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Springfield man arrested after rampage with screwdriver

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SPRINGFIELD — A Springfield man is being held overnight afterSpringfield Police"> police say he threatened people with a screwdriver. The incident began with a 911 call to police reporting that a man armed with what witnesses thought was a knife, began to threaten people in the vicinity of 130 Maple Street shortly before 2 a.m. Saturday. Before he could...

SPRINGFIELD — A Springfield man is being held overnight afterSpringfield Police"> police say he threatened people with a screwdriver.

The incident began with a 911 call to police reporting that a man armed with what witnesses thought was a knife, began to threaten people in the vicinity of 130 Maple Street shortly before 2 a.m. Saturday.

Before he could escape the area, police were able to stop the car he was driving, and restrain Edwin Harrison, 34, of 72 Dearborn St in Springfield, before he could escape.

Lt. Henry Gagnon said Harrison was arrested on a variety of charges including, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, assault and battery on a police officer, breach of peace and possession of a Class B substance.

He will be arraigned in Springfield District Court Monday.


Driver barely misses officer as he tries to flee police

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A Springfield man in the wrong place at the worng time nearly runs over a police officer thereto investigate a shooting

SPRINGFIELD — A Springfield police officer narrowly escaped injury when an alleged drunk driver nearly ran him over as he attempted to escape police closing in on a shooting scene.

Lt. Henry Gagnon said Darrell Gibbons, 28, of 45 West Crystal Brook Drive in Springfield, was arrested after he attempted to drive away from a downtown parking lot at a high rate of speed.

Gagnon said a 2 a.m. Saturday phone report of shots fired near the 23 Hampden Street parking lot sent all available officers to the scene. Just as the police arrived, Gibbons was leaving in his vehicle. Once he saw police, Gagnon alleges that Gibbons attempted to flee at a high rate of speed. As the car headed for the lot exit, a police officer stepped in front of the vehicle to try to stop it, but immediately had to jump out of the way as Gibbons sped out of the lot.

Police say Gibbons drove just two streets over to Grid Iron Street, parked and turned off his lights to try to avoid police now in pursuit. It didn't work. He was discovered and arrested. He was charged with operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, assault on a police officer with a dangerous weapon, resisting arrest and a one way street violation. He will be arraigned in Springfield District Court Monday.

Gagnon said there is no evidence to indicate that Gibbons had any part in the shooting police were called to the scene to investigate in the first place. No weapon was found, but nine spent shell casings from a 9mm weapon were found.

Powerball: 10 things you could buy with the $600 million jackpot

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Want an NBA team? A 50,000 square-foot house near Buckingham Palace? Or how about a drone? Any one of these items could be yours if the Powerball numbers are right!

sacramento-kings-fans.JPG04.17.2013 | SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- These rabid Sacramento Kings fans could be supporting your team if you win Powerball.

Trying to figure out what to do with that $600 million you’re going to win when your Powerball numbers are picked in the Saturday, May 18, 2013 drawing? Or, if you’re like me, are you good with the estimated $376.9 million cash value that you could take home Monday morning? (Right, you can't take that much home because that's the prize before taxes, but let's not spoil our dreams, for now.)

Here are 10 ideas for how you could spend the Powerball cash option in the second-largest lottery jackpot in history (which has a good chance to be the largest ever by the time we’ve all purchased the ticket we know will win):

1. Buy the NBA’s Sacramento Kings. The team is valued at $525 million, according to Forbes, and the current owners, the Maloof family, want to sell. They apparently have a deal to sell a 65 percent share for $347.75 million, but your $376.9 million trumps that. As long as you promise to keep the team in Sacramento, even NBA Commissioner Darth, I mean David, Stern would have to OK it.

2. Fund the budgets of a handful of small cities for a year. For example, in Western Massachusetts, you could fund the proposed fiscal 2014 budgets of the cities of Agawam ($79.3 million), Holyoke ($123.6 million), Northampton ($96.2 million) and West Springfield ($82.9 million). That all comes to $382 million – all tax-deductible! – a little over your $376.9 million budget, but let's just assume the jackpot will climb enough by tonight to cover the shortfall.

3. Book 376 trips to space aboard Virgin Galactic, and take 1,860 of your best friends with you. Virgin Galactic is offering reservations for its "Spaceship Charter" level trips to space. For a mere $1 million, you can book "An exclusive spaceflight for you and up to 5 friends; Pioneer status for all 6 seats; 6 seats for the price of 5." Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo made its first powered flight last month over the Mojave Desert.

MQ-9 Reaper drone pilots.JPG06.06.2012 | SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- You could be behind the joystick of your very own MQ-9 Reaper drone with your Powerball winnings (assuming General Atomics will sell you one). This photo provided by the Defense Department shows a student pilot and sensor operator at the controls of an MQ-9 Reaper in a ground-based cockpit during a training mission flown from Hancock Field Air National Guard Base. 

4. Buy six General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper drone units, which includes 24 aircraft with six each of sensors, ground control stations and Predator Primary satellite links. The cost for each unit is $56.5 million, so while you can't quite afford that seventh unit you'd like to have, you'll be left with $37.9 million to accessorize your drone fleet. According to the U.S. Air Force website, the MQ-9 Reaper drone "provides a unique capability to perform strike, coordination, and reconnaissance against high-value, fleeting, and time-sensitive targets." Sportsmen, why sit in a tree stand waiting for a deer to come around? With your MQ-9 Reapers, do your hunting from the comfort of your ground control station.

5. Build a 54-story office and residential tower in San Francisco. I know, I know, Jay Paul Co. is already doing that, according to Bloomberg, but you know you can do better with your $375 million, plus you know what they say: Go West, young $600 million Powerball winner who takes the $376.9 million cash option.

6. Live like the queen, or king, of England – or at least next door to them. According to the London Evening Examiner, a 50,000 square-foot "house" on Carlton House Terrace in London is available for £275 million, or about $375 million. Your new digs will be just a pleasant stroll down The Mall from Buckingham Palace, where you no doubt will soon be hangin' out with the Windsors.

7. Create a foundation. Sick of hearing about the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation or the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and all their charitable donations? Why not start the Poopsie L. and Fusilli D. Bubblehiney Foundation? (Or whatever your names are). You, too, could fund highbrow programming on NPR and PBS, or, better yet, support soup kitchens and affordable housing in your neighborhood for those less fortunate than someone who just won, for example, oh, I dunno ... $376.9 million.

dustheads.JPGWould you pay $48.8 million for this painting? This is an image released by Christie's auction house showing the Jean-Michel Basquiat painting titled "Dustheads" that sold for $48.8 million on Wednesday. 

8. Buy a bunch of contemporary art. At a Christie's art sale this week, the sale price with fees for paintings by Jackson Pollock ($58.3 million for "No. 19, 1948"), Roy Lichtenstein ($56.1 million for "Woman With Flowered Hat" and $23.6 million for "Nude With Yellow Flower"), Jean-Michel Basquiat ($48.8 million for "Dustheads"), Mark Rothko ($27 million for "Untitled (Black on Maroon)"), Philip Guston ($25.9 million for "To Fellini"), Gerhard Richter ($22 million for "Abstraktes Bild, Dunkel"), Willem de Kooning ($19.2 million for "Woman (Blue Eyes)" and $9.8 million for "Untitled XVII") and Piero Manzoni ($14.1 million for "Achrome"), totaled $304.8 million. Sorry, those are sold – though maybe the new owners will take your better offer – but visit Christie's website and you'll no doubt find an auction where you could blow your $376.9 million very quickly.

9. Make two blockbuster movies – and reap the profits! "Iron Man 3," for example, cost about $200 million to make, and already has taken in over $1 billion worldwide. Get the rights to "Iron Man 4" and add that to your production of something like "Star Trek Into Darkness" (about $185 million), and you've very wisely reinvested those Powerball winnings.

10. Fund some cancer research. While the odds of winning Powerball are tiny, the odds are good that anyone reading, or writing, this article has been affected or has a loved one or two or three or more who've been affected by cancer. No one can put a price on how much they'd be willing to spend to get rid of this awful set of diseases, but $376.9 million probably could go a long way. For more on cancer research funding, go to the National Cancer Institute website.

So, what would you do if you won the $600 million Powerball jackpot? You can leave your answer below in the comments.


ISO New England lawyer Ray Hepper expresses concerns about proposed state budget that would cut funding for Perkins Braille library

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While it surely will not be the biggest-ticket item up for debate in this 2014 'FY budget cycle, the Watertown-based Perkins Library is still fighting for $66,000 over what the House has proposed to keep current services afloat. Watch video

Ray Hepper 51813.jpgRay Hepper, general council for ISO New England in Holyoke, speaks about the need for services for blind people that may be imperiled in the Senate version of the proposed state budget. Hepper, who is blind, shows some the technology that allows him to hear the words of books and newspapers through his phone. 

HOLYOKE - Ray Hepper recalls his mother carting loads of Braille books in the back of her station wagon throughout his childhood.

Now 58, and the top legal executive at the region's energy supplier, Hepper accesses most of his visual information needs through three sleek little devices, including a Braille reader that links to his iPhone's voice and a "Victor Reader" that transcribes print into the spoken word.

A self-described "techno geek" and newshound who was born totally blind, Hepper starts his day as many do: scanning his favorite periodicals. He also spends many evenings as his sighted peers do: reading novels. As general counsel at ISO New England, Hepper concedes he has the means to purchase all the latest technology, but many sight-impaired do not.

"The unemployment rate among the sight-impaired is astronomical, something like 40 or 50 percent," Hepper said.

Consequently, the free services available to an estimated 100,000-plus sight-impaired across Massachusetts by Perkins Braille and Talking Book Library are critical, he says. They enrich Hepper's life and others by providing a world of content, including ts "Newsline" program.

 

While it surely will not be the biggest-ticket item up for debate in this 2014 'FY budget cycle, the Watertown-based Perkins Library is still fighting for $66,000 over what the House has proposed to keep current services afloat.

Sen. Stephen M. Brewer. D-Barre, Chairman, Senate Committee on Ways and Means, said that arm's proposed budget for the Perkins Library is about $2.5 million, which is about $55,000 higher than previous versions. The Senate released its budget on May 15 and begin debate in the coming days.

"Gosh. If I can't help the blind in the effort then I don't want the job," Brewer said in an interview on Tuesday.

Kin Charlson, director of Perkins Library, said there are scores of people eligible for the services who may not know they exist.

"We're one of the largest talking book libraries in the country," Charlson said. "We estimate there are about 100,000 more who are eligible for our services, but don't realize they exist or that they're eligible."

In addition to thousands of Braille books on-site, the agency has its own recording studio and offers access to 350 newspapers daily either through a free telephone service or free hand-held device like Hepper's.

Even Hepper said he had no idea of the breadth or depth of the organization's services, even though he was on the higher end of information access for the blind, before he joined the board of directors.

"It's place like Perkins that have changed the way people look at being blind," he said, adding that the sight-impaired sector is growing as our population ages and the need becomes more widespread.

Greater Springfield NAACP annual banquet focuses on voter rights, need to increase minimum wage

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About 400 people attended the membership banquet.

AGAWAM - About 400 people attended the annual membership banquet of the Greater Springfield chapter of the NAACP Thursday night at Chez Josef.

The Rev. Talbert W. Swan II said that since he was elected president of the NAACP in June, 2011, the membership has increased.

“We have revitalized the brand,” he said. “We are alive and well.”

Speakers at the annual dinner focused on threats to voter rights and the need to make the minimum wage “a living wage.”

“Voters in Massachusetts are fortunate,” Swan said. He said there are efforts in other parts of the country to require photo identification to vote.

There are people without driver’s licenses who want to exercise their right to vote, Swan said.

“Nationally, the NAACP is equipping vulnerable communities with the resources to fight back against attacks on fundamental voting rights, advancing the case for gun control, fighting racial health disparities and advocating for living wages,” Swan said.

He said the Greater Springfield NAACP has been actively pursuing an agenda to address these issues.

The keynote speaker for the event was Trudy Lucas Grant, manager of stakeholder relations for the National NAACP.

In the last presidential election, voter turnout by African-Americans surpassed voter turnout in 2008, Grant said.

Grant said the NAACP works with faith communities and civic organizations to continue to get the vote out.

“I am excited to be here,” she said of Thursday’s membership dinner.

Those who attended watched filmed remarks by Gov. Deval L. Patrick and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren.


Chicopee City Council approves money for paving of lot at the site of the former Market Square Billiards

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The project was originally expected to cost $350,000 but hidden problems ballooned the price to more than $1 million.

122811 market square billiards chicopee.JPGThis photograph was taken as the city prepared to demolish of the Market Square Billiards building. 

CHICOPEE - The City Council has approved $200,000 to pave a dirt parking lot in downtown, ending a long and expensive saga that began with the plan to raze the former Market Square Billiards building.

The city took the building at 6-20 Springfield St., which had been foreclosed on, by eminent domain in 2010 with the plans to tear it down and pave the land for a parking lot. The original cost was estimated at $350,000 and included removal of asbestos, engineering fees and paving.

But the discovery of problem-after-problem spiked the cost of tearing down the building and creating the parking lot to well over $1 million, Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette said.

He argued there was no other way to remove the structurally-compromised building from the downtown and having a deserted building that was frequently broken into by vagrants made it even more difficult to try to revitalize the city’s center.

“If not for the city it would still be sitting there,” Bissonnette said.

One new development is a judge recently ruled in the city’s favor on the eminent domain case. The city had paid $15,000 for the building while the owners, IB Property Holdings, LLC of Coral Gables, Fla., had argued it was worth more than $200,000. Bissonnette said the city is now arguing that even the $15,000 should be returned because of all the hazardous waste discovered in the building and on the surrounding property.

An engineering study done to prepare to take the building down discovered that Market Square Billiards shared a wall with the neighboring building and the city had to shore up the shared wall for an additional $250,000. Then an asbestos-covered boiler, which had been walled in with masonry, was found during demolition and had to be removed for $30,000. Workers also found more asbestos hidden under former bowling lanes which cost an additional $17,000 to remove.

Then chemicals were discovered underground that came from a long-closed dry cleaners located near the building. The chemicals had seeped into the ground, under pavement between the billiards building and the neighboring Kendall building. Two MassDevelopment grants for $210,000 were secured to assess and remove the environmental waste.

City councilors said they continue to have mixed feelings about the project but approved the funding in a 13-0 vote. The money will come out of the sale of real estate account.

“This is a long time in coming,” Councilor James K. Tillotson said. “This is going to be one of the most expensive parking lots for 25 to 30 spaces.”

But Councilor Charles Swider, who reminded councilors there are few vacant lots left in the city that are not contaminated, said business owners downtown have been waiting a long time for the project to be complete because more parking will help them.

“Things are starting to happen (downtown) and these are taxpayers, too,” he said.

President Barack Obama's second term agenda shifts to weathering controversies

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Despite Democratic fears, predictions of the demise of President Barack Obama's agenda appear exaggerated after a week of cascading controversies, political triage by the administration and party leaders in Congress and lack of evidence to date of wrongdoing close to the Oval Office.

By DAVID ESPO, AP Special Correspondent

WASHINGTON (AP) — Despite Democratic fears, predictions of the demise of President Barack Obama's agenda appear exaggerated after a week of cascading controversies, political triage by the administration and party leaders in Congress and lack of evidence to date of wrongdoing close to the Oval Office.

"Absolutely not," Steven Miller, the recently resigned acting head of the Internal Revenue Service, responded Friday when asked if he had any contact with the White House about targeting conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status for special treatment.

The president's re-election campaign?" persisted Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif.

"No," said Miller.

The hearing took place at the end of a week in which Republicans repeatedly assailed Obama and were attacked by Democrats in turn — yet sweeping immigration legislation advanced methodically toward bipartisan approval in the Senate Judiciary Committee. The measure "has strong support of its own in the Senate," said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., a member of the panel.

Across the Capitol, a bipartisan House group reported agreement in principle toward a compromise on the issue, which looms as Obama's best chance for a signature second-term domestic achievement. "I continue to believe that the House needs to deal with this," said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who is not directly involved in the talks.

The president's nominee to become energy secretary, Ernest Moniz, won Senate confirmation, 97-0. And there were signs that Republicans might allow confirmation of Sri Srinivasan to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, sometimes a stepping stone to the Supreme Court.

Separately, a House committee approved legislation to prevent a spike in interest rates on student loans on July 1. It moves in the direction of a White House-backed proposal for future rate changes to be based on private markets.

Even so, Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee, said, "It's been a bad week for the administration."

Several Democratic lawmakers and aides agreed, and expressed concern about the impact on Obama's agenda — even though much of it has been stymied by Republicans for months already.

At the same time, Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., voiced optimism that the IRS controversy would boost the push for an overhaul of the tax code, rather than derail it. "It may make a case for a simpler tax code, where the IRS has less discretion," he said.

Long-term budget issues, the main flash point of divided government since 2011, have receded as projected deficits fall in the wake of an improving economy and recently enacted spending cuts and tax increases.

Even before Obama began grappling with the IRS, the fallout from last year's deadly attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, and from the Justice Department's secret seizure of Associated Press phone records, the two parties were at odds over steps to replace $85 billion in across-the-board spending cuts. In particular, Obama's call for higher taxes is a nonstarter with Republicans.

Other high-profile legislation and presidential appointees face difficulties that predate the current controversies.

Months ago, Obama scaled back requested gun safety legislation to center on expanded background checks for firearms purchasers. That was derailed in the Senate, has even less chance in the House and is unlikely to reach the president's desk.

Republicans oppose other recommendations from the president's State of the Union address, including automatic increases in the minimum wage, a pre-kindergarten program funded by higher cigarette taxes and more federal money for highways and bridge repair.

In a clash that long predates the IRS controversy, Senate Republicans seem intent on blocking Obama's nomination of Tom Perez as labor secretary. Gina McCarthy's nomination to head the Environmental Protection Agency is also on hold, at least temporarily, and Democrats expect Republican opposition awaits Penny Pritzger, Obama's choice for commerce secretary.

Rhetorically, the two parties fell into two camps when it came to the White House troubles. Democrats tended to describe them as controversies, Republicans often used less flattering terms.

Speaking on the Senate floor, Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., accused the administration of fostering a "culture of intimidation." He referred to the IRS, the handling of the Benghazi attack and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius' "fundraising among the industry people she regulates on behalf of the president's health care law."

Two days later, Camp, a 23-year veteran lawmaker, opened the IRS hearing by calling the agency's actions part of a "culture of cover-ups and intimidation in this administration." He offered no other examples.

Rep. Trey Radel, a first-term Florida Republican, said in an interview, "What we're looking at now is a breach of trust" from the White House.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California offered a scathing response when asked if the controversies would hamper Obama's ability to win legislation from the Republican-controlled House. "Well, the last two years there was nothing that went through this Congress, and it was no AP, IRS or any other (thing) that we were dealing with."

"They just want to do nothing. And their timetable is never," she said of GOP lawmakers.

Similarly, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid gave no ground on Benghazi, a dispute that increasingly centered on talking points written for administration officials to use on television after the attack last September in which U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans were killed.

"It's obvious it's an attempt to embarrass President Obama and embarrass Hillary Clinton," he said of Republican criticism that first flared during last year's election campaign.

On a third front, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., resurrected legislation that would requiring a judge to approve subpoenas for news media communications records when investigating news leaks said to threaten the national security. It was a response to the FBI's secret, successful pursuit of Associated Press phone records in a current probe.

While Democrats counterattacked on Benghazi and parried on leaks, they bashed the IRS' treatment of conservative groups as improper if not illegal — and warned Republicans not to overplay their hand.


Probe begins after Connecticut train collision injures about 70 commuters

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About 700 people were on board the Metro-North trains when one heading east from New York City's Grand Central Station to New Haven derailed about 6:10 p.m. just outside Bridgeport, MTA and Bridgeport officials said.

By SUSAN HAIGH, Associated Press

FAIRFIELD, Conn. (AP) — Two commuter trains packed with rush-hour commuters collided in an accident that sent about 70 people to the hospital, severely damaged the tracks and threatened to snarl travel in the congested Northeast Corridor.

Three patients remained in critical condition Saturday morning, with two of those stable, according to officials at two Bridgeport hospitals.

The crash happened Friday evening on the Metro-North Railroad, which serves the northern suburbs of New York City.

Passengers described a chaotic, terrifying scene of crunching metal and flying bodies.

"All I know was I was in the air, hitting seats, bouncing around, flying down the aisle and finally I came to a stop on one seat," Lola Oliver, 49, of Bridgeport, told The Associated Press. "It happened so fast I had no idea what was going on. All I know is we crashed."

About 700 people were on board the Metro-North trains when one heading east from New York City's Grand Central Station to New Haven derailed about 6:10 p.m. just outside Bridgeport, MTA and Bridgeport officials said.

The train was hit by a train heading west from New Haven to Grand Central on an adjacent track, MTA spokesman Aaron Donovan said. Some cars on the second train also derailed as a result of the collision.

"We're most concerned about the injured and ultimately reopening the system," Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said from the scene about three hours after the crash.

A team from the National Transportation Safety Board was headed to the area to survey the crash site Saturday morning with Malloy, U.S. Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy and other Connecticut officials, according to Malloy's office.

Officials planned to update journalists on the crash following the tour.

Malloy said most people in the crash were not seriously hurt. Among those critically injured, he said, one's injuries were "very critical."

Trains Collide-ConnInjured passengers are removed from the scene of a train collision, Friday, May 17, 2013 in Fairfield, Conn. Two commuter trains serving New York City collided in Connecticut during Friday's evening rush hour, injuring about 50 people, authorities said. There were no reports of fatalities. (AP Photo/The Connecticut Post, Christian Abraham) MANDATORY CREDIT  

The nursing supervisor at St. Vincent Medical Center said Saturday morning that 44 people from the crash had been treated there, and that five of those were admitted. One of the five remained in critical condition but was now stable, the supervisor said.

Bridgeport Hospital spokesman John Cappiello said two patients were admitted in critical condition, and one of those was now stable. The hospital treated 24 other patients from the crash, and many had been released already with the rest expected to be released by late Saturday morning, Cappiello said.

The Metro-North Railroad, a commuter line serving the northern suburbs, described it as a "major derailment." Photos showed a train car askew on the rails, with its end smashed up and brushing against another train.

Malloy said there was extensive damage to the train cars and the track, and it could take until Monday for normal service to be restored. He said the accident will have a "big impact on the Northeast Corridor."

Amtrak, which uses the same rails, suspended service indefinitely between New York and Boston.

Bridgeport Mayor Bill Finch said the disruption caused by the train accident could cost the region's economy millions of dollars.

"A lot of people rely on this, and we've got to get this reconnected as soon as possible," Finch said.

Investigators Friday night did not know what caused the first train to derail. Malloy said there was no reason to believe it was anything other than an accident.

Passenger Bradley Agar of Westport, Conn., said he was in the first car of the westbound train when he heard screaming and the window smash behind him.

"I saw the first hit, the bump, bump, bump all the way down," he said.

Agar had returned to work this week for the first time since breaking his shoulder in January. And since he was still healing, he thought it would be safer to take the train than drive.

The area where the accident happened was already down to two tracks because of repair work, Malloy said. Crews have been working for a long time on the electric lines above the tracks, the power source for the trains. He said Connecticut has an old system and no other alternate tracks.

By late evening, Bridgeport Police Chief Joseph Gaudett said everybody who needed treatment had been attended to, and authorities were beginning to turn their attention to investigating the cause.

"Everybody seemed pretty calm," he said. "Everybody was thankful they didn't get seriously hurt. They were anxious to get home to their families."

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority operates the Metro-North Railroad, the second-largest commuter railroad in the nation. The Metro-North main lines — the Hudson, Harlem, and New Haven — run northward from New York City's Grand Central Terminal into suburban New York and Connecticut.


Associated Press writer Michael Melia contributed to this report from Hartford, Conn.

Brimfield to consider creating adult entertainment district

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The proposed adult entertainment district would be "from the westerly side of Monson Road to the easterly side of what was now or formally known as Bradway Road for a depth of 500 feet" from the bounds of Route 20."

BRIMFIELD – An article to create an “Adult Entertainment District” is part of the 53-article annual Town Meeting warrant on Monday that also includes a citizen’s petition requiring municipal boards to accept public comment and making the Treasurer's job appointed by selectmen instead of elected.

The meeting at town hall begins at 7 p.m.

The proposed adult entertainment district would be "from the westerly side of Monson Road to the easterly side of what was now or formally known as Bradway Road for a depth of 500 feet" from the bounds of Route 20."

A citizen’s petition article would change public access requirements.

The state’s open meeting law leaves it to the discretion of boards during regular meetings whether to allow audience members to speak. The law does not permit attendees the right to speak.

The proposed Brimfield article, number 40 on the warrant, would require a committee chairman to “allow time for members of the public to address the board concerning any agenda item prior to the board voting.”

A related article, also by petition, would require meeting minutes to be posted online, agendas to be publicly posted at least 48 hours prior to the meeting and require every meeting to include a public access agenda item.

Another citizen’s petition would make the town treasurer’s job a selectmen’s appointment. Former treasurer Kirsten Weldon resigned last month after admitting to mistakes.

The planning board has articles on the warrant to regulate “storage trailers.”

The Brimfield finance committee is recommending fiscal 2014 total expenditures of $8,724,927, a 3.5 percent increase from this year’s $8,430,528 total.

Town meeting will decide an article to limit to $150,000 the Brimfield Flea Market expenditures used for “administrative, operating, maintenance and emergency services.”

Development of Cedar Ridge condominiums in Wilbraham to continue as planned in wake of Town Meeting vote, officials say

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So far 25 condominium units have been built.

WILBRAHAM - With its bid to purchase additional land defeated at Monday’s annual Town Meeting, development of Cedar Ridge condominiums off Stony Hill Road will continue as planned, a spokesman for the developer said.

Developer Kent Pecoy was defeated at Monday’s annual town meeting in his request to have some abutting town property declared surplus so he could bid on purchasing the property.

With the bid defeated, the developers will continue to develop the project as planned, Paul Robbins, spokesman for Pecoy, said.

Robbins said Mile Oak Land Holdings LLC which owns the Cedar Ridge condominium project wished to bid on purchasing an additional 19 acres if the town declared it surplus.

In return for the developers acquiring the 19 acres of town-owned land, Mile Oak offered to convey 25 acres of woodland to the rear of the property to the town for permanent preservation.

The 25 acres currently are permitted for three-story attached units.

If the land exchange had taken place, the developer would have continued developing free-standing, detached condominiums, and the three-story buildings would not have been built, Robbins said.

Robbins said the developer could not get the required two-thirds vote required to have the 19 acres of town-owned property declared surplus.

“It is difficult to get a two-thirds vote at Town Meeting,” Robbins said.

Richard Butler, a member of the Planning Board, said residents in their wisdom said they cared more about preserving the trails which have been developed on the existing property than in the additional tax revenue from condominiums on that portion of the property.

“The townspeople, in their judgment, said no,” Butler said.

The town’s Open Space Committee has been cutting trails on the public land to connect to the old McDonald Farm, Butler said.

Following the vote, the developer will continue with his plan to develop free standing condominium units and the three-story buildings in the rear, Robbins said.

So far, 25 condominium units have been built on the property, Robbins said.

With the downturn in the economy, the market slowed for condominium units, he said.

He said the market has started to improve.

The developer had wanted to reconfigure the property because there is more interest from buyers in free-standing units, Robbins said.

The developer will continue building free-standing units, and will continue with the original plan to build three-story units in the back, Robbins said.

The site is permitted for 218 condominium units. Pecoy was offering to reduce the number of units to 203 if he had been able to purchase the additional land.

Republican Party hopes IRS scandal's collateral damage will include President Barack Obama's health care law

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Political scandals have strange ways of causing collateral damage, and Republicans are hoping the furor over federal tax enforcers singling out conservative groups will ensnare their biggest target: President Barack Obama's health care law.

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Political scandals have strange ways of causing collateral damage, and Republicans are hoping the furor over federal tax enforcers singling out conservative groups will ensnare their biggest target: President Barack Obama's health care law.

But no one appears to have connected the factual dots yet, and it's unclear whether they will.

The Internal Revenue Service has a major role in carrying out the health care law, because financial assistance to help the uninsured afford coverage will be funneled through the tax system. At the same time, the IRS is also responsible for penalties on individuals and employers who fail to comply with the law's requirements.

In the latest twist, it turns out that the former head of the office that subjected tea-party groups seeking tax exemptions to tougher scrutiny is now running the tax agency's division in charge of implementing the health care law.

That official apparently switched roles before internal alarm bells went off about the problem. But feed all that into today's frenzied world of online speculation, and red-meat associations are irresistible.

"Now we've learned that the IRS, which is tasked with enforcing this very unpopular bill of Obamacare, the IRS admitted they targeted Americans," Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., said during floor debate this week on repealing the health care law.

Barack ObamaIn this May 17, 2013, file photo President Barack Obama walks out of the White House Oval Office in Washington, and heads toward the Marine One helicopter on his way to Baltimore, Md., as part of his "Middle Class Jobs & Opportunity Tours". Despite Democratic fears, predictions of the demise of Obama's agenda appear exaggerated after a week blending cascading controversies, political triage by the administration and party leaders in Congress and lack of evidence to date of wrongdoing close to the Oval Office. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File) 

"And so this gargantuan government expansion known as Obamacare will allow bureaucrats access to our most intimate, personal health information," she added. "It will be a huge database that government is putting together and building right now. Under Obamacare, the average American will pay more, they'll get less, and now they have to worry that their government may punish them because of their beliefs."

Nonsense, says Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., ranking Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee, which oversees the IRS.

"There really isn't a tie," said Levin. "This is another effort by the Republicans to essentially try to score political points."

The head of the IRS health care office, Sarah Hall Ingram, was in charge of the tax exempt division when agents first started improperly targeting conservative groups over their applications for tax-exempt status. The fallout has already led to the ouster of acting IRS Commissioner Steven Miller, followed by the announcement that the current head of the division will retire.

But the IRS said Ingram was re-assigned to help the agency implement the health care law in December 2010, about six months before a Treasury inspector general's report said her subordinate, the director of exempt organizations, learned about the targeting.

"There isn't any evidence that Sarah Ingram had any inkling of the problems," said Levin. By comparison, Levin continued, ousted commissioner Miller failed to adequately inform Congress after he learned.

Tom Davis, a former Republican congressman from Virginia, said GOP lawmakers are right to be looking for a connection, but must be careful not to overplay their hand.

The health care law "is 50-50 with the public on a good day," said Davis. "You put that together with the IRS and it's combustible. For Republicans, I think they need to go a little slower and get some facts in."

"I don't think it's just a couple of underlings, but they don't have any smoking gun yet," he added.

Though it plays a crucial role in carrying out the health care law, the IRS is part of the back-office operation. IRS agents won't be setting up health insurance markets, and they won't have a say in which health plans people get to pick or what doctors they see.

However, agency officials will determine who is eligible for financial assistance under the law — and who must pay penalties.

The reason the IRS is involved in what's essentially a social program is that lawmakers crafted the financial subsidies available under the health law as tax credits. The agency already administers another major social program, the earned income tax credit, which long ago surpassed welfare as the main source of government assistance for low-income families.

The IRS is involved with four major components of the health care law. The most important one is determining if individual Americans are entitled to new tax credits to help pay private insurance premiums. It's a complex calculation.

Keyed to income on a sliding scale, the credits are available starting in 2014 to households making up to four times the federal poverty level, or about $94,000 for a family of four. Individuals or families are eligible if they don't have affordable coverage on the job. But if you understate your income to get a bigger credit, you'll owe more taxes next year.

The agency is also in charge of assessing penalties on people who ignore the law's requirement to carry health insurance, which applies to virtually all Americans starting next year.

On the employer side, the IRS administers a tax credit to help small businesses with low-wage employees afford coverage, and it's also in charge of imposing penalties on companies with 50 or more employees that don't offer coverage.


Obituaries today: Bessie Jean Emery worked at Sears and Roebuck and Ampad in Holyoke

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
051813-bessie-emery.jpgBessie Jean Emery 

Bessie Jean Emery, 68, passed away on May 6. She was born in Americus, Ga., the second-oldest of 15 brothers and sisters. She attended Holyoke High School. During her time in Holyoke, she worked for Sears and Roebuck Co., and the Ampad Company. She was a longtime member of the Bethlehem Baptist Church in Holyoke, where she served on the usher board for many years.

Obituaries from The Republican:


Agawam having discussions with Hard Rock International, MGM about potential status as community abutting Western Massachusetts casino development

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Communities surrounding casinos may get reimbursement from them in areas such as traffic, public safety and the environment.

AGAWAM – The mayor’s Casino Advisory Committee is negotiating with Hard Rock International for it to pick up costs associated with the effects on Agawam of the $800 million casino the company hopes to build just across the Westfield River in West Springfield.

Town Clerk Richard M. Theroux, who chairs the committee, also said Friday that MGM has agreed to speak with Agawam about its status as a community abutting the casino it would like to build in the nearby South End of Springfield.

“They are waiting for their vote July 16,” Theroux said of the referendum in which Springfield voters will decide if they will allow a casino in their community. “After that, we will negotiate our status with them and will talk about traffic, revenue sharing and other issues.”

Theroux pointed out that under the enabling legislation legalizing casinos in Massachusetts, communities abutting casinos may seek reimbursement from them to take mitigation measures. Abutting communities may also get compensation for legal fees and consultants on such issues as traffic, public safety and the environment.

Theroux said Jeffrey Fialky, the city’s legal counsel on casinos, is negotiating money for fees and consultants with Hard Rock International.

“I am adamant that the taxpayers of Agawam should not incur any of these costs,” Theroux said. “We want to protect the Town of Agawam. They (Hard Rock International) should be paying for the expertise we need.

Agawam officials have expressed concerns that a casino on the grounds of the Eastern States Exposition in West Springfield will cause traffic tie-ups around the Morgan-Sullivan Bridge over the Westfield River between West Springfield and Agawam. They have also said a casino in Springfield has the potential to create traffic problems on Route 5 near the South End Bridge.

Mark Rivers, president of the Bronson Companies, consultants to Hard Rock, confirmed that he is negotiating with Agawam to reimburse it for a peer review of Hard Rock’s traffic study and its expenses negotiating a surrounding community agreement with Hard Rock.

Massachusetts Auditor Suzanne Bump cites May Institute for seeking excess reimbursements on salaries

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The excess charges included $138,213 to the institute's former CEO and president and $210,556 for wages to 10 managers.

suebump.JPGSuzanne Bump 

BOSTON - The May Institute, which has a school in West Springfield, charged the state for $348,769 in management salaries that were beyond the state's reimbursement limits, state Auditor Suzanne M. Bump said on Monday.

The excess charges included $138,213 to the institute's former CEO and president and $210,556 for wages to 10 managers, according to an audit by Bump's office.

The May Institute is noted for its teaching to children with autism.


“The May Institute provides valuable educational and rehabilitative services to a vulnerable population, but if you do business with the state you have to follow the state’s rules when you spend public money,” Bump said in a statement which accompanied public announcement of her audit's findings.

The May Institute told Bump's office that it is amending its salary payments for program managers and is negotiating an agreement with the state to resolve the charges that are not allowed.

Bump called on the institute to repay the state $348,769 for the excess charges.

According to financial filings, the Randolph-based May Institute's now-former president and CEO’s total compensation amounted to more than $376,000 in fiscal year 2010 and $451,000 in fiscal year 2011. The former CEO is Walter P. Christian, who retired after 35 years, according to an institute press release in January.

The state reimbursed the nonprofit about $140,000 each year in accord with set salary reimbursement limits. State auditors found the May Institute improperly charged the Commonwealth $138,213 for additional compensation for its CEO and president.

The additional compensation provided for such items as personal services for the now-former president and CEO’s family, the personal use of two vehicles, and a daily allowance of $105 for traveling costs while he worked from a house he owns in Georgia.

The audit also found that the institute failed to report as much as $151,717 of the resident and CEO’s total compensation as taxable income to both the federal Internal Revenue Service and the state Department of Revenue.

The May Center for Child Development in West Springfield provides educational services to children and adolescents ages 3 to 22, with autism and other developmental disabilities. It is one of May Institute's four special education schools in Massachusetts and California.

Holyoke police: 1 of 3 arrested after vandalizing portable toilet on Mayer Field, locked himself inside in attempt to elude officers

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The suspects allegedly ripped out a hand santizer and damaged a toilet paper dispenser.

HOLYOKE - A 21-year-old Chicopee man, one of three suspects arrested after police said they vandalized a portable toilet at Mayer Field early Saturday morning, locked himself inside in an attempt to elude police.

The ruse did not work, and police arrested Andrew Chao, 53 Arlmont Street, Chicopee, on charges of trespass and wantonly injuring real or personal property, Lt. Matthew Moriarty said.

Two other suspects, Dylan O’Connor, 19, of 11 York Street, Holyoke, and Stephen E. Bergeron, 18, of 341 Bonnyvale Road, Brattleboro, Vt., found elsewhere on the field, face the same charges.

Moriarty said the three suspects ripped out the hand sanitizer and damaged the toilet paper dispenser. Police were summoned to the field for a report of vandalism at about 8 a.m.


Distinguished scholar Paul Alpers, husband of Smith College President Carol Christ, dies of cancer

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For 38 years, he was a member of the English department at the University of California, Berkeley.


smith college logo

Smith college logo.jpg 

NORTHAMPTON - Paul Alpers, husband of Smith College President Carol Christ and professor-in-residence in the department of English language and literature, died Sunday evening after a battle with cancer.

The death was announced by Marilyn Schuster, dean of the faculty, Monday morning.

Alpers was a distinguished scholar, a faculty colleague, and friend to the Smith community. He served as an unofficial ambassador for Smith, cherishing the friendships he made with many Smith alumnae from around the world, Schuster said.

He received the A.B., A.M., and Ph.D. from Harvard University.

For 38 years, he was a member of the English department at the University of California, Berkeley. Upon retirement, he held the title Class of 1942 Professor of English Emeritus. After coming to Smith, he took and helped to teach classes in classics and continued to offer guest lectures in his field of Renaissance literature.

He leaves his sons, Benjamin Alpers and Nicholas Alpers; his stepchildren, Elizabeth Sklute and Jonathan Sklute; and his brothers, David Alpers and Edward Alpers.

Information regarding a memorial service will be forthcoming.

Holyoke Community College plans livestream of commencement

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This will mark the college's 66th commencement on June 1.

holyoke community collegeStudents walk down stairs at the crowded Holyoke Community College campus.  

HOLYOKE - For the first time, Holyoke Community College will be live streaming its commencement ceremonies over the Internet.

Live streaming will begin at 10 a.m. on June 1 as the school’s 66th commencement ceremonies get underway under a tent on the college’s O’Connell soccer field. The live stream will be available through a link on the main page of the college website,hcc.edu.

“For friends and family members who may live far away or can’t make it, this is a great way for them to keep in touch and witness their loved ones participate in this special event,” said Liz Golen, student activities coordinator and a member of the the college's Commencement Committee.

At the ceremony, student orators Matt Cunningham, of Easthampton, and Samantha Melendez, ’of Springfield, will address graduates and guests.

The college will also confer Distinguished Service Awards to three individuals whose dedication and service to the college have enhanced the undergraduate experience and improved the quality of life on campus.

This year’s recipients are Greg Schneider, a member of the Class of 1990, of Longmeadow, co-founder and CEO of 3BL Media in Northampton; Lydia Petosky, a 2003 graduate, of Holyoke, a Springfield public school teacher; and former HCC trustee James Carey, of South Hadley.

Helen Caulton-Harris, chair of college's board of trustees, will confer associate degrees and certificates to approximately 900 graduates.

Interstate 91 slow-downs expected to continue between Longmeadow and West Springfield this week as contractor replaces signs

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Overhead signs will be replaced in the overnight hours.

SPRINGFIELD -- Drivers on Interstate 91 should expect single-lane restrictions between Longmeadow and West Springfield through Thursday this week as a contractor works to replace signs.

The MassHighway project information page offers this description of the project:

This project entails the replacement of guide and traffic signs on Interstate Route 91. The replacements will be made from the Connecticut / Massachusetts border in Longmeadow northerly to the US Route 5 interchange (Exits 13A-B) in West Springfield, including applicable signing on intersecting secondary roadways. Most of the signs are about 15 years old and reaching the end of their service life.
Gallery preview Sara Lavoie, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Transportation, said southbound drivers bore the brunt of the slow-down Monday as contractors worked in the area of the South End Bridge, where several on- and off-ramps are crowded into a relatively short area.

State police said they have been told that Monday’s work was scheduled to wind down around 2 p.m.

The contractor, Liddell Brothers, will work during the daytime hours to replace signs on the side of the highway. Overhead signs will be replaced in the overnight hours, Lavoie said.

Lavoie stressed the work will be done during off-peak hours and not during the morning and afternoon or evening commutes.

The contract value for the project is listed as $4,026,250.00, according to the MassHighway site.

Shortly before 4 p.m. Monday, the state website listed the project as 31 percent complete.

Negotiations set to continue between nurses, management at UMass Medical Center's University Campus with strike looming

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Negotiations between union officials for 1,100 nurses at the UMass Memorial Medical Center's University Campus and hospital management is set to continue today as the two sides to try reach a deal on a new contract and avert a possible strike.

WORCESTER - Negotiations between union officials for 1,100 nurses at the UMass Memorial Medical Center's University Campus and hospital management is set to continue Monday as the two sides to try reach a deal on a new contract and avert a possible strike.

Without a new contract, nurses have said they will go on strike at 6 a.m. Thursday. The hospital has reported that it will hire replacement nurses to work for five days beginning Thursday. According to Robert Brigna, a spokesperson for UMass Medical, there will be the "appropriate nursing staffing levels to provide safe, quality care for our patients."

The cost of the replacement nurses is reported to be $4 million. Eric Dickson, MD, CEO and president of UMass Memorial Health Care, confirmed on Friday that the hospital at the university campus on Plantation Street had come to an agreement with a replacement staffing agency.

Nurses who work at a different UMass Memorial facility on Belmont Street and the nurses at the Hahnemann facility on Lincoln Street reached a tentative contract agreement with hospital management on Friday and agreed not to strike.

Dickson said in a statement Friday that the offer the Memorial and Hahnemann campus nurses accepted was also given to the University Campus nurses. That offer has since been taken off the table and a new one will reflect the cost of brining in replacement nurses.

"As I have said in my previous communications to our nurses, the last, best and final offer that we made to both bargaining units, and which the MNA-Memorial/Hahnemann bargaining team accepted last night, is no longer available for our University Campus nurses," said Dickson in a statement on Friday. "Instead, their offer contains a decreased economic package, which reflects the cost of having to bring in replacement nurses for a minimum of five days. This is disappointing because our offer was fair and we had hoped it would have put an end to the negotiations."

According to the Worcester Telegram & Gazette*, University Campus nurses want the hospital to set the patient-to-nurse ratio to five to one.

"Right now it's seven to one and sometimes eight to one," David Schildmeier, spokesman for the Massachusetts Nurses Association, told the Telegram & Gazette.

According to the hospital's website, the Medical Center and Emergency Department will be open, but some "elective procedures" scheduled for May 23 and/or May 24 may be rescheduled. If a patient has a procedure scheduled on one of those days, the hospital will contact them if it needs to be rescheduled.

*Worcester Telegram & Gazette articles may require a subscription.

Armando Olivares acquitted of murder charge in Springfield shooting of Reality Shabazz Walker

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Frank told jurors that although Walker told the State Police dispatcher Olivares had threatened to shoot him, he never mentioned Olivares' name after his call was transferred to the Springfield Police, who would handle any investigation into the alleged threat.

ARMANDO.JPGArmando Olivares 

SPRINGFIELD — A Hampden Superior Court jury has acquitted 19-year-old Armando Olivares in the fatal shooting of Reality Shabazz Walker.

The jury deliberated about 90 minutes before returning its verdict.

More than a dozen family members of Olivares, who have attended the trial, were in court for the verdict.

Olivares, upon hearing "not guilty," began sobbing loudly and hugging defense lawyer Donald W. Frank. He repeatedly apologized to Judge John Ferrara, who had told everyone in the courtroom to greet quietly whatever verdict was returned.

Ferrara told Olivares he didn't need to apologize but did need to pull himself together.

In his closing argument, Frank told jurors the prosecution had not made its case that Olivares fatally shot Walker in the early morning hours of Nov. 30, 2010.

Three other men are still charged with Walker’s killing.

Ferrara had allowed some of the defense lawyers' motions to sever trials of defendants, because testimony could be introduced for one defendant that would be against the interests of other defendants.

The other men are Dennis Diaz, Lionel Lopez Cardona and Javier Nieves, all of Springfield.

Assistant District Attorney Diane Dillon said in her closing argument Walker had called 911 at about 8 p.m. Nov. 29 and told the State Police dispatcher who answered he was being chased and Olivares had threatened to shoot him.

That was about four hours before Walker was shot.

Frank told jurors that although Walker told the State Police dispatcher Olivares had threatened to shoot him, he never mentioned Olivares' name after his call was transferred to the Springfield Police, who would handle any investigation into the alleged threat.

Dillon went over the prosecution’s reliance on phone records to tie Nieves and Olivares together in a plot to kill Walker.

The prosecution theory is Nieves and Olivares, with the other two co-defendants, lured Walker to a place outside of the John L. Sullivan housing complex off Stafford Street so Olivares could kill him.

Frank said, “In order to make you believe Mr. Olivares killed Reality Walker, the commonwealth needs you to believe Javier Nieves killed (in a conspiracy) his friend Reality Walker.”

Dillon asked the jury to use what Daniel Baro, Nieves’ cousin, said on the stand, in combination with the phone records, to find Olivares guilty.

Baro testified he heard Nieves say certain things on a cell phone when he was driving Nieves around before the Walker shooting. Among those was a comment saying, “You can leave now.” Dillon said that was Nieves telling Walker to go outside so he could get shot.

Frank said there is no proof of who was on the other end of the calls Baro heard Nieves’ make and receive. He said even though phone records showed calls between Nieves and Walker and Nieves and Olivares, there were also calls to other numbers during the relevant time.


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