

Kansas City Chiefs:
The Chiefs have nobody behind Alex Smith that almost any fan outside of Kansas City would recognize. That bodes well for Tebow, who is obviously a household name. If Smith were to get injured, Tebow could fill in and provide enough of a spark to keep the Chiefs relevant. He would be the clear No. 2 behind Smith, who the Chiefs acquired with the purpose of being the starter. Still, he would be in a better situation than he was with the Jets.

Cleveland Browns:
The Browns used a first-round pick on incumbent starter Brandon Weeden in 2012, and despite a so-so first year, they are expected to give him another chance in 2013. They also brought in Jason Campbell to push Weeden for the starting role, so Tebow's presence would make it a three-way battle. His chances of winning the starting job or even the No. 2 spot would be iffy at best, however.

Philadelphia Eagles:
With the Eagles' acquisition of USC's Matt Barkley, this move is highly unlikely. However, Barkley is not a surefire starter, and the Eagles' quarterback situation remains unsolved. They have a number of competitors, from Michael Vick to Nick Foles to Dennis Dixon and now Barkley, but none has emerged as Chip Kelly's front-runner to start. Tebow would crowd an already muddled mess, but he could be given a chance in the wide open race taking place in Philly.

Jacksonville Jaguars:
The Jaguars elected not to choose a quarterback during this year's draft, despite having a chance to obtain Geno Smith with the first pick in the second round. They currently have a two-way battle between Blaine Gabbert and Chad Henne, neither of which has been impressive. Tebow would appear to be a good fit for the Jags, but they have showed very little interest in the past, even publicly stating that they will not make a move to acquire Tebow. They would need a change of heart in order for Tebow to get a chance to return to Florida.

New England Patriots:

[Nick Underhill says this one is unlikely to happen]

It may sound absurd, but Bill Belichick has no problem handling players with off-the-field attention. He has brought in such players as Chad Johnson (formerly Chad Ochocinco) and Randy Moss in the past. Bringing in Tebow would be mild comparatively. He does not bring any baggage, just unnecessary media attention. However, the difference between the Pats and the Jets is that Tebow would not be used as a quarterback. There is an obvious, future Hall of Fame starting quarterback by the name of Tom Brady in New England. Perhaps you've heard of him.

The Jets set themselves up for failure because Mark Sanchez never cemented his role as the starter. Sanchez's poor play made the situation worse, and led to a quarterback controversy in New York. With the Pats, Tebow would be used as a reserve, and probably not even at the quarterback position. Belichick has a knack for using athletic players in various ways, and could probably find a use for someone with Tebow's build and athletic abilities.

Orlando Predators:
Okay, so they may not be in the NFL, but the Predators are the one organization in any football sense that has openly expressed interest in the quarterback. According to Mike Garafolo from USA TODAY, the Predators of the Arena Football League publicly offered Tebow a contract if he exhausts his NFL options. Although this option does not seem likely, if one of the above teams does not take a chance on the quarterback, the Arena League may be his only chance to continue playing competitive football.

Closed Northampton Mountain Goat outdoors store to auction its wares

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A downtown fixture since 1989, the 189 Main St. store was a magnet for wilderness and urban adventurers looking for everything from thermal underwear to climbing gear to maps.

GOAT.JPGA Sidewalk Days shopper looks through the racks outside The Mountain Goat. 

NORTHAMPTON — The Mountain Goat will give its final gasp Friday when the store auctions off its remaining inventory of outdoor clothing and gear.

A downtown fixture since 1989, the 189 Main St. store was a magnet for wilderness and urban adventurers looking for everything from thermal underwear to climbing gear to maps. Owners A.J. Lafleur and Mary Colwell announced the closing recently, saying they can no longer compete with online distributors of outdoor goods. They could not be reached for comment Monday.

The auction, handled by Aaron Posnik Auctioneers of Springfield, is scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. on the store’s premises.

Among the goods listed are items by brands such as Patagonia and Vasque, including boots, coats, windbreakers, socks and backpacks. Also on the auction block are clothing racks, file cabinets, furniture, bookcases and a printer.


Worcester woman arrested on drunken driving charges after crash; Police rescue her 8-year-old child from traffic

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A Worcester woman was arrested on drunken driving, child endangerment and other charges after police said she put her son in danger when her car crashed into a median and sign on Belmont Street and police rescued her child from traffic Thursday evening.

WORCESTER - A Worcester woman was arrested on drunken driving, child endangerment and other charges after police said she put her son in danger when her car crashed into a median and sign on Belmont Street and police rescued her child from traffic Thursday evening. The child was running between cars and was reportedly almost struck by oncoming vehicles, police said.

Ruth Mitaru, 41, of 65 Esther Street, Apt. 3, Worcester, crashed her vehicle on the median on Belmont Street after leaving a party, police said. According to court documents, Ruth told an officer her 8-year-old child exited the vehicle and ran into traffic after being startled by the accident. An officer at the scene was able to grab hold of the child and place the child in a cruiser for safety reasons, police said.

An officer interviewing Mitaru reported that she was unsteady on her feet, had bloodshot eyes and a strong scent of alcohol on her, police said. When the officer asked Ruth if she had been drinking, she told the officer she had several drinks at a friend's party but was "not a bad person," police said. Officers report seeing a half-full bottle of rum in the vehicle in plain sight.

According to court documents, officers arrested Mitaru on suspicion of operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol but not did complete a field sobriety test because the officer determined the scene not safe enough with her son in a cruiser and her inability to keep her balance. Mitaru was brought back to the police station and charged with drunken driving, child endangerment while under the influence, marked lanes violations and having an open container in the vehicle.

According to court documents, Ruth consented to a breathalyzer test and blew a 0.296 in her first test and a 0.295 in her second.

Ruth was arraigned at Worcester District Court on Friday. She will appear in court again on June 7.

West Springfield police arrest Carlos Rodriguez after he allegedly set motor scooter ablaze at Riverdale Street Shell station

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The blaze was reported shortly after 2 p.m. No injuries were reported.

WEST SPRINGFIELD — Police arrested a 52-year-old man Saturday afternoon after he allegedly approached a motorist fueling a vehicle at the Riverdale Street Shell station, asked for and received a cup of gasoline and then used it to set a motor scooter ablaze.

No injuries were reported in the fire, which destroyed the scooter. Police do not know why the man, who claimed to own the scooter, set it on fire.

Sgt. Jeffrey Harlow said the incident occurred shortly after 2 p.m. The suspect, identified by police as Carlos Rodriguez, 17 Highland Ave., Apt. D, initially went into the station at Riverdale Street and Highland Avenue and asked for a gasoline container. Told that the station had no such containers, the suspect grabbed an empty coffee cup and left the store, police said.

Witnesses told police that Rodriguez approached the motorist, asked for some gasoline and then poured it over the scooter and lit it on fire.

Fire Chief William Flaherty said the fire was in a rear corner of the station’s parking lot, some distance away from the gasoline pumps.

“It wasn’t close to the building,” Flaherty said. “There were no exposures around.”

Although a store employee initially attempted to put out the fire with a fire extinguisher, he was not successful and the scooter was fully involved when firefighters arrived on the scene, Flaherty said.

After they put out the fire, firefighters saw a rag sticking out of the scooter’s gas tank and they called police, Flaherty said. The cap to the fuel tank was on the ground near the curb a short distance away, he said.

The fire was captured by amateur photographer Michael Hindes who said he had been preparing to go on a hike with a friend when they saw the thick black smoke from the fire.

“As we rolled up on it, we could see this insanely violent fire,” said Hindes, adding that firefighters had yet to arrive.

The two stayed on the scene only a short time because it was starting to get crowded with onlookers and they didn’t want to hamper firefighting efforts, Hindes said.

Harlow said fire damage made it difficult to determine the make and model of the scooter.

Rodriguez was charged with burning a motor vehicle. He was released on $250 cash bail over the weekend and is slated to be arraigned in Springfield District Court on Wednesday, officials said.


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NBA players, Clintons and others react to former Celtic Jason Collins coming out as gay

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Jason Collins became the first active player in any major American team sport to announce that he is gay. Check out some of the various Twitter reactions.

Jason CollinsFILE - In a Friday, Sept. 28, 2012 file photo, Boston Celtics' Jason Collins poses during Celtics NBA basketball media day at the team's training facility in Waltham, Mass. NBA veteran center Collins has become the first male professional athlete in the major four American sports leagues to come out as gay. Collins wrote a first-person account posted Monday, April 29, 2013 on Sports Illustrated's website. He finished this past season with the Washington Wizards and is now a free agent. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File) 
On April 29, Jason Collins made history as the first active athlete in any of the four major American team sports to announce that he is gay. He wrote an article appearing in a May 6 issue of Sports Illustrated detailing his journey to this point.

The overwhelming majority of the reaction on social media has been positive, though some people online have disagreed with the moment's importance.

Collins received immediate support from several notable NBA players and people affiliated with the league, including Kobe Bryant and Baron Davis.

He also received support from other sources, including writers and former players in other sports.

He was further supported by the Clinton family. Collins attended college at Stanford University where he befriended Chelsea Clinton.

Despite mostly positive support, the comments section of the Sports Illustrated article was contained disparaging comments toward Collins, and other people downplayed the importance of the moment.

Wallace deleted this tweet soon after it was posted, and added this comment:

As for Collins, he continued to go on with his life. At the time of this article, his last tweet did not even address his decision to come out.

Collins' decision to announce that he is gay was perhaps best summed up by Dave Holmes, who works on-air at FX.

Cumberland Farms wants to tear down and rebuild Agawam convenience store/gasoline station on Suffield Street

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The Planning Board will hold a public hearing on site plans by Cumberland Farms to demolish its operation on Suffield Street and construction a new building with gasoline pumps.

AGAWAM — Cumberland Farms of Framingham would like to demolish its existing convenience store and gasoline station on Suffield Street and construct a new building to house the operation.

Site plans for the project at 837 Suffield St. will be the subject of a Planning Board public hearing Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Agawam Public Library. The Conservation Commission on April 22 approved an order of conditions for the project as it has a perennial stream along its southern boundary.

The site consists of 3.36 acres on the east side of Suffield Street south of Silver Street. Currently there are three buildings on the property: the Parthenon Restaurant, which would remain the same; a building housing the convenience store as well as a West Coast Video; and a structure housing an automated car wash, according to material on file in the Planning Office.

The building housing the convenience store and video store would be torn down as well as the automated car wash. A new, 4,513-square-foot structure south of the existing convenience store would be constructed to house that business.

Plans also call for demolishing the existing six gas dispensers and three 10,000-gallon underground storage tanks and replacing them with six new gas dispensers, a new gas canopy and two new 15,000-gallon underground storage tanks.

A parking lot with 72 parking spaces with drive aisles, sidewalks and landscaped islands has also been proposed.

A traffic study for Cumberland Farms by Fuss & O’Neill of West Springfield reports that about 12,000 vehicles a day pass by the property on Suffield Street. The study projects that there will be 24 fewer vehicle trips during the weekday peak afternoon traffic hour.

Fuss & O’Neill senior project manager Stephen J. Savaria wrote in his traffic study that the proposed changes are not projected to have any noticeable impact on traffic conditions along Suffield Street.

No one from Cumberland Farms could be reached for comment.


Luxe Burger Bar project on Springfield riverfront moves forward

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The site, located at 1200 Hall of Fame Ave., also known as West Columbus Ave., has been fenced in for security.

SPRINGFIELD — Following a prolonged delay, a developer recently began a major renovation project at the former Visitor Information Center off Interstate 91, which will become a Luxe Burger Bar.

“We are extremely excited and eagerly looking forward to the opening,” said Raipher D. Pellegrino, a local developer with Lustra LLC, the development group that purchased the site from the Springfield Redevelopment Authority last June. “We are hopeful it will prove to be another step forward for the city.”

The renovations should be completed by late July, and there could be a “soft” opening of the Luxe Burger Bar restaurant in August followed by a full opening sometime after Labor Day, Pellegrino said. The site on Hall of Fame Avenue abuts Interstate 91 and the Connecticut River.

The site, located at 1200 Hall of Fame Ave., also known as West Columbus Ave., has been fenced in for security, and there has been some exterior and interior work taking place, Pellegrino said.

The project represents an investment of more than $2 million including the purchase price and renovations, Pellegrino said.

Lustra LLC was selected as the preferred developer of the vacant building in December 2011 and was the high bidder, purchasing the site for $450,001, which was finalized last June.

Construction was scheduled to begin last summer, but was delayed by many complications and hurdles, Pellegrino said.

While the project’s start “obviously took much longer than many envisioned,” it was due to unforeseen complications, legal issues, different ownerships involved in the riverfront area and zoning issues, Pellegrino said.

“Renovations are extensive,” Pellegrino said. “It was never used as a restaurant before”

A kitchen must be added among the extensive renovations, and a small addition is needed to help provide adequate space, Pellegrino said.

The former Visitor Information Center has been vacant since the center moved to the nearby Basketball Hall of Fame in 2009.

Local developer Peter Pappas, who had submitted a competing bid of $223,024 for the property in 2011, also proposing a restaurant use, has been critical of the delayed Lustra LLC project. Pappas asked the Springfield Redevelopment Authority to “disqualify” Lustra LLC a year ago, and again recently for failing to move the project forward, asking that the site be re-advertised for bids.

Officials from the redevelopment authority and city recently declined comment on Pappas’ request for disqualification.

Pellegrino praised the Springfield Redevelopment Authority and city departments for their cooperation.

“The collective vision is coming to fruition,” Pellegrino said. “Through the cooperation of everyone, we are now moving forward.”



Ludlow School Superintendent Todd Gazda proposes hiring 3 behavioral health clinicians, says they’ll keep schools safer

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It will cost $145,000 to hire the 3 behavioral clinicians, Gazda said.

LUDLOW — School Superintendent Todd Gazda is proposing to hire three behavioral health clinicians for the next school year.

2011 todd gazda.JPGTodd Gazda 

“This will help us keep more of our students in district,” Gazda said. “It will help keep our students part of the community.”

Having behavioral health clinicians who are licensed social workers will help the school district to identify at-risk students, Gazda said. Addressing mental health issues is “the most effective way to keep schools safe,” he said.

The clinicians will work with students to help them “manage their emotions” and “control negative impulses,” Gazda told the School Committee.

While gun control is mentioned as a way to keep schools safer, more attention needs to be paid to mental health issues, Gazda said.

The school superintendent said it will cost $145,000 to hire three behavioral health clinicians who will be used at the elementary, middle school and high school levels. By hiring these three employees, the school district will be able to bring back three students who attend school out of district, he said. That will result in an immediate savings of $115,000 per year, he said.

It will lower the number of Ludlow students who attend school out of district from 21 to 18, Gazda said. “Keeping more students in district will help us save money down the road,” he said.

The clinicians also will work with teachers to help them develop strong behavioral plans, he said.

The three new positions are part of Gazda’s proposed fiscal 2014 school budget of $26,542,224. The budget is $834,000, or 3.2 percent, over this year’s school budget.

The School Committee will vote on whether to approve the budget at its meeting on Tuesday. Final approval of the budget will require approval of voters at the May 13 annual Town Meeting.


Turnpike tolls appear set to be restored to finance transportation projects in Western Massachusetts

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An opponent said tolls are not the answer.

BOSTON - More than 15 years after they were eliminated by a former Republican governor, tolls on the western-most portion of the Massachusetts Turnpike are on the verge of being restored.

The Massachusetts Senate has approved a bill that would restore tolls for passenger vehicles between Exits 1 in West Stockbridge and Exit 6 at Interstate 291 east of Springfield. The Senate bill says the toll revenues would be spent only on road, rail and transit projects in the four counties of Western Massachusetts.

toll.JPGA car outside a toll booth on the Massachusetts Turnpike. Tollbooths at the toll-less Exits 1 to 6 in the western part of the state are still up, but passenger vehicles are only charged for driving east of Exit 6 in Springfield. 

Former Gov. William F. Weld, who controlled the old turnpike authority at the time, ordered the tolls eliminated in 1996, along with a toll in West Newton.

Senate Majority Leader Stanley C. Rosenberg, an Amherst Democrat, said 80 percent of the toll revenues between Exits 1 and 6 would come from drivers from other states such as New Jersey and New York.

"It's only fair," said Rosenberg, who is leading the effort. "We pay their tolls. They should pay when they come to our state."

If the tolls are reinstated, they would raise $12 million a year, according to Frank DePaola, administrator for the highway division of the Massachusetts Department of Transportation. DePaola supports the Senate bill.

Rosenberg said most drivers from Western Massachusetts use alternate routes, not the turnpike.

stan.JPGSen. Stanley C. Rosenberg 

Paul D. Craney, executive director of the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance, said he would oppose restoring the tolls between Exits 1 and 6. Craney said most toll revenues are spent on overhead and staff.

"Our legislators seem to be on a feeding frenzy to find more and more clever ways to take tax money out of people's pockets," Craney said. "Tolls are just not the right answer."

Senators on a voice vote on April 13 approved Rosenberg's toll-restoration plan as an amendment to the Senate version of a transportation financing bill. The state House of Representatives did not include the plan when it approved its version of the transportation financing bill shortly before midnight on April 9.

Both bills call for raising the state's gas tax by three cents to 26.5 cents a gallon, hiking the cigarette tax by $1 to $3.51 a pack and increasing taxes on certain software, multistate corporations and utilities.

A legislative committee, consisting of three members of the House and three from the Senate, will craft a compromise financing bill.

seanc.JPGRep. Sean F. Curran 

Each branch would then vote up or down on the compromise bill. If it's approved, it would go to Gov. Deval L. Patrick, who could sign or veto the bill.

State Sen. Gale D. Candaras, who voted for the Senate bill, said the chances are "50-50" that the toll restoration plan will be included in the compromise bill.

"It's a tough vote," she said. "It's a tough sell to the public."

State Rep. Sean F. Curran, a Springfield Democrat, said he opposes reinstating the tolls between Exits 1 and 6, which are still paid by commercial trucks.

“For the last 25 years, we've been paying off the $30 billion central artery tunnel here in Boston,” Curran said. “I know that Governors Weld and Cellucci kind of supported that idea of regional equity. They saw fit that Exits 1 through 6 should be toll free. I kind of agree with them.”

Under the Senate bill, the state transportation department would be given 90 days to present to the Legislature̱s committees on transportation and ways and means a plan for a proposed fee structure for the tolls between Exits 1 and 6.

galec.JPGSen. Gale D. Candaras 

DePaola, the highway administrator, has said the tolls would total between 75 cents and $1 one way between the exits.

The Senate bill also asks the department to study whether tolls should be expanded to other regions of the state.

Legislators from Westfield, which is at Exit 3, indicated they might support the idea of restoring tolls between Exits 1 to 6.

State Sen. Michael R. Knapik, R-Westfield, said he supports the “general concept” of reinstating the tolls and dedicating the revenues for transportation projects in Western Massachusetts. Knapik said he would need to be assured that the fee structure would not be a burden for drivers and that studies would take place on increasing tolls or creating new tolls in eastern Massachusetts.

State Rep. Donald F. Humason, R-Westfield, said he would not necessarily be against the Rosenberg amendment, but he will vote against the overall bill because it raises the gas tax.

“I don't really have a problem with user fees,” Humason said. “That's what tolls are -- a user fee on that road.”

Rep. William Pignatelli, D-Lee, who has Exits 1 and 2 in his district, said he would support reinstating the tolls. Pignatelli also said the tolls are a user fee and that the turnpike is very well maintained.

Pignatelli said tolls from Exits 1 to 6 might also capture a lot of revenue from out-of-state drivers who would visit a possible new casino being planned in Western Massachusetts.

Several people who weighed in on Masslive.com were hostile to the idea of bringing back the tolls.

“There is no clearer language in any legislation in this commonwealth that states emphatically that the tolls on the whole of the Massachusetts Turnpike would be ELIMINATED once the bonds for construction were paid,” wrote “Chicomee.” “Governor Weld began to approach the legislative intent by lifting the tolls for cars only on the Western Portion of the Pike. NOW. Depaola and Rosenberg, you wish to burden the Citizens of Massachusetts with ANOTHER TAX.”

“Sarky” criticized the Senate vote for taking the important vote during a rare session on a Saturday.

“The 13th eh?” Sarky wrote. “A Saturday? When no one is paying attention? Lovely.”

“We only have 2 highways, I-91 and the turnpike,” wrote “RetiredNOT.” “It's time for Eastern MA pay for our upgrades. If the tolls are added to the Pike we in Western MA get screwed again!!”

Police K-9 Units get training at Shore Park in Worcester

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Police cars lined the parking lot at Shore Park and the sounds of dogs barking could be heard from the street Tuesday as state police trained a few K-9 units from as far way as Gloucester and New York to find narcotics.

WORCESTER - Police cars lined the parking lot at Shore Park and the sounds of dogs barking could be heard from the street Tuesday as state police trained a few K-9 units from as far way as Gloucester and New York to find narcotics.

Sgt. Jerry Molet, of the Massachusetts State Police, said this program is for dogs making the next step in their training. And Tuesday's class, part of a nine-week program, was to teach the dogs to dig in the sand on the Shore Park beach to search for narcotics. These are dogs that can already track on the street, but now they're being given another lesson on how to find narcotics that are hidden from plain sight or buried.

"We use the sand to search for narcotics and shape behavior," Melot said.

Gloucester K-9 officer Jerry Ciolino and his dog Trident go through the training. Ciolino gives Trident a verbal and physical command to search the sand for a tightly wrapped towel that has the scent of marijuana on it. The dogs will eventually be trained to be able to find cocaine, marijuana, heroin and methamphetamines.

Smith College group to deliver petition on transgender policy to administrators

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The group said it plans to deliver the signatures to the Smith admissions office Thursday at 4 p.m.

Smith College gate.jpgSmith College. 

NORTHAMPTON – Smith Q&A, an on-campus group that focuses on raising awareness about transgender issues at Smith College, has announced plans to deliver more than 4,000 signatures from their Change.org petition to Smith College’s Office of Admissions on Thursday.

The online petition drive followed the college’s refusal to consider the application of Calliope Wong, a male-to-female transgender high school student from Connecticut.

A letter dated March 5 to Wong from Smith Dean of Admission Debra Shaver and posted on the student’s Tumblr blog states that the reason for the rejection is that she is listed as male on her Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) form. The form is a standard

“As you may remember from our previous correspondence, Smith is a women’s college, which means that undergraduate applicants to Smith must be female at the time of admission,“ Shaver stated in the letter.

In March, the college’s rejection of Wong drew national attention after generating reports on The Huffington Post and in USA Today.

At the time, Laurie Felason, Smith’s vice president for public affairs, e-mailed The Republican the section of the college’s policies on gender identity and expression.

That document states that the college has students who identify as transgender and that it does not decide who is a woman, but “relies upon the information provided by each student applicant.“

It also states that any student who completes the college’s graduation requirements regardless of gender identity, gender expression or sexual orientation is awarded a Smith degree.

The Smith Q&A petition urges Smith College to adopt admissions policies that are welcoming and supportive to all transgender women applicants.

The group said it plans to deliver the signatures to the Smith admissions office Thursday at 4 p.m.

Kenny Chesney starts fund to help Boston Marathon bombing victims

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Country star Kenny Chesney is starting a fund to help those who lost limbs in the Boston Marathon bombing.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Country star Kenny Chesney is starting a fund to help those who lost limbs in the Boston Marathon bombing.

A Tuesday news release says Chesney has established the "Spread the Love" fund with his own donation and will gift sales of his single by the same name as well. Donations will go to Boston Medical Center and other area facilities. Fans also can donate directly to the fund at http://bmc.org/Kenny.

The money will go to the purchase of prosthetics and fitting, follow-up care and physical therapy.

Three people were killed and more than 260 injured in the April 15 attack at the marathon finish line.

Chesney co-wrote "Spread the Love" with The Wailers. It appears on his new album "Life on a Rock," out this week.

___

Online: http://kennychesney.com

Boston-area casino competition would cut New Hampshire income

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A researcher says a planned casino in the Boston area would cut into New Hampshire's gambling income if a casino is built along the border between the two states.

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A researcher says a planned casino in the Boston area would cut into New Hampshire's gambling income if a casino is built along the border between the two states.

Steve Norton, executive director of the New Hampshire Center for Public Policy Studies, estimated Tuesday that New Hampshire's income from building a casino at Rockingham Park race track would drop 36 percent if a comparable casino is built in Massachusetts.

Norton told a special joint House subcommittee examining a Senate casino bill that the state's profit would drop 45 percent if the Massachusetts casino is three times as attractive as the proposed New Hampshire facility.

Norton said construction and other costs are much higher in Massachusetts, making it possible to build an equally attractive facility in New Hampshire for less money.

ESPN regrets Chris Broussard comment on gay NBA player Jason Collins

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ESPN says it regrets that one of its reporters described Jason Collins as a sinner after the NBA center publicly revealed he is gay.

NEW YORK (AP) — ESPN says it regrets that one of its reporters described Jason Collins as a sinner after the NBA center publicly revealed he is gay.

Chris Broussard, who covers the NBA, said on the air Monday that Collins was "walking in open rebellion to God" by living as a gay man.

In an article in Sports Illustrated, Collins became the first male athlete in one of the country's four major sports to come out as gay.

ESPN's Josh Krulewitz said the network regrets that a discussion of personal viewpoints became a distraction. He said the network was "fully committed to diversity" and welcomed Collins' announcement.

Broussard on Tuesday praised Collins' bravery and said he had no objection to him playing in the NBA.


Civil trial depicts two sides of Michael Jackson

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Two sides of Michael Jackson have emerged during the start of a trial involving a lawsuit over his death.

By ANTHONY McCARTNEY, AP Entertainment Writer

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Two sides of Michael Jackson have emerged during the start of a trial involving a lawsuit over his death.

The superstar was repeatedly called an addict by lawyers on both sides of the lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother against concert giant AEG Live.

His financial struggles also were put on display during the proceedings that resumed Tuesday.

"The truth is, Michael Jackson fooled everyone," defense attorney Marvin S. Putnam told jurors. "He made sure that no one — nobody — knew his deepest, darkest secrets."

Jackson's words and music also rang through the courtroom as a lawyer for plaintiff Katherine Jackson tried to show jurors his loving relationship with her and his children.

Jackson's praise for his mother brought tears to her eyes as she sat in court.

While Jackson's song, "You Are My Life," filled the courtroom, jurors watched footage of a Christmas morning when he gave his children a dog.

Jackson died in June 2009 from an overdose of the powerful anesthetic propofol. A year later his mother filed the negligence lawsuit against AEG, claiming the company failed to properly investigate a doctor who was giving propofol to him. The former physician, Conrad Murray, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and remains jailed.

AEG has denied any wrongdoing.

Paramedic Richard Senneff — one of the first people to respond to Jackson's home on the day he died — was the trial's first witness.

As he did at Murray's trial, he described Jackson's bedroom and the frantic moments spent trying to revive him.

In opening statements, attorneys read emails describing the singer as unhealthy and in need of serious intervention.

A defense attorney for AEG Live at one point flashed a slide listing 45 medical professionals. He said Jackson had consulted with each of them over the years and requested doses of propofol from some.

Murray, AEG and Michael Jackson were part of an intricate puzzle that plaintiff's lawyer Brian Panish said he intended to piece together for the jury in the coming weeks.

He told the panel that AEG, motivated by its desire to overtake a competitor, created a conflicted situation for Murray in which he chose a huge payday over properly caring for Jackson.

The company also ignored Murray's troubled finances and Jackson's string of health problems as he prepared for a series of comeback concerts titled "This Is It," Panish said.

"They didn't care who got lost in the wash," Panish told the jury. He repeated the adage, "the show must go on," to describe AEG's actions toward both Jackson and Murray.

Defense attorney Putnam countered that the company couldn't have known Jackson was using propofol or the depth of his addiction. He said Jackson hid the drug abuse from his family, and medical professionals were barred from telling anyone about it due to doctor-patient confidentiality.

Putnam told the panel that it was Jackson who wanted Murray's treatments, and the singer ultimately was responsible for his own death.

"This case is about personal choices," Putnam said. "Also, it was about his personal responsibility. There's no question that Michael Jackson's death was a terrible tragedy. I believe the evidence will show it was not a tragedy of AEG Live's making."

Panish, however, urged the jury of six men and six women to reject placing blame on Jackson.

"Michael paid the ultimate price. He died," Panish said. "Michael has taken responsibility."

During his opening remarks, Panish displayed several emails between AEG executives discussing Jackson's health.

One was sent by AEG Live CEO Randy Phillips before Jackson's news conference announcing his "This Is It" shows. The message to Tim Leiweke, former CEO of AEG'S parent company, stated that Jackson was drunk and refusing to address fans.

"This is the scariest thing I have ever seen," Phillips wrote to Leiweke. "He is an emotionally paralyzed mess riddled with self-loathing and doubt now that it's show time. He's scared to death."

The trial will feature testimony from Debbie Rowe, who was married to Jackson and who Putnam said witnessed the entertainer receiving propofol treatments in the 1990s.

"Ms. Rowe knew this was incredibly dangerous," Putnam said, and she insisted on staying by Jackson's side while he was under the effects of the anesthetic.

Panish told jurors it would be up to them to decide any possible damage award to Jackson's mother and children. If Jackson had lived, he could have earned at least $1.5 billion, the lawyer said.

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AP Special Correspondent Linda Deutsch contributed to this report.

Russia had elder Boston suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev under surveillance

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Russian agents placed the elder Boston bombing suspect under surveillance during a six-month visit to southern Russia last year, then scrambled to find him when he suddenly disappeared after police killed a Canadian jihadist, a security official told The Associated Press.


ARSEN MOLLAYEV & LYNN BERRY
Associated Press


MAKHACHKALA, Russia (AP) — Russian agents placed the elder Boston bombing suspect under surveillance during a six-month visit to southern Russia last year, then scrambled to find him when he suddenly disappeared after police killed a Canadian jihadist, a security official told The Associated Press.

U.S. law enforcement officials have been trying to determine whether Tamerlan Tsarnaev was indoctrinated or trained by militants during his visit to Dagestan, a Caspian Sea province that has become the center of a simmering Islamic insurgency.

The security official with the Anti-Extremism Center, a federal agency under Russia's Interior Ministry, confirmed the Russians shared their concerns. He told the AP that Russian agents were watching Tsarnaev, and that they searched for him when he disappeared two days after the July 2012 death of the Canadian man, who had joined the Islamic insurgency in the region. The official spoke only on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the news media.

Security officials suspected ties between Tsarnaev and the Canadian — an ethnic Russian named William Plotnikov — according to the Novaya Gazeta newspaper, which is known for its independence and investigative reporting and cited an unnamed official with the Anti-Extremism Center, which tracks militants. The newspaper said the men had social networking ties that brought Tsarnaev to the attention of Russian security services for the first time in late 2010.

It certainly wouldn't be surprising if the men had met. Both were amateur boxers of roughly the same age whose families had moved from Russia to North America when they were teenagers. In recent years, both had turned to Islam and expressed radical beliefs. And both had traveled to Dagestan, a republic of some 3 million people.

The AP could not independently confirm whether the two men had communicated on social networks or crossed paths either in Dagestan or in Toronto, where Plotnikov had lived with his parents and where Tsarnaev had an aunt.

After Plotnikov was killed, Tsarnaev left suddenly for the U.S., not waiting to pick up his new Russian passport — ostensibly one of his main reasons for coming to Russia. The official said his sudden departure was considered suspicious.

Plotnikov's father told the Canadian network CBCNews on Monday that his son had broken off contact when he returned to Russia in 2010 and he had no way of knowing whether his son knew Tsarnaev.

In an August interview with the Canadian newspaper National Post, Vitaly Plotnikov said his son, who was 23 when he died, had converted to Islam in 2009 and quickly became radicalized. But he said he fully understood what his son was up to in Russia only when he received photographs and videos after his death.

In one photo, a smiling William Plotnikov is shown posing in the woods, an automatic rifle slung over his shoulder and a camouflage ammunition belt around his waist. In the videos, which the National Post reporter watched with the father, the younger Plotnikov talked openly of planning to kill in the name of Allah.

Plotnikov had been detained in Dagestan in December 2010 on suspicion of having ties to the militants and during his interrogation was forced to hand over a list of social networking friends from the United States and Canada who like him had once lived in Russia, Novaya Gazeta reported.

The newspaper said Tsarnaev's name was on that list, bringing him for the first time to the attention of Russia's secret services.

Novaya Gazeta, which is part-owned by former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and wealthy businessman Alexander Lebedev, has regularly criticized the Kremlin. One of its best known reporters, Anna Politkovskaya, angered the Kremlin with her reporting from Chechnya, and her 2006 murder in a Moscow elevator was widely presumed to have been in connection with her journalistic work.

The Islamic insurgency in Dagestan grew out of the fierce fighting between Russian troops and separatists in neighboring Chechnya that raged in the 1990s. Attacks now are carried out almost daily in Dagestan against police and security forces, who respond with special operations of their own to wipe out the militants.

As recently as Sunday, two suspected militants were killed in a shootout after being cornered in a house in the Dagestani village of Chontaul, according to police spokeswoman Fatina Ubaidatova.

Plotnikov was among seven suspected militants killed on July 14 during a standoff with police in the Dagestani village of Utamysh, according to the official police record.

After Plotnikov's death, Russian security agents lost track of Tsarnaev and went to see his father in Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, who told them that his son had returned to the U.S., Novaya Gazeta said.

The agents did not believe the father, since Tsarnaev had left without picking up his new Russian passport, and they continued to search for him, the newspaper reported.

The Russians later determined that Tsarnaev had flown to Moscow on July 16 and to the United States the following day, the newspaper said. Tsarnaev arrived in New York on July 17.

Russian migration officials have said they were puzzled that Tsarnaev applied for the passport but left before it was ready.

His father, Anzhor Tsarnaev, said last week that his elder son stayed with him while waiting for the passport to be processed. He could not be reached Tuesday for comment on the Novaya Gazeta report.

The Tsarnaev family had lived briefly in Dagestan before moving to the United States a decade ago. Both parents returned to Dagestan last year.

The official with Russia's Anti-Extremism Center said Tsarnaev was filmed attending a mosque in Makhachkala whose worshippers adhere to a more radical strain of Islam. The official would give no further details about what the Russian security services knew about Tsarnaev's activities in Dagestan or about any possible connection to Plotnikov.

The AP was unable to determine whether the official was the same one who provided the information to Novaya Gazeta.

Plotnikov had settled in Utamysh, a small village about 70 kilometers (40 miles) from Makhachkala. It was not known whether he had spent any significant amount of time in Dagestan's capital.

Novaya Gazeta said Tsarnaev was also seen in the company of Mahmud Nidal — a man who was both Palestinian and Kumyk, one of the dozens of ethnic groups living in Dagestan — and who was believed to have ties to Islamic militants in the southern Russian region.

Nidal was killed in May 2012 after refusing to give himself up to security forces that had surrounded a house in Makhachkala, according to official police records.

Shortly after Plotnikov identified Tsarnaev during his December 2010 interrogation, the Russian secret services, the FSB, studied Tsarnaev's pages on social networking sites and asked the FBI for more information, the Russian newspaper said.

The FBI has acknowledged receiving the request. The U.S. agency said it opened an investigation, but when no evidence of terrorism was found and no further information from the Russians was forthcoming, the case was closed in June 2011.

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Berry reported from Moscow.

Springfield Fire Department: Power cord, damaged by weight of refrigerator that it powered, causes Forest Park neighborhood house fire

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The fire caused $125,000 in damage to the home at 61 Texel Drive.

twexell.jpg4-30-13 - Springfield - Firefighters respond to the scene of a fire on Texel Drive in the city's Forest Park neighborhood. 

SPRINGFIELD - A power cord, believed to have been damaged by the weight of a refrigerator that it powered, was the cause of a blaze that heavily damaged a Forest Park neighborhood home Monday night and displaced two residents, according to the Springfield Fire Department.

“It looks like one of the refrigerator legs was directly on top of the cord,” Dennis Leger, aide to Commissioner Joseph Conant, said.

The fire at 61 Texel Drive started just before 8 p.m. It took firefighters about 25 minutes to extinguish the blaze in the large single-family house, Leger said.

It caused an estimated $125,000 in damages. The heat from the blaze also melted some siding on nearby garages at 67 Texel Drive and 52 Elwood Drive, which is in back of the house, Leger said.

The blaze was investigated by the Springfield Arson & Bomb Squad.

Holyoke voter turnout for Primary Day slow

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The new Ward 6 polling place was the Sullivan School, 400 Jarvis Ave., an address change that might have affected turnout.

HOLYOKE - Seventy people is a fine turnout for a high school play or Super Bowl party, but not so good when it reflects voter turnout.

Only 70 votes had been cast by 1 p.m. Tuesday in the special primary election for U.S. Senate at the Ward 6A polling place, the Sullivan School, 400 Jarvis Ave. - and poll warden Charles Cavagnac was betting the address was partly to blame.

Ward 6 voters for years cast ballots at the First Lutheran School, 1810 Northampton St.. But that site being unavailable, Sullivan School became the new voting place for Ward 6A and B.

The city mailed out notices about the polling place change to voters but Cavagnac said perhaps the notices were sent too far in advance and voters forgot or got confused.

In any case, with Ward 6B registering 80 votes by 1 p.m., that meant 150 people had come out to vote for what Cavagnac said was an important election.

"It's very low, very low. I think it wasn't advertised enough, you know? It's the primary, and they got a bunch of candidates on the ballot and I think they got their messages across late.

"It's kind of hard, when it's a primary, people don't realize it's what decides who gets on the ballot. It's mostly older people (voting). Young people should get more involved. because the guy who gets elected makes important decisions about the direction of the country," Cavagnac said.

City Clerk Suzanne Mead said described the turnout citywide this way: "Slower than slow."

Getting 10 percent turnout was doubtful, she said.

The city has 23,904 registered voters and she expected Holyoke results from the 14 precincts would be available by 8:30 p.m., a half-hour after polls closed.

Massachusetts elections officials: No voters disenfranchised by South Boston ballot snafu

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Some ballots delivered in South Boston did not include the candidates running in the state Senate election.

BOSTON (AP) — State elections officials say a minor ballot snafu in Boston has been resolved and no voters were disenfranchised.

In addition to the U.S. Senate primary, a special primary is also being held Tuesday in the 1st Suffolk state Senate district.

Brian McNiff, a spokesman for Secretary of State William Galvin, says some ballots delivered in South Boston did not include the candidates running in the state Senate election. But McNiff says city voting machines did not accept the ballots and the handful of voters who cast them were allowed to re-vote with the proper ballots.

State Reps. Nick Collins and Linda Dorcena Forry, and Maureen Cahill are vying for the Democratic nomination to succeed former state Sen. Jack Hart, who resigned in January.

Republican Joseph Anthony Ureneck is also running.

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