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Event for veterans will mix hot dogs, help

Posted by Ralph Ranalli May 3, 2008 08:30 AM

In a show of appreciation for those who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Veterans Administration Heathcare System is sponsoring a family event in Waltham that will mix food, family fun, and information about the benefits, services, and educational and job opportunities available to veterans.

Military personnel who have served in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom and their families are invited to the event, which will be held on the grounds of the National Archives and Record Administration offices at 380 Trapelo Road on May 17 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Veterans and their families will enjoy a cookout, pony rides and an animal show, music, and free raffles with the grand prize of $1,000 or a 42-inch flat screen TV. Various local, state and federal agencies will also be there to provide information.

The event is not open to the general public. Anyone seeking more information is urged tocontact Diane LeBlanc at the National Archives at 781-663-0133 or 781-526-1137.

-- Stephanie V. Siek

Transcript of the 911 call in cheerleading accident

Posted by Ralph Ranalli April 29, 2008 08:12 AM

The following is a transcript of a 911 call from the DCU Center in Worcester where cheerleader and Newton North High School graduate Lauren Chang was injured during a routine on April 13. She was treated at the scene by a emergency medical technician who was working the event, but died the next day of complications from collapsed lungs. Officials have said it took approximately five minutes for an ambulance to arrive on the scene, and at least one lawmaker is now pressing for standby ambulances to be present at all cheerleading competitions.

You can also listen to the call.

Note: When the participants are talking about a "traych," they are referring to an emergency tracheotomy, a medical procedure where a tube is placed directly into the windpipe through the lower neck to allow air into the lungs. The reference to "one of the privates" refers to a local private ambulance company.

DISPATCHER: 911 this line's recorded. What's your emergency?
CALLER NO.1: I'm at the DCU Center in Worcester. There's a girl passed out on the stage. She's having an allergic reaction.
D: Where is she ma'am?
C1: She just passed out after (inaudible). She's, like, in the DCU Center.
D: All right whereabouts inside, inside ...
C1: In, in one of the exhibition halls.
D: OK. Do you know which one?
C1: What exhibition hall is this? (Yells to someone at the scene)
UNKNOWN VOICE: (inaudible)
C1: What exhibition hall is this?
UNK: (garbled)
C1: Yeah, but which hall?
UNK: (garbled)
C1: Hall A.
UNK: Yep.
D: Hall A?
C1: Yep.
D: OK. Do you know how old she is?
C1: Um, no. But I'm going to give this phone to somebody who can ...
D: All right. Can I transfer you over to the ambulance ma'am?
C1: Yep.
D: Hold on please.
C1: (To Caller No. 2) It's 911 do you want to talk to them?
CALLER 2: Hello?
D: All right, hold on one second OK?
C2: Sure.
PARAMEDIC: Paramedics, what's the address of your emergency?
C2: I'm in Worcester. Um, and we need an ambulance immediately. We have a cheerleader ...
P: What's the address of your emergency?
C2: Do you know the address is here? (talking to someone else at the scene) It's, it's the DCU Center. It's this huge convention center in Worcester. I actually don't know the physical address.
P: OK. Slow down sir. I can't understand you. You're at the DCU Center?
C2: I'm sorry.
P: Where in the DCU Center are you?
C2: We're in the main arena.
P: The main arena.
C2: In the DCU Center.
P: What section are you in?
C2: Um, right now I'm standing next to E7.
P: Section E7.
C2: Yeah there's a big power station at E7.
D: All right, what's going on?
C2: We had a cheerleader -- it's a cheerleading competition.
P: Yep.
C2: And she got ki -- And it looks like she got kicked or um hit in the throat. Her face is all swollen. They're trying to get her air.
FEMALE VOICE IN BACKGROUND: They're trying to traych her.
C2: Um, they're trying to traych her.
P: They're trying to traych her right now?
C2: Yeah, that's what it looks like, yeah.
P: So she's unconscious and not breathing right now?
C2: She ... is she conscious? She is conscious. And they have her tubed.
P: O-kaaay. We're gonna send the amb ... is there an ambulance on scene there, sir?
C2: There, there could be I don't know. Let me ask one of the people who works here. Excuse me, sir (talking to someone at the scene) is there an ambulance here or no?
VOICE IN BACKGROUND: On the way.
C2: On the way. They say that there's one on the way but there isn't one here right now.
P: All right.
DISPATCHER: Sir.
P: You can hang up, sir.
D: Sir, is this in the main...is this in, in one of the exhibition...?
P: Paramedic four with...
C2: Yeah it's in the exhibition hall.
D: OK. And it's, um A, right?
C2: Um, I'm actually not sure of the number. I'm standing next to a post that says E7.
D: OK. All right. Stay on the line with the EMS, OK?
P: ...cheerleader unresponsive. Reportedly tubed at this time. By who I don't know. Downtown, you still on?
C2: Yes sir.
P: Sir, you can hang up.
C2: OK, thank you.
D: It's Exhibition Hall A.
P: Exhibition Hall A?
D: Yes.
P: All right, I got an ambulance going. There should a detail working over there from one of the privates but I'm sending a truck anyway.
D: Yes.
P: All right, thanks. Bye.
D: B-bye.

Details of fatal injury lead some to question medical precautions

Posted by Ralph Ranalli April 29, 2008 07:36 AM

When Lauren Chang crumpled to the floor at the Minuteman Cheerleading Championships, the medic assigned to the competition was away from the action, restocking her supplies after treating three earlier injuries, according to the private ambulance company she worked for.

As she gathered more icepacks nearby, coaches and spectators rushed the mat, where Chang's team had just finished performing a 2 1/2-minute routine.

Amid the chaos of questioning voices and blaring music at Worcester's DCU Center, two registered nurses, both of them mothers attending the event, and several others checked Chang's pulse, listened to her heartbeat, and forced air into her lungs using a breathing bag that one of the rescuers found in a bag of medical supplies nearby. The panicked cheerleader fought her rescuers as she struggled to breath and at one point vomited blood, the nurses said.

A spokesman for American Medical Response, the private ambulance company contracted by the DCU Center, said its medic responded quickly to help treat Chang. But 20-year-old Lauren Chang died a day later. An autopsy showed her lungs had collapsed.

There would be still one more cheerleading injury that evening, during a competition that spectators later would say was filled with a freakish spate of accidents.

The death of Chang, a Newton North High School graduate, has parents and others scouring their memories of April 13, questioning the safety of the event and whether the medic on hand had been overtaxed.

By the time Chang went down at 7:20 p.m., the EMT already had already dealt with an asthma attack or fainting on stage, and a neck or back injury suffered in a fall during a stunt performed in the warm-up area, according to several witnesses.

Read more about the medical response to Lauren Chang's tragic injury in the online edition of today's City & Region section.

-- Erin Ailworth

Would you buy a used car in cyberspace? Some towns saying no...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli April 27, 2008 09:59 AM

SHREWSBURY/REGION

Matt Grenier wants to expand his business worldwide. And, like most car dealers, he wants to make a good living.

But unlike most, he plans to do so without attracting road-clogging traffic to his hometown of Shrewsbury, polluting the environment, or erecting unsightly road signs. Grenier, 23, wants to be an online used-car salesman.

The problem is the Internet. The technology that would allow Grenier's business to operate almost unnoticed in Shrewsbury is the very reason why its Board of Selectmen recently denied his application for an auto dealer's license.

"I just don't see the benefit to the town, both to the public and the potential administrative costs," said Selectman John Lebeaux during the board's April 14 hearing on Grenier's license application.

Grenier said he intends to fight the board's decision.

Read more about the conflict over internet-based used car businesses in the online edition of today's Globe West.

In case you missed it: Storm drain technology

Posted by Ralph Ranalli April 17, 2008 08:43 AM

REGION

The cover of last Sunday's Globe West featured a story about how new technologies are helping cities, towns, and private developers capture and clean storm runoff before it can carry pollution into the region's rivers and lakes.

Laced with harmful bacteria, chemicals, and trash, storm water is the primary frustration for environmentalists trying to restore the region's waterways and turn them into healthy places to swim, boat, and fish.

The story included a graphic explaining one system -- which turns an ordinary sidewalk tree planter into a storm water capturing and cleaning device -- being marketed by Virginia-based Filterra Bioretention Systems.

Going the extra mile for Globe West's readers, David Butler of the Graphics Department took that drawing and turned it into this interesting animation. Check it out.

-- Ralph Ranalli

Broken promises have senior housing residents seeing red

Posted by Ralph Ranalli March 30, 2008 07:58 AM

seniors.JPG
Ed Cobb (front) and other members of the residents association board at the Esplanade Condos in Hudson, (from left) Harriette McCarty, Mary Haley, Lou Tagliani, Bob Cyr and Jackie Kapopoulous, want the developers to stand by their promise not to sell to buyers under age 55.

HUDSON/REGION

The Esplanade was supposed to be Ed Cobb's last home. He has a condo with a sun-splashed open floor plan and emergency call buttons in the kitchen and bathroom, just in case he takes a fall.

Cobb, a 73-year-old math teacher who raised three daughters, chose the over-55 complex specifically to avoid generational deja vu: teenagers outside on skateboards, late-night parties, hallway commotion, and the other sort of high-spirited chaos that comes with younger families.

But harsh economic realities have prompted the Esplanade's developers to break a fundamental promise made to Cobb and dozens of his neighbors - that they would be free to grow old in a community of their peers. MP Development LLC is petitioning Hudson officials to reverse the residential age restrictions so they can sell Esplanade units to anyone, citing a state law that forbids towns from enforcing zoning burdens that make a development "uneconomical," Globe West Bureau Chief Erica Noonan reports on the front page of today's Globe.

Cobb and dozens of other residents who bought up 90 of the 140 Hudson units, mostly at boom-market prices between $250,000 and $290,000, say they feel betrayed in what they describe as a housing bait-and-switch.

"It's like buying a car, and then two years later they come and remove the engine," said Cobb. "That's how major it is."

With more than 20,000 new over-55 units built statewide since 2000, builders of the Esplanade, as well as developers in Wellesley, Holden, Hanover, Hingham, and Sharon, are saying that age restrictions, formerly a hot marketing tool, are now hampering sales.

The red-hot trend toward over-55 buildings worried the Citizens' Housing and Planning Association, an affordable housing group, as far back as 2005, when an agency survey found how many senior-oriented units were online, and saw that new complexes were being permitted seemingly every week, said Aaron Gornstein, executive director of the agency.

"We would not be surprised to see more developers coming forward asking for this," he said.

Raising kids, raising taxes -- its all in a day's work for Override Moms

Posted by Ralph Ranalli March 2, 2008 06:58 AM

NATICK

You could call them the Override Moms - politically powerful suburban women who lobby for property tax increases to pay for teachers, new schools, and better classroom gear for their school-aged children. Think soccer moms, with an activist bent.

In one community after another, these mothers have banded together in common cause, Globe West Bureau Chief Erica Noonan reports in today's City & Region section. They are nimble and they are quick, often performing with the agility and strategy of an expert strike force.

With at least 40 Eastern Massachusetts cities and towns planning to ask voters for more than $50 million over the next few months, this is the make-or-break season for thousands of these young mothers dedicated to persuading neighbors to vote themselves a tax hike.

Within 48 hours after Natick selectmen voted last month to seek a $3.9 million override, the town's first such attempt in six years, the group Vote Yes! for Natick had a position statement e-mail waiting in thousands of inboxes around town.

"This matters so much to the community," said campaign cochairwoman Mari Barrera, while standing out in the freezing rain Tuesday evening with a Vote Yes! placard. She cited threatened teacher cuts, library hour reductions, and cutbacks in the Police Department, Department of Public Works, and the town-run organic farm, if the vote does not pass.

Read more about Override Moms in the online edition of Globe West.

Who's got who - Globe West wants to know

Posted by Ralph Ranalli December 10, 2007 02:10 PM

REGION

If you are a state representative, a local elected official or an appointed official, or even Town Meeting member and you've signed on as a volunteer or given an endorsement to one of the Democratic or Republican candidates for president, Globe West wants to hear from you.

Please contact us via e-mail for a story that's currently in development.

-- Ralph Ranalli

Power players

Posted by Ralph Ranalli November 29, 2007 08:32 AM

gaynor.JPG
Paul Gaynor, the CEO of UPC Wind in Newton

REGION

Roaring with the constant din of traffic and enveloped in fossil-fuel exhaust, the Massachusetts Turnpike corridor seems an unlikely path to a future of clean, renewable energy.

Yet Boston's western suburbs have quietly become home to companies that are national and even world leaders in developing clean, renewable power sources, staff writer Ralph Ranalli reports in today's Globe West.

Although they specialize in different areas - wind energy, solar power, fuel cells, batteries - top executives at four of the companies say they share an appreciation of the deep well of brainpower and technical talent in the region and a commitment to a sustainable energy future.

"The biggest advantage is access to the talent pool here," UPC Wind's chief executive officer, Paul Gaynor, said last week. "There are a lot of folks with great energy backgrounds, and the current state administration is being very proactive in terms of helping us out."

Read more about four companies - A123 Systems in Watertown, Evergreen Solar Inc. in Marlborough, Protonex Corp. in Southborough, and the Newton-based UPC Wind - at the forefront in the search for alternative sources of energy.

More from today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli November 29, 2007 07:44 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents have cast their nets around the region and hauled in a bounty of interesting stories for today's edition, including:

Correspondent Alexandra Perloe's report about how Ashland parents are being asked to complete a survey about drug and alcohol use by adolescents, in an effort to close the sometimes significant gap between the perceptions of adults and the realities of teenagers;

Staff writer Ralph Ranalli's story about how a rule change on handicapped ramps has helped the once-reliable Needham Line on the Commuter Rail sink into a morass of tardy trains and frustrated riders;

Correspondent Nadia Salomon's story about how state officials are making it easier for non-custodial parents to get information about their children's school records, and;

Staff writer Stephanie Siek's report about how Waltham School Committee members say collective bargaining has delayed completion of the annual performance review for the district's superintendent, Susan Parrella, who is now in the final year of a contract that may not be renewed.

For a complete listing of all of today's Globe West stories, visit the section online.


Making the ultimate sacrifice

Posted by Ralph Ranalli November 11, 2007 12:42 PM

booth.JPG
Lt. Joshua Booth with his wife and young daughter while they were stationed in Hawaii, shortly before he was deployed to Iraq.
(Photo courtesy of the Booth family)

REGION

Before he was deployed to Iraq, Marine Lieutenant Joshua L. Booth made seven videos of himself reading bedtime stories, so that his daughter, Grace, could hear her father's voice before going to bed.

Booth was killed by a sniper on Oct. 17 of last year in Haditha. A graduate of St. John's High School in Shrewsbury who grew up in Sturbridge, he was 23.

The Booth family played the videos for Grace again recently, but her reaction wasn't what they expected. She had nightmares for days afterward.

Booth is one of 10 members of the military from communities west of Boston who have died since the United States responded to the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Two others, Seth R. Michaud, a Hudson native, and Kyle A. Little of West Boylston, also left behind young children who will grow up without a father.

Read more about the sacrifices made by military families in the Globe West region as Veteran's Day approaches.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli November 8, 2007 01:22 PM

REGION

Globe West's reporters have blanketed the region this week, uncovering a wide variety of interesting stories, including:

Bureau Chief Erica Noonan's story about how relatives of late neighborhood icon Anthony "Fat" Pelligrini are vowing that Nonantum's traditional Christmas events will go on, despite an intra-family fight over the foundation that sponsors them;

Correspondent Nadia Solomon's report about how, after five years of negotiations, police officers in the neighboring towns of Wellesley and Dover will be able to make arrests and exercise authority in both communities;

Another story by Noonan about how a lone protester is raising questions about a controversial traveling exhibition of posed cadavers that has set up shop in a former CompUSA store in Framingham, saying that the exhibit "is an affront to the dead and to the living," and;

Correspondent Alexandra Perloe's story about a group of construction workers from Wayland who have been building houses in Waveland, Miss, where 95 percent of the homes were destroyed two years ago by Hurricane Katrina.

Boston Scientific announces major cuts, effect on region unclear

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 18, 2007 11:11 AM

NATICK/REGION

Natick-based Boston Scientific Corp., facing flagging sales for its two key product lines, has announced that will eliminate 2,300 jobs, or 8 percent of its worldwide workforce, restructure parts of its business, and go forward with plans to shed some less-critical assets.

The Natick maker of medical devices said it expects the cuts, set to begin this month and be substantially completed by 2008, will help it reduce annual expenses by 12 to 13 percent, boost profits, and make it easier to cope with the firm's crushing $8 billion in debt, staff writer Todd Wallack reported in the Globe's Business section.

Boston Scientific, the state's third-largest life sciences company, behind Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. and Biogen Idec Inc., did not say where the job cuts will be made. But only 2,400 of its 28,000 workers are in Massachusetts, suggesting that a fraction of the layoffs will be in the Bay State. Boston Scientific employs nearly 1,000 at its corporate headquarters in Natick and about 1,000 at its endosurgery unit in Marlborough, which makes products for minimally invasive surgery.

Another 500 employees work at the Quincy distribution center, but some analysts think Minnesota, where the company's stent business is based, could bear the brunt of the layoffs.

"I don't think it will have a significant impact at all on total employment in the medical device industry in Massachusetts," said Thomas J. Sommer, president of the Massachusetts Medical Device Industry Council.

Read more about the looming cuts at Boston Scientific on Boston.com.

Should non-profits be non-contributors?

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 18, 2007 08:39 AM

pilots.jpg
Newton's Brae Burn Country Club reported on 2006 tax forms it had assets of $21 million and income of $9 million.
(Globe file photo)

REGION

Call it municipal fantasy math. There's hardly an official of almost any suburb who has not cast a longing gaze at the campus of a tony private school or the expansive headquarters of a local social-service agency and wished that nonprofit organizations had to pay local taxes on the properties they own.

In Newton, it's a fantasy worth millions. In February, the city's Blue Ribbon Commission, a citizen advisory group, urged officials to confront its five local colleges with a combined assessed property value of $450 million, Globe West bureau chief Erica Noonan reports in today's edition. If Boston College, Lasell College, Mount Ida College, Andover Newton Theological School, and Hebrew College paid property taxes, the city would collect nearly $6 million annually, the commission found.

Framingham, meanwhile, has become the first community to take official action on the dream, formally requesting payments from more than a dozen tax-exempt social service agencies with local holdings. The town's actions are being closely watched in the nonprofit world, concerned that other host towns will attempt to strong-arm nonprofit educational, religious, and charitable institutions - none of which pay local property taxes - into donating payments in lieu of taxes, also known as PILOT arrangements.

Residents and officials alike have focused on affluent local institutions that, by virtue of their tax-exempt status, own properties but pay no real estate taxes. Names of well-heeled suburban educational institutions like Wellesley College and Boston College, both of which reported more than $1.5 billion in assets to the IRS in 2005, surface in discussion groups and letters to the editor when their host communities hit budget crises.

But nonprofits - poor and rich alike - cry foul, saying the payments would threaten their core missions to educate the young, help the needy, or minister to the faithful.

Read more about the tensions between non-profits and their municipal hosts in the online edition of today's Globe West.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 18, 2007 08:30 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents have stepped up to the plate today with a full lineup of interesting stories from around the region, including:

Staff writer Ralph Ranalli's report on how, with less than a year to go until the MCAS science exams become a mandatory graduation requirement, students in a dozen schools in the region had failure rates of 30 percent or higher on either the biology, chemistry, or physics exams;

Correspondent Kristen Green's story about how Lincoln, a longtime dry town, is in line to see its first drinking establishment as early as next summer;

Correspondent Lisa Keen's story about the debate raging in Wellesley about whether the town can and should use an $825,000 bequest, and raise additional funds, for a freestanding senior center for its aging baby-boomer population, or turn use the money upgrade the modest facilities for seniors currently available at the Wellesley Community Center, and;

Correspondent Tanya Perez-Brennan's report about how the debate over whether Framingham has too many shelters and social service agencies has moved to the internet via a popular local web site.

For a complete listing of all the stories in today's edition of Globe West, visit the section online.

Also in today's Globe West

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 14, 2007 09:13 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents have journeyed across the region to bring you an exciting itinerary of stories and reports in today's edition, including:

Bureau Chief Erica Noonan's story about how fast-growing Orthodox Jewish community that has battled the city for nearly five years scored a major victory last week, defeating the last municipal obstacle to building a 12,000-square-foot synagogue in a residential neighborhood in Newton Highlands;

Correspondent John Dyer's report on how, in a counterintuitive measure practiced throughout Massachusetts, conservation workers are hacking and slashing undeveloped areas to add open fields that will create favorable habitats for deer, songbirds, and other animals;

Correspondent Calvin Hennick's story about how Holliston officials, stunned last month when the lowest bid for a police station came in about $800,000 over the town's budget, plan to slash about $1 million off the project and hope to begin construction in the spring, and;

Correspondent Christina Pazzanese's report about about several large properties in Watertown -- including a nearly 12-acre swath of land at Greenough Boulevard and Arsenal Street that was once used to burn depleted uranium from a Watertown Arsenal nuclear reactor -- that are undergoing close scrutiny to determine how badly contaminated they are and who is responsible for cleaning them up.

For a complete list of stories in today's edition of Globe West, visit the section online.

Abled

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 11, 2007 10:37 AM

disabled.JPG
Once a mechanic, Brian Smith of Framingham now works as an auto appraiser.
(Globe staff photo by Bill Polo)

REGION

After surgeons installed two mechanical valves to repair his congenital heart defect, Brian Smith knew he had seen the end of his grease-monkey days. Heavy lifting was out of the question, and he had to avoid sharp objects because his new blood-thinning medication made cuts potentially disastrous.

Unable to work at his former job as a mechanic at a Framingham car dealership, Smith went on Social Security for a few years. By 2002, he had recovered and, no longer qualifying for public assistance, was told to get a job, Globe West correspondent John Dyer reports today.

"They were telling me I could go back to work, but they all agreed I couldn't do what I used to do," said the 49-year-old Bellingham resident. "They were thinking about me selling movie tickets. But I have two kids. I wasn't going to go back to a job for minimum wage."

After a four-year job search, his first in decades, Smith received training in a state program and landed a position as an automobile appraiser for a Mendon company. Now he's a proud earner.

Smith's happy ending is the exception, not the rule. Across the state, disabled people and their advocates say that while progress is being made in putting the disabled onto payrolls, most are still unemployed.

The gap between disabled people and the help they need leaves a hole in the region's economy, in the form of an untapped workforce, they say. Although the Massachusetts unemployment rate is hovering between 4 and 5 percent overall, around 70 percent of the state's approximately 550,000 disabled residents older than 18 don't work, said Charles Carr, commissioner of the Massachusetts Rehabilitation Commission, the agency that helped retrain Smith.

Read more about how the disabled are being retrained to work in the online edition of today's Globe West.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 11, 2007 10:30 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters have roamed the region and have reported back with a full menu of interesting stories this week, including:

Correspondent Alex Oster's report on how the recent dry spell could affect the fall leaf-peeping season and the annual tourism dollars it brings in;

Bureau chief Erica Noonan's stony on how regional planners and politicians think they can finally get Route 9 -- one of the state's busiest and and most congested regional economic corridors -- onto the state's transportation priority list;

Staff writer Stephanie Siek's report on how next month's city government ballot in Waltham is a mix of familiar faces from past races and first-time candidates hoping that voters are ready to see a transfusion of new blood, and;

Correspondent Alexandra Perloe's story about how administrators at Franklin High School have pooled together freshmen into smaller -- and hopefully tight-knit -- teams to help keep students from dropping out.

You can see a complete listing of all of today's Globe West stories by visiting the section online.

Local Armenian- Americans praise genocide vote by Congress

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 11, 2007 10:19 AM

WASHINGTON/REGION

A key congressional committee approved a resolution yesterday that brands the World War I-era Ottoman Empire massacres of Armenians as genocide, despite warnings from President Bush that the measure would anger Turkey, a crucial US ally assisting the effort in Iraq.

The move was welcomed as good new by local Armenian-Americans, who have spearhead the move to have the resolution passed and who have been pressuring groups like the Anti-Defamation League to recognize the genocide. There are an estimated 50,000 Armenian-Americans in Massachusetts, Globe staff writer Farah Stockman reports today.

"It's absurd to think that we can have a foreign policy that does not acknowledge the past," said Sharistan Melkonian, a Waltham resident who chairs the Armenian National Committee of Eastern Massachusetts. She said US foreign policy has up until this point been "held hostage to lies."

In a rare show of urgency, Bush, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates each declared that the resolution the House Committee on Foreign Affairs approved could lead Turkey's leaders to curb vital US military supply routes through their country, leaving American troops without enough equipment to conduct operations in neighboring Iraq.

"We all deeply regret the tragic suffering of the Armenian people," Bush told reporters on the White House lawn hours before the vote. "This resolution is not the right response to these mass killings."

Read more about the showdown over the genocide vote in the online edition of today's Globe.

From tracks to Treks

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 8, 2007 10:47 AM

REGION

The state Division of Conservation and Recreation and the MBTA are negotiating terms of a 99-year lease by the parks agency of an old rail corridor the T controls between Waltham and the Central Massachusetts town of Berlin.

Nonprofit local land groups, including Wachusett Greenways and the East Quabbin Land Trust, have begun working on upgrading the rail line for cyclists and strollers west of Berlin to connect to the existing Norwottuck Trail from Belchertown to Northampton, Globe staff writer Peter Howe reports in today's City & Region section.

Read more of Howe's story about a plan top state parks planners have for a latticework of 100 miles of bike trails statewide.

Taking its toll

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 7, 2007 12:31 PM

tolls2.jpg
(Globe staff photo by David L. Ryan)

REGION/TRAFFIC

A typical commute from Framingham to Boston costs as much as $900 annually in tolls. In January, that amount will increase to $1,150, thanks to toll increases approved Thursday by the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority board.

Under the new toll structure, typical commuters living outside of Route 128 would pay $1.25 each time they use the Weston (Exit 15) and Allston-Brighton (Exit 18) toll booths. Between the gas tax and the tolls, drivers from the western suburbs would pay more than nine times as much for their commutes than those from Boston's northwest suburbs and on the South Shore, which do not have tolls on their major highways into the city.

The board rejected a second proposed increase that would have raised the Allston-Brighton and Weston tolls to $1.75, adding another $500 to a yearly commute from Framingham.

Even though the increase as voted is smaller than it could have been, it has many commuters, local officials, and politicians questioning whether the cost of the increasingly expensive roadway is still worthwhile, staff writer Ralph Ranalli reports in today's Globe West.

The issue of the toll increases is not necessarily dead, however. The hikes still face a public hearing process and a final board vote, and board member Mary Connaughton - who represents the interests of the western suburbs - has said she will urge her colleagues to reconsider Thursday's vote, instead increasing tolls only in the Boston Harbor tunnels.

Read more about the issue of toll equity in the online edition of today's Globe West.

Also, check out Globe transportation reporter Noah Bierman's report in today's City & Region section on how technology could someday drastically change who pays highway tolls in Massachusetts and how they are collected.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 7, 2007 11:25 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents have spread out across the region to bring you a buffet of interesting stories today, including:

Correspondent Lisa Keen's report about how the use of modular classrooms to expand capacity at old school buildings, usually a simple solution to a common problem, has turned into a tricky, expensive, and contentious dilemma for Wellesley High School;

Correspondent Alexandra Perloe's story about how, frustrated with the remedy proposed by Medway water and sewer commissioners for the brown water coursing through pipes in the northeast section of town, officials and residents made their feelings clear during a selectmen's meeting last week, and;

Staff writer Stephanie Siek's report about how a luxury housing development going up near a corner of Weston's Highland Street and Boston Post Road boasts top-of-the-line technology for those less-savory elements of modern life, waste-water and storm-water treatment.

Blinded by the light

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 4, 2007 11:03 AM

skylights.jpg
(Sky & Telescope Magazine Satellite Photo)

REGION/UNIVERSE

Astronomy professor Wendy Bauer pulls on a thick rope, opening to the night sky the huge, overhead dome of Wellesley College's Whitin Observatory. She aims the antique brass-and-mahogany telescope, twice as tall as she is, toward the opening. Then she climbs a rickety wooden ladder to look for Jupiter.

Other than her blue T-shirt, she could be taken for an astronomer in 1900, the year the observatory was built. But there's another difference between then and now - the view. The stars at night are not so bright, staff writer Lisa Kocian reports in today's Globe West.

As development has come to the western suburbs, so has light pollution. And the change has occurred so quickly, local astronomers say, that there hardly is anywhere in Greater Boston that has escaped its drastic effect in recent years.

When Bauer arrived at Wellesley in 1979, she could see the Milky Way with her naked eye. No longer.

Wellesley's situation exemplifies what has become an international debate over what to do about the fading firmament. The International Dark-Sky Association, headquartered in Tucson, was incorporated in 1988 to spread the word about light pollution. Bauer, who describes herself as a not-very-active member, said lobbying against wasted light isn't antidevelopment because there are plenty of light fixtures available now that don't illuminate the sky. The trick, she said, is to increase public awareness.

Read more about the debate over light pollution in the online edition of today's Globe West.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 4, 2007 10:20 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents cover the region from Newton Corner to the Worcester line, and have come up with a wide variety of interesting stories for today's section, including:

Correspondent Tanya Pérez-Brennan's report about how fears of arrest and immigration enforcement are scaring away customers and hurting Brazilian businesses in once-vibrant downtown Framingham, where several empty storefronts now abound;

Arts correspondent Denise Taylor's story about how an unusual theater piece created in Wayland -- a hip-hop musical version of William Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" -- has made it all the way to a high school in Johannesburg, South Africa;

Staff writer Meg Woolhouse's story about a new pie bakery in Newton Centre, and;

Correspondent Matt Gunderson's piece about how momentum is building to refurbish a 3.2-mile stretch of former railroad bed in Stow that would help complete a "missing link" along the Assabet River Rail Trail, a 12.5-mile scenic path from Marlborough to Acton.

State to begin school project studies early

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 4, 2007 09:51 AM

REGION

The state will begin feasibility studies for local school projects about a month earlier than anticipated, potentially allowing some projects to be ready for Town Meeting votes next spring, staff writer James Vaznis of the reports in the Globe's City & Region Section today.

On Nov. 2, the state School Building Authority will decide which school districts' proposed projects to study first. Other districts will be selected on a rolling basis after that.

Being selected for a feasibility study doesn't automatically guarantee construction funding, but it is a prerequisite. More than a dozen school districts west of Boston are among 161 districts statewide competing for about $500 million in construction funds this year, the first time in four years the state is doling out school construction money.

In choosing which feasibility studies to pursue first, the state has been dispatching inspection teams to analyze building conditions and enrollment trends, visiting 90 districts so far. Those districts include Berlin-Boylston, Franklin, Hopkinton, Hudson, Marlborough, Maynard, Nashoba, Natick, Needham, Norfolk, Shrewsbury, Wayland, and Wellesley.

The resulting studies, which should be completed this winter, will give the state the first glimpse of how much it could potentially cost to do all the projects. In all, 161 districts have expressed interest in 422 school projects.

Central Mass $$$ will flow to Natick

Posted by Ralph Ranalli October 1, 2007 10:46 AM

NATICK/REGION

Central Massachusetts should be fertile ground for luxury retailers and the Natick Collection, the Worcester Telegram & Gazette is reporting.

The Census Bureau estimates Worcester County is home to 110,686 households with more than $75,000 in annual income. An estimated 71,571 of those households, or 25 percent of all households in the county, have more than $100,000 in annual income.

Yet aside from small, independent boutiques or specialty retailers, it’s tough to find brand-name luxury shopping in the Worcester area. Shoppers willing to plunk down $300 or more for a wool sweater generally have to get in their cars and drive — to Newbury Street in Boston or the Mall at Chestnut Hill in Newton; to Providence or to New York City.

Centers of attention

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 30, 2007 09:21 AM

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Wellesley Planning Director Rick Brown with the Linden Square project.
(Globe staff photo by Bill Polo)

REGION

Lincoln's town center is hardly a hotbed of activity. A speed bump greets visitors driving in on the main drag.

Yet last week, a developer broke ground on a $7 million project to renovate a local shopping center and erect a 2 1/2 story building in this no-stoplight downtown. There are even plans for a restaurant, with the town's first-ever liquor license.

"Everyone's a little nervous," said Cathy Jahrling, one of the few customers grocery shopping at Donelan's Market in the town center on a recent morning. "Change doesn't come easily to Lincoln."

The same could be said of many New England cities and towns, yet change is on the way. In Franklin, Westborough, Marlborough, and other communities, private developers are building multimillion-dollar projects aimed at recreating downtown centers, often in their own image, staff writer Megan Woolhouse reports in today's Globe West. The goal of some of the projects is to mimic the look and feel of a New England village, creating space for merchants, new apartments, and even new public commons.

The investment is anything but common. In Franklin, there is $28 million in construction. A Westborough developer won't disclose the cost of its 23-acre downtown redevelopment project, except to say it is in the tens of millions.

The changes don't come without public debate. Downtowns are often the psychological epicenter of their communities. In Newton, a city task force has been at odds for months over how to redevelop that city's center.

Read more about the push to revitalize town centers in today's Globe West.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 30, 2007 09:15 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents have fanned out across the region to bring you a variety of compelling stories in today's edition, including:

Staff writer Ralph Ranalli's report about how state environmental officials are phasing out odd-even day watering bans, saying they may actually be encouraging homeowners to use more water, not less;

Staff writer Meg Woolhouse's story about how Newton Mayor David B. Cohen's insistence on pushing through a proposal for articial turf fields at Newton South High School has angered critics who believe the city has more pressing capital needs;

Correspondent Matt Gunderson's report detailing how the days of hiding dismal report cards and midterm grades to avoid the wrath of parents may soon become a relic of the past, as more and more schools ramp up their online links with parents, and;

Correspondent John Dyer's report about a proposal in Westborough to ban JetSkis and other personal watercraft.

For a complete listing of all of today's Globe West stories, visit the section online.

Hard work and fluffy pancakes

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 27, 2007 10:13 AM

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The Deluxe Town Diner in Watertown
(Globe staff photo by Bill Polo)

REGION

It's community and atmosphere and regulars. It's historic character and comfortable booths and french fries. And, oh yeah, long hours. Really long, brutal hours.

Ask anyone what makes a diner a diner. You'll hear about the food, the building, and the history. But for all the enthusiasm, for all the nostalgia, diners are disappearing because they are so tough to run. Nationally, the number of diners has dropped from 5,000 to about 1,500 over the last 55 years, staff writer Lisa Kocian reports in today's Globe West.

It's a problem Shrewsbury officials have wrestled with for two decades. The town acquired the Edgemere Diner, a streamlined classic on Route 20, in 1987 because the owners stopped paying property taxes. After years of renting it out on short-term leases, two years at a time to start, the town decided this summer to offer a better deal. It tried to sell the diner car, made in 1948 by the Fodero Dining Car Co. of New Jersey, with a 20-year lease of the land in order to give a new proprietor incentive to invest in the business and make improvements.

But no one wanted to take it on.

Read more about the struggle to keep classic diners open in the online edition of today's Globe West.

Globe West is also telling the story in pictures, via an online photo gallery.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 27, 2007 09:55 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents have filed a broad array of fascinating stories from around the region today, including:

Staff writer Stephanie Siek's story about how, even on the eve of her reelection bid, Waltham Mayor Jeanette McCarthy continues to challenge the city's political establishment, most recently in her attempt to change the rules that prevent her from reaching outside the city to hire a new police chief;

Correspondent Alexandra Perloe's report about how Franklin officials say the town of Norfolk has not held up its end of a 14-year-old water-sharing agreement and owes Franklin $43,717 for water it has been sending to Norfolk for more than a decade;

Correspondent John Dyer's story about how state and local historic preservation watchdogs are sounding alarms over the Fay School's plans to demolish three old houses on its campus in Southborough, and;

Sports writer Jeremy Gottlieb, in his Football Thursday column, reports how in the town of Shrewsbury, the matchup with nearby Saint John's of Shrewsbury is considered the game by which all others are measured.

For a complete listing of all the stories in today's Globe West, visit the section online.

-- Ralph Ranalli

Enhanced toll taking technology sparks privacy fears

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 24, 2007 10:24 AM

REGION/TRAFFIC

Toll booths in Massachusetts - and across the nation - could be heading the way of manual typewriters and vinyl records.

Instead of fumbling for change or navigating through special lanes in transponder-equipped cars, drivers may soon have to do little more than cruise on and off highways passing under a metal beam spanning the entire width of the road. At the end of the month they'd receive a bill, much like any other utility bill. Except this bill would log each time they entered or exited a highway system, how far they traveled and how much they owed.

The idea is called "open road tolling" and it's a key recommendation of a new report on ways Massachusetts can close a multi-billion gap in transportation funding over the next two decades.

It's more than just an idea. In Melbourne, Toronto and Israel, open road tolling has been a reality for years. States like Texas, Florida and Illinois are already starting to employ the technology.

While the authors of a new report on Massachusetts' transportation funding dilemma concede open road tolling - something they envision for all highways, not just the Massachusetts Turnpike - is still years off, the plan is already drawing fire. Chief among the early critics are privacy activists who say they worry about any plan that allows the government to essentially track the movements of citizens.

Ann Lambert, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, said she worries about information being stored indefinitely in databanks.

"They clearly haven't thought through the need for privacy safeguards and the flushing of information after the data isn't needed," Lambert said.

-- AP

In losing, they gain

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 23, 2007 10:48 AM

obeseblog.jpg
Tina Fisher holds a picture of herself, pre-surgery. (That's her on the right. Honest.)
(Globe staff photo by David Kamerman)

NEWTON/WELLESLEY/REGION

The findings - released last month from long-term studies of 20,000 dangerously overweight people in Utah and Sweden - were stunning.

Obese patients who had undergone stomach reduction surgery were up to 40 percent more likely to live longer, 56 percent less likely to die of heart disease, and 92 percent less likely to die from diabetes than those who tried diet and exercise alone.

Yet for Tina Fisher, program coordinator for the new Center for Weight Loss Surgery at Newton-Wellesley Hospital, the studies only confirmed what she already knew. In the six years since her own gastric bypass surgery, the 30-year-old nurse practitioner has lost 137 pounds. She exercises four times a week, can fit into a standard movie theater seat, and sometimes forgets what her old life was like, staff writer and web producer Ralph Ranalli reports in today's Globe West.

A roller-coaster enthusiast, Fisher used to watch her husband ride alone because she was worried whether the seat belt or safety bar would fit around her 297-pound frame. She also suffered from the litany of health woes common to the very overweight diabetes, joint problems, and sleep apnea, a disorder in which a person literally stops breathing repeatedly during sleep.

"Patients come back and tell me about their experiences, like the first time they didn't have to go into a plus-size clothing store," she said. "And I think, 'Oh yeah, I remember that.' "

Thanks to stories like Fisher's, officials at Newton-Wellesley said they were convinced that gastric bypass operations represent a sound medical option and were aggressively expanding their weight loss surgery practice even before the new findings were released. Last year, the hospital's bariatric surgery program was accredited to operate on even the most severely obese patients, and in June, the program was elevated to a full-fledged department and renamed the Center for Weight Loss Surgery.

As it turns out, the timing of the hospital's push could not have been better, officials said.

Read more about how bariatric surgery is changing lives in the online edition of today's Globe West. While you're there, you can also view an audio slide show about Tina Fisher's experience with the surgery and losing 137 pounds.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 23, 2007 09:45 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents have dished up a buffet of savory stories from around the region today, including:

Staff writer Stephanie Siek's story about Watertown native and 19-year-old Princeton University sophomore Wesley Morgan, who has developed a special close relationship with Army General David H. Petraeus, the commander of American forces in Iraq;

Correspondent Calvin Hennick's report about how Wrentham officials -- eyeing major construction projects going up along Route 1 in neighboring Foxborough and Plainville -- are considering zoning changes to encourage businesses to build on the town's own less-developed stretch of the highway;

Correspondent Tanya Pérez-Brennan's story about how Framingham residents, frustrated by what they believe is an overabundance of social service agencies in town, have been granted the public hearing they had demanded from town officials, and;

Correspondent Alexandra Perloe's story about how Medway officials are proposing to tackle the problem the town is having with its water, which is so heavy with iron that it stains clothing brown.

For a complete listing of all of today's Globe West stories, visit the section online.

Fighting back

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 20, 2007 11:10 AM

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Nilton Lisboa is helping to form an advocacy group for immigrants in Marlborough
(Globe staff photo by Bill Polo)

REGION

A doctor, a real estate broker, a sales manager for an oil company, and three local business owners gathered in Marlborough last week to fight anti-immigrant sentiment. Two members of the group are in their late 20s, grew up in Marlborough, and are bilingual. All are immigrants, from either Brazil or Portugal.

The hostility they feel takes a number of forms in several communities: a revised town health code; a city's effort to get its own federal immigration office; anonymous hate fliers left in an apartment house lobby.

These sort of events and more have prompted defensive measures. Immigrants and their advocates are fighting back by getting organized, staff writer Lisa Kocian and correspondent Tanya Perez-Brennan report in today's Globe West.

In Marlborough, the City Council's attempt to open a local office for federal immigration authorities inspired the group of immigrant professionals to form an advocacy group over the summer. In Framingham, a community meeting was organized last week in response to a batch of fliers carrying the threat of deportation, which were distributed around an apartment complex. In Milford, some residents are trying to repeal a measure on overcrowded apartments that is widely seen as targeting immigrants.

"We are here permanently and we have as much love for this city as others," said Nilton Lisboa, who spearheaded the formation of the new Marlborough group.

Read more about organized efforts to fight discrimination against immigrants in the online edition of today's Globe West.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 20, 2007 10:35 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents have filed a wide array of compelling stories from around the region, including:

Bureau chief Erica Noonan's story about how the myriad modern amenities at the upscale new Natick Collection shopping mall apparently do not include a recycling program;

Staff writer Lisa Kocian's report about how community leaders in Marlborough are still preparing for the possibility of a casino there despite being shut out of Governor Deval Patick's recently-announced three casino plan for the state;

Staff writer Stephanie Siek's story about how Waltham city councilors have handed Mayor Jeannette McCarthy a significant setback in her efforts to open up the search for a new police chief to candidates from outside the city's Police Department;

Arts writer Denise Taylor's weekly column, which describes how one World War II Seabee's daughter from Newton is out to tell the story of when the Seabees landed on Iwo Jima on Feb. 19, 1945 for what would become the Corps' bloodiest campaign ever, and;

Correspondent Matt Gunderson report about how Maynard school officials are taking a hard look at joining a nearby regional district to help alleviate the financial burden, despite previous rejections from several surrounding communities.

For a complete listing of all of today's Globe West stories, visit the section online.

For whom the Turnpike tolls

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 19, 2007 11:53 AM

REGION

Tolls on the Massachusetts Turnpike east of Route 128 will be going up next year, an editorial in today's Globe states, the only question is how much.

To keep turnpike users from paying an unfair share of the burden, Governor Patrick and the Legislature ought to be ready to intervene to prevent the kind of steep increases that were discussed at a meeting of the Turnpike Authority board Monday, the editorial states.

The board yesterday ordered the staff to double-check its figures on the projected deficit and find new revenue sources from turnpike properties. The board also needs to make sure that its recurring personnel expenses are reasonable. Cohen ordered a freeze on "nonessential" hiring on Monday, but that's not enough. The authority needs to make sure that its health insurance and pension costs are in line with those of the rest of state government.

Changes in fringe benefits will not, however, affect the short-term toll problem. To deal with that, the board needs to make the case before the governor and Legislature that turnpike users are saddled with too large a share of Central Artery expenses. Beyond what toll payers kick in, the state also picks up $25 million of Central Artery cost a year, but that isn't enough, given both the maintenance and the bonding obligations.

Read the full editorial in the online edition of today's Globe.

Beverly Beckham: The Donner Party ain't got nothin' on me

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 17, 2007 09:12 AM

beverlybeckham2.jpg

REGION

Beverly's trying to be Zen about it, but the truth is, she's down on air travel. Which is tough because her husband is in the travel business.

How bad has it become? Well, without ruining the suspense, let's just say she's invoking the memory of the ill-fated Donner Party that got trapped in a snowbound pass the Sierra Nevada mountains in 1846 and had to resort to cannibalism to survive.

Listen to Beverly's column and more about the purgatory that is modern air travel in the latest installment of her podcast, "Coffee with Beverly."

-- Ralph Ranalli

Out of darkness

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 16, 2007 07:43 AM

suicide.JPG
Older men like William Rose of Newton have the highest suicide risk in the state, officials say.
(Globe staff photo by Bill Polo)

REGION

Simply by virtue of his age, 93-year-old William Rose of Newton is at heightened risk of death. But the threat that came closest to taking his life was not old age, or illness. It was suicide.

According to the Massachusetts Coalition for Suicide Prevention, men age 85 and older have the highest suicide rate in the state. So when Rose told his home healthcare aide that he was thinking of killing himself after his daughter died, she took it seriously.

Fortunately, Rose's aide, Elina Dubovsky, knew what to do. She had attended a program on how to help prevent suicide in seniors, offered by the Geriatric Institute of Jewish Family and Children's Services in Waltham, Globe West staff writer Stephanie Siek reports today.

The training offered helped Dubovsky recognize depression in her patients, including Rose.


The Geriatric Institute began running its suicide prevention program for the elderly last year, said Kathy Burnes, the institute's project manager. It's one of several programs aimed at translating research on the elderly into practical solutions to the problems of old age. The Jewish family services agency also runs a general mental health program, and one of the motivations in creating the geriatric suicide prevention program was the discovery that about 60 percent of the mental health clients were 55 or older.

The institute is nonsectarian and works with clients regardless of their religion. Its suicide prevention program, adapted from research and materials from Cornell University's Homecare Research Project, began by training agency home healthcare aides on how to recognize symptoms of depression in the seniors they cared for. The training was expanded to aides affiliated with two Boston agencies, Midtown Home Health Services and Kit Clark Senior Services. It also holds sessions to teach doctors and nurses how to train other healthcare workers. So far, the program has trained 400 home health aides, doctors, and nurses. The materials have been translated into Russian, French, Spanish, Chinese, and Vietnamese.

"The thing we're really trying to communicate is that depression is not a normal part of aging. It's a serious medical illness," Burnes said. "Seniors who have disability, medical illness, and pain are more likely to be depressed, but many are experiencing major depression for the first time in their lives, and this is not something that they'll get over [without help]."

Read more about the hidden problem of elder suicide in the online edition of today's Globe West.

Also in today's Globe West ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 16, 2007 06:19 AM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents bring you a wide variety of interesting stories from around the region today, including:

Bureau chief Erica Noonan's report about a ruling by the Middlesex District Attorney's Office that two members of Sherborn's Board of Selectmen violated the state's Open Meeting Law when they met behind closed doors this year to discuss an employee contract;

Staff writer Meg Woolhouse's story about a developing feud between two big Boston-based hospitals about a new cancer center in Newton;

Correspondent Christina Pazzanese's story about how embattled Watertown Town Councilor Marilyn Petitto Devaney has emerged as an unlikely leader of the forces pressuring the Anti-Defamation League to fully acknowledge the Armenian Genocide, and;

Correspondent Calvin Hennick's report about how Holliston officials are scrambling to find a way to pay for a new police station after bids for the project came in nearly $1 million higher than expected.

For a complete listing of all the stories in today's Globe West, visit the section online.

Turf wars

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 13, 2007 02:33 PM

turfwars.JPG
Artificial turf foes Tom Sciacca of Wayland and Guive Mirfendereski of Newton measure the temperature in the artificial turf field at Veterans Memorial Athletic Complex in Waltham
(Globe staff photo by Bill Polo)

REGION

On a cloudless summer morning, Kurt Tramposch, a public health consultant from Wayland, looked out across acres of green, artificial-turf playing fields in Waltham. Others might have seen a vista of potential play, a landscape made for fun. Not Tramposch.

"Some of us look at this and see a tire dump," he said.

Tramposch and a small group of allies have come together to oppose what some call progress - a growing wave of installations of artificial turf throughout the western suburbs. They are fighting the battle on blogs, before town officials, and even in the state Legislature, arguing that there are too many health and environmental questions surrounding fake grass. In some communities, they have taken local officials to court, staff writer Megan Woolhouse reports.

The ringleaders don't have any formal name for their group, an unlikely conglomeration of individuals from diverse backgrounds who didn't know one another before debate on artificial turf erupted. One is a lawyer of Iranian descent who holds a PhD in international relations. A second is an MIT-trained electrical engineer and grandfather of three. Another is an accountant. Yet another is a public health consultant and cofounder of the Massachusetts Association of Health Boards. And they are unafraid to take on a very powerful force in local politics: sports boosters.

Their movement has met with some success. Town Meeting members in Wellesley, for example, voted against installing artificial-turf fields there last spring, saying they had too many questions about the project. But the opposition has bewildered sports boosters and parents who have crusaded to install artificial turf on the fields where their children play. And in some cases, the debate has pitted parents, many of whom moved to the suburbs for the schools, against environmentalists and longtime town residents.

Read more about artificial turf wars in the online edition of today's Globe West.

Also in today's Globe West

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 13, 2007 02:10 PM

REGION

Globe West's reporters and correspondents bring you a wide variety of interesting stories from the region today, including:

Staff writer Stephanie Siek's story about how Waltham Mayor Jeanette McCarthy is seeking greater authority from the City Council to control the process for naming a new police chief;

Correspondent John Dyer's story about how the rail trail along the Assabet River has been an even greater success that the officials who support it had hoped;

Correspondent Kristen Green's report about how an elite gym in Sudbury was recently transformed into a small piece of Hollywood, and;

Correspondent Lisa Keen's update on development plans for a key disputed parcel in Wellesley.

For a complete list of links to all this week's Globe West stories, check out the section online.

Clintonians open wallets for open space, seniors

Posted by Martin Finucane September 13, 2007 02:00 PM

CLINTON

Bucking a statewide trend, Clinton voters said 'yes' on Wednesday to two Proposition 2 1/2 property tax hikes that will authorize the town to acquire about 62 acres of open space and to build a senior center.

The debt exclusion approved by voters will allow the town to issue about $4 million in bonds in order to purchase Rauscher Farm and to purchase land for and finance the construction of a senior center. The town is also applying for a $500,000 grant from the state to help purchase the farm.

Clinton’s debt exclusion will only raise taxes above current levels for the life of the bonds, which have not yet been issued, but will likely have a 20-year duration.

With the issuance of a $2.875 million bond for the farm purchase, the average homeowner’s taxes would go up about $43 yearly, according to the Assessor’s office. A $1.4 million bond for the senior center would raise the average homeowner’s tax bill about $21 dollars.

About a quarter of registered voters participated in the election -- less than a sixth of the town’s population.

Earlier this year, more than 60 percent of towns rejected proposed overrides, according to a Globe survey in May.

Proposition 2 1/2 is a 1980 law that forces Massachusetts communities that want to raise taxes more than 2.5% above current levels to get voter approval for the change.

-- Alex I. Oster

Also in today's Globe West...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 9, 2007 06:53 AM

REGION

The reporters and correspondents of Globe West have filed a variety of interesting stories and reports from across the region in this Sunday's edition, including:

Staff writer Lisa Kocian's story about Pam Wilderman, Marlborough's first code enforcement officer, who serves as the city's cleanliness cop.

Staff writer Meg Woolhouse's report about how a proposal for a tax hike in Newton is gaining steam;

Staff writer and web producer Ralph Ranalli's story about how suburban development and the recent dry spell have lowered the Charles River to near-historic levels, and;

Correspondent Marvin Pave's report about a new approach for the Framingham State College football team, which features 60 new players this year on its 70-man roster after winning just four games in the last five years.

For a complete listing of all of today's Globe West stories, please visit the section online.

What they didn't miss ...

Posted by Ralph Ranalli September 7, 2007 05:36 PM

unopened%20stores.jpg
Gucci fans will just have to wait.
(Globe staff photo)

NATICK COLLECTION BLOG-A-THON

If your favorite store is Neiman Marcus, or Gucci, or Bottega Veneta, you don't have to feel bad about missing today's gala Grand Opening of the Natick Collection.

They weren't here either.

In fact, a fairly substantial number of high-end stores that will occupy the new wing of the mall won't be making their appearances for weeks, even months.

Neiman's is due in two weeks, but expect to wait longer for Salvatore Ferragamo, Marina Rinaldi, Karen Miller, Ralph Lauren, Thomas Pink, Piazza Sempione, and Links of London. In fact, the north end of the mall, supposedly the ritziest section, was a bit of a ghost town yesterday, with just Tiffany, Louis Vitton, and a piano player bravely trying to draw shoppers in that direction.

Of course, if you're a glass-half-full person, that just means you still have something to look forward to.

-- Ralph Ranalli

This is the last post of the Globe West Updates Natick Collection Blog-A-Thon. Thanks for tuning in.

Our woman inside: bargains and splurges

Posted by Erica Noonan, Globe West September 7, 2007 04:59 PM

NATICK COLLECTION BLOG-A-THON

I went on the hunt for best bargains and most egregious splurges. Someone had to do it.

KATE SPADE: The ladies at Kate Spade looked like they wanted to squeal, but refrained as they offered up the Maya bag from the Arabella collection. It is a large, black, patent-finished python handbag with semi -circle beech wood handles. And this super shiny morsel can be yours for only $1,495.

I am a bargain shopper so I will maybe buy the cute yellow and white striped sticky notes for $9. For the low, low price of $8, you can swipe some Spade charm via the refill paper for daily organizers (I know from experience that the paper is standard size and fits non-Kate organizers.)

TOURNEAU: But I did not know splurge until I walked into fancy watch store Tourneau. The very accommodating salesmen there showed me a Patek Philippe watch for just under $60,000. It was "preowned" -- come to find out you can trade in watches there like you do cars-- and it featured a perpetual calendar, black crocodile band, and clear case on the back so you can see it at work. The perpetual calendar is supposed to stay accurate (day, date, and month) until at least the year 2100, according to store manager Bruce Bowman, so you can feel good about handing it down as a family heirloom.

Uh, yeah, I'll take it. And hock it faster than you can say "skinny jeans are so unfair." The best I could come up with at Tourneau for a bargain was the $375 Swiss Army women's tank watch, which I've been eyeing for years.