Friday, February 13, 2015

Is UMass Profiling?

UMass Amherst:  What dangers lurk in that library?

Baby boomers who lived through the frustration and humiliation of the student initiated Iranian Hostage Crisis, which helped bring down President Carter but also brought us Nightline, probably would not feel a whole lot of sympathy over Iranian students being denied access to certain curriculum at our flagship educational institute, UMass/Amherst.

Especially if you fear that particular enlightenment could lead to a mushroom cloud over one of our unsuspecting cities one beautiful Tuesday morning.

But I also wonder if UMass/Amherst is really offering classes in how to build the bomb.  Isn't that why we have the Internet?



The National Iranian American Council issued a press release yesterday decrying the alleged recent regulatory actions of UMass.   I suppose any international student could worry about the slippery slope:

First they came for the Iranian students and I didn't speak out because I was not Iranian; then they came for the Chinese students and I didn't care because I'm not Chinese; and by the time they came for the middle-aged white Republicans ...


DUI Dishonor Roll

On average 2 of 3 people will be involved in a drunk driving accident in their lifetime

In Eastern Hampshire District Court on Wednesday morning Judge Michael Mulcahy entered a plea of "not guilty" for Steven Yarbrow, age 37, and appointed him a public defender at an assessed cost of $150.  His case was continued until next month.

 Steven Yarbro stands before Judge Mulcahy

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Fire Station Follow Through

Chief Nelson and Assistant Chief McKay demo new breathing apparatus

The discussion concerning the new $12 million South Fire Station was easily ten times better than in previous years.  Rather than dismissing it within a minute or two the Joint Capital Planning Committee actually spent a good 15 minutes discussing the l-o-n-g overdue public safety project.

Chief Nelson told the committee that they have come a long way trying to make this new station happen.  The real issue at the moment is land.  Once a site is chosen, then money will need to be appropriated for a design phase ($1 million or more) which will give a clearer picture of what the entire project will cost.

The  $12 million figure has been used as a "placeholder" for a few years now but may not be accurate.  Finance Director Sandy Pooler said it will almost certainly come down to a "Proposition 2.5 debt exclusion" to finance construction.

Pooler went on to say Town Manager Musante "Is committed to moving forward.  We know it's an important project and it's very high on our list of things to get done."

Of course that list could also include other major building projects on the immediate horizon, including the Jones Library expansion, Wildwood Elementary School replacement and a new DPW building.

 Stair chair makes it easier and safer to transport patients down stairs

The good thing about AFD coming to the JCPC with a total request next fiscal year of $12,336,790 is the rest of the other important items on the list -- tallying up to a half-million or so -- is a lot easier to swallow.

During a discussion of the $18,000 for an (Assistant Chief) "staff vehicle" the inevitable question about a hybrid came up.  Chief Nelson pointed out that he and his two Assistant Chiefs are, "Working chiefs, not administrative chiefs.  We are out on the road day and night and respond to scenes with all sorts of equipment."

 Chief Nelson demonstrates "scoop stretcher"

Total requests for everything besides the new Fire Station came to $543,790 with $77,000 of that coming from the Ambulance Fund (which generates between $2 and $2.5 million annually.




Fill 'Er Up

Amherst DPW takes a 35 ton delivery of salt this morning

You can't fight a war without the proper equipment and supplies.  Especially when dealing with Mother Nature,  who is one Hell of an opponent.

Yesterday the DPW took two 35 ton deliveries of salt, one delivery today, and still has another 200 tons to go from a previous order.   And today -- based on current forecasts -- just ordered another 800 tons.  All of it at $78.46 /ton.


And The Beat Goes On ...

Timothy Stahl, age 36, stands before Judge Michael Mulcahy

While the Amherst Police Department is winning the war on youthful rowdy behavior with noise/nuisance tickets down dramatically from last year, one area of peace keeping is not so successful: dealing with the homeless, or drug/alcohol impaired individuals with mental health problems ("62 issues" in police code).

Click to enlarge/read

APD Chief Livingstone told the Finance Committee last week that one of the two new officers will be assigned to downtown patrol at the urging of the Chamber of Commerce and Business Improvement District.

And his department has put in for a behavioral mental health grant to try to get these frequent offenders off the streets and into treatment.

Currently individuals like Mr. Stahl are arrested (tying up an officer or two), transported to the Northampton House of Correction, then transported to Eastern Hampshire District Court in Belchertown, then released by a Judge with a token fine.

Only to end up back on the streets of Amherst.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Frat House Frolics

Alpha Tau Gamma, 118 Sunset Avenue, Amherst

It has been a while since a frat made my party house of the weekend dishonors.  Let's hope it's even longer the next time, especially with the March 7 Blarney Blowout fast approaching.


 Levi Lilly, 19, frat Pres

In Eastern Hampshire District Court yesterday all three UMass students took the deal offered by the Commonwealth.  Stay out of trouble for the next four months and the two frat representatives pay $300 each out of the two $300 tickets issued (Noise & Nuisance).  

 Tyler Wuerthner, age 19

Mr. Wuerthner, because he was charged with "underaged drinking" was charged $100 probation fee and will be required to take the UMass BASICS alcohol education program.
Shane Bradford, 20, frat Vice Pres

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Amherst Outlier?

Wildwood Elementary School

UPDATE 1:00 PM Wednesday

Turns out it WAS a paperwork thing.  Wildwood actually has the best rate of immunization out of all three elementary schools rather than the worst.  Yeah.


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Original story Yesterday

If my youngest daughter attended Wildwood rather than Crocker Farm elementary school, would I be concerned about the recent Department of Public Health document exposing immunization rates in our public schools that clearly show Wildwood compliance with state law dramatically lower than our other two elementary schools?

Click box to enlarge/read


Well yes, yes I would.  Very concerned.

I'm hoping the dangerously low rates published are just a paperwork thing and that Wildwood -- with the largest Kindergarten population (57) of the three Amherst elementary schools -- simply forgot to submit a state form on time.  Or that the 32% not fully immunized have at least had the initial shot and are scheduled for the next.

Although I asked school officials last week for any explanation and thus far have heard nothing back.  Never a good sign: 


Simply put, the math does not add up.  If an average of 64% of the children at Wildwood are fully immunized and 3.8% have an "exemption," then what about the other 32.2%?

The Amherst Board of Health has not had to deal with Measles, Polio, Rubella or Mumps in recent memory, but they did see a case of Chicken Pox last year, and a few Haemophilus influenzae type B infections in the recent past.

Considering the threshold for maintaining a "herd immunity effect" to prevent measles is 94%, the two-thirds of parents at Wildwood who did immunize their children deserve to know what's up with the one-third who may not have.

Actually, everyone in town deserves to know.




USA Today data base has Wildwood at slightly lower numbers than state report