Monday, January 31, 2011

Haydenville bank branch future unclear after merger

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

WILLIAMSBURG - The future of the Legacy Bank branch office on Main Road is unclear, following the bank's announcement it plans to merge with Berkshire Bank.

On Dec. 22, the two companies signed a definitive merger agreement stating that Berkshire Bank plans to acquire Legacy Bancorp Inc. and its subsidiary, Legacy Banks, in a transaction valued at approximately $108 million.

On Friday, Laurie Gazzillo, spokeswoman for Legacy Bank, said that officials with both banks are still working toward getting paperwork approved before changes can be made.

"We just announced the agreement to merge so there is still a lot of regulatory filing that has to occur before anything can be officially approved," Gazzillo said. "That is why we have no information about any individual branch offices at this time."

The next step in the process, she said, will be gaining the Department of Justice's stamp of approval on the applications they have submitted. A ruling could be months away.

According to a press release issued by Gazzillo, the merger of Legacy into Berkshire would create a combined institution with about $4 billion in assets. Both banks, she said, have branch offices located across western Massachusetts and northeastern New York.

Legacy has nearly $1 billion in assets and 19 branches; Berkshire, which is also working to acquire the New York-based Rome Savings Bank, has nearly $3 billion in assets and will have 47 branches when the pending transaction with Rome Bancorp. is complete.

"Legacy and Berkshire have been friendly competitors over the years and now we're joining the Berkshire team to create a larger combined platform to serve our traditional and target markets," J. Williar Dunlaevy, Legacy bank's president and CEO, said in a statement.

Echoing Dunlaevy's optimism was Berkshire Bank President and CEO Michael P. Daly, who laid out the bank's planned expansion over the next 12 months. "We expect to complete our pending our pending merger with Rome Bancorp in the first quarter of 2011 and to complete the Legacy merger in the following quarter."

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

Friday, January 28, 2011

Easthampton Chamber Celebrates 50 years, honoring 17 members

Photo: Easthampton Chamber looks back and ahead

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

HOLYOKE - At the celebration of its 50th anniversary Thursday night, the Greater Easthampton Chamber of Commerce took a moment to look back at how far it has come since its inception and honor its 17 founding members.

The Chamber's annual celebration drew a crowd of more than 100 area residents to the Delaney House and featured addresses from a handful of local and state legislators, including state Sen. Michael R. Knapik, R-Westfield; state Rep. John W. Scibak, D-South Hadley; and Mayor Michael Tautznik.

Before dinner, guests looked over a display spread on a table in the main conference room, featuring photos, newspaper clippings and assorted memorabilia that harked back to the Chamber's founding in 1961.

The theme of the evening, it seemed, was noting the vast changes that have taken place in Easthampton over the last 50 years, the many businesses that have come and gone and those that continue to flourish to this day.

As the evening's first speaker, former Chamber president and longtime board member Chuck Connor, brought those in attendance back to 1960, when local business owners looked to establish a Businessmen's Association, which soon after became the city's first Business and Professional Men's Association.

"Tonight isn't just about kicking off the next 50 years of the Chamber, but to honor our Chamber's charter members for their 50 years of membership, their successes and their continued support of the Greater Easthampton business community," said the organization's executive director, Eric Snyder.

Although Knapik too noted that the business landscape in Western Massachusetts has changed dramatically in the 50 years since the Chamber was formed, he pointed out that it has been the willingness of area business owners to take risks that has helped the city's business community to thrive.

"There are many pioneers here in Easthampton who have been integral to this Chamber but more importantly this community," Knapik said. "Easthampton has positioned itself in a much different way than many communities have, and I think Easthampton is in a place that is very good for its future."

Scibak echoed Knapik's optimism for the future, attributing the Chamber's lasting success to the city's diversity, both in its business offerings and its residents.

"It is the diversity in terms of what the local business community offers and the diversity and the involvement of the people who are sitting right here in this room," Scibak said.

Also speaking Thursday was Mayor Michael Tautznik, who marked the occasion by offering Chamber President Susan Lapointe with a golden key to the city. "Together we will all move forward," Tautznik said. "This is to recognize our outstanding business members on our Chamber's 50th anniversary ... I present this symbolic gold key as a sign of the future and in the hope that it will unlock the door to continued success and prosperity."

The Chamber's 17 charter members, each of which received a commemorative plaque, were the Banas & Fickert Insurance Agency, Big E's Supermarket, Boulanger Plumber & Heating, Cernak Fuel Corp., Daily Hampshire Gazette, DeGrandpre Jewelers, Easthampton Feed, Easthampton Savings Bank, Finck & Perras Insurance Agency, Landry Furniture Company, O'Brien Funeral Home, The October Co., Stevens Urethane, Strong Bus Corp., Western Massachusetts Electric Co., WHMP radio and the Williston Northampton School.

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

Longtime coach, girls sports advocate Agnes 'Gush' Valenta dies at 77

Photo: 'Gush' went to bat for women, girls in sportsPhoto: 'Gush' went to bat for women, girls in sportsPhoto: 'Gush' went to bat for women, girls in sports

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - Agnes A. "Gush" Valenta, a lifelong Hampshire County resident well known for promoting girls sports in an era when opportunities for female athletes were scarce, died late Tuesday night at age 77.

Her name, now memorialized on a city softball field, has become synonymous with women's and girls sports in western Massachusetts, especially the Northampton Lassie League, which she cofounded in 1969.

Born on the Fourth of July in 1933, Valenta was a 1952 graduate of Northampton High School, coached the Blue Devils girls basketball and softball teams and for more than 20 years worked for the city's Recreation Department.

Valenta, who most recently lived on Grove Street in Haydenville, spent her childhood in Northampton and devoted 55 years of her life to promoting various women's sports leagues in cities across western Massachusetts.

Her tireless efforts did not go unrecognized, and she was the proud recipient of numerous awards: In 1988 the Professional Women of Hampshire County named Valenta their choice for Woman of the Year; in 2007 she received Boston College's Heights Award for forwarding women's sports; and in 2003 she was inducted into the New England Women's Sports Hall of Fame.

Despite her many accolades, in 2005 Valenta told a Gazette reporter that the "highlight of her life" came on a brisk fall afternoon in 1985, when city and state officials came together to honor her and rename the city's Lassie League Field near the Three-County Fairgrounds "Agnes 'Gush' Valenta Lassie League Park."

"When the city named the field after me, that was the highlight of my life. I had no idea. I was retiring and they gave me a city employees' party in the back room and sent invitations and told people to just drop in and say goodbye to Gush, but they wanted to do something else," Valenta said in 2005. "They couldn't do it at a restaurant because they felt there wasn't any place that would be big enough, so they decided to do it up at Look Park Pavilion. It was perfect because we had hot dogs and hamburgers and it was a lot of fun. It was great how many of my Lassie Leaguers and coaches came back. It was unbelievable."

Valenta, whose seldom-used given name Agnes was dropped early on in her life in favor of its Polish shorthand, grew up with an affinity for basketball, softball and field hockey in an era when there were few athletic opportunities available to young women.

Her life spent promoting girls and women's sports began soon after her high school graduation, when a few girls in her neighborhood expressed interest in playing basketball after high school. There were no basketball teams in town for young women.

By day, Valenta worked as an accountant for Pioneer Valley Ginger Ale, the soda pop company that once bottled Pepsi in downtown Florence, and on nights and weekends she worked to establish the Gazette Girls semi-pro basketball team.

Valenta spent about a dozen years organizing the team's annual road trips to Maine, New Hampshire and Rhode Island and one year took the team on a goodwill trip to Bermuda.

Although her career began with the Gazette Girls, Valenta is better known locally for bringing the Lassie League, a youth softball league, to Northampton.

Soon after it was introduced, the local league was a huge hit. Though Lassie League, which involves girls from childhood through late teens, was offered in cities across the commonwealth, the Northampton league was recognized as being among the most successful statewide.

Ray Ellerbrook, who served alongside Valenta on the city's Recreation Department from 1976 until her retirement in 1996, visited her at the Linda Manor Extended Care Facility in Northampton earlier this week.

Ellerbrook described Valenta as "a woman before her time" and said the formation of the city's Lassie League was the effort that was always "nearest and dearest to her heart."

"When Gush set her mind to doing something, she would see it through and nothing could stop her," Ellerbrook said. "She had tons of friends and tons of supporters, and she didn't think twice about calling on them to help her out if it meant forwarding something for the girls in the community."

Ellerbrook said he has organized a celebration of Valenta's life, to be held at the Garden House at Look Park immediately following the burial of her ashes on Monday.

"The celebration will be open to anyone who would like to stop by and talk about Gush and what she meant to this community," Ellerbrook said. "She was the one who started everything when it came to women's sports in Northampton."

Services

A memorial Mass will be held at 10 a.m. Monday, Jan. 31, at Our Lady of the Hills Church in Haydenville. Immediately following the service, Valenta's ashes will be buried in St. Mary's Cemetery in Leeds. There are no calling hours.

Donations in her memory may be made to the Gush Valenta Softball Field, in care of the Northampton Recreation Department, 90 Locust St., Northampton, MA, 01060. The Czelusniak Funeral Home has been entrusted with her arrangements.

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

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Let it snow! And it will

Photo: Let it snow! And it willPhoto: Let it snow! And it willPhoto: Let it snow! And it will

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

A nor'easter expected to begin this evening could dump 8 to 10 inches of snow across parts of the Pioneer Valley and has prompted the National Weather Service to institute a winter storm watch for much of the state.

According to News 22 meteorologist Brian Lapis, the storm will last about 18 hours and will start off as a light snow as early as this afternoon, eventually turning to a heavier, wetter snow overnight.

The predicted snowstorm has already spurred at least one cancellation - Cooley Dickinson Hospital's Stroke Support Group, which had been scheduled for Thursday, has been rescheduled to Feb. 24.

The storm, which is expected to taper off sometime late Thursday morning, will follow a record-setting cold snap in the Valley, one that recorded low temperatures at Westover Air Force Base in Chicopee of minus-20 degrees and in Orange of minus-22.

The storm, Lapis predicts, will likely impact this evening's commute, and weather experts are encouraging people to consider leaving work a little early if they travel a long distance to get home.

The storm follows a light snowstorm early Tuesday that snarled traffic for morning commuters on I-91 around Northampton. State police spent about three hours assisting more than a dozen motorists who veered in the median or spun out off I-91 in the greater Northampton area.

Two accidents caused trouble in Hatfield near Exit 22. No injuries were reported, though traffic was backed up in both the northbound and southbound lanes for miles at times during the morning commute.

"We had to remove quite a few of them from the road," said State Police Sgt. Adam Hakkarainen. "People were going too fast."

In one accident in Hatfield, a motorist smashed into a guardrail. In a collision nearby, two vehicles smashed into each other, he said.

"There were calls of cars off I-91 all morning," Hakkarainen said. He noted that state police responded to 14 separate incidents between 6 and 9:30 a.m.

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

EHS stages the musical 'Funny Girl'

Photo: EHS stages the musical 'Funny Girl' this weekPhoto: EHS stages the musical 'Funny Girl' this weekPhoto: EHS stages the musical 'Funny Girl' this week

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

EASTHAMPTON - The stage is set, the bright lights are shining and the cast and crew of this year's Easthampton High School Parents Council musical "Funny Girl" are ready for Thursday's opening.

More than 40 local students have been hard at work this week, holding nightly dress rehearsals in the auditorium at White Brook Middle School.

Auditions for the musical were held in October and cast and crew have spent the last three months learning lines and songs, lighting cues and scene changes.

The musical will star recently crowned Easthampton Junior Miss Shealyn Berube, who takes the lead role of Fanny Brice, as well as EHS junior Joe Katusich as her love interest, Nick Arnstein.

The musical is set in pre-World War I New York and is based on the life and career of Broadway and film star Fanny Brice and her stormy relationship with entrepreneur and gambler Nicky Arnstein.

According to EHS junior Elizabeth Burdeau, who is serving as student producer, the cast and crew consist of about a dozen seventh- and eighth-graders and more than 30 local high school students.

"This play has a lot more really interesting characters that are really different from each other than we've had in school plays in the past," Burdeau said.

The production opens Thursday night in the White Brook Middle School auditorium at 6 p.m. Other performances are Friday at 7 p.m.; Saturday at 7 p.m., and Sunday at 2 p.m.

Tickets are available in advance and at the door. Theatergoers are encouraged to order ahead of time by calling 413-247-9288.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Frozen fuel lines spur cancellations in two school districts

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

Students in two local school districts awoke to an unexpected day off this morning, thanks to record low temperatures overnight Sunday that fouled up their school bus fleets.

All public school students in the South Hadley and Central Berkshire school districts received automated alerts between 6 and 7 a.m. announcing that school had been cancelled because bus drivers were unable to start their routes on-schedule.

School officials reported that temperatures, which dipped to -20 degrees Fahrenheit in some parts of Hampshire County, had "gelled" the diesel fuel inside the buses' gas tanks and made starting impossible.

News 22 meteorologist Brian Lapis reported that Westover Air Force Base in Chicopee recorded an all-time overnight low temperature for the date of -20 degrees, which he said would have felt colder because that reading didn't take the wind chill into consideration.

In his eight years of working as South Hadley's superintendent of schools, Gus Sayer said he has seen school start-times delayed as the result of frozen fuel lines but never a full cancellation.

"We had a half-day scheduled today because of a professional day, and ordinarily I would have just postponed school to give the buses time to warm up," Sayer said. "But if we did that, kids would be coming in later and then just turning around and going home, so we couldn't do that."

South Hadley schools, which include Plains Elementary School, Mosier Elementary School, Michael E. Smith Middle School and South Hadley High School, use buses provided by Five Star Transportation Inc., which is located in Agawam but has a bus garage in South Hadley.

Attempts to reach employees at the town's bus garage were unsuccessful this afternoon.

Over at Berkshire Trail Elementary School in Cummington, Principal Lorraine Liantonio was dealing with a very similar situation.

"We had a district-wide cancellation because of our buses being unable to start," Liantonio said. "We always add five extra days to the end of our school calendar, and we've already had four snow days. So we're collecting them too quickly, but we still have one left before we go over."

Schools in the Central Berkshire district, she said, use buses from Dufour Tours Inc., located in Hinsdale.

Kay Hall, an employee at Dufour's school bus garage, said the problem wasn't that the company wasn't prepared for cold weather, but that the overnight low was far lower than expected.

"We haven't seen these kind of temperatures for a long, long time, and whenever you see temperatures drop this low, this is what happens," Hall said.

Owen Boss can oboss@gazettenet.com.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Easthampton man, 52, dies on park bench of apparent exposure to cold

Photo: Easthampton man, 52, dies of apparent exposure on park bench

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

EASTHAMPTON - Longtime city resident Mark A. Tiffany was found dead Monday morning on a park bench, likely from exposure to the cold, a friend he was living with has confirmed.

Easthampton police said that at 7:04 a.m. Monday, officers responded to a report that a man had been found unresponsive on Union Street near the city's bike path. Police said the death did not appear suspicious.

Although police declined to identify the victim, Elizabeth Janik, who Tiffany had been staying with since the end of September, said police told her the body was that of Tiffany.

"I've been a friend of his for a long time and when he asked me to help him out, that's what I did," Janik said. Tiffany had been homeless for several years.

Janik said she last saw Tiffany, who was 52, when he left her Ballard Street home at about 12:30 p.m. Sunday to go watch football on television.

According to News 22 meteorologist Ashley Baylor, the overnight low temperature Sunday in the Pioneer Valley was around 7 degrees, but would have felt like 6 below zero with the wind chill.

"Usually if he goes out, he'll call me when he needs me to come pick him up," Janik said of Tiffany. She also said there were times that he didn't come home at all overnight and that he was "battling some personal problems."

Janik said her friend was distressed over the deaths of his brother earlier this month and his father in 2009.

"He just lost his brother a couple of weeks ago and he hasn't been right since," Janik said. "He had been going through a lot lately. He was in a lot of pain, both physically and emotionally."

Family losses

Tiffany's father, Dwight L. Tiffany Sr., died on Nov. 21, 2009 in Holyoke. His brother, Dwight L. Tiffany Jr., 58, of Glendale Road in Southampton, died at his home on Jan. 2. Two other brothers had also died this past decade - Paul Tiffany, 49, in 2004 and Donovan Tiffany, 47, in 2003.

Janik said she and Tiffany had been in a relationship 10 years ago but most recently were living as roommates. When she noticed Tiffany acting increasingly distant, she said she arranged a phone call between the two estranged brothers over Christmas.

"The one thing I am glad about is that I got the two of them on the phone with each other," Janik said. "They may not have been able to hear each other, but at least they were talking."

Robin Bialecki, director of the Easthampton Community Center, said Tiffany had come in regularly for groceries and dinner for the last four or five years. She said she noticed that he seemed different since the death of his brother Dwight this month.

The last time Bialecki saw him, she said, was on a bench near Nashawannuck Pond the day after Dwight Tiffany Jr. died.

"He said 'I'm just really depressed,'" Bialecki said. "He said, 'I'm the last one of my family ... I don't want to be the last one of my family.'"

Sleeping outdoors

Although he was wearing a heavy jacket he had received at the community center, Bialecki gave him a ride to Janik's home on Ballard Street and told him that it was far too cold to stay outdoors on a bench overnight. His response, she said, was that he "was warm enough."

Bialecki said Tiffany had been known to stay outdoors overnight, often sleeping on a wooden observation deck at Nashawannuck Pond.

When she saw a row of police cruisers near Big E's Supermarket on Union Street Monday morning, Bialecki said she suspected the worst.

"I thought it was him. I said 'Oh my gosh it's probably Mark,'" she said. "I wished when I had been with him last week and gave him a ride that I could have done more. Sometimes as much help as you can give somebody - it's just not enough."

Staff writer Matt Pilon contributed to this story.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Panel doesn't act, NHS start time stays the same

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - School Committee members were unable to raise a motion that would set aside the more than $180,000 needed to accommodate a later start time at Northampton High School Thursday night, functionally rejecting the plan for next year.

After spending about an hour discussing a report provided by business manager Susan Wright that outlined several alternative busing scenarios, members were unwilling to come up with a motion that would ask school executives to set aside approximately $183,000 from next year's budget for four additional buses.

The panel's decision not to vote Thursday night means the committee will agree with a recommendation made by the school system's Curriculum Subcommittee in December not to change the start time at NHS from 7:30 a.m. to 8 a.m.

Although committee members once again agreed with research showing an additional half-hour of sleep would increase academic performance among high school students, none could offer a clear answer on how to fund the additional buses needed to accommodate the change.

Aside from being unable to pay for more buses, committee members also worried that rearranging the city's bus routes would affect transportation for special education students, require satellite stops for students traveling longer distances and leave insufficient time for drivers to get from school to school.

Another concern, raised by committee member Lisa Minnick, was that rearranging the bus schedule would result in high school students' milling around the building unsupervised as they waited for a ride home.

"We are responsible for these students from when they get dropped off in the morning until they leave in the evening, and the liability that goes along with having them in the building after hours would be huge," she said.

Despite the committee's lack of a decision Thursday, local resident Steve Herrell, who has been a vocal advocate for a later start time, said he remains optimistic that the switch will be made in the future.

"I think they've finally realized that this is something that they've got to do," Herrell said after leaving the meeting.

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

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Snow day means no work, lots of play

Photo: Snow day means work, lots of playPhoto: Snow day means work, lots of playPhoto: Snow day means work, lots of playPhoto: Snow day means work, lots of playPhoto: Snow day means work, lots of playPhoto: Snow day means work, lots of playPhoto: Snow day means work, lots of play

By OWEN BOSS, NICK GRABBE and DAN CROWLEY

Staff Writers

The nearly two feet of snow dumped on the region in Wednesday’s storm — what one resident called the most snow she’s ever seen — was perfect for a few things: shoveling, skiing, snowshoeing and sledding.

And people were out in full force engaged in those quintessential winter activities throughout the day as the region dug out from the biggest snowstorm of the season yet.

It wasn't as bad as it might have been, according to experts. Amherst Department of Public Works Superintendent Guilford Mooring said efforts to clear the streets in Amherst went well, in part because most students were still away, and because the snow was easy to clear.

"It's a good time to have a storm like this," Mooring said.

Mooring said DPW workers found the snow itself easy to deal with, given that it was so light and fluffy, though the rate it came down posed challenges.

Related story: Storm brings up to 26 inches of snow, no major problems to Pioneer Valley

Amounts varied across the region, with Northampton getting a foot or more.

The city has a snow-clearing ordinance, and several residents were seen removing snow along sidewalks so that others could pass safely. Among them was Joe Henefield of Wilson Avenue, who cleared an entire length of sidewalk on his street with a snowblower as well as a large section of sidewalk on Conz Street.

"We have a lot of elderly around here," Henefield said, by way of explanation for going above and beyond the call of duty with his snowblower.

There appeared to be far more people shoveling out their driveways and clearing sidewalks in Northampton than those using snowblowers, Henefield's tool of choice.

"It's almost pleasurable," he said of blazing a path with the machine. "After shoveling for years, it's almost revenge."

Out shoveling on Chestnut Street in Amherst Wednesday morning, Kelley Hamaoui said she got stuck in a drift at one point and had to use her shovel to propel herself out onto the street. "This is the most snow I've ever seen," she said. "I'm just like a kid at Christmas. I'm totally going sledding."

While snow closed many businesses and virtually all local schools, it was business as usual at the A.J. Hastings stationery store in Amherst. Hastings was open Wednesday, just as it has been every day since 1914.

"It's a tradition," said owner Mary Brole. "People who know us expect us to be open."

Brole noted that her late father-in-law, Donald Hastings, used cross-country skis to come to the store during snowstorms when he was over 80.

This time around, employee Chris Pfohl opened up at 7:15 a.m. - a little later than usual, but then he had to drive up from Holyoke. Most mornings, there are people waiting for him to open so they can buy their newspapers, but not on Wednesday.

There were six employees at work Wednesday, and as of 11:30 a.m. they had served only 12 customers. Richard Howland said he bought extra newspapers to thank Brole for shoveling the sidewalk from the entrance to the street. She brushed his car off, too.

Brole and the employees spent the morning catching up on paperwork, doing inventory and looking at emails. The folks at Fresh Side restaurant next door brought them ginger tea.

Police reported few accidents, and said that may have been because residents heeded their calls to stay off the roads so plows could do their work.

"Thankfully, people seem to be staying home," said state trooper Sandra Habel at the Northampton barracks. "The roads and visibility are terrible. There have been a couple of accidents on I-91, but nothing serious."

Break out the sleds

About 100 people filled the slopes of Hospital Hill on Route 66 in Northampton Wednesday afternoon, many taking advantage of the snow day.

Dressed head-to-toe in colorful outdoor attire, teen-age snowboarders launched themselves off hand-made jumps and younger children used toboggans and tubes to speed their way down the steep hill.

Easthampton residents Julia and Mike Kerr, along with Julia's sister, Didi DeAlmeida, brought the couple's children, Alexa, 7, and Nathan, 5, out for their first day of sledding this winter.

Accompanying their children to the hill Wednesday were Sharon and Jim Baranowski, of Florence, who took turns sliding downhill with their 7-year-old twins, Jake and Jenna. After Alexa pleaded for one last trip down the hill, Sharon hopped onboard a two-person sled with her and the pair slid away from the crowd.

The snow, all agreed, was perfect for sledding.

"The snow is pretty deep so it took a little while to carve out a path, but once we got that done it has been great," Julia Kerr said as she watched Alexa spin down the hill on a pink tube. "The kids just love it."

The snow was perfect for other winter exercise as well. Along Main Street in Easthampton, residents seemed eager for the arduous process of removing more than a foot of snow from cars, driveways and sidewalks.

High Street resident Sherman Yell, 53, said he looks forward to winter storms because shoveling away the snowdrifts is a great way to get his blood pumping during the winter months.

"I just love doing it," he said with a smile as he threw a pile of snow from his front walkway. "I've been out here since 7 a.m. and I'll be going back and forth from inside all day."

Meanwhile, on Lux Avenue, Ingrid Flory and Audrey Hyvonen got exercise by snowshoeing.

"We're just out here to get a little cardio," Flory said as she pumped her way down the street. "We're taking turns switching with our husbands, they're back home with the kids now and earlier they were out while we were back inside."

Much earlier in the day, Flory said her husband, Andrew Foster, and Hyvonen's husband, Isaac Bromberg, had used cross-country skis to navigate the neighborhood before the roads were cleared.

Also getting fresh air Wednesday was Lee Forester, who pulled a yellow sled carrying his granddaughter Mia Mancini, 2, along the sidewalk in front of Big E's Supermarket on Union Street.

After a short walk, Forester said Mia was ready to get back to the warmth of her grandmother's house.

"She was loving it at first," he said as Mancini tasted a piece of falling snow. "But I think it's time to get her back inside."

The light, fluffy kind

Three people were out shoveling for every one using a snowblower around noon Wednesday on Chestnut Street in Amherst.

Pam Ledoux said she was getting her daily exercise by shoveling, and saw no need for a snowblower. "We can do this without supporting the oil industry," she said.

Artie McCollum and Katie Lazdowski have been in Africa for the past two years, so this was the biggest snow they'd seen in some time. They were scheduled to go to Ohio Wednesday but put off their trip.

"It's light and fluffy," said McCollum. "I remember storms where it was heavy and wet. Lazdowski added, "I enjoy it, as long as it's not all the time. It's awesome!"

But Jean Kuhn looked weary and said it was the fourth time she or her husband had shoveled their driveway. "Today it's work," she said. "Sometimes it's fun and satisfying, but this is a lot of snow."

On Northampton Road, Jack Cheney was shoveling his walkway, and the snow was a lot deeper near the road because the plows had pushed it onto his property. At 63, he still sees shoveling as good exercise, but is mindful of the potential for heart attacks and takes it slow.

"I do want to live through this," he said

Northampton resident Leon Jasinski of Fair Street said he was impressed with the response from the city's road crews.

"I think they did a great job given the size of the storm," said Jasinski as the snow continued to fall Wednesday at noon. "They were down here at 5 o'clock in the morning and they've been down here two times since."

In Easthampton, a tractor trailer truck heading down Route 141 towards Mountain Road Wednesday morning turned onto East Street and got stuck in the snow blocking traffic in both directions for some time. The road over the mountain to Holyoke was closed at 2 a.m. Wednesday and remained closed into the afternoon.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Interim register: main goal customer service

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - Interim Register of Probate Mark Ames says he hopes to keep the office focused on helping people navigate the system.

Ames, 40, a Northampton native, spent the last 13 years serving the Hampshire Probate and Family Court in a variety of roles. He was accounts clerk, head administrative assistant and deputy assistant register. And Shortly after former register David Sullivan was elected Northwestern district attorney in November, Ames said he approached the court's First Judge Gail L. Perlman to let her know he was interested in serving in the post. He was sworn in Jan. 5.

"I've been here a long time and I've observed two different registers and the commitment to customer service that lead them to be so successful," Ames said. "That is something that I've seen as being one of the more important aspects of the job. I'm just going to do what I can to keep moving forward."

In a press release Perlman stated that said she was pleased to name Ames as interim register, noting his depth of experience and his " high degree of intelligence and competence."

"He has won the confidence of the court staff and is broadly respected for his willingness to pitch in wherever he's been needed during the last several years of serious reduction in court staff..." she said.

The post pays about $110,000 annually.

Also praising Ames was Sullivan, who said "Mark has been a dedicated member of the registry staff and will be able to guide our court through this transition."

The departure of a register - an elected position - mid-term requires the appointment of temporary register. State law requires Ames serve until an election in the fall of 2012, when a permanent register will be elected for a full six-year term, according to release.

When asked if he would throw his hat into that race, Ames said "Right now I'm just focused on the position I have now."

Ames said he wasn't planning on any sweeping changes in the office because he was still adjusting to his new role and "the paint isn't even dry yet."

Previously, Northampton residents William R. Rosen, a local political consultant and Wendy M. Berg, an attorney with Western Massachusetts Legal Services, expressed interest in being appointed to the interim post.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

District Attorney creates communications post

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan has created a new position of communications director, and named a former news reporter to fill it.

Mary Carey, a former Daily Hampshire Gazette reporter who worked on Sullivan's election campaign, was hired as communications director for the Northwestern district attorney's office.

Carey, 53, of Amherst, served as media coordinator during Sullivan's election campaign. Carey said she and Sullivan recognized the need for a communications director when the pair toured other district attorneys' offices following Sullivan's election in Novemeber.

"We went around to the other DA's offices and found that most of them have a communications director and some even have more than one," Carey said. She noted that transparency is one of Sullivan's top priorities.

"Dave wants to be quicker with our responses to inquiries," she said.

In addition to adding a communications director, Carey said an effort is being made to open up the line of communication between Sullivan and the general public through the office website.

"Dave wants to make the website much more interactive because he wants to do more outreach and we feel the website is the perfect venue to do that," Carey said.

From 1994 to 2007, Carey worked as a news reporter for the Gazette and the Amherst Bulletin. She has been an adjunct professor of journalism at the University of Massacchusetts since 2002, teaching a class on news writing.

Sullivan, who offered Carey the position on Christmas Eve, said he expects her expertise will help in his office's effort to communicate openly with area residents.

"Her experience as a professional journalist will help make our district attorney's office more accessible and responsive," Sullivan said. "She will also be a part of our community outreach and education efforts to help with crime prevention and consumer protection. We look forward to Mary's work in the community."

Carey said she became increasingly interested in working in law enforcement during her time spent as Sullivan's campaign media coordinator.

"During the campaign I became more and more impressed with Dave. He's really a fantastic leader, he listens to advice and he's super prepared for everything," Carey said. "I learned so much about about the benefit of being well-prepared ahead of time."

Although she said her new 30-hour-a-week position will leave her without time to continue working as a freelance writer, Carey plans to keep teaching at UMass and hopes to bring some of her students along for internships. "I'm going to continue teaching Journalism 300 at UMass and Dave has been very supportive of that," Carey said. "We hope to revive the internship program that this office used to have. I'm sure there are a lot of students who would be excited to be part of that."

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

District Attorney creates communications post

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - Northwestern District Attorney David Sullivan has created a new position of communications director, and named a former news reporter to fill it.

Mary Carey, a former Daily Hampshire Gazette reporter who worked on Sullivan's election campaign, was hired as communications director for the Northwestern district attorney's office.

Carey, 53, of Amherst, served as media coordinator during Sullivan's election campaign. Carey said she and Sullivan recognized the need for a communications director when the pair toured other district attorneys' offices following Sullivan's election in Novemeber.

"We went around to the other DA's offices and found that most of them have a communications director and some even have more than one," Carey said. She noted that transparency is one of Sullivan's top priorities.

"Dave wants to be quicker with our responses to inquiries," she said.

In addition to adding a communications director, Carey said an effort is being made to open up the line of communication between Sullivan and the general public through the office website.

"Dave wants to make the website much more interactive because he wants to do more outreach and we feel the website is the perfect venue to do that," Carey said.

From 1994 to 2007, Carey worked as a news reporter for the Gazette and the Amherst Bulletin. She has been an adjunct professor of journalism at the University of Massacchusetts since 2002, teaching a class on news writing.

Sullivan, who offered Carey the position on Christmas Eve, said he expects her expertise will help in his office's effort to communicate openly with area residents.

"Her experience as a professional journalist will help make our district attorney's office more accessible and responsive," Sullivan said. "She will also be a part of our community outreach and education efforts to help with crime prevention and consumer protection. We look forward to Mary's work in the community."

Carey said she became increasingly interested in working in law enforcement during her time spent as Sullivan's campaign media coordinator.

"During the campaign I became more and more impressed with Dave. He's really a fantastic leader, he listens to advice and he's super prepared for everything," Carey said. "I learned so much about about the benefit of being well-prepared ahead of time."

Although she said her new 30-hour-a-week position will leave her without time to continue working as a freelance writer, Carey plans to keep teaching at UMass and hopes to bring some of her students along for internships. "I'm going to continue teaching Journalism 300 at UMass and Dave has been very supportive of that," Carey said. "We hope to revive the internship program that this office used to have. I'm sure there are a lot of students who would be excited to be part of that."

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Obama as Hitler poster causes stir in Easthampton

Photo: Obama-as-Hitler poster causes stir in Easthampton

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

EASTHAMPTON - Two unidentified men waved to motorists Monday, holding a sign that read "Pull over to stop Obama" along with an image of the president with an Adolf Hitler-style mustache.

The two, who declined to identify themselves to the Gazette, stood next to a car with Massachusetts plates parked in front of Easthampton Savings Bank on Main Street and said the display was in response to Saturday's shooting in Tucson, Ariz., that killed six people and wounded 14 others, including Democratic U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords.

"This is our answer to what happened in Arizona," one of the men said. "We're here on behalf of the LaRouche Political Action Committee."

They were later joined by two more people with similar signs who set up shop nearby on the Pulaski Park rotary.

The signs drew strong responses from some city residents, including a local business owner who mobilized a response from Florida, where she was vacationing and spotted a picture of the signs on Facebook.

Demonstrators claiming to be with the LaRouche PAC were also spotted in Holyoke on Monday with similar signs.

According to the literature they were handing out in Easthampton, the display was intended to thwart what political activist Lyndon LaRouche called an effort to blame Sarah Palin for the Arizona rampage.

"An attempt is being made to use the case to attack Sarah Palin, who had targeted Giffords and 19 other congressmen for defeat in the November elections because of their vote for Obama's Nazi health bill," the handout read. It also read: "Anyone who attacks Sarah Palin is implicitly pro-Hitler."

LaRouche, a perennial presidential candidate and prominent conspiracy theorist, has built a worldwide organization over several decades that espouses his idiosyncratic political views. Most recently LaRouche, 88, has railed against bank bailouts, against the health reform act and, now, against political attacks on Palin in the wake of the Arizona shootings. His supporters are known for their signs that draw comparisons between Obama and Hitler.

As the men stood on the roadside in Easthampton Monday, some residents slowed to a stop and honked in support. Others muttered curses at the men as they attempted to hand out fliers to residents entering the bank.

Attempts to reach a manager at Easthampton Savings Bank for comment were not successful Monday afternoon.

Two teenagers were seen around 3:45 p.m. trying unsuccessfully to grab one of the signs from the men. One began forming a snowball to throw at the men but ultimately walked away.

Nashawannuck Gallery owner Marlies Stoddard had a more noticeable response to the demonstrators. Stoddard saw a picture of the signs on Facebook Monday after Eastmont Custom Framing owner Jean-Pierre Pasche snapped a few shots.

Stoddard, who is vacationing in Florida with her mother, Mai Stoddard, called Pasche and asked him to compose a response to the demonstrators, whose message she called "incredibly hateful."

Pasche walked down to the Wing Travel sign, owned by Mai Stoddard, near the rotary on Northampton Street and arranged the letters to read: "Say No To Hateful Political Rhetoric!"

"I love people expressing themselves, but it was just very hateful and divisive," Marlies Stoddard said Monday evening by telephone. "And the timing couldn't have been any worse, in my opinion, with the shootings."

After about an hour on the side of the road, a city police officer pulled up behind their car and asked the pair - on behalf of bank officials - to take down the table they had set up and to stop handing out fliers, police said.

Soon after, the two men moved their display to Pulaski Park, in the center of the rotary, and continued to wave to motorists into the evening.

Stoddard said she got some satisfaction when Pasche reported to her by telephone that the demonstrators had piled into a car and headed out of town right past the message on her mother's sign.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Easthampton, Williston students set for history competition

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

EASTHAMPTON - History students from Williston Northampton School and Easthampton High School will travel to Boston later this month to participate in a statewide U.S. history competition.

The We the People competition, organized by the Center for Civic Education, a federal nonprofit, is meant to enhance local students' understanding of the country's democratic institutions and the modern relevance of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Students from Williston have participated in the event since 1998 and finished in the top three places four times, including winning the honor of representing Massachusetts in the national finals in 2000. This year will mark the first time that Easthampton High has joined in.

Before leaving for Boston, the two schools will present their research on the Williston campus on Wednesday, Jan. 19. The showcase will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Dodge Room of the Reed Campus Center and individual hearings will occur in Reed 202 and 204 from 7 to 9 p.m.

Then, on Saturday, Jan. 29, students from both schools will travel to the John Joseph Moakley courthouse in Boston to compete against 12 other public and private schools from across the commonwealth.

Kelly Brown, a U.S. history teacher at EHS, said she has enjoyed working with the new textbooks associated with the curriculum this year and has seen a positive response from her students.

"I've been teaching AP History for 10 years, and I think this curriculum offers a really in-depth study of the Constitution, which will be incredibly helpful for my students and will be something that they can use for their entire study of American history," she said.

As part of the program, 25 EHS students and 36 from Williston, most of whom are juniors and seniors, will participate in a simulated congressional hearing in which students "testify" before a panel of judges. Students will be asked to demonstrate their knowledge and understanding of constitutional principles and will have opportunities to evaluate, take, and defend positions on both historical and contemporary issues.

According to the Center's website, since the We the People program started in 1987, more than 28 million students and 90,000 educators have participated in the study. Several studies by the Educational Testing Service and Stanford University professor Richard Brody have shown that students who used the curriculum "significantly outperformed comparison students" on every topic studied, according to the site.

For more information about the competition, residents can visit the organization's web site, http://www.civiced.org.

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

Mom pinned against wall by car driven by son, 14

NORTHAMPTON - A city woman was rushed to the hospital Friday evening after her 14-year-old son accidentally pinned her against the wall of a local parking garage with the family car, police said.

At 6:41 p.m., police responded to the garage of a private home after it was reported that Ajna Maric, 44, of 183 Grove St. in Northampton, had been struck by a vehicle driven by her son, according to Lt. Michael Patenaude.

"A teenager was trying to park a car in the garage and his mother, who was directing him into the space, ended up being pinned between the back of the garage and her car," Patenaude said.

Patenaude said Maric's husband took her to Cooley Dickinson Hospital where a hospital spokeswoman said an X-ray indicated that she had no broken bones; she was treated and released Friday night.

Patenaude said Maric will not be issued a citation for allowing her son to drive her car without a license.

- OWEN BOSS

Dwight back on the airwaves

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - After an eight-month hiatus, "The Bill Dwight Show" will return to the airwaves this month on the Florence-based Valley Free Radio, WXOJ 103.3 FM.

The morning news program, which will begin Jan. 24, is scheduled to air Monday through Thursday from 8 to 9 a.m.

Dwight, 55, a former Ward 1 city councilor, spent four years hosting a morning radio show on WHMP-AM The River before a programming dispute with the station's manager caused him to walk away from the microphone last April.

Joining Dwight will be Northampton resident Jaz Tupelo, who produced Dwight's former program on WHMP and served as an afternoon disc jockey for the station.

Similar to his former show, Dwight said he will focus on local news and will feature provocative interviews with news makers and intriguing people from across the Pioneer Valley.

"I was encouraged by a lot of people to come back and give it another shot, and they're giving us a morning drive slot, which is exactly what we were looking for," Dwight said.

Although Dwight and Tupelo haven't been broadcast on an area radio station in almost a year, Dwight said the duo has been recording a weekly podcast to stay sharp.

"We're both really psyched about this. We did a practice run of our show recently, and the people over at Valley Free Radio have been really great," Dwight said.

Tupelo said she is excited to work music into Dwight's show and expects he will pick up right where he left off.

"The thing I love about Bill is his commitment to this area and the knowledge that he has about the people and the players who live here," Tupelo said. "I just love hearing him bring that knowledge to the show and I love learning about the things that are going on locally."

Mayor Clare Higgins and renowned journalist Rachel Maddow are among the guests that Dwight said he hopes to interview the week he returns to the airwaves.

"The work we've done in radio has been an act of love of sorts; it has never been about the money," Dwight said.

Valley Free Radio, located on Pine Street in Florence, is a nonprofit, community-based and volunteer-run radio station aired around the Greater Northampton area.

For more information about Valley Free Radio, or to see a list of its programs, visit the station's website www.valleyfreeradio.org.

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

Easthampton high school offers up its keepsakes

Photo: Easthampton High School offers up its high keepsakesPhoto: Easthampton High School offers up its high keepsakes

By Owen Boss

Staff Writer

EASTHAMPTON - If a framed piece of the gym floor at Easthampton High School would help you relive your glory days or if you're interested in buying a locker from the hallway in which you once gingerly stepped as a freshman, you have until the end of the month to let the Easthampton High School Building Committee know.

Building Committee members and project managers planning the city's new $44.9 million high school surveyed the interior of the current high school Monday afternoon and took stock of anything that could be of sentimental value to local residents.

Although it isn't old enough to be considered historically significant, school officials are hoping there will be community interest in salvaging memorable features of the 51-year-old building, because it will be the city's first high school to disappear.

"Memorial Hall and Pepin Elementary School are former high schools, and they are still being used, and the fact of the matter is that pretty soon this high school isn't going to be here anymore," committee member Tom Brown said. "We're hoping to get a photographer in here to take pictures of it before it is torn down so we can have at least a record of what the interior looked like."

By the end of the hour-long tour, the group's message to the community was clear: Depending on the response from local residents, any part of the building that teachers don't want to keep is going to be sold, auctioned off or buried under a pile of rubble.

"If they want something like the eagle on the floor of the gym, they can let us know and we can let the project managers know that there is someone willing to pay for it," Brown said. "Otherwise we're going to drive a bulldozer through it."

Building Committee Chairman Michael Buehrle said he hopes to find a temporary location to store unwanted items, including desks, chairs and shop equipment sometime before the building's demolition in 2013. That way, he said, those items can be sold at auction.

Project Manager Mel Overmeyer of Strategical Building Solutions Inc. of Chicopee warned, however, that trying to auction off items with little or no real value can end up costing organizers money in the long run.

"You can spend the money you are trying to save pretty quickly if you end up paying someone to move all of this stuff out of here and then pay them again for a place to store it until the auction," Overmeyer said.

Residents interested in purchasing a part of the EHS building should contact Buehrle at 527-6595 before the end of January.

Story so far

Last May, city residents approved an $18.1 million debt exclusion override by nearly a 3-1 margin. The vote means that the city will raise property taxes over a 20-year period to build, equip and furnish a new 110,000-square-foot high school building on Williston Avenue.

The new building will replace, on the same 8-acre parcel, the existing high school, which school officials deemed undersized, worn out and lacking technological infrastructure, fire sprinklers, an auditorium and other features.

According to the most recent time line, presented by Overmeyer to High School Building Committee members last August, the building plan so far is as follows: The design development phase of the project, which began in July last year, is expected to last into February, when the project will go out to bid through the end of April.

Then, in June, the construction of temporary parking spaces will begin and the site will be prepared for construction through the end of July.

Actual construction of the new building will start at the beginning of the upcoming school year and, according to the time line, is expected to last until February 2013. As it stands now, in April 2013, students are expected to make the move from the old building to the new building to allow for the demolition of the existing structure and the completion of all site work by August 2013.

For more information about the project, visit the school's website www.easthampton.k12.ma.us.

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

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Exchange program to send local high schoolers to Norway

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - Thanks to grant funding secured by the Amherst-based Institute for Training and Development, two groups of local high schoolers will travel to Norway this semester as part of an international exchange program.

Two different trips, one planned for February, the other for April, will send 18 sophomores and two teachers from Northampton High School and Amherst Regional High School to the northern European country for a three-week visit.

According to Julie Hooks-Davis, executive director at ITD, both three-week programs will span week-long school vacations, so the 40 students and teachers participating will miss only two weeks of school. Each 20-person group, she said, will be comprised of nine sophomores and one teacher from each high school.

While abroad, she said students are expected to keep up with homework from their home schools and will be allotted time to do so during their weekends in Norway.

"There was an exchange that we did a couple of years ago with the Netherlands and the lasting connection between students at NHS and that school was just fabulous," Hooks-Davis said. "On both sides of the exchange, the kids involved quickly became inseparable."

The two Norwegian schools participating in the project are Lillestrom High School and Jessheim High School.

Lillestrom Videregaende Skole is a suburban college preparatory high school in the greater Oslo area and Jessheim Vidergende Skole is located in a rural area about 31 miles from Oslo.

Both schools conduct some classes in English, and, as English language fluency is a priority in Norway, most Norwegian high school students can speak conversational English.

The exchange program will focus on the theme of environmentalism, especially climate change. While in Norway, participants will develop plans for the environmental projects and present them at the U.S. Embassy in Oslo before returning to the states. Program activities abroad will be school-based for the first two weeks and American participants will reside with Norwegian host families. In the third week, the Northampton High and Amherst students will stay in a hotel, where they will work on their environment projects, take part in a workshop at an environmental organization, and enjoy some cultural activities.

Once home, the students will implement these environment projects, which are geared to improving their communities. Participating students will conduct school or community presentations on the Norway program and share their planned projects for bettering the local environment.

Funding for this project is provided by the Youth Programs Division, Bureau for Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State. The ITD grant will pay for all expenses for the 40 American participants, including air fare, additional transportation, meals, materials,and accommodations.

For information about the exchange, visit ITD's website: www.itd-amherst.org.

###

Superintendent search

The panel tasked with finding the city's next Superintendent of Schools will hold a series of workshops this month aimed at gathering ideas and opinions from local residents.

The search follows Superintendent Isabelina Rodriguez's announcement this fall that, after seven years as Northampton's schools chief, she does not wish to renew her contract when it expires in June. Several weeks after the announcement, Rodriguez accepted an offer to take over as superintendent in Granby.

With the help of the Marlborough-based New England School Development Council, an 11-member Superintendent Search Committee will sit down with the parents of students and area residents in the hopes of identifying desirable personality traits and a level of expertise that participants are looking for the new superintendent to have.

"We will hold six focus groups in total and once all of those are done, NESDEC is going to report back to us with a list of the attributes they think (the superintendent) should possess," School Committee clerk Nicole Markel said. "That is really going to help us with our screening of potential candidates."

The members of the search panel are Susan Biggs, a Northampton High chemistry teacher and coach; Sharon Carlson, a physical education teacher at JFK Middle School; Julie Hooks-Davis, co-chairwoman of the Northampton Education Foundation's Small Grants Committee; Karen Jarvis-Vance, the school system's director of health and safety education; Martha Jenkins, Northampton High parent; Greg Kerstetter, a fifth-grade teacher at Ryan Road School; Jason Mark, a Leeds Elementary School parent; Police Capt. Scott Savino, a Northampton High parent; Gail E. Scordilis, director of educational outreach at Smith College; and School Committee members James Young and Stephanie Pick.

The focus group sessions, which will take about 90 minutes, will be held in the Community Room at JFK Middle School. The schedule is as follows:

Parents of students will gather on Wednesday, Jan. 19, at 9 a.m. and Thursday, Jan. 20, at 6 p.m. City employees and community members will meet on Wednesday, Jan. 19, at 11 a.m.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

State transportation secretary likes what he sees at Northampton Airport

Photo: Northampton Airport gets thumbs-up from state official

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - The state's Secretary of Transportation toured Northampton Airport Monday morning as part of an ongoing effort to visit all of the commonwealth's 39 privately owned airports.

As Northampton was the first stop on his statewide tour, Secretary of Transportation Jeffrey Mullan said he wasn't sure what to expect. But he said he left impressed with the facility's efforts to be energy efficient, as well as with its educational offerings.

"I'm trying to be active in the aviation community because that is a big part of the economy and a big part of the state's transportation picture," Mullan said. "I was impressed with the team they have there and that the training they do is focused on safety."

Leading Mullan's tour was the airport's owner, Robert Bacon, who made sure to point out the airport's youth aviation seminars, its flight school and the development of a new women in aviation program.

Following a walking tour, Mullan said he was impressed with renovations made to the airport last summer, including an expanded ramp, two new hangars and the installation of solar panels on the roof of the airport's community hangar.

The state Department of Transportation paid for about 80 percent of the renovation's cost, estimated at $340,000. The expanded ramp added more parking space for airplanes and repaired a taxiway that's almost 50 years old. The two new hangars each can hold up to five aircraft.

The use of solar panels to limit energy costs, Mullan said, is among the attributes he saw at Northampton Airport that he would like to see implemented at other privately owned, publicly used airports statewide.

"The investment in solar energy is something that we are seeing not just at airports but in building projects going up all over the state," Mullan said. "It is always good to get out here and talk to people so we can see what is working, what isn't, and try to use that information to make improvements elsewhere."

Rich MacIsaac, the airport's manager and chief flight instructor, said he though Mullan left with the desired impression of the Old Ferry Road airport.

"We wanted Secretary Mullan to see firsthand what an asset Northampton Airport is to the area," MacIsaac said. "It was the first time they've sent someone out and I think it was a great visit and hopefully he learned a lot from it."

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com

Monday, January 3, 2011

Flu vaccinations abound, but flu season still an unknown

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

THE ISSUE: For many area residents, the ushering in of winter means preparing for another flu season and although local hospitals are reporting that there are plenty of influenza vaccinations to go around, the timing, severity and length of this year's epidemic is still unknown.

STORY SO FAR: Last year, the H1N1 or swine flu virus spread worldwide causing the first flu pandemic in more than 40 years. Across the country, people lined up outside of clinics to receive their vaccinations and reported cases steadily increased during the winter season. After children, senior citizens and those with chronic underlying conditions were vaccinated, the H1N1 vaccine was made available to all residents and soon after reported swine flu cases declined steeply.

However, during the 2010-2011 flu season, the Center for Disease Control is expecting the same 2009 H1N1 virus will cause illnesses again along with other influenza viruses. In an attempt to prevent a resurgence of the strand, the 2010-2011 flu vaccine will protect against 2009 H1N1 and two other more common influenza viruses.

WHAT'S HAPPENING: According to Christina Trinchero, spokeswoman for Cooley Dickinson Hospital, the number of local residents coming in with flu-like symptoms during the month of December has decreased dramatically from last year. Over the last three months, Trinchero said 60 residents have been tested for influenza and of those, only three have tested positive. Over that span last year, 519 people were tested for influenza, 80 of whom had confirmed cases. As of Dec. 1, the Center for Disease Control had distributed 163 million doses of the 2010-2011 flu vaccine to clinics across the country, more than enough, they say, to make it readily to anyone looking to receive one.

FINE PRINT: The Center for Disease Control strongly recommends a yearly flu vaccination as the first and most important step in protecting against the flu. The 2010-2011 seasonal influenza vaccine will protect against an H3N2 virus, an influenza B virus, and the 2009 H1N1 virus that emerged last year. The seasonal 2010-11 vaccine has begun shipping from manufacturers and the CDC recommends that everyone 6 months and older get a 2010-2011 flu vaccine for the upcoming season.

VERBATIM: "The problem with the flu virus is that it is very unpredictable, it can look like it is starting off really slowly and then just explode across the local population. It can also come on very heavy in the beginning of the season and then diminish quickly."

- Linda Riley, Manager of Infection Prevention at Cooley Dickinson Hospital in Northampton

WHAT'S AHEAD: According to the state's Department of Public Health, flu activity most commonly peaks in Massachusetts in January or February. However, seasonal flu activity can occur as late as May. Although reported cases have been scarce so far this year, Riley said the flu tends to appear locally sometime after students return from holiday break.

"We live in a college community so usually our numbers peak sometime in February or March when students come back from home and spread germs among each other," Riley said. In addition to getting vaccinated, Riley suggests area residents take everyday preventive steps like staying away from sick people and washing your hands to reduce the spread of germs. Also, if you are sick with flu or are coming down with symptoms, she said it is important to stay home from work or school to prevent spreading influenza to others.

RESOURCES: For information about local clinics where you can receive vaccinations, visit the state's Department of Public Health's website: http://flu.masspro.org/clinic/index; For updated statistics regarding the number of reported influenza cases in your area, visit the Center for Disease Control's website: http://www.cdc.gov.

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

Two men face bank robbery charges; links probed to other heists

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

SPRINGFIELD - Police are investigating whether two men arrested for allegedly robbing two banks in Springfield and Ludlow Friday morning could be connected to a string of recent local bank robberies.

Jesus Ashanti, 34, and Yannick Fanis, 26, both of Hartford, Conn., were arrested and charged with unarmed robbery after the duo allegedly robbed a TD North Bank in downtown Springfield and then a Citizens Bank in Ludlow less than an hour later.

At 9:30 a.m., Springfield police responded to the TD North branch on Chestnut Street, after it was reported that a black man, wearing a white hat and glasses, had snatched cash from a teller's drawer when attempting to make change for a $100 bill. After getting away with an undisclosed amount of money, tellers reportedly told police that they saw the man get into a blue sedan with a New York license plate.

Shortly after, at 10:21 a.m., Ludlow police were notified employees at the Citizens Bank on Center Street, after a black man, wearing glasses, a white hat and a gray sweatshirt reportedly handed the teller a note that read "This is a robbery" and demanded all the cash they had.

After he was given an undisclosed amount of cash, the man reportedly fled on foot toward Randall's Farm, a greenhouse and grocery store across the street.

Tellers also told police that a dye pack, hidden among the cash, had exploded and that the man may have left the scene in a small blue Chevy sedan.

After issuing a lookout notice for the vehicle to surrounding cities and towns, Springfield police pulled the pair over as they traveled south on Interstate 91.

One of the men, police said, was found to be wearing clothing matching the description of that provided by witnesses at the Ludlow robbery and cash covered in red dye was found in the trunk of the vehicle.

Similarities between Friday's robberies and a string of thefts from local banks last month have area police departments collaborating to look into whether they could somehow be connected.

"We're absolutely looking into all of the recent robberies. There have been a significant number of armed robberies in the area in the past few weeks, and right now we are working to see if we can tie any of them together," Springfield Lt. Kevin Wood said.

Last month, banks in Chicopee, South Hadley, Northampton and Agawam were allegedly robbed by a black man who was wearing assorted stylish hats and had a bright gray beard.

On Dec. 23, Gerund A. Mickens, 35, of Bloomfield, Conn., was arrested by police in West Springfield after he led police on a high-speed chase in a vehicle that matched the description of the one used in several of those robberies.

Mickens has since been charged with failure to stop for police, operating with a suspended license and reckless operation of a motor vehicle. Area police departments have been working together to see if Mickens can be connected to the string of thefts.

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

Valley celebrates the old, new at First Night

Photo: Valley celebrates the old, new at First NightPhoto: Valley celebrates the old, new at First NightPhoto: Valley celebrates the old, new at First NightPhoto: Valley celebrates the old, new at First Night

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

NORTHAMPTON - The streets were flooded with revelers Friday night looking to close out the millennium's first decade by taking part in the 26th annual First Night Northampton celebration.

Donning tiaras, party hats and their First Night buttons, thousands of Valley residents spent the last night of 2010 taking in performances from community artists at venues across the city and marveling at the Northampton's annual fireworks display.

The New Year's Eve celebration, organized by the Northampton Center for the Arts, has become a signature event in a city that prides itself on its diversity and artistic offerings.

Early in the afternoon, more than 100 partygoers, many of them too little to be staying up until midnight, marched their way from the Northampton Center for the Arts to Pulaski Park down Masonic, Center and Main streets. Leading them were a legion of red-coated drummers and blue-hatted hula hoopers.

Tracy Green, who recently moved to Northampton from Lexington, stayed to watch the drummers perform in Pulaski Park with her son, Jack Cleary, 4. Green said 2011 was looking bright.

"We just moved back to western Mass., so we're looking forward to reconnecting with old friends and starting a new life in the Happy Valley."

Nearby, 6-year-old Makenzie Whitley was waiting with her grandparents Terry and Ed Kenfield, of Chicopee, for Ed the Balloon Man's act to begin at the Unitarian Society. Asked what she was looking forward to in the new year, Makenzie replied, "Fun. That's all I can say."

This is the third year Henry and Carla Lafleur, of Montgomery, have brought their grandchildren, Andrew, 12, and Amanda, 10, to First Night in Northampton. The kids and their grandmother were in the spirit, wearing white plastic fedoras.

Henry Lafleur said he doesn't know what 2011 would bring, but the past year was an eventful one. "I think we've done everything in 2010," he said.

Wearing a colorful cardboard crown, Patrick McCullough said he's looking forward to "doing my own creative work" in film. For six months in 2011, he'll be doing that in an exciting new setting, Budapest, Hungary, with his family - wife Viktoria, son Conor, 4, and daughter Nora, 18 months.

Although she didn't venture a guess at how many buttons had been sold for admission to the celebration, Penny Burke, the center's executive director, said this was the first year she could remember where the button supply ran out.

"It's always a good sign when buttons become scarce and our volunteers have to start making new ones the night of the celebration," Burke said with a smile as she greeted patrons on their way into a performance by the MarKamusic Latin Family Fiesta at the Center for the Arts.

"From what I can tell from here, it looks like a lot of people came out this year," Burke said. "The crowds for our early events were simply huge. It was much more than just standing room only, there were so many people that some people couldn't get in at all."

Money generated from First Night, Burke said, accounts for about 30 percent of the center's annual operating costs.

"We have in excess of 100 volunteers who really knock themselves out putting this thing on each year," Burke said. "Without their help, this event wouldn't be possible."

Across the city's downtown business district, store fronts and restaurants were decorated with balloons and streamers and crowded to capacity. Many, like Faces on Main Street, extended store hours to accommodate the influx of shoppers.

Terri Pajaak, an employee at Faces, was happy to report that this year's crowd was among the largest she had ever seen.

"It's been really crazy tonight," Pajaak said. "This is much busier than it was last year for New Year's, which is what we love to see."

Around 6 p.m., performances citywide came to a halt as area residents funneled into the street to find a spot for the annual fireworks display, sponsored by the city's Business Improvement District.

From the parking lot outside of The Northampton Brewery, a crowd of more than 100 sounded noise makers and cheered as the display was launched from atop the municipal parking garage.

From atop his father Sean's shoulders, 3-year-old Liam Brennan stared upwards in amazement, letting out an "ooo" or an "ahh" after each firework lit up the night sky.

"We've been coming down from Sunderland for First Night for the last couple of years because there's so much to do you can kind of pick and choose what you want to check out," Sean Brennan said.

Staff writer James F. Lowe contributed to this story.

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

Search panel forming for new HRHS principal

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

WESTHAMPTON - For the next two weeks, the Hampshire Regional School District will accept applications from area residents interested in joining a search committee for Hampshire Regional High School's next principal.

Superintendent Craig Jurgensen said School Committee members are looking for a local resident or the parent of a local student to join the committee, which will be tasked with reviewing applications, interviewing candidates and narrowing down the field of finalists for the position.

"I think that the last time they hired a principal there were about 16 people on the search committee, and that is about where I'd like us to be this time around," Jurgensen said. "Right now we're reaching out to area residents so that we can make a list and then select from that list a person who is really sure that they want to make a commitment to this search."

The search panel is expected to consist of delegates representing employees, school groups and various community residents who have an interest in the school's future leadership.

Candidates for the committee, Jurgensen said, must be available for up to 40 hours of afternoon or evening meetings and interviews, beginning in mid-January and lasting through final public interviews of finalists in late March.

"I'm hoping that we will have a recommendation ready in time for the School Committee's first meeting in April," Jurgensen said.

Anyone with questions about the Search Committee is asked to call Jurgensen at 527-7200. If interested, residents should send a written note to his office, located at 19 Stage Road, Westhampton, 01027-9655, by Jan. 14, 2011.

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

Westhampton fire chief offers tips for safe heating

By OWEN BOSS

Staff Writer

WESTHAMPTON - With winter officially here and townspeople preparing to spend more time in the comfort of their homes, Fire Chief Christopher Norris is urging residents to set time aside to make sure their smoke and carbon monoxide detectors are working properly.

Since 2006, it has been a state mandate that carbon monoxide detectors are required in every residential dwelling, building or structure that contain fossil-fuel burning equipment or have an attached garage.

"Because carbon monoxide is a colorless and odorless gas, it is all the more important that people be aware of the law and know that these detectors are a requirement," said Norris. In addition, he advised residents to walk around the outside of their homes, making sure that all vents leading in and out are clear of snow.

"With the high winds we've had recently, sometimes a gust will push snow drifts against a home and that can be enough to block up the vents and cause unsafe carbon monoxide levels," Norris said.

In addition to having appropriate detectors, Norris warned residents against operating generators or any other power equipment inside of their homes and recommends that they have an oil burner technician perform an annual safety review of their homes and detectors.

"We continually hear about the unfortunate occurrences of people getting hospitalized or killed from carbon monoxide poisoning that could have been prevented with properly working detectors," Norris said.

Norris also alerted townspeople that the state's burning season will begin in just over two weeks and will run from Jan. 15 to May 1.

In Westhampton, Norris said about 400 burning permits are approved annually, the majority of which are issued to residents in early spring.

"Unfortunately, most people will wait until the weather warms up to burn their brush piles, and after all of the snow is gone is when they can pose a greater fire danger," Norris said.

It is required that all brush piles must be at least 75 feet away from any buildings and grass, leaves, hay and stumps cannot be burned.

Norris said local firefighters reserve the right to inspect any permitted brush piles for compliance with the rules and regulations set by both the town and state. Any resident found to be breaking those rules will be asked to have their fire extinguished, and their burning permit will be revoked.

Free burning permits are available by calling the Fire Department at 529-7181 between the hours of 7 and 9 on Saturday and Sunday mornings. Residential burning in Westhampton will only be allowed on Saturdays and Sundays between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.

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

Snowstorm's bark worse than bite in mid-Pioneer Valley

Photo: Snowstorm's bark was worse than bite in mid-Pioneer Valley Photo: Snowstorm's bark was worse than bite in mid-Pioneer ValleyPhoto: Snowstorm's bark was worse than bite in mid-Pioneer Valley

By OWEN BOSS and SCOTT MERZBACH

Staff Writers

The season's first major snowstorm roared through the Valley Sunday night, only causing a handful minor car accidents and with crews clearing roadways by early afternoon today.

When all was said and done, the overnight storm dropped between eight and 10 inches of light snow in cities across the region and more than a foot in some of the Hilltowns.

In Amherst, police reported few problems as a result of the snowstorm. Detective David Foster said many people likely heeded warnings to not drive unless necessary.

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At 1:45 a.m. today, a vehicle went off West Bay Road into a ditch. No injuries were reported and a towing company was able to remove the vehicle. The Department of Public Works was notified to put more sand down to prevent other vehicles from sliding off the road in the same area.

Amherst Town Hall was scheduled for a 10 a.m. opening because of the weather, and many area roadways could be easily navigated by this afternoon.

Meanwhile, the homeless shelter at the First Baptist Church was able to stay open past its normal 7:30 a.m. closing as a result of the harsh weather conditions.

In Northampton

Over the bridge in Northampton, police Capt. Scott Savino said there were no major weather-related accidents Sunday into Monday, and police only dealt with one incident involving a downed tree.

At 1:30 a.m., Savino said Northampton police responded to a reported power outage on Spring Street. After discovering that the outage was the result of a downed tree branch, Savino said police contacted National Grid and closed the roadway from Chesterfield Road to Dimock Street.

"Power at that location was lost for just under two hours," Savino said. "We were done and cleared out of there by 7:30 (this) morning."

Although he said police weren't preoccupied with any serious car accidents during the storm, Savino said towing companies worked to remove 35 cars from city roadways overnight.

Joseph Pipczynski, Easthampton's director of the Department of Public Works, said road crews were out in full force Sunday night and were ready to for anything.

"We probably had 24 pieces of equipment out there, and we were prepared for the worst," he said. "The storm produced really light fluffy snow, which meant it pushed nicely, and then we just had to worry about some spots where we got some drifts because of the wind."

Easthampton's city offices were opened at 12 p.m. today, and police responded to only two minor car accidents. The first occurred at 6:45 p.m. on Hendrick Street and the other at 10:42 p.m. at the intersection of Northampton Street and Groveland Street.

Both South Hadley and Belchertown police reported no major incidents during the overnight and early morning hours.

Westhampton road crews were prepared for the worst when the National Weather Service issued a blizzard warning for Hampshire County on Sunday, but Highway Superintendent David Blakesley said that they saw only about 3 inches fall outside the Highway Garage on Stage Road. He estimated that about 5 inches had fallen in the higher elevations in town, but said it was hard to tell because of the drifting.

“There’s lots of wind for sure, and it will cause problems with drifts and will keep the roads white for a few days, but I don’t think it’s too slippery. It’s kind of a dry snow,” Blakesley said Monday afternoon.

Southampton Highway Superintendent Edward Cauley said at noon that although the snow had mostly stopped, gusty winds would mean that road crews would have to keep plowing.

“We have an awful lot of drifting,” he said. “We’re out now just pushing it back and pushing it back. We’ll probably be out until tonight and into tomorrow — until the wind subsides and the sun comes out.”

Cauley said that three or four trees came down on roads during the storm, but were quickly cleared away. No power lines were down in the storm that dropped 4 to 5 inches here.

Goshen Highway Superintendent Joel Lagergren said that the snow storm hit hardest late Sunday night, coming down at a rate of one to two inches per hour. “The total is about 8 inches, but it’s hard to say because the snow isn’t staying still long enough to be measured, the wind is blowing so hard,” he said around noon today. “The wind is supposed to continue through the afternoon, so the drifts will definitely need to be tended to.”

Lagergren added that no trees or wires had been reported down.

He also said that the Highway Department employees and equipment did well during their first snow storm of the year. “It’s just breaking us in,” he said. “There were no major problems, just that the snow just kept coming.”

Huntington survived the storm well, said Highway Superintendent Charles Dazelle, thanks to plows and sanders that treated the roads on Sunday night until 11 p.m. and Monday morning beginning at 4 a.m.

“The snow has pretty much stopped, but we have a lot of drifts and a few back roads that we need to check before we go home,” he said at noon on Monday. “There are no trees down ... yet.”

Dazelle said about 4 to 5 inches fell in Huntington.

Owen Boss can be reached at oboss@gazettenet.com