Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Middle School Scare


 APD at Amherst Regional High School this morning
UPDATE 6:30 PM



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The first emailed bulletin from the Amherst Public Schools this morning was a heart stopper:  Three schools had gone into "lockdown" because an unauthorized male was inside the Middle School.  An announcement over the PA system said he had ducked into a bathroom where he made a strange remark to a student using the bathroom.



The next bulletin an hour or so later gave the all clear, but little else.


Then at 3:08 p.m. the final bulletin gave more of the backstory and the exceedingly good news that APD had made an arrest, even though it was on an unrelated charge:



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Election Aftermath: Turmoil in the Making?

 Amherst March 25 election 2014:  Do over?

If Helen Berg -- 3rd place finisher in a 4-way race where the top two win a Select Board seat -- gets her way, Amherst taxpayers will spend another $12,000 for a "do over" of yesterday's election.

Ms. Berg finished 3rd garnering only 379 votes compared to the two winners, Andy Steinberg with 1,843 and second place finisher Connie Kruger with 1,700.

Or what most political insiders would consider not even close.  In fact, you don't even have to be a political insider to consider that not even close.



Helen Berg speaks at  3/17 Select Board meeting


The technicality stems from placing the order of candidates names on the ballot.  Traditionally the town has always drawn names from a hat for order of placement, thus giving our Polish friends with surnames ending in W a chance to be first on the ballot.

At the February 6 meeting of the Board of Registrars, that took about 45 minutes, all the contested town wide races and Town Meeting races were done this way.  Ms. Berg complained about her 3rd place drawing stating the town should go alphabetically, thus placing her first on the ballot.

The town currently operates under the Amherst Town Government Act which was enacted in December, 2001.   And the that document is silent on how to place names on the local election ballot.

Therefore the safest course of action would be to abide by state statute.  

Her complaint did raise a red flag, and it was then the Town Clerk noticed the February 6 meeting of the Board of Registrars had not been properly posted according to Open Meeting Law.

At that point -- with a do over already in the works, meaning a reprinting of all the ballots, both the town attorney and Town Manager looked at whether the town should go by state statute and simply list all candidates alphabetically (as requested by Ms. Berg), or do it the way it has always been done.

They decided to properly repost the Board of Registrars do over meeting for March 5th, redo the random drawing, and then reprint the ballots.  The only change in Select Board order was Ms. Berg moved up a notch to #2 on the ballot and Mr. Boothroyd moved down to #3 from his former #2 spot.


And it certainly seems like being #4 on the ballot did not hurt Connie Kruger any.

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Another angry Select Board loser:



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Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Status Quo Election

Steinberg, Kruger and Appy it is

No big surprises as the 255th annual Amherst town election is now history ... but hardly historic.

Select Board winners -- the insiders -- Andy Steinberg (1,843) and Connie Kruger (1,700) far outdistanced outsider candidate John Boothroyd (259)  and particularly far out candidate Helen Berg (379).

The School Committee contest was the only race that seemed to generate any enthusiasm where incumbent Katherine Appy was given a scare by the populist nature of newcomer Vira Douangmany's campaign but still won a resounding victory 1,532 to the challenger's 1,012.

As consolation prize Vira was the top vote getter for Town Meeting in Precinct 7 for a three year seat with 239.  Her vote total in that Precinct for School Committee was only 158.

With the Amherst schools embroiled in yet another racism/bullying scandal the racial difference between the two candidates could have played a major role, but Douangmany did not overplay the race card.

The same can be said for the other low-key contest for a seat on the Amherst Housing Authority, where insider incumbent Peter Jessup easily bested newcomer Tracylee Boutilier 1,371 to 905. Although Ms. Boutilier did win a three year seat in Town Meeting representing Precinct 6.

Although the Amherst Redevelopment Authority has not met in over a year the open seat vacated by former chair John Coull had to be filled.  Pam Rooney won the tightest race of the evening against Paige Wilder 999 to 905 respectively.

But Wilder was #1 vote getter in her home Precinct 10 for a three year Town Meeting seat with 95 votes.  She also trounced Rooney in that particular Precinct 89-26.

 Voter turnout was a lousy 13.4% (which I called almost exactly), sad to say, about usual for a local election -- although not nearly as bad as last year's pathetic 6.6%.

Two years ago the Presidential election had a 69% turnout.  Historic all time high for Amherst was in 1992 when 89% of the voters turned out -- mostly for Bill Clinton.


Monday, March 24, 2014

4 Strikes & You're Out?

Patrick M. Lynn (mugshot courtesy of APD)

UPDATE Tuesday morning:  Mr. Lynn blew a 0.24% BAC, three times the legal limit!

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Yes, you have to wonder how Patrick Lynn, age 31, could be arrested three times for drunk driving, not to mention robbing a bank in Springfield, yet still manage to get behind the wheel of car -- again under the influence of alcohol -- and drive in the wrong lane early Saturday night in the heart of downtown Amherst?



APD performs Field Sobriety Test on Mr. Lynn 8:05 p.m Boltwood Ave/Spring Street in front of Grace Episcopal Church.  He flunked.


The Blarney Continues

Start of the news cycle 


So they still have not found Malaysia Airlines flight 370 -- although they are getting closer -- and our local hometown newspaper continues the front page, above the fold drum beat over the Blarney Blowout.

Is a bitch session, err, I mean "public forum" between students crying to the UMass administration about how outnumbered police responded to a riot really front page material over two weeks after the event? 


Update 10:05 a.m

Malaysian officials announced they have found some remains of flight 370.  Sadly, it crashed with no survivors.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Bear With Me

The wrong end of a bear (not that there's a right end)

In the past week a 300 pound black bear has made stealth appearances in three separate neighborhoods in our little college town.  Last night it was Fearing Street, immediately adjacent to UMass.

Starting next weekend, Fearing Street becomes a superhighway of students on foot looking for late night entertainment.  Although a hungry black bear probably does not qualify.  


Photos by Al Wilbur, used with permission



The other wrong end of a bear

On Friday the big black bear shown in these pictures paid a visit to a bird feeder at a Bed & Breakfast on Northampton Road (Rt 9) one street over from Amity Street, where a bear fitting the same description ambled around the Amity Place Condos complex last week. 


Local Election Fever


Noon today, Amherst town center.  Note Select Board candidates don't even bother

With actual town-wide contests on the ballot, Tuesday's election will draw twice the voter turnout as last year's snoozer.

Although, that's not saying much since last year Amherst -- where even the H is silent -- saw a pitiful showing at the election booth of only 6.6%; compared to 69% the previous year for the Presidential contest (which in Massachusetts is not much of a contest).

And with two of four Select Board candidates firmly representing the status quo establishment vying for two open seats, and with each voter allowed to vote for two candidates, Finance Committee Chair Andy Steinberg and Amherst Housing Authority Chair Connie Kruger are nothing if not unbeatable.

The other two candidates -- John Boothroyd and Helen Berg -- can flip a coin to see who's last. Although considering her eccentricities, let's hope it's Helen Berg.



When it comes to the Select Board race -- after the tumultuous years of Czar Anne Awad, his lordship Gerry Weiss and t-shirt tosser Rob Kusner -- the last six years have been pretty smooth sailing.

Well, other than the perennial national embarrassment over censoring the commemorative American flags in the downtown on 9/11.

So I'm quite comfortable with Steinberg and Kruger assuming top leadership roles in town government, as it's not like "changing horses in mid stream." 

The School Committee is a different matter altogether.  Amherst has champagne costs with lite beer results.  And the PC problem, also a PR nightmare, of racism and bullying has been an issue for many years; an issue the current School Committee has done nothing to solve.

So I'm more than up for giving an outsider a chance -- especially since Vira Douangmany is not your usual white-bread upper middle class automaton, and her husband owns a small business.  Maybe now the connection between expensive school costs bringing on high property taxes in a town that has a tiny commercial tax base will be understood.

The Amherst Redevelopment Authority is dead but if it is ever revived it wouldn't hurt to have a stakeholder with some passion on board, so I will be voting for Paige Wilder, even though we strongly disagreed on the Gateway Project.

Phillips Street was the only area in the Gateway that was officially ruled "decadent" (making it easier to take by eminent domain) by a certified consultant, so maybe some day the ARA will take the  street, flatten it, and build something we can all be proud of.  That is, if they ever meet again. 

Same can be said for Amherst Housing Authority.  While I would strongly disagree with Tracy Lee Saraia Grace Boutilier's quest to take Echo Village Apartments by eminent domain (they are not considered "decadent") she would still bring an impassioned outsider perspective informed by experience.

Ah, Town Meeting -- that overwhelmingly white, overly educated bastion of democracy. Until Amherst grows up and switches to a more professional Mayor/Council it's the only game in town (what the gambler said about a rigged operation).

I can't argue with the recommendations of Sustainable Amherst, but I find it interesting the long-time Town Meeting members they did not endorse:  Media mogul Isaac BenEzra, landlord Richard Gold, Nonny Burack, Rob Kusner, Mary Wentworth to name a few. 

Matthew Cunningham-Cook (the UMass student who brought us the $15/hr Minimum Wage article slapped down by Town Meeting last week), also fails to garner an endorsement, which, after the recent debacle is more than understandable.

We do have a handful of other students running for Town Meeting, so in all likelihood some will be successful.  Of course Town Meeting drags on until June, so it will be interesting to check their attendance records after UMass lets out.