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Holyoke Geriatric Authority fails to pay employees who are left unsure when pay will come; board meeting in closed session on 'future'

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Employees at Geriatric Authority wait for their paychecks.

holyoke geriatric authority sign large horz.JPG 

>HOLYOKE -- Workers at the Holyoke Geriatric Authority remained confused and frustrated at failing to get paychecks this week and receiving only vague assurances from authority officials about when pay will come, a union official said Friday.

Meanwhile, the authority board of directors is meeting behind closed doors at the 45 Lower Westfield Road nursing home to discuss "the future" of the facility and its property.

Employees were supposed to be paid Thursday, but have been told a computer problem, or the snow storm or a late state reimbursement has pushed that back to next week sometime, said Tyrone C. House, vice president of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 1459. The union represents 70 employees at the authority such as certified nurse assistants, dieticians and others, he said.

"As you know, there is somewhat of an issue, a big issue, going on at this time about the wages, or lack there of. The wages have not been distributed on the usual day, which is Thursday," Housey told the board, before it went into closed session.

"We are surprised. We have a lot of upset people. As you know, our members live paycheck to paycheck," he said.

Housey said the problem appears to be the authority has no money to meet payroll, though authority officials didn't say the exact cause of the pay problem.

"We don't know where we stand. We don't know if we have any jobs right now," he said.

The board approved a motion by member Joseph O'Neill to have the authority cover checking-account overdrafts experienced by employees who didn't get paid and can provide documentation about an overdraft charge. But it was unclear if that applied only to those employees with accounts at Holyoke Credit Union or at all institutions.

The board voted in open session to accept the resignation as chairwoman of member Patricia C. Devine, who will resign from the board outright next month, according to a letter she gave to board members. Board member Fred Glidden is the new chairman.

The authority at 45 Lower Westfield Road has 80 nursing home beds and 80 day-care slots for elderly people. It is overseen by a board consisting of three appointed by the City Council and three appointed by the mayor, with those six choosing a seventh.


Transcripts show Fed at times slow to grasp 2008 financial crisis

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The Federal Reserve agonized in 2008 over how far to go to stop a financial crisis that threatened to cause a recession and at times struggled to recognize its speed and magnitude.

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
and PAUL WISEMAN
AP Economics Writers

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve agonized in 2008 over how far to go to stop a financial crisis that threatened to cause a recession and at times struggled to recognize its speed and magnitude.

"We're crossing certain lines. We're doing things we haven't done before," Chairman Ben Bernanke said as Fed officials met in an emergency session March 10 and launched never-before-taken steps to lend to teetering Wall Street firms, among a series of unorthodox moves that year to calm investors and aid the economy.
"On the other hand, this financial crisis is now in its eighth month, and the economic outlook has worsened quite significantly."

The Fed on Friday released hundreds of pages of transcripts covering its 14 meetings during 2008 — eight regularly scheduled meetings and six emergency sessions. The Fed releases full transcripts of each year's policy meetings after a five-year lag.

The 2008 transcripts cover the most tumultuous period of the crisis, including the collapse and rescue of investment bank Bear Stearns, the government takeover of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the fateful decision to let investment bank Lehman Brothers fold in the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history and the bailout of insurer American International Group.

For all its aggressive steps in 2008, the transcripts show the Fed failing at times to grasp the size of the catastrophe they were dealing with. Bernanke and his top lieutenants often expressed puzzlement that they weren't managing to calm panicky investors.

As late as Sept. 16, a day after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, Bernanke declared, "I think that our policy is looking actually pretty good."

The Fed declined at that meeting to cut its benchmark short-term rate. Yet just three weeks later, after the Fed had rescued AIG, Bernanke felt compelled to call an emergency conference call. In it, he won approval for a half-point rate cut.

Early in the year, some Fed officials had yet to appreciate the gravity of the crisis. In January, Frederic Mishkin, a Fed governor, missed an emergency conference call because he was "on the slopes."

"I think in Idaho somewhere," Bernanke said.

The crisis had been building for months. In the Jan. 21 conference call, Bernanke rallied support for a deep cut in interest rates. He warned that market turmoil reflected investors' concerns that "the United States is in for a deep and protracted recession."

Bernanke apologized for convening the call on the Martin Luther King holiday. But he felt the urgency of the crisis required the Fed to act before its regularly scheduled meeting the next week. It approved a cut of three-fourths of a percentage point in its benchmark for short-term rates.

The transcripts show that Bernanke enjoyed the support of Janet Yellen, who succeeded him this month as Fed chair, for the unconventional policy actions he was pushing. At the time, Yellen was head of the Fed's San Francisco regional bank.
At an Oct. 28-29 Fed meeting, Yellen noted the dire events that had occurred that fall. With a nod to Halloween, she said the Fed had received "witch's brew of news."

"The downward trajectory of economic data," Yellen went on, "has been hair-raising — with employment, consumer sentiment, spending and orders for capital goods, and homebuilding all contracting."

Market conditions had "taken a ghastly turn for the worse," she said. "It is becoming abundantly clear that we are in the midst of a serious global meltdown."

Yellen had downgraded her economic outlook and was predicting a recession, with four straight quarters of declining growth. The recession was later determined to have begun in December 2007. It lasted until June 2009.

The Fed's moves failed to prevent colossal damage from the crisis. The U.S. economy sank into the worst recession since the 1930s. But Fed officials and many economists have argued that without the Fed's aggressive actions, the Great Recession would have been more catastrophic, perhaps rivaling the Great Depression.

"I really am extremely nervous about the current situation," Mishkin said at a July meeting. "We've been in this now for a year, but, boy, this is deviating from most financial disruptions or crisis episodes in terms of the length and the fact that it really hasn't gotten better. We keep on having shoes dropping."

Even as they grappled with a floundering financial system and an economy in freefall, Fed policymakers wondered how history would judge them. Bernanke, acknowledging that they were operating in "the fog of war," said in late October: "I would defend what we've done in terms of the general direction, acknowledging that execution is not always perfect and that communication is not always perfect."

But Bernanke wrestled with doubts, too. At an April meeting, he said: "I play Jekyll and Hyde quite a bit and argue with myself in the shower and other places."

By the end of 2008, the Fed had made eight rate cuts, leaving its benchmark short-term rate on Dec. 16 at a record low near zero. It remains there today. Many economists don't think the Fed will start raising rates until late 2015 at the earliest.

The Fed that year also launched other never-before-tried programs to get money flowing to parts of the economy that were desperate for credit.

Yet Fed policymakers fretted over the unprecedented steps being taken. Thomas Hoenig, head of the Fed's Kansas City regional bank, expressed concern during a July 24 conference call that the Fed might continue its extraordinary lending to Wall Street firms into 2009.

"This seems to take us away from, rather than toward, backing out — and I really am a bit concerned about that," Hoenig said.

Bernanke countered that the Fed was "not in this business indefinitely ... But at the moment, conditions do not seem considerably better, and I don't think that at this moment we really should be reducing our support to the market."

Jeffrey Lacker, head of the Richmond Fed, worried at the March 10 meeting about accepting mortgage bonds as collateral for Fed loans to Wall Street firms. "This proposal crosses a bright line that we drew for ourselves in the 1970s in order to limit our involvement in housing finance," Lacker said.

But Timothy Geithner, then head of the New York Fed, countered that the Fed was a stronger institution than in the '70s. "We need to be flexible and creative in the face of what are really extraordinary challenges," Geithner said.

On Oct. 7, Bernanke called an emergency conference call to seek approval for a half-point cut in the benchmark rate. Five other central banks in Europe and Canada had agreed to take similar steps.

"It's just a sign of the extraordinary times that we're currently living through," Bernanke said. "Virtually all the markets — particularly the credit markets — are not functioning or are in extreme stress."

The proposal was unanimously approved. Some Fed officials worried that it still wouldn't be enough.

"I don't think that anything that we do today — cutting the funds rate 50 basis points or whatever — is going to make the next couple of months in terms of the overall economy any less painful," said Charles Plosser, head of the Philadelphia Fed.

Plosser said it was important for the Fed to invoke broader economic concerns to justify its actions beyond the turmoil in the stock market.

One Fed official asked Bernanke if the sharp rate cut meant further cuts would occur at forthcoming meetings.

"I feel rather unconfident about predicting the path of rates six months in the future," Bernanke replied, "because I'm not quite sure what is going to happen tomorrow at this point."

AP Business Writers Christopher S. Rugaber and Marcy Gordon contributed to this report


Alleged Beacon Hill Dunkin Donuts robber caught, arraigned after leaving cell phone at crime scene

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A Winthrop man that left his cell phone behind after allegedly robbing a Dunkin Donuts was arraigned on armed robbery charges.

Dunkin Donuts.jpg 

BOSTON — A Winthrop man that left his cell phone behind after allegedly robbing a Dunkin Donuts was arraigned on armed robbery charges.

Dennis Stack, 41, allegedly threatened the employees and customers of a Cambridge Street Dunkin Donuts on December 10, 2013 with a tire iron before being confronted by a customer and fleeing the store with $65 in cash.

While leaving the store Stack dropped his white iPhone and tire iron. Police eventually used the phone and the photos on it to track down Stack.

Stack is facing additional charges stemming from a December 1, 2013 robbery of a Revere Dunkin Donuts, a December 9 robbery of a Cambridge Street flower store, and an attempted robbery of a Chelsea hair salon.

He is facing additional robbery charges in a Middlesex County court.

Stack's attorney is Marcus Clay Chamblee and he is due back in court March 24.

2 accidents a few miles apart in Westfield slow westbound traffic on Mass Pike

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At about 1:30 p.m., a tractor trailer struck a MassPike bridge overpass at West Road, causing damage to the truck, said Massachusetts State Trooper Thomas Murphy.

 

WESTFIELD — Westbound traffic on the Massachusetts Turnpike was slowed Friday afternoon by two accidents within 4 miles of each other, State Police said.

At about 1:30 p.m., a tractor trailer struck a bridge overpass at West Road, causing damage to the truck, said Trooper Thomas Murphy.

One lane was closed for close to three hours while the contents of the truck had to be removed and loaded onto another truck, police said.

The scene was cleared just after 5:30 p.m.

Tractor trailers in Massachusetts are required to be no more than 13 feet, 6 inches tall in order to fit under all bridges on highways and city roads.

Murphy said the truck was within the height requirement, but apparently the weight from an accumulation of snow and ice collapsed the trailer in the middle. This caused the two ends to rise up beyond the 13-foot-6 limit and allowed it to hit the overpass, he said.

He did not know if the bridge was damaged.

The second accident, reported just after 3:30 p.m., involved a car going out of control in the westbound lane and ending up on its roof in the median strip.

One person received minor injuries in the crash.

The accident closed the left lanes for both eastbound and westbound traffic following the crash. By 4:30, the scene had been cleared and both lanes were open, Murphy said.


Grammy nominee Alastair Moock to play concert for children and families at Wilbraham Public Library

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A longtime member of the Boston folk scene, Alastair Moock turned his attention to family music after the birth of his twin daughters in 2006.

WILBRAHAM — The Wilbraham Public Library will welcome Alastair Moock March 2 at 2 p.m. for a free concert for families.

A longtime member of the Boston folk scene, Moock turned his attention to family music after the birth of his twin daughters in 2006.

His latest album, “Singing Our Way Through,” won Gold medal awards from the Parents’ Choice Foundation and received a Grammy nomination.

To learn more about Moock, watch videos and hear samples at www.moockmusic.com.

The event is sponsored by the Friends of the Library. The program is recommended for children from toddlers through age 9 with parents. No registration is required.


Boston couple found guilty of running sex-trafficking operation

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40-year-old Rafael Henriquez and his wife, 52-year-old Ramona Carpio Hernandez, of East Boston, become the 1st people convicted under Massachusetts' anti-trafficking law.

BOSTON — A Massachusetts man and his wife have been found guilty of running a sex-trafficking operation in the Boston area, becoming the first people convicted under the state's anti-trafficking law.

Forty-year-old Rafael Henriquez and his wife, 52-year-old Ramona Carpio Hernandez are of East Boston. They were convicted Friday on four charges of running and managing a sex trafficking operations.

A Suffolk Superior Court jury also convicted a third person, 36-year-old Diego Suarez of Chelsea, on three counts of owning a sex trafficking home.

The three were arrested on March of 2012, becoming the first suspects to be charged under the new law from 2011.

There are currently 11 people with pending human trafficking charges.

The convicts are being held without bail while they await sentencing scheduled for Feb. 26.

Connecticut family of Julian Cartie to hold downtown Springfield vigil to mark 5th anniversary of his unsolved homicide

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Cartie, a Connecticut national guardsman, was shot to death 5 years ago as he walked down Main Street. The shooter has never been found.

SPRINGFIELD — The family and friends of Julian P. Cartie will travel from Connecticut to Springfield on Saturday to conduct a memorial vigil at State and Main streets, the spot where the 22-year-old New Britain resident was gunned down five years ago.

juilian cartie.jpgJulian P. Cartie 

Michael Peterson, Cartie’s brother, said the vigil is an effort by the family to bring to bring the unsolved homicide back into the public eye in the hope that someone will come forward with information that could identify the killer.

The vigil is planned for 5 p.m.

Cartie, a member of the Connecticut Army National Guard, was shot to death at around 2 a.m. on Feb. 22, 2009 near Crown Fried Chicken.

According to police reports at the time, Cartie, his brother and a friend were walking toward the restaurant after having spent the night dancing at downtown clubs. As they approached the restaurant, some words were exchanged with people in a nearby car. One of the passengers got out of the car and opened fire.

The shooter jumped back into the car, described as a blue Hyundai, and it was last seen speeding off down Main Street toward the South End. In addition to the shooter, the car had three other occupants – a female driver and two female passengers in the back seat.

The shooter was described as an 18- to 20-year-old Hispanic man with no facial hair.
Cartie was shot three times and was later pronounced dead at Baystate Medical Center.

Cartie was a standout football player at New Britain High School.

As a private first class with F Company of the 186h Brigade Support Battalion in Southington, Conn., Cartie was due to be deployed over the next few months to serve in Iraq.

The family has previously offered a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the shooter.

Family and friends also gathered at the same spot for a vigil on March 22, 2009, one month after the killing.

Peterson said he did not know how many people would turn out. He said it could be anywhere from 20 to 50 people.

The plan is to meet at Cartie’s grave at Fairview Cemetery in New Britain and then for everyone to drive up to Springfield, he said.

He said it is extremely frustrating for the family still to have no answers about why he was killed or by whom.

“We continue to inquire (with police) and they keep saying they don’t have anything,” Peterson said.

By holding a vigil, the family hopes it will cause someone to come forward. "If we could just get some help in this situation," he said. "The person who shot him could have been from anywhere. We're just hoping something leads to something."

Peterson said he has talked with police and seen surveillance video footage of the shooting. It happened so quickly that he does not believe there was any time for a heated altercation before the shots were fired.

“My brother was a victim of a random act of violence,” he said.


Mark Imbody outlines priorities in campaign for Ludlow selectman

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Mark Imbody said his goal, if elected Ludlow selectman, would be to keep property taxes low.

LUDLOW — Mark A. Imbody has announced he will be a candidate for selectman in the March 24 town election.

2014 mark imbody.jpgMark Imbody 

Imbody, 41, of 58 Cady Street, is challenging incumbent William Rooney for the three-year selectman’s term.

Imbody said he decided to run because “I wanted to make a positive impact on my community, in service to it. As a selectman, I will be committed to keeping property taxes low," he said.

He said he would work to maintain a business-friendly environment and to market the town to new business. "I will be a champion for small business while balancing the needs of our residents," he said.

Imbody is employed at Plastipak Packaging Inc. of East Longmeadow, supervising the Chicopee warehouse operations. He graduated in 1991 from Millbury High School in Millbury and earned a certificate in business management and accounting from the Burdett School of Business, Worcester Campus, in 1994.

He is making his first run for municipal elective office.

The race for selectman is the only race on the March 24 town election ballot. All other candidates are running unopposed.

For two seats on the School Committee, incumbents Patricia Gregoire and James “Chip” Harrington are seeking re-election. Harrington also is running for the state Senate seat which Gale Candaras, D-Wilbraham, will vacate.

Town Clerk Laurie Gibbons said that according to the town attorney, Harrington would be permitted to serve in both positions.



Massachusetts Health Connector chipping away at insurance application backlog

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In the last week, the state has enrolled another 15,000 people in temporary health insurance plans as it continues to process a backlog of 72,000 applications for coverage through the Health Connector.

Employees at the Massachusetts Health Connector are slowly chipping away at a backlog of applications for health insurance coverage.

As of last week, 72,000 people had submitted applications for coverage that had not yet been processed. Since then, the state has enrolled nearly 15,000 of those people in temporary coverage through MassHealth, the state's Medicaid program. It has determined that another 22,000 of those people were already enrolled in a state health insurance plan.

"Fifteen thousand people who didn’t have coverage seven days ago have coverage today," said Sarah Iselin, a special assistant to Gov. Deval Patrick overseeing fixes to the Health Connector. "It doesn't get us to where we need to be ultimately, but it's keeping us pointed in the right direction."

The Massachusetts Health Connector website, the state's health insurance marketplace, went live Oct. 1 as a means for Massachusetts to conform with the federal Affordable Care Act. It has been a technical disaster, with individuals unable to use the site to enroll in health plans or determine their eligibility for subsidies. State officials have blamed an underperforming contractor, CGI, although an independent report also identified flaws with state management.

Patrick earlier this month hired Iselin, a Blue Cross Blue Shield executive, to oversee the project of fixing the website and getting people enrolled in coverage. The Connector hired the health technology company Optum to work on the fixes and to help with data entry of paper applications that the state has been using to work around the website.

The problems have left thousands of consumers who are enrolled in Massachusetts' subsidized health plans or who are applying for subsidies or buying insurance on the individual market for the first time uncertain about the status of their coverage.

Iselin has committed to holding weekly briefings. In a Friday telephone briefing, she said the Connector has been making progress. Of 22,000 applications that had already been entered into the system last week, the state moved 15,000 applicants into temporary coverage and established that the rest were from individuals who were already enrolled, either through MassHealth or Commonwealth Care, which provides subsidized coverage for low-income residents.

Health Connector officials also said last week that they had a backlog of 50,000 paper applications waiting to be processed. Iselin said officials have screened 28,000 of those and identified 3,800 duplicate applications. Another 15,000 people were found to be already enrolled in health insurance. The state is still working to enter the rest into the system.

Anyone enrolled in insurance in February will have coverage retroactive to Feb. 1.

To speed up the processing of applications, Optum already hired nearly 200 staff. Another 100 will be hired by March 3. The state is also developing a new data entry tool that will reduce the two hours that it currently takes to process a paper application.

Iselin said the state is still assessing the long term requirements to fix the website. "For the near term, we have a laser-like focus on getting people the coverage they need now and getting caught up on our backlog," she said.

So far, just 10,748 people have been enrolled in permanent plans, a number that includes those enrolled in subsidized and unsubsidized medical and dental plans. The state has created a fast track way for those seeking unsubsidized plans to enroll, using paper applications and avoiding the Health Insurance Exchange.

Iselin said the state is monitoring the cost of keeping thousands of people on temporary MassHealth plans – who may or may not be eligible – but she did not have any cost figures to report. The state is allowed to keep people on those plans until June. She said there has been a partnership between the state and federal governments so far on health reform. "We are continuing to explore all options, including leveraging our partnership with the federal government, for how we're going to finance and fund what needs to happen to get us where we need to be," Iselin said.

Optum will be paid $9.8 million for the first 30 days of work. Patrick previously said he believed the state could complete the project within its original $68 million budget, since the state is not paying CGI for services it has not delivered. That cost does not include the cost of temporary coverage, which Secretary of Administration and Finance Glen Shor has said could be covered under MassHealth's existing budget.

Greenfield man killed in single-vehicle crash on I-91 in Franklin County

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According to state troopers, the one-vehicle crash happened just after 8 a.m. and the driver died of injuries sustained in the crash.

An update to this story was posted at 4:17 p.m. Saturday.


WHATELY — Massachusetts State Police closed a stretch of Interstate 91 south in Franklin County Saturday morning following a fatal car crash which left a Greenfield man dead.

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According to Trooper Dustin Fitch, the one-vehicle crash happened around 8:04 a.m. when the 56-year-old man rolled his 1999 Chevrolet Tracker near Exit 24. Troopers say the driver was trapped in the car and pronounced dead at the scene.

The southbound lanes remained closed late Saturday morning as troopers processed the scene and continued to investigate the crash. Traffic was re-routed onto Route 5 around the area of Exit 24, and Whately and Deerfield police were assisting with the detour.

The southbound lanes of the highway were re-opened around noon.

The driver's name is not yet being released, pending notification of the family. Fitch said he expects the identity to be made public sometime Saturday.

Troopers from the Northampton barracks, detectives assigned to Hampshire County District Attorney’s Office, State Police Collision Analysis Reconstruction Section, State Police Crime Scene Services Section, Whately Fire/EMS Department, Northampton EMS Department, Massachusetts Department of Transportation assisted on scene.

The Franklin County crash was the second fatal accident troopers investigated in less than 24 hours. Around 2:15 a.m. on I-95 in Needham, a single-car crash claimed the life of Sally White, 22, of Wapole.

It wasn't immediately clear if winter weather was a factor in either crash.


Protesters take control of Ukraine's capital, vote to remove President Viktor Yanukovych

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President Viktor Yanukovych described the events as a coup and insisted he would not step down.

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -- Protesters took control of Ukraine's capital Saturday, seizing the president's office as parliament voted to remove him and hold new elections. President Viktor Yanukovych described the events as a coup and insisted he would not step down.

After a tumultuous week that left scores dead and Ukraine's political destiny in flux, fears mounted that the country could split in two -- a Europe-leaning west and a Russian-leaning east and south.

Parliament arranged the release of Yanukovych's arch-rival, former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, but the president said he would not recognize any of the lawmakers' decisions as valid.

Yanukovych left Kiev for his support base in the country's Russian-speaking east, where lawmakers questioned the legitimacy of the newly empowered legislature and called for volunteer militias to uphold order.

"They are trying to scare me. I have no intention to leave the country. I am not going to resign, I'm the legitimately elected president," Yanukovych said in a televised statement, clearly shaken and with long pauses in his speaking.

"Everything that is happening today is, to a greater degree, vandalism and banditry and a coup d'etat," he said. "I will do everything to protect my country from breakup, to stop bloodshed."

Ukraine, a nation of 46 million, has huge strategic importance to Russia, Europe and the United States.

The country's western regions, angered by corruption in Yanukovych's government, want to be closer to the European Union and have rejected Yanukovych's authority in many cities. Eastern Ukraine, which accounts for the bulk of the nation's economic output, favors closer ties with Russia and has largely supported the president. The three-month protest movement was prompted by the president's decision to abort an agreement with the EU in favor of a deal with Moscow.

Massachusetts State Police identify driver in fatal Needham crash as 22-year-old Sally White of Wapole

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Massachusetts State Police have identified the victim of a fatal car crash on Interstate 95 in Needham Saturday morning as 22-year-old Sally White of Wapole.

NEEDHAM — Massachusetts State Police have identified the victim of a fatal car crash on Interstate 95 in Needham Saturday morning as 22-year-old Sally White of Wapole.

According to troopers, the crash happened around 2:15 a.m. in the southbound lanes of I-95 near exit 19 B. As police arrived on the scene, they saw White's 2004 Honda Civic had left the pavement and struck a train bridge just north of Kendrick Street.

Troopers said White was the only person in the car and she was pronounced dead at the scene. The crash remains under investigation by troopers from the Framingham Barracks.

State Police Troop H Detectives, State Police Collision Analysis Reconstruction Section, State Police Crime Scene Services Section, Needham Fire/EMS Departments, the State Medical Examiner’s Office and the Massachusetts Department of Transportation assisted at the scene.

Later Saturday morning, a 56-year-old Greenfield man was killed in a single-vehicle crash in the southbound lanes of Interstate 91. Troopers say the victim, who was the only person in the car, rolled his 1999 Chevrolet Tracker and was pronounced dead at the scene.


West Springfield mayor pulls back from idea of buying white church on Elm Street

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He said several reasons the mayor’s office is requesting to withdraw the application, include lack of estimates for maintenance costs, the general cost overall, and a practical use for the building.

WEST SPRINGFIELD – Mayor Edward Sullivan is requesting to withdraw an application from the Community Preservation Committee (CPC) for the city to purchase a historic 214-year-old white church at 732 Elm St. with an estimated cost of $480,000.

The request for purchase of the historic property had been proposed by the city’s previous mayor, Gregory C. Neffinger, in August, 2013.

“That’s the approach the mayor’s office has taken because we’re the applicant,” said Sullivan. “It just so happens, that whether it’s good or bad, there’s a change in the mayor’s office.”

He said several reasons the mayor’s office is requesting to withdraw the application, include lack of estimates for maintenance costs, the general cost overall, and a practical use for the building.

“If the city’s going to move forward on something like that, we should really have a plan, instead of buying something for the sake of buying it,” he said.

As well, another ongoing CPC application is for maintenance repairs to the historic building’s roof and steeple, requested by Warren Amerman, who lives and operates his recording business “Rotary Records” there, added Sullivan.

Paul H. Boudo, chairman of the CPC, had previously stated that public funds on a privately owned property may not be legally possible.

Furthermore, he said, that as a member of the committee, he would like to see a non-profit 501(c) (3) organization own, maintain and utilize the historic church.

“That’s what has to happen with this church, in my opinion only,” he added. “We’ve talked about it but we’ve they haven’t taken a position yet.”

In addition, he said other communities in Massachusetts such as Cambridge, Newton, and Lexington, have created non-profit organizations to preserve historical buildings and landmarks and that he’d like to see West Springfield follow in example.

“That would be a way that this could happen but it wouldn’t be the town’s responsibility, it would be a private organization doing that,” he said.

New Jersey man killed, 33 injured, when tour bus collides with tractor trailer on Vermont highway

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Troopers say the driver of the bus, 59-year-old Darnell Hanah of Millstone, N.J., was killed in the collision while two passengers sustained serious injuries.

WEST HAVEN, Vt. — A tour bus driver from New Jersey was killed in a horrific crash on a Vermont highway Friday evening, as the bus full of passengers crashed into a tractor trailer on Route 22A.

According to Vermont State Police, a 911 call reported the accident around 8 p.m. Friday as roads in the area were slippery and snow covered.Troopers say the truck jacknifed on the highway while the commercial bus, which was traveling north with 32 passengers on board, collided with the tractor trailer as it crested a hill.

State police say the charter bus company was Triple D Travel based in Trenton, N.J. and it was heading north to Sugarbush and Stowe, Vt. The owner of the tractor trailer was JP Logistics, the the truck was hauling K-cup coffee products, heading south.

Troopers say the driver of the bus, 59-year-old Darnell Hanah of Millstone, N.J., was killed in the collision while two passengers sustained serious injuries.

Dozens of first responders from local police, fire and EMS units in the area responded to the scene and took 24 bus passengers and the driver of the tractor trailer, 34-year-old Haroon Kalid of Scotrun, Pa., to the Rutland Regional Medical Center for treatment. an additional eight passengers were taken to Porter Hospital in Middlebury.

bus crash.jpgIn this Friday, Feb. 21, 2014 photo, crews work to extract passengers from a tour bus after it collided with a tractor trailer rig on Route 22A in West Haven, Vt. The driver of the bus was killed and several passengers sustained minor injuries. (AP Photo/Rutland Herald, Brent Curtis) 

The road was closed for approximately 12 hours and the accident was treated as a mass-causality disaster. The crash is still under investigation and troopers are asking anyone who may have witnessed the collision to call the Rutland barracks at 802-773-9101.

Weather also caused several spin-outs and crashes Friday evening on Interstate 91 in Vermont. Troopers said between 8:30-9:30 p.m, black ice caused many drivers to lose control of their vehicles between mile markers 32-38.

No injuries were reported in those accidents but while a trooper was on the scene assisting a motorist who had crashed, another car narrowly missed him. Troopers said the driver of that vehicle was cited for traveling too fast for the conditions.



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Vermont State Police investigating death of 2-year-old girl brought to hospital with head injuries

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Troopers reported that the child was brought to the hospital around 6:20 p.m. Thursday and later taken to the intensive care unit at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center.

Vermont State Police are investigating the death of a 2-year-old girl who was brought to the Rutland Regional Medical Center with signs of trauma to her head.

Vermont State Police patch 

Troopers reported that the child was brought to the hospital around 6:20 p.m. Wednesday and later taken to the intensive care unit at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center. The child died on Friday.

The hospital, in accordance with the law, notified troopers of potential signs of child abuse when the young girl was admitted with signs of head trauma. An autopsy is pending to determine the exact cause of death, and the child has been identified as Dezirae Sheldon of Poultney, Vt.

The Vermont Department of Children and Families, along with the Rutland County State’s Attorney’s Office were notified of the incident and are working closely with state police investigators.

Anyone with information about the child's death is asked to call the Vermont State Police at the Rutland barracks at 802-773-9101.



Don Berwick stresses health care in race for Massachusetts governor

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With Gov. Deval Patrick not seeking re-election, the 67-year-old pediatrician from Newton decided last year to make his first run for elected office in Massachusetts.

BOSTON (AP) — Don Berwick is proud to tell an audience how he was once called "the second most dangerous man in America."

The label, he explains, was put on him by conservative commentator Glenn Beck at a time when Berwick, a Democrat now running for governor on a progressive platform, was playing a lead role in the early implementation of President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.

Berwick's praise for aspects of the British single-payer health care system also marked him for criticism from congressional Republicans, who said it showed his affinity for big government programs. They blocked his confirmation as permanent head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and Berwick left Washington after a 17-month recess appointment.

With Democratic Gov. Deval Patrick not seeking re-election, the 67-year-old pediatrician from Newton decided last year to make his first run for elected office in Massachusetts, which in 2006 pioneered its own universal health insurance law that later became the model for the federal law.

"This is a state that does get things done," he recently told an audience at Suffolk University.

Born in New York and raised in a small Connecticut town, Berwick earned degrees in 1972 from both Harvard Medical School and the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, setting in motion a dual career path as practicing physician and nationally recognized health care policy expert.

At Harvard, he served as both professor of pediatrics and a professor and lecturer in health care policy. In 1991, he became president and chief executive of the Cambridge-based Institute for Healthcare Improvement, where his work caught the eye of officials in the Obama administration and led to his appointment to CMS in 2010.

Beck and other conservatives saw him as an advocate for health care rationing, which he denied.

"I deeply believe health care is a human right." Berwick said in an interview with the Associated Press. "We are the only Western democracy that hasn't made it a human right."

While optimistic the federal Affordable Care Act will succeed despite its shaky rollout, Berwick said an American version of single-payer health care should be considered an option in light of high costs and inefficiencies associated with the current system.

"The single payer system is the plan B we should develop if we can't execute properly the multi-payer system," he said.

Berwick's gubernatorial campaign faces enormous hurdles, not the least of which is qualifying for the September primary ballot by gaining support from at least 15 percent of the delegates to the Democratic state convention in June. Attorney General Martha Coakley and state Treasurer Steven Grossman are both seen as likely to win a significant share of delegates, leaving Berwick and the two other Democratic hopefuls, Juliette Kayyem and Joseph Avellone, to divvy up what's left.

A Suffolk University/Boston Herald poll of 600 likely voters in early February found nearly three in four had never heard of Berwick. As he tries to become better known, he's also seeking to build a platform beyond health care, his area of greatest expertise. To that end, he's rolled out a series of position papers on education, transportation, energy and homelessness, among other issues.

Berwick is the only Democratic candidate for governor calling for outright repeal of the state law that authorizes up to three resort casinos and a slots parlor in Massachusetts.

While acknowledging that casino gambling could bring more jobs and tax revenues, "Nonetheless, I believe, the costs are simply too high for this to be the best step for our state," he said.


Massachusetts State Police: Traffic stop in Springfield leads to discovery of pistol, Oxycodone and marijuana

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What started out as a routine traffic stop for a motor vehicle violation on Thursday ended with police finding a loaded gun and illegal drugs.

SPRINGFIELD — What started out as a routine traffic stop for a motor vehicle violation on Thursday ended with police finding a loaded gun and illegal drugs.

State Police drugs and gunView full sizeTroopers say a traffic stop in Springfield led to the discovery of a Jennings .25 caliber semiautomatic pistol, an unspecified amount of the prescription painkiller Oxycodone, and approximately five ounces of marijuana. (Submitted Photo) 

According to a press release from the Massachusetts State Police, trooper Felipe Martinez was patrolling on West Columbus Avenue around 3:20 p.m. Thursday when he pulled over a 1987 Mazda pick-up truck for an alleged traffic violation.

It is unclear what circumstances led the trooper to searching the truck, but according to state police, he found a Jennings .25 caliber semiautomatic pistol, an unspecified amount of the prescription painkiller Oxycodone, and approximately five ounces of marijuana.

The driver, 24-year-old Alexis Alicia of Springfield, was taken into custody and charged with possession of Class B and Class D substances with the intent to distribute, illegally possessing a firearm, possession of a firearm in the commission of a felony, impropoer storage of a firearm, possessing a firearm with a prior violent or drug-related conviction and driving an unregistered motor vehicle.

Alicia was taken to the Springfield barracks and held in lieu of $10,000 bail, awaiting arraignment in Springfield District Court.


Your comments: Readers react to report detailing how Massachusetts Gaming Commission spends lavishly on travel, lodging, food and parking

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Readers react to a report detailing how the Massachusetts Gaming Commission has spent tens of thousands of dollars on everything from airfare and lodging to parking and food.

When the Boston Business Journal reported Friday that the Massachusetts Gaming Commission had spent lavishly on items ranging from airfare and lodging to dining and parking, the commission promised to order an independent review of its habits to determine the best practices for spending.

While some readers defended the commission's spending as necessary considering their task of establishing a new casino industry in Massachusetts in a short period of time, the overwhelming majority were troubled by the revelations, despite the commission's assertion that all their expenses were to be covered by gaming fees instead of taxpayer dollars.

A survey of MassLive.com readers (vote at the bottom of this post) concluded that just 7.84 percent of those who voted by early Saturday afternoon thought the spending was justified while 92.16 percent deemed the spending "excessive."

Reader waterfordman wrote, "What did you expect, from this Comm? How many employees with salaries over $100,000? No 99 restaurants here. When are we the people going to learn?"

havingfun123 wrote, "'Trips across Asia and Europe'. Tell me that is a typo? (What) is in Asia and Europe that will help make a decision? Why do they need catering before meetings? Eat before you get there like the rest of us would."

Reader Bad Intelligence wrote, "Anyone defending this by saying some or all of this was covered by money the casinos have already paid the state is a moron. If these expenses were kept in check and not allowed ridiculous excesses, then the $ left over could be used wisely by the state."

Kengken wrote, "I hate to say it, but this is just a fraction of what falls off the truck on the highway of the state budget."

Reader Liberal hypocrite wrote, "Does Evan Dobelle ring a bell? The more the news media digs the dirtier this is going to get. I'll bet if you look at the spending in higher education you'll find the same type of thing going on."

Mary_Askew_730 wrote, "How do these five commissioners pay for their lunches when the Commission isn't meeting? 5 people + $1600 lunch tab for each meeting? What are they eating at a price of $320 a head for lunch?"


What do you think?

Vote in our poll and sound off in the comment section below.





Obituaries today: Alan Lajoie was master technician at Ford of Northampton and Balise Toyota

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Obituaries from The Republican.

 
022214-alan-lajoie.jpegAlan Lajoie 

Alan Lajoie, 28, of South Hadley, passed away on Friday. He was was a graduate of Springfield Technical School in 2006. He went on to become a senior master technician at Ford of Northampton and Balise Toyota. He often enjoyed going to the Ludlow Fish and Game Club to play pool with friends.

To view all obituaries from The Republican:
» Click here

Connecticut State Police ask public for help identifying bank robbery suspect

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Troopers say the man entered the bank around 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, presenting a teller with a note demanding money.

HEBRON, Conn. — Connecticut State Police are asking the public for help identifying a man who robbed the Savings Institute and Trust in Hebron this week.

Troopers say the man entered the bank around 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, presenting a teller with a note demanding money. He implied he had a weapon but no weapon was shown, according to troopers.

The man made off with an unspecified amount of cash and police believe he may have jumped in a waiting getaway vehicle.

The suspect is described as standing approximately 6-feet tall with a thin build and light-colored facial hair groomed into a goatee. He was wearing a gray-colored hooded sweatshirt with a tan-colored coat over it. The coat has a lapel-type collar and zipper in the front.

The man also wore dark-colored jeans, a green or gray winter hat, dark-colored sunglasses and white colored Nike Cortez sneakers with a blue colored swoosh on the side.

The bank has been the subject of several hold-ups over the years, and troopers are asking anyone with information about the current incident to contact the State Police Eastern District Major Crime Squad, Troop K, at 860-537-7500 or 860-465-5422.

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