Friday, June 26, 2009

News of Michael Jackson's death a shock for local fans

By OWEN BOSS
Staff Writer

Photo: News a shock for local fans, predictable boost for sales

NORTHAMPTON
— News of Michael Jackson’s death spread across town quickly Thursday evening. Walking around downtown, one could see people reacting to text messages carrying the sad news.

But when night fell, many took to the streets to celebrate his music.

“I just can’t believe it,” said a young woman playing her guitar in front of Thornes Marketplace on Main Street. “It is just so sad. He was so young, and his music has always been an inspiration.”

Around 9:30 p.m., Lee Hall opened the four doors and rear of his Volkswagen hatchback in front of Faces on Main Street and began blasting Jackson’s “Greatest Hits” album, setting off an impromptu dance party.

“I was sitting across the street and somebody said we should get a Michael Jackson tribute going, so that is exactly what we did,” Hall said as he sat on his car’s rear bumper.
Amid spin moves, moonwalks and clapping, more than 30 strangers came together and danced to Jackson’s 1979 hit “Rock With You” on the sidewalk, chanting “Long Live Michael” and “Happy Michael Jackson Day.”

Taylor Stearley, a local resident, said he was walking down the sidewalk when he saw the crowd of people dancing and decided to join in.

“God bless Michael Jackson,” Stearley said. “We are going to stay out here dancing until this entire CD is over.”

Inside the Turn it Up! music store on Pleasant Street, which sells used CDs and records, customers discussed the musician’s career as a Jackson Five album played in the background.
Roger, an employee who declined to give his last name, said Jackson’s music has always sold well in the store, but he anticipates the singer’s untimely death will bring a sudden increase in sales.

“We may have to set up a display case out front or something,” he said, while a female customer asked if she could have a copy of Jackson’s 1982 hit album, “Thriller,” reserved for her.

Across the street, the same album was resting near the cash register at Main Street’s Dynamite Records. It had been originally marked as being worth $9, but Willis, the store’s manager, who also would not give his last name, said the price will most likely go up as a result of Jackson’s death.

“We are expecting a ton of business because of this,” he said as he turned the store’s computer monitor around, pointing out that the price of Jackson’s albums on the online auction site eBay had increased from around $5 at 3 p.m., to between $25 and $50 an hour later, after news sources confirmed his death.

Also wrapping his head around the news was Steve Waksman, an American music professor at Smith College, who teaches a class on rock history and described Jackson’s death as “shocking.”

“There is no question that Michael Jackson was one of the most significant African-American pop artists that has ever lived,” Waksman said.

Record sales aside, Waksman said it was Jackson’s ability to appeal to a range of music lovers that made him unique and his music so successful.

“I think he was an artist that took the notion of crossing over to a whole new level. He was one of the first African-American pop artists with an audience that wasn’t made up of just African-Americans, but was made up of all different kinds of people,” he said.

Unfortunately, Waksman noted, Jackson’s death at the young age of 50 has laid to rest any hopes for another rise to greatness, leaving his legend somewhat tarnished after more than a decade of silence and bizarre legal issues.

“Whenever there is a death in music, people wonder about all the music they still would have made and at this point in his career it is hard to know if there was anything left for him to say,” Waksman said. “But still there is no question that his death will bring a major sense of loss for anyone who listens to pop music.”

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

21 guns, slew of charges for Easthampton man

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

EASTHAMPTON - A Chestnut Street man was arraigned on multiple gun charges Thursday after police say they found 21 unregistered guns in his house.

Jeffrey S. Parrish, 46, of 18 Chestnut St., pleaded innocent Thursday in Northampton District Court to 19 counts of possessing a firearm without a firearms identification card and two counts of possessing unregistered large-capacity firearms.

According to court documents, on May 22, Parrish's wife went to the Public Safety Complex and told Officer Robert J. Pouska that she was returning from receiving a restraining order against her husband and wanted a police escort to gather some of her belongings. She also told Pouska that her husband had two safes in the house containing many unlicensed guns.

At the home, according to police reports, she led the officers to a back bedroom and opened a closet containing two large gun safes. The first safe, which was a large steel gun safe with a combination lock, was left open, and police found many weapons and a variety of ammunition. The second safe, which was homemade and needed a key to open, was transported to the station to be opened and inventoried.

In the second safe, among other weapons, police reportedly found a .30 caliber US M-1 semi-automatic carbine rifle and a Taurus 9 mm handgun, both of which are considered large-capacity firearms and carry a more severe punishment for unregistered possession.

According to the state's Executive Office of Public Safety's Web site, possessing an unregistered large-capacity firearm is a felony, and conviction can result in up to two years in prison.

At the station, police said Parrish was issued his wife's restraining order and was told his weapons would remain seized. He reportedly told police he had been living in Massachusetts for three years and never had the $100 to apply for his firearms identification card.

Judge Richard J. Carey released Parrish on his own recognizance. He is scheduled to reappear in court on July 24.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Highway to hurt: I-91 construction site racks up accidents

A view of the passage that motorists must negotiate while driving south on I-91 through Easthampton. The construction is blamed for an increase in accidents on the highway.">Photo: Highway to hurtTroopers respond to the scene of Maryann Kieras' March crash on I-91. The Hadley woman says she lost control of her car and hit a concrete barrier erected at the site of ongoing construction.">Photo: Highway to hurt


By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

EASTHAMPTON - When Maryann Kieras lost control of her car in March and crashed into the concrete barriers surrounding a treacherous Interstate Route 91 construction zone, she was knocked unconscious for more than two hours.

When she came to in a Northampton hospital bed, state police had a ticket waiting for her.

"Had I been killed, maybe they wouldn't have given me a ticket," said Kieras, 61. "I never realized that there were so many accidents along that stretch until after I crashed, when I noticed more of them in the news."

In fact, there have been dramatically more accidents at the work site this year - with 16 logged already, compared to three in 2008.

A state highway official notes that thousands make it through the area safely. But for those who do not, a trip through the narrowed lanes on I-91 can bring injury, financial losses and motor-vehicle violations.

And drivers who come upon accident scenes can face long delays, as traffic comes to a standstill while authorities clean up the accident scene.

(Link to video about construction zone.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Y_2aG3MT9k

One driver's trip

To get to work the Monday after the accident, Kieras said she ran the gauntlet between Exits 17 and 18 again, this time with her face covered in bruises and fluid gathering around her injured eye socket.

"It was a really nasty accident, it was no picnic," Kieras said. "But I have to do what I have to do, it is a dangerous area and I always hold my breath going through there because you can't move a quarter of an inch in either direction."

The construction zone Kieras crashed in requires motorists on both sides of the highway to navigate through two narrow lanes of concrete Jersey barriers.

Kieras, of Hadley, appeared in Northampton District Court Monday to appeal the citation she received for failing to stay in her lane. She said she believes the accident was caused by a broken tie rod that forced her car into the barriers. She said she'll find out through the mail the result of her appeal.

"My mechanic said that when a tie rod breaks, that is often what the car will do. You cannot move it right or left and I was doing my damnedest but couldn't do anything but try to straighten it out, and I started to fishtail," she said.

Spate of accidents

Lt. John G. Murphy, station commander at state police's Northampton barracks, said emergency crews have responded to far more accidents at the site during the first six months of 2009 than in any other time span since the federal and state-funded bridge reconstruction project began last April.

According to Murphy, the site's first accident, and the only accident to take place in the eight months construction was going on in 2007, took place Sept. 23.

In 2008, there were three accidents in the construction zone and in 2009, there have already been 16 reported accidents, including two involving oversized loads that ignored signs warning of narrow corridors, and several that involved drivers who were just going too fast, Murphy said.

As motorists approach the site between Exit 17 and 18 from either direction on I-91, signs warn them that the speed limit will change to 45 mph and they must choose to travel down one of two 100-yard stretches of Jersey barriers. The barriers are separated by only 11 feet, which leaves most drivers with only 2 or 3 feet of free space.

According to Adam Hurtubise, a spokesman for the state Highway Department, the treacherous section of highway has been rearranged since April 2007, when the department began an $11.3 million project to replace the bridge over East Street with a three-span, steel girder bridge. The majority of the project, he said, is expected to be completed by the end of this year while some East Street work will last into next spring.

"Of the accidents this year, four resulted in individuals being charged with operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, six others were charged with more minor offenses and the others didn't result in citations," Murphy said. "The way I look at it, in spite of all of these accidents, there are thousands of other motorists who have gone through the same construction zone without a problem."

Just last week, a tractor trailer that crashed while traveling through the site left 25 gallons of diesel fuel spilled across the highway and northbound traffic stretch for miles after the accident limited drivers to only one lane for more than five hours. Two weeks ago, a suspected drunken driver allegedly forced another motorist into the Jersey barriers before leading state police on a high-speed car chase into Hatfield. Neither accident resulted in injury, but both caused traffic delays.

Although the project has been a real problem so far this year, Hurtubise said motorists who regularly run the gauntlet can expect an easier ride down I-91 in the coming weeks.

"Phase II of the project should be completed within the next month, and the contractor should be pouring the decks over the next couple of weeks," Hurtubise said. "Phase III will shift the two right lanes over and the left lane will be closed. Traffic will not be split, so that will be a little easier on drivers."

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Woes of wet week

Benefits, berries and ballfields among the soggy

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

Weather experts are predicting that the summer of 2009 will likely begin with more than a week of rain, which could pose serious problems for outdoor seasonal events and headaches for some local farmers — and a chance of localized flooding.

The National Weather Service’s Web site is predicting either rain showers or rolling thunderstorms across the Pioneer Valley into next week and possibly next weekend.

According to News 22 Storm Team meteorologist, Adam Strzempko, the sustained rain is a result of a cyclical weather pattern over parts of New England that will continually generate moisture over the next week.

“The problem is that we are stuck in this weather pattern; the jet stream to our south is funneling the rain right over us and that is why it has been cooler than usual,” Strzempko said Thursday night. “It is like having train tracks that are just sending these storms our way.”

While the sight of only rain clouds on many seven-day forecasts may look grim, Strzempko said he expects to see a break in the weather sometime in the middle of next week.

“By next week, hopefully around Wednesday or Thursday, we will see this pattern change and some drier weather come our way. Right now I’m thinking that will take place in the middle of next week.”

Another of the station’s meteorologists, Brian Lapis, said Friday that although a flood watch will be in effect for parts of Hampden, Hampshire and Franklin counties through Sunday, residents shouldn’t worry about the region’s larger rivers.

“We’ve had a lot of rain recently and there is the potential for more heavy rain here over the weekend, and that could create some urban street flooding and the swelling of smaller streams,” Lapis said. “It is tough to get the Connecticut River to flood this time of year — it typically floods in the spring if there is a lot of snow melting.”

Outdoor activities

The organizers of two outdoor events planned for this weekend, the Relay for Life in Florence and the Taste of Amherst on the town’s common, are prepared to go forward as scheduled, regardless of what Mother Nature has in store.

At the relay, the more than 1,500 participants are expected to walk around the track at Look Park rain or shine, many of whom spent last night sleeping through the rain in tents.
“Cancer doesn’t stop for rain, cancer doesn’t stop for sleep, so we won’t either,” said Thomas McCusker, one of the relay’s tri-county chairs. “It is the cause that drives us. Unless a tornado touches down or we have thunder and lightning and it seems too dangerous, people will be out on the track.”

The 21 restaurants participating in 18th annual Taste of Amherst were setting up their booths and preparing to dish out food Friday night, despite ominous clouds gathering in the sky above. The Thursday session was canceled.

Tony Maroulis, the executive director of the Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce, couldn’t remember a year when the event was held during a weekend of nonstop rain but said if that happens this year, local restaurateurs are prepared to work through it.

“There really is nothing you can do with an event like this, where we have to reserve space on the common a year in advance,” Maroulis said. “But we will be out here this weekend rain or shine.”

Farmers anxious

Too much rain this early in the season can also be a problem for local farmers, particularly those who offer strawberries, a fruit that is especially susceptible to excessive rainfall.
Joe Czajkowski, owner of Lakeside Farm in South Deerfield, said the rain may not be the best thing for his pick-your-own strawberry patch but because it is early enough in the season, there will be plenty of the fruit left to ripen later in the summer.

“We have had a really good run up to now, and this rain isn’t helpful,” Czajkowski said. “All we can really do is make sure than any time it stops raining we are out there picking. We are going to be OK, and customers should know that once we get through these next few days, there will be a lot of strawberries for them to enjoy.”

While prolonged rainy weather can be rough for strawberry farmers, it can spell disaster for other crops as well, said Tim Wilcox, owner of the Kitchen Garden farm in Sunderland.

“Having this much rain any time you have crops on the ground is not good. The first rain we had during this stretch we really needed but after you get an inch of water on the ground if you add another, that starts to be too much,” Wilcox said. “One of the old adages is that you can water down but you can’t take it away, and because of that in some ways a drought is preferable over this.”

Wilcox said that if the roots of crops like squash, melons and cucumbers get saturated for more than a few days they will frequently die, and there is little that farmers can do to prevent it.

“All you can really do is hope for the sun to shine. There are certain kinds of tilling that will allow the soil to do better, but when it’s this wet people can’t get their tractors out on the fields,” Wilcox said.

Youth sports jammed up

The early summer stretch of rainstorms could also result in a scheduling nightmare for organizers of local Little Leagues, where rained-out games and flooded fields may force teams to play a series of double-headers or even shortened games.

“The regular season was pretty good, we only lost one or two games to weather,” said Andy Grimaldi, president of the Northampton Little League. “I know the kids are really disappointed about all the rain, but we are working closely with the recreation departments and there are a couple of scenarios we are looking at if we miss some games.”

In addition to the dilemma of trying to finish the playoffs and crown city champions before the region’s two tournament teams begin their season in the end of June, Grimaldi said if the rain continues, he could lose many of the league’s players to family vacations after the school year ends on Tuesday.

The hope, he said, is to get in a couple of games this weekend, if the league is lucky enough to get a break in the weather.

“The city is giving us an expanded schedule, and unless we get a lot of heavy rain for the next couple of days, I think we should be OK,” Grimaldi said.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Police find between $500,000 and $1 million in I-91 stop

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - Acting on a tip, state police stopped a pickup truck on Interstate 91 Wednesday morning and seized between $500,000 and $1 million dollars packed in hidden compartments.

Michael Masse, 22, of Fairfield, Vt., was arrested Thursday on a federal warrant by Drug Enforcement Agency agents after being picked up by a state police officer Wednesday. State police acted on a DEA task force tip that Masse was driving a vehicle containing what the report called "hydro-weed."

Investigators later said Masse was believed to be involved in a large-scale, international marijuana-trafficking organization that operates between Canada and the United States.

According to the application for a criminal complaint in Masse's court file, Trooper Matthew Donah was working a paid traffic detail on I-91 northbound in Holyoke Wednesday morning when he received a notice from the DEA task force to be on the look out for a silver Ford F-150 pickup truck with Vermont plates. The tip stated that the task force believed the vehicle had a hidden compartment containing a large amount of marijuana.

Several minutes later, the vehicle passed Donah and he reportedly pulled it over several miles down the highway in Northampton. Masse, who was driving the vehicle, reportedly told Donah that he had a license out of Quebec, but did not have it on him. Masse also reportedly told police that he was coming from a vacation in New York and was returning to Montreal.

After a police K-9 unit trained to identify drugs indicated that there might be drugs in the vehicle, both Masse and a passenger, Mathieu Nantais, 22, of Quebec, Canada, were arrested on charges of conspiracy to violate a drug law.

After being read his Miranda rights, Nantais reportedly put his head in his hands and told arresting officers, "We are so stupid," and "I should have just stayed at home."

The vehicle was taken back to the barracks to be searched, where Lt. John Murphy directed a state police mechanic to search the area behind the rear passenger seat because the insulation appeared to be facing in the wrong direction.

The mechanic reportedly found a large stack of money behind the seat, and then discovered a large amount of money in a backpack on the rear floor of the vehicle, as well as four stacks of cash hidden in the passenger side air bag of the truck, estimated to be about $40,000.

More searching, Donah reported, revealed two loose wires that led from the front of the truck and ran into the back seat. Suspecting that the wires might release another hiding place, police exposed the wires to a 12-volt power source, which caused two hidden electric pistons to push the rear seat open and exposed a "large cache of money in various denominations," according to Donah's report.

All the money, police reported, was either wrapped in rubber bands or shrink-wrapped and was estimated to be between $500,000 and $1 million, though police were still counting Thursday afternoon.

There was no marijuana in the vehicle, reports stated, just the money.

Meanwhile, Northampton District Court officials Thursday dropped a charge of unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle against Masse, and he was taken away by federal agents on a warrant out of New Hampshire. It was not clear Thursday where Nantais was.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Two cases of swine flu at HRHS

By OWEN BOSS
Staff Writer

WESTHAMPTON — With just over a week remaining in the school year, two Hampshire Regional High School students have been diagnosed with swine flu, Assistant Superintendent Anthony Ryan said Wednesday.

Parents of students at the high school began receiving phone calls from Superintendent Barbara Ripa last night and Ryan said the students who have confirmed cases, whom he did not identify, will stay home for the remainder of the school year. All other students, he said, should report to school as usual and take the necessary sanitary precautions.

“The state is pretty clear on how schools should respond if a case of the swine flu was to arise, and we are following every one of those conditions and procedures,” Ryan said.

The reported cases follow a similar situation at Hatfield Elementary School last week, when parents received phone calls warning that one student, who had been out for more than a week, may have contracted the illness.

“We have more kids out during the regular flu season that we have had over this,” Ryan said. “All of the guidelines are being followed, and people should use common sense.”

According to the state’s Department of Public Health’s Web site, as of June 11, there were 1,153 confirmed cases of the flu in Massachusetts, and 80 people in the state have been hospitalized since the outbreak began.

The site also warned that certain groups are at higher risk of complications from the flu, including children under the age of 2, adults over 65, pregnant women, and people with chronic health conditions, such as asthma, diabetes and heart disease.

On Monday, the department announced that a 30-year-old Boston resident was the state’s first death linked to the illness.

The best way to avoid contracting the virus, the department’s Web site says, is to regularly wash your hands with soap and warm water or to use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer. If you are sick, the department stresses, you should stay home from work, and a sick child should be kept home from school for seven days or 24 hours after symptoms resolve, whichever is longer.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Truck crash, fuel spill, slow traffic near Oxbow

By OWEN BOSS
Staff Writer

EASTHAMPTON
— An accident involving a tractor-trailer at an Interstate 91 construction zone Wednesday afternoon left diesel fuel spilled across the highway and resulted in long delays for drivers.

According to state police trooper William Loiselle, who works in the Northampton barracks, at 12:30 p.m., state police responded to a construction zone near the Oxbow on I-91 north for a report that a tractor-trailer had crashed and was leaking diesel fuel.

The truck, Loiselle said, belonged to Wecare Transportation Co., based in Jordan, N.Y., and was transporting a large amount of steel from Pittsfield to Greenfield. The driver, Stephen Pryor, 26, was reportedly uninjured in the crash.

As a result of the accident, traffic traveling north was limited to one lane for more than five hours while two Department of Environmental Protection vehicles cleaned the reported 25 gallons of spilled gasoline, Loiselle said.

Traffic on the north side of the highway, state police said, was reportedly back to normal by 6:30 p.m.

The cause of the accident is still under investigation and no citations have been issued, Loiselle said.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Williamsburg eatery shutters to cut losses

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

WILLIAMSBURG - A little more than a month after it opened, the Hilltown Silver Spoon restaurant is closed for good.

The breakfast and lunch eatery was opened in early May by Jeff Doyle, longtime proprietor and cook at the Silver Spoon on Main Street in Easthampton, He blamed the closing on poor preliminary planning.

"I don't think it was the economy or the location, I think it was basically just a lack of proper planning on my part," Doyle said. "I had never opened a place before, and I wasn't exactly prepared to do the things that needed to be done."

After realizing that he was unable to pay his bills, Doyle said, it came down to whether or not he was willing to use money from the Easthampton restaurant to support his Williamsburg location.

"There just wasn't enough money behind me when I started and I was expecting the business would pay for itself. When it didn't, I couldn't afford to pay for it out of Easthampton's pocket," Doyle said.

The closing of the Hilltown Silver Spoon comes on the heels of the announcement that McFadden's Pub, a popular bar down the road, has closed until Sept. 15 to avoid another summer of lackluster business.

The Hilltown Silver Spoon has now become the third restaurant in just over two years to go out of business at its 49 Main St. location.

According to town records, the Williamsburg Cafe, which changed its name to the Grille and Tavern in 2003, turned in its liquor license on Feb. 6, 2007, and closed shortly after. The next restaurant, The Kitchen Table, applied for its liquor license on April 17, 2007, opened shortly after it was approved on July 23, 2007, and then closed last winter.

Plans for future business

Although he said he has not received any formal bids, Doyle hopes another entrepreneur makes a fourth attempt at providing the people of Williamsburg with another place to sit down to enjoy a cup of coffee and a quick bite to eat.

"I have had a couple of different people expressing interest but nothing concrete yet," Doyle said. "Hopefully I will be able to turn it over and someone else will take over and continue doing something similar."

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Shutesbury man held on $5,000 for drug possession

HADLEY — A Shutesbury man who led police on a short foot chase into the woods behind the Norwottuck Shops Friday was arrested for having outstanding warrants before police discovered drugs in his car.

Philip H. Jacobsen, 21, of 78 Pelham Hill Road, Shutesbury, pleaded innocent Monday in Eastern Hampshire District Court to charges of possessing a class D substance (marijuana) with intent to distribute, possession of a class B substance (cocaine), possession of a class E substance (oxycodone), violating an abuse prevention order and intimidating a witness.

According to Officer Adam Bartlett, at 2 p.m., he was traveling along Rte. 9 when he reportedly saw Jacobsen yelling and pointing his finger in a crying woman’s face in front of the Norwottuck Shops. When Jacobsen noticed Bartlett pull in to help the woman, he reportedly fled into a wooded area behind the building. The woman reportedly told police he had several outstanding warrants and was violating an abuse prevention order by contacting her.

After officer Bartlett and officer Mitchell Kuc located Jacobsen inside Loonar Tatoo and placed him under arrest, they reportedly found a large amount of marijuana and smaller amounts of cocaine and oxycodone in his car.

“We have sent the marijuana off to a lab to be weighed and analyzed so we don’t have any official numbers on how much there was,” Kuc said Monday. “ But I can tell you it was much more than an ounce.”

Judge John Payne Jr. ordered Jacobsen held on $5,000 bail and he is scheduled to reappear for a pretrial hearing on July 9.

— OWEN BOSS

PVPA postpones meeting on director's fate

SOUTH HADLEY — A special Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter Public School board meeting originally scheduled to be held in the school’s library tonight at 6 has been postponed until either June 23 or 30, board president Dorie Shallcross said.

According to Shallcross, the decision to postpone the meeting, which will address a subcommittee’s unanimous recommendation to terminate Executive Director and school co-founder Robert Brick’s contract after next year, has been attributed to the growing unrest among students, parents and staff.

After hearing of the subcommittee’s decision, students organized through the online social networking site Facebook and created a group called “PVPA - What is happening to Bob Brick?” Membership in the group has swelled from 181 Saturday to 475 Monday night.

According to a post on the Web site, which featured a letter submitted by Shallcross to the board, the postponement was meant to allow both students and school administrators time to think about the decision and will offer her a chance to seek legal guidance before the meeting.

“The atmosphere around the recommendation not to renew the Executive Director’s contract in 2010 has become extremely overheated,” the posted note read. “This has derailed the work that needs to be done by students and faculty for the remainder of the school year and a cooling-off period is needed.”

— OWEN BOSS

Driver blamed for causing I-91 crash in Easthampton

By OWEN BOSS
Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON
— An alleged drunken driver who reportedly rear-ended a motorist on Interstate Route 91 — forcing the vehicle off the road in a construction zone in Easthampton — led police on high-speed chase Friday, reaching speeds over 120 mph, state police said.

James M. Scanlon, 53, of Springfield, pleaded innocent Monday in Northampton District Court to charges of operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol, leaving the scene of an accident with property damage and negligent operation of a motor vehicle.

According to Trooper Brian Pearle, at 8:16 p.m. Friday, a motorist called the Northampton barracks to report an erratic operator in a gray Toyota Avalon heading north on the highway at a high speed, forcing motorists off the road. The caller later told police Scanlon rear-ended him on the highway, causing him to lose control and strike the Jersey barriers at a construction zone in Easthampton near the Oxbow.

Near Exit 21 in Northampton, Pearle reportedly saw the vehicle pass. When he pulled out to stop the car, it accelerated away from him at speeds approaching 100 mph. In his report, Pearle noted that at one point his speedometer read 120 mph and he was unable to close the gap between himself and the vehicle.

Pearle eventually stopped the vehicle in Hatfield. He said he found a half-empty bottle of liqueur next to Scanlon in the front seat. After failing field sobriety tests, Scanlon was reportedly placed under arrest, police said.

A test for blood-alcohol content reportedly found that Scanlon was at twice the legal limit.
Judge Richard J. Carey released Scanlon on his own recognizance and he is scheduled to reappear for a pretrial hearing June 24.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Friday, June 12, 2009

Cyclist, 10, in good condition after collision

SOUTH HADLEY - A 10-year-old boy struck by a motorist while riding his bike Monday was listed in good condition at Baystate Medical Center Wednesday, a hospital spokeswoman said.

According to police, at 6:30 p.m., Korey Champagne of 7 Bridge St., Apt. 1, was riding his bike with a friend near Buttery Brook Park on School Street when he reportedly rode out into the road and into the path of an oncoming vehicle. He was transported by ambulance to Baystate Medical Center, police said, and the extent of his injuries are unknown.

Although the driver of the car, Sarah M. Helm, 23, of 44 Linwood Drive, has not been charged and a citation wasn't issued, police said they are still investigating the cause of the accident.

- OWEN BOSS

Kollmorgen headquarters project at Village Hill approved

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - Kollmorgen Electro-Optical Corp., the city's largest manufacturer, won Planning Board approval Thursday for its new 140,000-square-foot headquarters on the grounds of the former state hospital.

Once the two-story manufacturing and office facility in the middle of a 13.6-acre site along Chapel and Prince streets is completed, the company and its 366 employees will leave their current 5-acre location on King Street.

Before the plans were approved, however, a lengthy public comment session attended by about 20 people revealed that many were unhappy with a decision made in May to realign the south campus's multi-use bike path away from the new building rather than having it wind through the site.

When O'Connell Development Group, the site development company, originally brought plans before the board in late May, members requested that they return with a representation of what the building would look like from Laurel Street to the south and southwest, along with answers to questions about snow storage, the amount of lighting used at night and increases in traffic levels.

All of these they had prepared for Thursday's meeting.

Francesca Maltese, development director for O'Connell, said lighting would be kept to one foot-candle over the entire site, which is much lower than the standard four foot-candles traditionally used at retail locations. She said that snow gathered would be stored in two designated areas on the northern end of the site's 485-space parking lot. Also, Maltese said, residents should not fear swells of commuter traffic to the site because the company staggers the arrival and departure times for its employees.

"There was a traffic study done this year that found that the weekday peak morning traffic for Kollmorgen employees would be 141 vehicles as opposed to the previously approved 317 vehicles," Maltese said.

To ensure that the company adheres to the requests of the building's abutters, board members wrote in a number of conditions before approving the plans. Included in the conditions were that O'Connell provide stamped engineering documents indicating that light levels meet those on the plans; that the site's eastern fence contains no slats; and that no parking lot is located closer to Prince Street than shown on the plans.

Also, four more shade trees must be planted to the south of the building if deemed necessary by the board; six months after receiving an occupancy certificate O'Connell must submit a statement from a sound engineer that sound created by the loading dock meets the ordinance; and only two parking lot poles per lot may stay on after 10 p.m., while lights within 20 feet of the building may remain on.

Kollmorgen, which makes optical and imaging systems for submarines, surface ships and combat vehicles, expects the project to cost $18 million and to create an additional 30 jobs.

Although the board OK'd the site plans in a 5¿1 vote, with Kenneth Jodrie the lone dissenter, disapproval of the redesigned bike path was a consistent theme among speakers. Rust Avenue resident Benjamin Spencer, who spoke a number of times at the meeting, said he thought changes to the bike path made it unsafe for children and that the company's claim that a bike path would cause a security problem was insincere.

"I find it hard to believe that the Kollmorgen company, which has had a sidewalk no more than 20 feet from its front door, can say that a bike path is completely out of the question." Spencer said. "It seems reasonable to ask Kollmorgen to agree to this bike route as a demonstration of their willingness to be good neighbors and to help retain the original vision of a mixed-use village open to everyone."

Defending the site plans was Teri Anderson, the city's economic development coordinator, who said the site was the only location in the city that could house such a large building. She said the plans suit the original goal of creating affordable housing through an economic development that both retains and creates jobs and uses existing infrastructure to create a connection with downtown businesses.

"This is a project that I think, as scary as it is to say in this crowd, is something that the community can still be proud of," Anderson said.

Developers say the building is situated in such a way that views of the mountain ridge line to the south and east from Village Hill Road will remain, and existing and newly planted trees will limit views of the office building from the street.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Smith Voke grads step up, ready, willing, able

Photo: Smith Voke grads step up, ready, willing, ablePhoto: Smith Voke grads step up, ready, willing, able


By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - The 117 graduates of Smith Vocational and Agricultural High School's class of 2009 walked across the stage at Smith College's John M. Greene Hall as high school students for the last time Wednesday night.

Garbed in their traditional school colors, the boys in black caps and gowns and the girls in gold, seniors entered the crowded concert hall to a standing ovation from the faculty, friends and family members who helped them on their path to graduation.

School administrators used the ceremony as an opportunity to remind the seniors, many of whom are prepared to immediately enter the work force in a variety of fields, that the solutions to the problems of today will likely be solved during their generation's turn at the helm.

"The climate is changing. Be ready for change, class of 2009, don't be caught off guard," said Principal Leslie Skantz-Hodgson. "Stay on top of the new technologies and not just the latest cell phones and video games. Learn all that you can about what is going on in the changing world, be flexible and ready to adapt."

Also speaking at graduation was Superintendent Arthur P. Apostolou, who told seniors that despite the current state of national economy, many of the careers they are entering into are still in need of a new generation of well-trained applicants.

"You will now go out into your community during tough economic times. Fortunately, many of the vocations you are in will not be outsourced," Apostolou said. "You cannot ask your plumber to fix your sink from Asia through the phone, and homes cannot be built over the Internet."

"Always keep in mind the successes that you have experienced and the tough times you have already gotten through," Apostolou said in closing, "You have a track record, you know what to do and you are going to do all right. You truly are a really great class, and I am really proud to see you here."

A plea for the planet

Using his chance at the podium to voice his concerns about reversing global warming was John W. Diemand, senior class president, who elected to slightly change the words of President John F. Kennedy's famous speech to "Ask not what your planet can do for you, but what you can do for your planet."

"I want to end this speech with a personal plea, not just to the graduates, but to all of you sitting here tonight," Diemand said. "Do your part, don't wait for the person next to you or scientists in labs in countries on other continents, let's all take the necessary steps together, here in our country, and take them now."

Mayor calls for quick thanks

Before assisting school administrators in handing out diplomas, Mayor Clare Higgins asked students to recognize the faculty members who molded them into the qualified professionals they are today and the parents who helped them succeed both in and out of school.

"Congratulations, class of 2009, you have all done a great job, and I am sure you will all do great things in the future," Higgins said.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Woman hurt in crash that fells wires, snarls traffic

By Owen Boss
Staff Writer

WILLIAMSBURG - An 84-year-old Williamsburg woman crashed her car into a utility pole on Main Street, causing active power lines to fall on a tractor-trailer traveling behind her, police said, and creating long delays in afternoon traffic through the center of town Tuesday.

According to Police Chief John W. Cotton, at 3:15 p.m., local firefighters and police officers responded to the area of 22 Main St., near Lashway Lumber, for a report that a woman's 2001 station wagon had struck and downed a utility pole and that the pole had landed on a tractor-trailer truck following behind her. The broken pole hit the side of the trailer and lodged itself there, Cotton said in an email.

The driver, Charlotte P. Otis, of Village Hill Road, was transported by Highland Ambulance to Cooley Dickinson Hospital. She was treated there and then was transferred in good condition to another facility, according to a hospital spokeswoman late Tuesday night. The spokeswoman declined to say where Otis was sent.

In describing the accident, Cotton said, "The wires from the pole were on the truck and, according to National Grid, they carried 13,000 volts when active. So we had to close the road down until crews could stabilize the wires and get them off of the truck."

Firefighters at the scene redirected traffic down High Street and South Main Street, and backups caused by the accident stretched several miles down Main Street, at one point reaching as far as Bread Euphoria.

"We had to close the roads to give the electric crews a chance to stabilize the poles," Fire Chief Donald Lawton said.

The downed pole was repaired by National Grid crews, Cotton said, and traffic through the center of town was moving normally shortly after 5 p.m.

Cotton said the cause of the accident is still under investigation.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Break-in suspect nabbed

Police stay arrest breaks streak of 30 robberies


By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - State police have arrested a man they believe to have been involved in more than 30 burglaries spanning Hampshire and Franklin counties and parts of Vermont.

William Goly, 34, of New Salem, pleaded innocent Monday in Greenfield District Court to charges of breaking and entering a building during the daytime to commit a felony, larceny over $250, using a motor vehicle to commit a felony and possession of cocaine.

According to Trooper Adam Mathieu of the Northampton barracks, at 3 p.m. on June 3, state police responded to Chestnut Plain Road in Whately for a report that an elderly woman and her two grandchildren had returned home and interrupted two burglars who were ransacking the residence.

Although the two men managed to escape out the back door of the house and sped away across the woman's front lawn, Mathieu said, she was able to record the license plate and told police it belonged to a red Ford Escort wagon.

The description of the men, the items they targeted and the vehicle they were driving, Mathieu said, was an almost identical match to those described in many other unsolved incidents in the area.

"They seemed to be going after jewelry, loose cash, firearms, big-screen televisions and assorted other electronic items, and they tried to pry open every safe they came across." Mathieu said. "The description seemed to match up in many different locations."

After searching for the car for two days, Mathieu said state police located the vehicle Saturday afternoon, when Goly was allegedly involved in a road rage incident in Greenfield.

"We found him because of an incident with a pedestrian," Mathieu said. "A mother was walking her child near the street and she jumped out to tell him to slow down because he was screeching his tires, and he ended up getting into a verbal confrontation with her and a whole slew of other things."

When police arrived on the scene, Goly reportedly fled from his vehicle and was apprehended by state police after a short foot pursuit.

Mathieu said Vermont State Police suspect Goly has been involved in a series of break-ins in southern Vermont and he is also wanted in connection with 20 or 30 other break-ins across both Franklin and Hampshire counties.

The search for the missing items and the second suspect, Mathieu said, is ongoing and he is urging area residents to remember to secure their homes when they are left unattended.

"They seem to be going house to house and they have been finding and breaking into a lot of houses that are not secured properly," Mathieu said. "People should remember to lock their doors."

Judge Laurie MacLeod ordered Goly held on $5,000 cash bail and Mathieu said he is currently being housed at the Franklin County Jail and House of Correction in Greenfield.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

PVPA graduates stage final high school performance

Photo: PVPA grads stage final high school performancePhoto: PVPA grads stage final high school performance

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - The raucous graduation ceremony for Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter Public School's Class of 2009 was as unique as the 79 individuals who graced the stage as high school students for the last time Thursday night.

Before a capacity crowd at the Calvin Theatre on King Street, students and faculty members reflected on four years of maturing as musicians, dancers, thespians and community members and prepared for the sweeping changes that the future holds for them.

To kick off the ceremony, which seemed more like a Broadway production than a graduation, class members entered the theater, each in uniquely decorated graduation caps, to a standing ovation and a school band performance of Survivor's "Eye of the Tiger." After which, Five Alone, a senior singing group, performed its own original rendition of the Star-Spangled Banner, complete with beatboxing.

School Administrator Bob Brick, who was one of the ceremony's keynote speakers, reminded students that while seniors took their own route to graduation, their diverse curriculum and student body was what separated their high school education from that offered at other institutions.

"Your diversity represents our dreams for our school and our dreams for our society," Brick said. "Dreams that I believe we might find in the real world because after all, diversity is the one true thing that we all have in common and we should all celebrate that."

Before ending his speech, Brick maintained a tradition that had begun on a hot day several years ago, by offering graduating seniors their own "bailout package," and throwing ice cream bars into the student section while they all barked like seals.

Also offering her own words of wisdom was senior speaker and aspiring dancer Sasha Jimenez, who compared her time at the South Hadley school to the dictionary's definition of "potluck."

"The only way I can describe high school is through an analogy," Jimenez said. "According to the dictionary, a potluck is a food or meal that happens to be available without preparation or purchase. The students at PVPA aren't meals, but each and every individual I came across on my path had something different to teach me. They opened my eyes to new ideas and brought something different to the table. I personally had a taste of what everyone had to offer."

After each senior received their diploma, the class brought the crowd it its feet one last time when they took to the stage during the Senior Class Performance, which showcased a variety of their talents including acting, singing, dancing and music.

"You are all curious, creative, energetic, talented, kind, politically involved, playful, socially conscious and active - sometimes silly, sassy and fresh and always lovable," Brick said before closing his speech. "You all face many challenges and obstacles in the future, but I believe every one of you has the gumption and the gas to finish."

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Hampshire Regional: Seize your hopes, Seize your dreams

Photo: ¿Seize the day, seize your dreams, seize your hopes'Photo: ¿Seize the day, seize your dreams, seize your hopes'

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - The hundreds of family members and friends of the 128 graduates in Hampshire Regional High School's Class of 2009 filled Smith College's John M. Green Hall Friday night to celebrate their accomplishments over the past four years and to prepare them for the changes the future holds.

The theme of the night, it seemed, focused on preparing the graduates for the uncertain world they are entering into and encouraging them to take chances in spite of adversity.

The students donned the school's tradition colors, boys wearing red caps and gowns and the girls in white, as they entered into the recital hall as high school students for the last time and stepped into the next stage of their lives.

While addressing his fellow students, Class Treasurer Thomas Alexander reminded graduating seniors that while the world of today may face a long list of problems, it will be up to their generation to come up with many of the solutions. And instilled in them a quote from Grace Murray Hopper, that "a boat in port is safe, but that is not what ships are built for."

"Do not waste your life away sitting in harbor and waiting for the storms to die down, go out and conquer the fierce winds and waves that are the challenges we face today," Alexander said. "In the words of Robert Herrick: Gather your rose buds while you may, old time is still a flying, and the same flower that smiles today, tomorrow will be dying. So go now, seize the day, seize your dreams, seize your hopes and seize the next stage of your lives."

Another speaker, Class Advisor Michael Braidman, told seniors that while it will be up to them whether or not they will make an impact on the world in the future, each one of them now has the tools necessary to do it.

"As your class adviser I want to leave you with some advice, there is a lot that is wrong with the world that we live in but it is the way it is because of the people who live in it," Braidman said. "Every individual has the power to change it and each of you can change it simply by the choices you make and how you live your life... Be the kind of person that you think the world needs more of and you will have made it a better place already."

The night's final speaker, Superintendent Barbara J. Ripa, used her chance at the podium to offer an optimistic look at the future and to remind students not to shy away from life's challenges.

"You are fortunate to be graduating in the year 2009, it is a time when the world is full of opportunity and challenge. There are new careers opening every day, careers that weren't even thought of just a few years ago, you can do wonderful things with your life," Ripa said. "Don't experience life from the sidelines. It was never meant to be a spectator sport. Jump in and give it your all."

She went on to say, "Graduates, today your life begins. Today you become citizens of the world, today you become grown ups, today you become accountable to someone other than yourselves or accountable to your grades, today you become accountable to the world, to the future and to the possibilities that life has to offer. Your job is to show up wide-eyed and willing, ready for anything and ready to take on life, to take on love, to take on responsibility and to take on possibility."

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Informant's tip leads to cocaine arrests

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

HOLYOKE - Northampton state police arrested a Ludlow man and a woman from Brattleboro, Vt., Tuesday on charges of trafficking cocaine after information from a confidential informant led to the discovery of more than 12 grams of the drug in their vehicle during a traffic stop on Interstate 91.

Cyrus C. Moss, 27, of 215 Laurel Lane in Ludlow, and Charlotte E. Crawford, of 1336 Putney Road in Brattleboro, both pleaded innocent in Northampton District Court Wednesday to charges of possessing a class B substance (cocaine) with intent to distribute.

According to court documents, at 4:45 p.m., state police Trooper Brendhan Shugrue was observing traffic at the Mt. Tom power plant on Route 5 when he received word that narcotics detectives in Springfield were attempting to catch up to a gold Ford Taurus with Vermont license plates that was traveling north on I-91. A confidential informant, Shugrue reported, had told detectives a passenger in the vehicle, a known gang leader in Indian Orchard, was trafficking cocaine.

Several minutes later, Shugrue reportedly spotted the vehicle near Exit 18 traveling 74 mph in a posted 65 mph zone. While attempting to stop the vehicle for speeding, Shugrue reported that it traveled in the breakdown lane for about a quarter mile before stopping and during that time the front seat passenger was moving around and acting suspiciously.

After stopping the vehicle, Shugrue reportedly called K-9 Trooper Brian Gladu for assistance. While leading the dog around the vehicle, it reportedly showed interest in the front door and police handcuffed both Crawford and Moss and placed them in cruisers. During a search of Crawford's purse, Shugrue located a baggie that contained 12.4 grams of crack cocaine.

After Moss and Crawford were arrested and processed at the station, Crawford was reportedly interviewed separately by Trooper William Loiselle. During the interview, she reportedly told Loiselle that Moss had been hiding out at her apartment in Vermont because he had an outstanding warrant for violating his probation and that in exchange for crack cocaine, she would drive him to Springfield to purchase the drug, which he would then sell in Brattleboro.

She also reportedly told Loiselle that she first met Moss when he sold her cocaine and that since that time, they had made four trips to Springfield and back.

According to court documents, in November of 2004, Moss was convicted of cocaine trafficking in Hampden Superior Court. Judge Richard J. Carey ordered Moss held on $10,000 cash or $100,000 surety and Crawford held on $500 cash, $5,000 surety. Neither posted bond Wednesday. Both are scheduled to return to court on July 2 for a pretrial conference.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Man crashes motorcycle after high-speed pursuit

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

BELCHERTOWN - A Springfield man faces a slew of charges after reportedly leading police on a high-speed motorcycle chase through Belchertown Tuesday and eventually crashing near a bridge in Athol.

Bradford Hull, 20, of 75 Birchland Ave., pleaded innocent Wednesday in Eastern Hampshire District Court to charges of failure to stop for police, driving to endanger, operating an unregistered motorcycle, unlicensed operation of a motorcycle, operating an uninsured motorcycle and attaching a false license plate to a motorcycle.

According to court documents, at 10 p.m., officer Niel T. Lozier attempted to pull Hull over on Maple Street after noticing that the inspection sticker on his license plate was expired and his rear light was dim.

After activating his lights and siren, Lozier reported that Hull increased speed and began passing vehicles in a no-passing zone on North Main Street. Hull reportedly continued north on Daniel Shays Highway, at one point reaching speeds over 80 mph in a 50-mph zone. After about 25 miles, Hull reportedly lost control of the motorcycle and crashed next to a bridge in Athol.

"There was a bridge under construction and I guess he panicked and laid the bike down," Sgt. Bruce Jenks said. "His bike was damaged and he had some road rash, but refused treatment."

Hull reportedly told Lozier he only had a permit to operate a motorcycle and that he had attached an expired license plate to it knowing that it was unregistered and uninsured.

Hull is scheduled to reappear in court for a pretrial conference July 6.

Williamsburg rolls up savings

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

WILLIAMSBURG - A town firefighter with a keen eye for a good deal saved the town $220,000 by securing a "mini-pumper" fire truck through a Department of Defense surplus equipment program.

Fire Chief Donald Lawton said the town was preparing to borrow that amount to replace a deteriorating fire engine that has been in the department's garage since 1973.

About a week and a half ago, Lawton said, a firefighter within the department noticed that a mini-pumper from Dover with just 10,000 miles on it had become available through the Department of Defense.

"One of our firefighters worked for a place that had access to the equipment that was coming up, happened to see it, and when it became available we were able to get it," Lawton said.

Lawton said there were no transportation costs associated with the new truck and obtaining it was as easy as sending a firefighter to go and pick it up.

The new fluorescent yellow modified pickup truck, which has side compartments for storing a variety of equipment, is a combination of an all terrain vehicle, mini-pumper and a wilderness rescue vehicle.

Its small size, Lawton said, makes it invaluable to a department that frequently responds to calls for brush fires and alarms at homes with steep, long or narrow driveways.

"It is a mini-pumper that is used for a quick attack," Lawton said. "They are used to get in the long driveways that we can't access with a larger truck and to fight brush fires. And you can operate them with less personnel."

At the Town Meeting Monday, the new truck was parked outside of Anne T. Dunphy School so residents could get a first-hand look at the new equipment.

Before opening the meeting, Selectman David Mathers announced the acquisition and attributed it to the hard work and quick thinking of Fire Department officials, which drew a loud round of applause from the more than 100 town residents in attendance.

"This replaces the $220,000 we were going to borrow for a new truck next year," Mathers said, "and we can all thank the Fire Department for always looking forward, because this apparatus is perfect for us."

A formal presentation of the new vehicle, Lawton said, to recognize the many people who contributed to the department's success in securing the truck, will be organized sometime in the coming weeks.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Truck fire ties up traffic on I-91

Photo: Truck fire ties up traffic on I-91

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - A tractor-trailer caught fire on Interstate 91 Monday afternoon, causing lengthy delays for drivers on the commute home.

According to Deputy Fire Chief Dana Cheverette, at 3:45 p.m., two department fire engines and a tanker truck were dispatched to the breakdown lane a mile north of Exit 19 on I-91 northbound for a report that a tractor-trailer truck had caught on fire.

The source of the fire, Cheverette said, was the refrigeration unit mounted on the trailer. After realizing that something was wrong with the unit, Cheverette said the driver quickly separated the trailer from the truck, and firefighters were able to extinguish the blaze in about 15 minutes.

"Fortunately for us, the trailer was completely unloaded already so while it burned up the refrigeration unit completely, there weren't any contents to damage," Cheverette said. "We were able to put the fire out pretty rapidly."

As a result of the fire, traffic was reduced to a standstill and eventually backed up for several miles to Exit 18.

Damage was limited to the truck's refrigeration unit and it did not result in any injuries, Cheverette said. Traffic was reopened to a single lane by 4:30 p.m.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Williamsburg OKs budget, school work

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

WILLIAMSBURG - The more than 100 residents in attendance at Monday's Town Meeting unanimously approved the Finance Committee's $5.4 million operating budget for next year, put $150,000 into the town's stabilization fund and approved up to $60,000 for designs to renovate the Anne T. Dunphy School.

Last week, Town Administrator Steven Herzberg said when compared to other Hilltowns, Williamsburg has far less money put aside as stabilization funding and that the general consensus among members of the Selectboard and Finance Committee was that this was the year to put free cash into that account, a decision that residents endorsed unanimously.

"We haven't been in a position to put money into stabilization for some time," Finance Committee Chairman Christopher Smith said before the vote Monday. "Five percent of our operating budget is the desirable amount we would want in that account. We have seen a significant jump in free cash and we would like to put some of that money aside."

Of the approved $150,000 transfer, residents voted that $133,000 would be allocated from free cash and the remaining $17,000 would be derived from taxation.

Another key vote Monday night was residents' unanimous decision to approve the School Committee's request to allocate no more than $60,000 from free cash to hire a licensed design consultant to plan renovations to the Anne T. Dunphy School.

The decision to go forward with planning renovations without the financial support of the Massachusetts School Building Authority, committee Chairwoman Charlene Nardi said, came after years of submitting requests and design plans without results. The new design proposal also includes plans for a 9,000-square-foot addition to the building.

Before the vote was made, Principal Fred Venne presented a video outlining a variety of problems with available space in the building, outdated electrical and heating systems and structural damage to the building itself.

"It is a serious issue," building inspector Paul Tacy said before the vote. "Every year I am asked to sign off on these certificates of inspection, and with these aging buildings, each year it becomes more and more difficult."

Residents also unanimously approved each section of the Finance Committee's $5.4 million budget proposal, which called for $1.5 million for local school expenses; $1.27 million for the Hampshire Regional High School assessment; $471,463 for public works and facilities; $372,916 for general government; $285,428 for the vocational school assessment; $280,033 for public safety; $270,097 for debt service; $111,989 for culture and recreation; $86,053 for human services; $58,487 for intergovernmental expenses; $1,421 for the school committee's stipend; and $682,102 for fixed miscellaneous expenses.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

A Rising business: Bread Euphoria expansion underway

This gallery space at Andrew Quient Pottery in Haydenville will be converted to a cafe seating area for an expanding Bread Euphoria in Haydenville. Quient will be moving his studio farther back into the same building.">Photo: A rising business: Bread Euphoria expansion under wayBarbara Neulinger and her son, Lucas Solem, 10, of Florence select an item from the display case in the current indoor seating area at Bread Euphoria in Haydenville. The bakery is expanding and will be converting the studio and gallery space of Andrew Quient Pottery into a cafe. This current customer space indoors seats four. Quient will be moving his studio farther back into the same building.">Photo: A rising business: Bread Euphoria expansion under wayThis studio and gallery space at Andrew Quient Pottery in Haydenville will be converted to a cafe for an expanding Bread Euphoria in Haydenville.">Photo: A rising business: Bread Euphoria expansion under wayChuck Wixsom, right, of Pittsfield, is working with general contractor Steve Mauter in the expansion of Bread Euphoria in Haydenville.">Photo: A rising business: Bread Euphoria expansion under wayBread Euphoria owner Mark Pollard, left, Nort Wright and Darryl Moore form bread in the kitchen of the Haydenville establishment Friday.">Photo: A rising business: Bread Euphoria expansion under way

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

WILLIAMSBURG - While the economy is leading to cuts in some area businesses, Bread Euphoria and Andrew Quient Pottery are thriving - so much, in fact, that their owners are expanding and renovating.

The renovations, which are expected to be completed by Labor Day, include paving and enlarging the parking lot to accommodate 64 cars, transforming Quient's former pottery studio into a 50-seat cafe with an outside seating area, creating a pottery gallery and studio in the center of the building, and making a safer, more accessible main entrance from Route 9.

Quient, owner of the building that houses both his pottery studio and Bread Euphoria, a gourmet bakery and cafe, said structural improvements being made to the parking lot, landscaping and the building itself have been in the works for a long time.

"The purpose of the move was to make the larger front space available to the cafe because the pottery studio really didn't need it. All a pottery studio needs is space," Quient said. "The space behind the cafe that I will be moving into was only being used for passive storage and wasn't being taken full advantage of. What we are doing now is making better use of the space in the building."

Quient, who has been selling the pottery he creates in his studio for more than 30 years, also offers four seasonal classes to local residents interested in pursuing the craft as a hobby.

Mark Pollard, who owns Bread Euphoria with his wife, Geri, said the cafe's move from its cramped location in the back of the building to the much larger area in front will help their rapidly growing business reach new heights.

"We keep getting busier and busier," Pollard said. "We have been doing 40 percent more business than we were at this point last year, and it just keeps increasing."

Currently, 20 people work at Bread Euphoria.

The cafe, which is known for gourmet pastries, pizza and bread, currently offers fewer than 20 seats for patrons who want to sit down and eat. Pollard said a large portion of his current business is selling bread to local restaurants; through the move out front, he is looking to increase on-site sales.

Six years ago, Pollard purchased the company from its former owner and moved to Cummington from San Francisco. Since taking over the business, he said he has gotten used to working in cramped conditions. For three years before moving to his current location on Main Street, Pollard said he ran the business out of the basement of his house, with a single wood-burning oven. "We would sell our bread out to local restaurants," Pollard said. "Even then, business was good."

The renovation, Pollard said, is meant to offer local residents a new place to enjoy a meal. The remodeled cafe will include a new wood-burning oven for pizzas. Pollard said he hopes to apply for a liquor license to sell beer and wine with dinner.

"A lot of people have said they would love to have sit-down service here but get their sandwiches to go," Pollard said. "People come from all over to visit us, and the new cafe will offer them somewhere to sit down and eat."

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Missing man found in Hatfield, sent to CDH

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

HATFIELD - A missing Florence man, who police said was known to wander the woods behind the VA Medical Center in Northampton, was found in a remote section of Hatfield Thursday evening and was rushed to Cooley Dickinson Hospital to be treated for exposure, state police said.

According to Northampton Police Lt. Michael Patenaude, neighbors of Leonard Scagel, 54, of 34 Hasting Heights in Florence, came to the station to file a missing person report Thursday morning after realizing that Scagel's front door had been open for almost a week.

Patenaude said Scagel was last seen Tuesday at the VA Medical Center on North Main Street, where he worked.

"I guess he liked to wander, and he frequently walked around Fitzgerald's Lake and in the area behind the VA Hospital," Patenaude said. "Evidently he had been missing for several days."

State Police Trooper Adam Matthew said that at about 7 p.m. Thursday, a woman who lived on Stage Road in Hatfield found Scagel walking near her home and he "looked like he was in bad shape."

"He was approached by the female resident, and after she had a conversation with him, she was able to determine that he was someone who had been missing from the VA hospital and that he had been out in the elements for several days," Matthew said.

Scagel was transported by Hatfield ambulance to Cooley Dickinson Hospital to be treated for cuts, bruises and hypothermia caused by exposure.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

TM takes up $5.4 M budget

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

WILLIAMSBURG - Residents Monday will be asked to approve the town's $5.4 million operating budget for next year and take up more than a dozen other matters when Town Meeting convenes Monday.

Finance Committee Chairman Christopher Smith said residents will be presented with the committee's proposed $5.4 million budget for fiscal 2010, which begins in July.

The proposed budget is about $2,000 less than the current year's budget. Smith said it be broken down by department and analyzed before any vote is taken.

Town Meeting begins at 7 p.m. Monday in the Earl F. Tonet Gymnasium in the Anne T. Dunphy School on Main Street.

Other matters on the meeting warrant are a request to transfer money to a rainy day account, a move Town Administrator Steven Herzberg said is particularly important because of the scarcity of money in the fund and as a measure to improve the town's bond rating, important when the town needs to borrow money.

"Times are tough and the finance, and Selectboard both think it is really important to start saving some money," he said.

"Of all the small Hilltown communities, we have the lowest or nearly the lowest percentage of our operating budget in actual dollars in our stabilization fund," Herzberg said. "Which means there are towns with much smaller budgets that have much more in their stabilization fund."

Other measures include a request to hire a consultant to design a plan to renovate and repair the Anne T. Dunphy School.

Voters also will be asked to consider a bylaw prohibiting the consumption of alcohol in public places such as town streets, sidewalks and playing fields and to weigh in on an article that seeks to keep the position of police chief part-time and one that would reappoint John W. Cotton to the position.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Outdoor furnace blaze snuffed in Huntington

Huntington firefighters investigate a fire Wednesday at 84 Searle Road in Huntington, where an outbuilding that housed a wood-burning boiler was leveled.">Photo: Outdoor furnace blaze snuffed in Huntington

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

HUNTINGTON - Firefighters from three towns rushed to a house off Searle Road Wednesday night to extinguish a fire that engulfed a small shed housing a family's outdoor furnace.

According to Fire Chief Gary Dahill, at 7:15 p.m., three fire engines and about a dozen firefighters were dispatched to 84 Searle Road for a report that an outdoor wood-burning furnace had burst into flames and the fire was threatening to spread to the house nearby.

By the time firefighters arrived on scene, Dahill said the outdoor furnace, which was about 10 feet from the base of the family's porch, was completely engulfed in flames.

"The homeowner had gotten his hose out and was spraying down his porch to keep it wet so that it wouldn't spread," Dahill said. "We were definitely concerned for the house."

Once firefighters had positioned several tanker trucks up the family's steep dirt driveway, Dahill said it took about 15 minutes to extinguish the blaze, which spared only the metal furnace itself and left a smoldering pile of debris where the shed once stood.

The homeowner's decision to use an outdoor furnace to generate the family's heat and hot water was a fortunate one, Dahill said, because had the same fire begun in a furnace within the house, the situation could have been much worse.

The Russell and Westhampton Fire Departments assisted with the fire, Dahill said, and a Huntington police vehicle and a state police cruiser were called in to block the entrance to the driveway.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Stranded fishermen blamed for Quabbin fire

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

PELHAM - One of the three men who allegedly started a forest fire Tuesday afternoon after their rented fishing boat flipped over at Quabbin Reservoir failed to show up for an interview with state police Wednesday.

The interview, state police Lt. Kevin Hanna said, was scheduled for 4 p.m. and was meant to help with the investigation into how the fire started, but the man, whom Hanna declined to name, never arrived at the station. The fire burned approximately an acre of forest.

Hanna said the men had to swim for shore Tuesday afternoon when their boat flipped over. After retrieving the boat and beaching it in a remote location near the Belchertown line, the men set off on foot for their car, which Hanna said was parked at a popular boat launch called Gate 8 along Packardville Road.

Along the way, Hanna said, the men started a small fire to warm themselves from their chilly swim to shore. But they reportedly left the fire burning and hiked to their car, Hanna said, where they reported the incident to the state Department of Conservation and Recreation. A DCR park ranger was sent to retrieve their abandoned boat.

At about 5 p.m., Hanna said the ranger noticed a large plume of smoke rising from the hills nearby and called for support from both the Pelham and Belchertown fire departments.

Because of the fire's remote location and the steep and rocky terrain, Hanna said about a dozen firefighters were ferried across the reservoir in two state police patrol boats.

"We had to bring them out to the area and then they had to climb up the side of this steep hilltop with water on their backs," Hanna said. "When they arrived they found the fire hadn't spread as much as they thought it would."

Fortunately, Hanna said, mild weather kept the fire from spreading quickly and by the time it was extinguished, only about an acre of the forest had burned.

"If we had the same windy conditions that we had a couple of days ago, or even last week, this fire could have really taken off," Hanna said.

Hanna said all three men had left before state police arrived on the scene. State police are still investigating the incident.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Shredder truck catches fire, sets woods ablaze

As a truck full of paper burns on Routes 5 & 10 in Northampton, a city firefighter, right, battles a brush fire ignited by the truck fire.">Photo: Shredder truck catches fire, sets woods ablaze

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - City firefighters worked quickly Tuesday morning to extinguish a truck filled with paper that ignited and started a small forest fire on North King Street.

The fire, which resulted in the early closing of Pioneer Valley Spine and Sports, began on the side of the road at about 10:30 a.m., fire officials said.

The Northampton Fire Department responded to the scene at 766 North King St., after it was reported that a truck belonging to Wilbraham's ProShred Security Inc., a security company that shreds business documents, had caught on fire.

Plumes of dark smoke rising from the burning truck, which was fully loaded with paper, rose more than 50 feet into the sky and could be seen as far away as King Street.

According to Deputy Fire Chief William Hurley, two fire engines and about a dozen firefighters were dispatched to the scene, one of which was stationed to protect Pioneer Spine and Sports from the fire while the other prepared to use a nearby fire hydrant.

According to Jessica Izquierdo, an employee at Pioneer Spine and Sports' West Springfield office, the Northampton branch was closed early and employees were sent home after downed power lines cut electricity to the building.

At the nearby Sunoco gas station, a crowd of onlookers stood and watched as flames pouring out of the roof of the truck began setting adjacent trees on fire and spread several yards into the forest lining the street.

After National Grid workers cut electricity to several overhead power lines that the truck had ignited, firefighters used foam to extinguish the fire inside the truck and then used water to fight the brush fire.

While crews battled the blaze, state police blocked the entrance to Interstate 91 and rerouted traffic from King Street down Coles Meadow Road. Though traffic was reportedly rerouted for more than an hour, there were no lengthy delays.

Hurley said the cause of the fire is still being investigated by Assistant Fire Chief Duane Nichols. But he suspects the truck's shredder was the likely culprit.

"It was a processing truck that shreds paper, and something catching during the shredding process was what probably caused the fire," Hurley said.

The driver of the truck was Nelson Guzman, a ProShred Security employee.

Hurley said both the truck fire and the fire in the woods nearby were completely extinguished shortly after power crews cut electricity. He said the truck, which was not ruled a complete loss, was eventually towed away.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Cyclist dies in Amherst accident

AMHERST - A local woman was killed Monday after she was struck by a vehicle while riding her bicycle near University Drive.

According to police, at 10:30 a.m., officers responded to a motor vehicle accident in a parking lot off University Drive involving a vehicle that had struck a bicyclist.

The bicyclist was transported by ambulance to Cooley Dickinson Hospital, where she was pronounced dead. The victim, whom police declined to identify pending the notification of her relatives, was a 34-year-old Amherst woman, police said.

Police said they had not yet determined the cause of the accident and a state police accident reconstruction team is continuing the investigation. The accident did not result in any arrests, police said Monday.

Police declined to release any further information Monday.

- OWEN BOSS

Man flown to medical center after fire accident

WESTHAMPTON - A man with second- and third-degree burns on his legs was rushed by helicopter to Worcester Medical Center Friday after reportedly falling into a fire at a local campground, a fire official said.

According to Westhampton Fire Captain Bill Jablonski, at about 3:30 p.m., a Northampton Fire Department ambulance responded to the Northampton/Springfield KOA campground on South Road for a report that a man had fallen into a fire and suffered severe burns to both of his legs.

After rushing the man into an ambulance, Jablonski said members of the Westhampton and Northampton fire and police departments worked quickly to clear a landing zone in the parking lot of Hampshire Regional High School so an emergency helicopter could transport the victim.

"Our landing zone is typically at the high school," Jablonski said, "and with the severity of the burns, we had to send him out to Worcester."

Jablonski declined to name the victim and his condition was unknown Friday night.

- OWEN BOSS

Hadley Registry Plaza sold at auction for $1.5 M

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

HADLEY - The Registry Plaza on Russell Street, which the town's assessor valued at $3.5 million, was auctioned off Thursday to a local accountant for $1.5 million.

John P. Regish, who operates an accounting office on River Drive, purchased the building for far less than it was actually worth, assessor Daniel H. Zdonek said. Calls made to Regish's office for comment went unanswered Thursday.

Bidding on the plaza began at $2 million, Zdonek said, and was overseen by an auctioneer from the auctioning and appraising firm Paul E. Saperstein Co.

Zdonek attributed the low price tag to a number of structural problems with the plaza's main building, which led to the permanent closure of the Registry of Motor Vehicle's office on Tuesday.

"I would assume that it was because people weren't sure what needed to be done to the building," Zdonek said.

Along with the former registry, the Route 9 plaza is also home to a Subway restaurant, a U.S. Department of Wildlife office and the adjacent Butternuts restaurant. The nearby Sears Hometown Dealer, which shares the plaza's parking lot, was auctioned last fall, Zdonek said, for $1.05 million.

According to published reports, the property was owned by developer Kevin A. Michelson.

Earlier this week, Ann C. Dufresne, spokeswoman for the state Registry of Motor Vehicles, said the decision to permanently close the registry office was driven by bankruptcy proceedings and Michelson's noncompliance with repairing structural problems that included a lack of handicap accessibility, flood damage, pipe bursts and issues with the building's heat and air conditioning.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Neighbors get look at Kollmorgen plans

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - Residents who live in and around Village Hill Northampton got a sneak peek at designs for Kollmorgen Electro-Optical Corp.'s new headquarters during a special meeting Wednesday night and had the chance to voice concerns about the building's impact on the surrounding neighborhood.

The more than 30 neighbors who attended the meeting, arranged by Ward 4 City Councilor David Narkewicz, got to speak with architects, site developers and Kollmorgen officials and view computer renderings of the proposed 140,000-square-foot manufacturing and office facility and its accompanying 485-space parking lot.

Kollmorgen, which makes optical and imaging systems for submarines, surface ships, combat vehicles and other defense platforms, is the city's largest manufacturer and has 366 employees at its current 5-acre location on King Street.

Last week, the company submitted a site plan to the Planning Board for the building on Village Hill's south campus, and Wednesday's meeting, in the former Cahillane Dodge showroom on South Street, was the first public presentation of the designs.

Chief concerns raised by residents in attendance included plans for landscaping and fencing and the amount of traffic expected to be generated by the new two-story building off Chapel and Prince streets.

Francesca Maltese, development director for Kollmorgen's development company, O'Connell Development Group of Holyoke, said designers of the new site made a point of preserving the view of nearby mountains and planned to use existing and newly planted trees to limit views of the office building from the street.

"The parcel out front on Prince and Chapel we have worked really hard to landscape so that the entrance to the building will only be seen down the main roadway to the front entrance," Maltese said. "The parking lot and area near the entrance will be densely populated with trees."

Another concern raised by nearby homeowners was the number of tractor-trailer trucks that would be using the company's service entrance off of Chapel Street and whether shipments would be arriving outside of office hours.

According to Kollmorgen President and CEO Michael J. Wall, like many other companies, Kollmorgen receives regular deliveries from UPS and Fed-Ex once in the morning and once in the afternoon and averages about 15 deliveries a week from larger tractor-trailer trucks. All deliveries, he said, will arrive between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Also, Maltese assured residents whose homes face the location of the company's future loading dock that designers planned to plant thick rows of evergreen trees intended to block the view of the building entirely.

Another question raised at the meeting concerned plans for a still undeveloped 6.4 acre parcel near the entrance to the company's main parking lot.

According to Maltese, that land will still be owned by MassDevelopment, the state agency developing the former state hospital grounds, with the goal of building a much smaller 30,000-square-foot retail or office location.

Carolyn Hendrie, a representative for the building's architecture and design firm, Bargmann Hendrie Archetype Inc., said fencing around the location will be used only where absolutely necessary.

"There are certain requirements for security, but those do not require an entirely sealed-off site," Hendrie said. "Fencing will be limited."

Along Prince and Chapel Streets, Hendrie said, design plans call for lining the property with granite boundary markers rather than chain-link fencing.

Kollmorgen officials are scheduled to formally present design plans to the Planning Board at its regularly scheduled meeting Thursday, May 28, at 7 p.m. in City Council Chambers.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.

Williamsburg man faces gun charges

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

HATFIELD - A Williamsburg man is facing numerous weapons charges after police allegedly found a loaded gun and drugs in his truck Friday during a routine traffic stop on Interstate 91.

Philip Bacon, 27, of 121 South St., pleaded innocent Monday in Northampton District Court to charges of possessing a class E substance (Adderall), possessing a loaded firearm without an Firearms Identification Card, possessing ammunition without an FID card, defacing the serial number on a firearm, operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, operating an uninsured motor vehicle, operating an unregistered motor vehicle, and committing a number plate violation to conceal his identity.

According to court documents, Trooper Rachel Loisell of the Northampton State Police Barracks was observing traffic on I-91 southbound Friday morning when she saw Bacon drive by in a yellow Dodge pickup with a loud, defective exhaust. Loisell checked the plates and found that they were revoked and belonged to a red Chevrolet pickup.

After being stopped at a gas station off Exit 21, Bacon reportedly told Loisell that his license was suspended for failure to pay child support and that he had recently purchased the truck and borrowed his friend's plates so he could drive it.

While searching the vehicle, which was also occupied by Bacon's pit bull, Loisell reportedly found a black handgun under the passenger seat with a loaded magazine and the serial number scratched off. Further search of the vehicle also revealed a black backpack in the back seat containing a multicolored pipe with marijuana residue, a grinder with marijuana inside and a brown prescription bottle containing 12 Adderall pills. A plastic bag containing less than an ounce of marijuana was later found in Bacon's pocket, according to police.

While under arrest, Bacon told Loisell, according to her report, that when he purchased the gun in Holyoke for protection, the serial number was already scratched off. Bacon also allegedly told Loisell the prescription bottle of Adderall belonged to his girlfriend's son and that he had mistakenly taken it with him that morning.

Bacon posted $3,000 bail and is scheduled to reappear in court for a pretrial conference on May 28.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com.