Friday, June 20, 2014

Coulda' Been a College


 
Cowls Tree Farm northeast Amherst

W-A-Y before signing a $6.5 million purchase and sale agreement with Landmark Properties for 147 acres of woodland now destined to become The Retreat, a high-end student housing development, the W.D. Cowls company offered to donate the land for a proposed new unnamed college that seven years later materialized in South Amherst as Hampshire College.

Yes even back in 1958 the property was ripe for development.  Today Hampshire College hosts 1,400 students -- or twice the number of the proposed Retreat, with 641 total tenants.



When You Build It

Excavation work for Kendrick Place @ 57 E Pleasant Street has commenced

It may not look like much at the moment but after Kendrick Place is completed it will be an unmistakable anchor for the north end of downtown Amherst.

The LEED certified mixed-use building will tower five stories (in Amherst, that's a tower) and contain 36 units of high-end apartments over four floors with the ground floor set aside for retail.
  
Archipelago Investments, LLC has already built a similar successful project dead in the center of town, Boltwood Place.



Last month Amherst Town Meeting voted down a simple easement request for the abutting intersection at Triangle and East Pleasant Street, which is required if the town chooses to install a state financed roundabout at that busy intersection.

The NO vote was a thinly disguised NIMBY payback for the Planning Board allowing Kendrick Place and Boltwood Place to be approved without requiring on site parking for tenants, and allowing the projects to go forward with no "affordable" units in the mix.

The town is currently teetering on the brink of falling below state mandated 10% threshold of Subsidized Housing Inventory thus opening up the possibility of a Ch40B mega-development coming to town. 


A survey contractor measuring the intersection earlier this month

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Can You Hear Me Now?

Jones Library this morning


After an outage of four hours and forty three minutes due to server issues the extensive downtown public wifi system is back up and running. 

This total outage was only the second time in six years the system went down, with the first time being the notorious 2011 Halloween snowstorm that knocked out power to the entire town.

Fortunately Amherst Town Hall now has a generator.   So if another major power outage should occur, the Internet around Town Hall, Police headquarters and Central Fire Station will stay up. 

No Rest For The Weary

Bangs Community Center this afternoon

So unlike the stones left atop Miss Emily's gravestone in historic West Cemetery the recent jagged rock stone installation atop a stone wall at the Bangs Community Center is not a sign of love and respect.

More like a "Keep out" sign.

Yes loitering teen-agers with time on their hands or the homeless can be a bit of a pain -- especially since the Bangs Center houses our Senior Center.

But seriously, what's next: electrified barbed wire?

When I contacted Ron Bohonowitcz, Director of Facilities for both town and schools, to inquire about the recent installation it was the first he had heard about it.  A few minutes later he emailed me back to say it would be gone soon.
Sure enough  6:00 PM Bangs Community Center



Trinkets adorn the top of Miss Emily's gravestone

Here Comes The Taste (du du du du)

Taste of Amherst setting up Thursday morning


Probably the only event on the Amherst town common that generates more traffic than the Extravaganja pot festival, the Taste of Amherst is a fun, family oriented festival that brings many thousands of visitors to our fair town over the next four days.

Organized by the Amherst Chamber of Commerce and Business Improvement District with iconic century old Atkins Farms Country Market as main sponsor, the taste becomes a showcase for the 21 participating restaurants who hope a taste here and there leads to a longtime customer over the rest of the year.

The food extravaganza opens tonight at 5:00 PM until 9:00 PM, Friday 5:00 PM until 10:00 PM, Saturday noon until 10:00 PM and Sunday noon until 4:00 PM.

 6:00 PM

Business Improvement District free trolley doing its thing

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Blarney Still Blowing

March 8, 2:15 PM Fearing/North Pleasant Street intersection

As the world -- or at least our little part of it -- anxiously awaits the release of the $160,000 Davis Report to ascertain what went wrong with the Blarney Blowout (besides everything), the throng of college aged youth arrested that despicable day are still appearing in Eastern Hampshire District Court, one on Monday and another on Tuesday.

 Jared Dawson, left, expensive attorney, right

On Monday Jared Dawson, age 21, had a brief pre-trial hearing with both his dad and a fairly expensive looking lawyer present.  Probably because of the severity of his charges: disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, assault and battery on a police officer, inciting a riot.

His case will go to trial and it's been scheduled for July 30.

Page 2 continues:  tucked his arms into his chest so he could not be handcuffed.

On Tuesday Judge Payne disposed of another Blarney Blowout case, that of Samuel Douglas, age 21, in what seems to be usual plea deal:  $200 restitution to the town of Amherst, 20 hours community service, $200 probation fee and a letter of apology to APD.

 Samuel Douglass, age 21

A pretty good deal considering he was charged with failure to disperse, inciting a riot, and disorderly conduct.  But not assault and battery on an officer, which seems to make a major difference -- as well it should.


Tuesday, June 17, 2014

The One That Got Away

Attorney David Mintz did all the talking for client Jesse Bollinger (seated)

In a bench trial this morning Judge John Payne found Jesse Bollinger, age 29, not guilty of driving under the influence, 2nd offense.

He was arrested back on Easter Sunday early morning by APD officer Rita Contardo after she noticed his front headlight out and when pulled over he exhibited the strong "order of alcohol, bloodshot eyes and slurred speech."

In other words, the usual traits that gets you out of the car performing a Field Sobriety Test. He also admitted to having just consumed alcohol.

 Jesse Bollinger did not take the stand to testify

On the Step Test, where you have to take nine strait steps heel-to-toe while saying each step aloud, he missed on step #4 -- leaving a one inch gap -- and step #7 where his heel came down on his other foot.

And on the return trip he made the same type of mistake with one step.

On the One Leg Stand, where you lift one leg, point your toes and count up from one one-thousand, he had to use his arms for balance and touched down at 18.

He also raced through the alphabet (although correctly) in a mumbling manner.

After the brief trip back to APD for booking the officer noted her cruiser was left with the odor of alcohol and even after the booking process the room was left with the distinct smell of alcohol.

Defense Attorney David Mintz rattled off a series of questions establishing that there was no indication of impaired driving after the officer followed his client for about 200 yards.  He also asked if police tend to look a little harder for drunk drivers just after bars close, to which she responded, "yes."

As for the FST's Attorney Mintz told Judge Payne that officer Contardo was a "hard grader" and he would not want to have her for a school teacher.  Because only faltering on 3 of 18 steps was close enough.  And the smell of alcohol does not precisely indicate how much you have had.

Judge Payne agreed that she's a "hard marker" and that the mistakes exhibited on the 9 step test were "not significant."  And since she did not give him explicit instructions about reciting the ABCs it doesn't matter that he quickly mumbled them. 

Since a guilty finding requires "proof beyond a reasonable doubt" Judge Payne found the prosecution did not meet the burden of proof.  Without missing a beat, Attorney Mintz then asked the judge to sign a motion for reinstatement of his client's drivers license.

Of course the one telling piece of evidence not presented to the Judge was Mr. Bollinger's refusal to take the breath test back at Amherst police headquarters during the booking process.  State law says you cannot use the refusal to take a breath test as evidence at trial, but the act of refusal instantly garners a six month license suspension. 

In this case the refusal paid off for Bollinger as he now gets his license back less than two months after losing it for refusing a breath test that would have given solid evidence one way or the other for the serious charge of drunk driving.

The state needs to close that loophole.