Home 2011 (Page 7)
Building Permits Departments

BUILDING PERMITS

The following building permits were issued during the month of June 2011.

AGAWAM

1676 Main St., LLC
1676 Main St.
$250,000 — Renovate existing building into restaurant and pub

Agawam Properties, LLP
408-410 Meadow St.
$85,000 — Renovations

EAST LONGMEADOW

Vertis Inc.
245 Benton Dr.
$48,500 — Construct steel-frame room

HOLYOKE

City of Holyoke Schools
500 Beech St.
$2,801,000 — Renovation of classrooms, locker rooms, and install new security system

WBC Realty
28 Appleton St.
$14,400 — Install new roof

NORTHAMPTON

City of Northampton
19 Meadow St.
$3,400 — Install interior stained glass window

Coolidge Northampton, LLC
243 King St.
$5,500 — Interior renovations

Kenneth and Carol Bowen
40 Center St.
$8,250 — Remove and construct new wall to expand waiting room

The Brushworks, LLC
221 Pine St.
$8,000 — Replace six antennas

LUDLOW

Westside Pizza
103 West St.
$5,000 — Install new exhaust system

SOUTHWICK

Dunkin Donuts
497 College Hwy.
$60,000 — Renovations

SPRINGFIELD

Pearson Cooley Development
1334 Liberty St.
$179,000 — Convert to franchise pizza restaurant

SIS Center
1459 Main St.
$340,000 — Tenant improvements

WESTFIELD

Cloverleaf Realty
110 Elm St.
$7,500 — Renovation for new restaurant

Sage Engineering
217 Root Road
$139,000 — Interior repairs

Departments Incorporations

The following business incorporations were recorded in Hampden, Hampshire, and Franklin counties and are the latest available. They are listed by community.

BLANDFORD

Blandford Police Association Inc., 1 Russell Stage Road, Blandford, MA 01008. Dennis Flores, same. Nonprofit organization developed to purchase equipment for police officers.

EASTHAMPTON

Fluery’s Outdoor Power Equipment Inc., 126-L Northampton, St., Easthampton, MA 01027. Stephan Fleury, 9 Campbell Dr., Easthampton, MA 01027. Power equipment sales and service.

FEEDING HILLS

Asha Krishna Inc., 121 Elizabeth St., Feeding Hills, MA 01030. Rameshbhai  Patel, same. Package store.

FRANKLIN

Chez Mieux Inc., 140 Wachusett St., Franklin, MA 02038. Patricia Dowd, same. Domestic animal boarding facility.

GRANBY

Abelson Medical Career Advising Inc., 134 Gold Hill Road, Granby, MA 01033.Herbert Abelson, same. Advising and consultation for applicants applying to medical school.

GREAT BARRINGTON

Camille’s Market Inc., 389 Stockbridge Road, Great Barrington, MA 01245. Frank Savino, same. Food market for specialty food products.

GREENFIELD

Chabad Jewish Center of Franklin County Inc., 25 Haywood St., Greenfield, MA 01301. Menachem Hecht, same.  Community Center for worship.

HADLEY

Ethan’s Eden Landscape and Design Inc., 21 North Maple St., Hadley, MA 01035. Nikkie, Laforte, same. Landscape and landscape design services.

HOLYOKE

Farm Chef Corporation, 40 Mackintosh Terrace, Holyoke, MA 01040. Daniel Ross, same. Business networking.

Final Expense Insurance Services Corp., 10 Woodbridge St., Holyoke, MA 01040. Henry Smith, same. Insurance products and services.

LEE

Chapel River Inc., 1370 Pleasant St., South Lee, MA 01260. Philip Pryjma, 301 Great Barrington, MA 01230. Retail sales.

MIDDLEFIELD

Ezmereld Inc., 16 Bell Road, Middlefield, MA 02143. Adair Laurel-Cafarella, 48 Chester Road, Middlefield, MA 02143. Community recreation and activity center.

PITTSFIELD

BCC Engineering Scholarship Committee Inc., 85 Ridge Ave., Pittsfield, MA 01201. Dirk Peterson, 128 Georgetown Road, West Newbury, MA 01985. Engineering Alumni scholarship fund.

SOUTH HADLEY

Ari Automotive Inc., 609 Newton St., South Hadley, MA 01075. Jeffrey Beaulieau, same. Auto repair services.

Colonial Carpentry Innovations Inc., 566 Amherst Road, South Hadley, MA01075. Jennifer Deforge, same. Design and building construction.

SPRINGFIELD

All Stars Youth Soccer Inc., 123 Patricia Circle, Springfield, MA 01119.Ozzie Alban, 215 Jasper St., Springfield, MA 01109. Youth soccer league.

Cogic Family Service Corporation, 35 Alden St., Indian Orchard, Springfield, MA 01109. Silena Kearse, 85 David St., Springfield, MA 01104. Nonprofit organization committed to the education or men, women and children; to assist those in the community in need; to promote social activities and promote public and human resources in the community.

Eternal Nail Salon Inc., 1195 Sumner Ave., Springfield, MA 01118. Nicole Chen, 19 Abbott St., Springfield, MA 01118. Nail salon.

WEST SPRINGFIELD

ASG Seamless Gutters Inc., 76 Merrick St., West Springfield, MA 01089. Yuri Grechka, 77 Nicole Terrace, Feeding Hills, MA 01030. Home construction and remodeling.

First Choice Transportation Inc., 249 Main St., West Springfield, MA 01089. Mustafa Gusenov, same. Commercial transportation of foods, specialty goods, vehicles, and other commodities via flatbed, container and heavy hauling trailers.

WESTFIELD

Direct Auto Promotions East Inc., 300 East Main St., Westfield, MA 01085. Michelle Dicienzo, 90 Southwood Dr., Ludlow, MA 01056. Motor vehicle and recreational vehicle sales and service.

Direct Auto Realty East Inc., 300 East Main St., Westfield, MA 01085. Michelle Dicienzo, 90 Southwood Dr., Ludlow, MA 01056.

WILLIAMSTOWN

Bamboo Star Inc., 412 Main St., Williamstown, MA 01267. Lan Ying Lin, same.  Chinese Restaurant.

DBA Certificates Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of June 2011.

AGAWAM

Commonwealth Cannon
1063 Main St.
Michael Mercadante

Francis Kelly Massage Therapy
1 South End Bridge Circle
Kathy Porcello

Sophia’s Nail Care
854 Suffield St.
Viet Q. Nguyen

The Sand Trap
1399 Suffield St.
Nicholas Ventrice

AMHERST

High Horse Brewery and Bistro
24 North Pleasant St.
Jason Dicaprio

Painting Unlimited Wood Carving
233 North Pleasant St.
Alvaro Ramos-Jaco

Rhys Davies Design
41 Blue Hills Road
Rhys Davies

Vici Hair Studio and Beauty Bar
189 North Pleasant St.
Maria Amarosa

HOLYOKE

Chris’ Cut & Design
910 Hampden St.
Kenneth A. Adams

Fashion Nails
293 High St.
Quynh Dao

Fish-on Tackle
98 Nonotuck St.
Elsa D. Tenczar

Old Navy
50 Holyoke St.
Thomas Croston

Strum’s Deli & Meats
502 Westfield Road
David Amedeo

The Creative Strategy Agency
4 Open Square Way
Alfonso Santaniello

NORTHAMPTON

Brewmaster Jack
13 Market St.
Tyler Guilmette

Champaca Journeys
35 New South St.
John Leupold

Country Comfort
153 Main St.
Eva Trager

Creative Roots Landscape Design
39 Matthew Dr.
Anthony Medeiros

Honeybee Reflexology
68 Cherry St.
Jeanell Innerarity

Kevin’s Haircuts
128 King St.
Kevin Ovitt

SOUTHWICK

Fox Den Restaurant
161 Sheep Pasture Road
Paul Bshara

LDLTS
18 Sheep Pasture Road
John Parker

Moo-Licious Farm
258 Feeding Hills Road
Joseph Deedy

SPRINGFIELD

AWU
41 Somerst St.
Germain Anthony Bryan

ACE Taxi
295 Allen St.
Yasir E. Osman

Apartment Listings
180 Massachusetts Ave.
Raja S. Akbar

Cathy’s Food Consulting
807 Worthington St.
Perla Quioto

Dales’ Corner
142 Dickinson St.
Tazeen Rafiq

Dearprisoner.com
53 Lester St.
Morning Bambi

E.T.K’s Nothing Fancy
65 Dickinson St.
Eugenia M. Finnell

Enoch Construction
118 Cornell St.
Clive L. Ryan

Finishing Touch
69 Clayton St.
Alfred Shattelroe

Glamorous Canine Salon
258 Main St.
Julie Slatton

Highly Blessed Entertainment
44 Prospect St.
Jennifer Ray

J & R Mowing Service
98 Orange St.
Roberto Vicente

Jenny Beauty Solon
618 Belmont Ave.
Jose J. Vargas

Larry’s Landscaping
410 Grayson Dr.
Larry Croteau

Law Office of Nancy Louise
83 State St.
Nancy Louise

Lazy Valley Winery
30-40 Front St.
Scott D. Santaniello

WESTFIELD

All-Stars Dance Center
209 Root Road
Kim Starsiak

DAS Alarm Systems, Inc.
845 Airport Industrial Park Road
David Schenna

Mama Cakes
31 Elm St.
Kimberly McNutt

Menard Construction & Design
46 Stuart Place
Dennis Menard

New Corner Variety
2 Crown St.
Laura Parker

Professional Handyman
20 Old Feeding Hills Road
Keith Meyer

Swayger Plumbing & Heating
18 Llewellyn Dr.
Michael Swayger

Yellow Stonehouse Farm
354 Root Road
Constance L. Adams

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Balise Collision Repair Center
1800 Riverdale St.
Balise Motor Sales Company

Balise Honda
400 Riverdale St.
Balise Motor Sales Company

Kohl’s
935 Riverdale St.
Cheryl Oswald

Masstrans Insurance Agency
54 Oleander St.
Roman Shtefan

New York Sound & Motion
180 Doty Cir.
Edward Brown III

Superior Cuts
450 Main St.
Ricardo Guzman

Top of the Line Goalkeeping
65 Craig Dr.
Matthew Andrea

Banking and Financial Services Sections
There Are Financial Benefits to Putting Family Members on the Payroll

Dawn Badorini

Dawn Badorini


It is that time of year again. The kids are out of school, and you wonder what they are going to do all summer to keep themselves busy and away from the social-media frenzy. If you are a business owner, there are many potential financial benefits of hiring your children.
One of the biggest incentives of hiring your children is the potential tax savings. The tax savings will vary depending on the type of entity your business is. If you are the owner of an unincorporated business (Schedule C/Self-Employed) you have the greatest potential tax savings. If your children are under age 18, you will not have to pay FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes on their wages. Your children are also not required to have these withheld from their paycheck.
For employers, the Social Security portion of the tax is 6.2%, and the Medicare tax is 1.45%. For your children, the Social Security portion is 4.2% (reduced from 6.2% for 2011 only), and Medicare is 1.45%. Also, wages paid to children under age 21 are exempt from federal unemployment taxes (FUTA). Both the FICA and FUTA tax exemptions also apply if your business is a partnership or LLC as long as the only partners are the parents. This is a huge tax savings because you would have to pay these payroll taxes on any other employee you hired.
This does not mean there are no tax benefits if you are an S-corporation or a C-corporation. No matter what type of entity you are, you will get a business deduction for the wages paid to your children, assuming it is for bona-fide work at a reasonable rate. As a corporation, you also get a deduction for the payroll (FICA/FUTA) taxes paid on their wages. This reduces the amount of overall profit subject to income taxes. Assuming you are in the 33% tax bracket, if you pay wages of $10,000 to your child, this could potentially reduce your tax liability by almost $3,700. The tax liability to your child before possible education credits is $985 ($565 FICA and $420 federal income tax). The tax savings to the family is more than $2,700. If you are self-employed, it also reduces the amount of profit subject to self-employment taxes, further reducing your own overall income-tax liability.
Now let’s look at the tax impact on your children. If the wages paid to your children are equal to or less than the standard deduction ($5,800 in 2011), they will not owe any income taxes on their earnings. Even if you pay your children more than the standard deduction, there is typically still a tax benefit. Since your children are most likely in a lower tax bracket than you are, you are shifting income from your higher tax bracket to their lower one. In 2011, taxable income up to $8,500 is taxed at only a 10% rate for a single taxpayer. Also, earned income (wages) is not subject to the ‘kiddie tax.’
Another advantage is that older children may be able to offset any taxes owed by education credits of up to $2,500 claimed on their own individual tax return. In many cases, your income is too high to utilize these education credits. In order for the child to claim any of the education credits, the parents may not claim them as a dependent on their tax return. This results in you losing the deduction for their personal exemption ($3,700 in 2011). To demonstrate the benefit, lets assume the child earns $20,000 working during school breaks and maybe on weekends. Their tax would be $1,530.
This represents only the FICA tax on their earnings, since the income tax is fully offset by education credits. The first $5,800 is tax-free, the next $8,500 has a tax of $850 (10%), and the remaining $5,700 is taxed at 15% or $855. If you or your child paid college tuition of $1,705, they can get a tuition credit of the full $1,705 (100% of first $2,000 of tuition and 50% on next $1,000). The parents’ tax savings could be $4,534, which is a $20,000 deduction plus a deduction of $1,530 for employer FICA less the lost dependent deduction of $3,700, or $17,830 at 33% or $5,553, reduced by the employer FICA tax of $1,530 to net to the $4,534 benefit. Compare this to the child’s tax cost of $1,530, and the family unit saves $2,824.
However, assuming the child does have a tax liability, the overall tax savings is typically still greater when the child is able to claim the education credit. Furthermore, beginning in 2013, personal exemptions will once again be subject to phase-out limits based on income. If your income exceeds these limits, you get no tax benefit for claiming their personal exemption.
Something else you should consider is having your children begin to save for their own retirement by investing some of their wages in a Roth IRA. In 2011, they may make a contribution to a Roth IRA of $5,000 or their taxable compensation, whichever is less. This is an excellent long-term tax-savings investment for your child. They will be able to withdraw this account with all its earnings tax-free upon retirement. This could be substantial since it’s most likely 50 or more years from now.
Of course,there are some limitations and other considerations in employing your children. As mentioned above, in order to get the payroll tax savings (FICA, FUTA), your business must be unincorporated (this includes a sole proprietorship, limited-liability company, or partnership if the only partners are the parents).
There are no age limitations for employing your child, but the work performed must be necessary for the business, and the wages paid must be reasonable for the type of work performed. There could be a little more bookkeeping required as you should keep time sheets showing the dates, hours, and services performed. You will also need to file quarterly payroll tax reports and Form W-2 at the end of the year. However, if you have other employees, you are filing these already. Finally, money held in your child’s name may reduce the amount of financial aid available.
Everyone’s situation is different, but this could be a great opportunity for you to teach your child about your business and help them learn new skills, as well as begin to develop a sense of responsibility, limit the amount of time available for non-desired activities, and save taxes as well.

Dawn Badorini, MST is a manager in the Tax Division of Meyers Brothers Kalicka, P.C. in Holyoke; (413) 536-8510.

Departments Picture This

Send photos with a caption and contact information to:  ‘Picture This’ c/o BusinessWest Magazine, 1441 Main Street,  Springfield, MA 01103 or to [email protected]

Woman of the Year

WomensChamber1WomensChamber2The Professional Women’s Chamber (PWC) honored Kate Kane, managing director with the Springfield Group of the Northwestern Mutual Financial Network in Springfield, with its annual Woman of the Year Award at a dinner on May 18 at the Springfield Sheraton. Kane was honored for her outstanding leadership, professional accomplishments, and service to the community. In accepting her award, Kane said, “I have learned more of value in my volunteer work than I have ever given back to the organizations I serve, and I want to thank all the community organizations and their amazing and dedicated staffs for offering me the chance to help.” Top left, Kane and her husband, Craig Knowlton. At left, Kane greets some of the many guests.





Grand Opening

HampdenBankGrandOpenHampden Bank opened its 10th office at 977 Boston Road on May 24, featuring a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Seen here, from left, are Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno; state Rep. Angelo Puppolo, with a proclamation from the House; Thomas Burton, president and CEO of Hampden Bank; and Peg Daoust, retail banking manager of the Boston Road office.


Legislative Outlook

ScottBrownScottBrownChamberThe East of the River 5 Town Chamber of Commerce (ERC5) and the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield (ACCGS) staged their first mid-year legislative outlook luncheon on May 27 at the Country Club of Wilbraham. The keynote speaker for the luncheon was U.S. Sen. Scott Brown, who spoke about the economy, the federal budget, health care, and small business. Brown spent about an hour at the luncheon, meeting local residents, signing copies of his book, answering questions, and offering his comments. During the event, Wilbraham Selectman Pat Brady spoke about issues impacting municipal government and the people it serves. Tom Creed, a past chairman of the ACCGS Legislative Steering Committee, provided an update on legislative issues at the state level that are impacting member businesses. Left, Brown poses with members of  ERC5 Board of Directors, as well as staff from the ACCGS. At below left, Brown, spends time greeting guests, including ERC5 board members, from left, Carmina Fernandes of the Law Offices of Carmina Fernandes, and Gloria Faria and Cidalia Inacio, both of Chicopee Savings Bank.


YMCA Campaign Breakfast

YMCA 1YMCA 2
YMCA 3YMCA 4The YMCA of Greater Springfield staged its 2011 Annual Campaign Breakfast on May 20 at Springfield. The keynote speaker was Carlton Fisk, who regaled attendees with stories of his playing days with the Red Sox. The event itself raised more than $120,000, and the campaign has netted more than $325,000. Left from top, YMCA Board Chairman Sam Hanmer (left), CEO of FieldEddy Inc., bids on one of the many auction items signed by Fisk (Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno is at his right); participants in the Y-TIP (YMCA-Teen Incentive Program) take a bow after performing for the audience; ‘Pudge’ Fisk accentuates one of his comments with a finger point; Karen Mercier, accounting manager for the Y, holds up a Fisk bat while Robin Olejarz, CFO, watches for new bidders.

Court Dockets Departments

The following is a compilation of recent lawsuits involving area businesses and organizations. These are strictly allegations that have yet to be proven in a court of law. Readers are advised to contact the parties listed, or the court, for more information concerning the individual claims.

CHICOPEE
DISTRICT COURT
The Levato Supply Co. Inc. v. Theroux’s Plumbing & Heating Inc.
Allegation: Non-payment of plumbing and heating goods and materials: $6,755.67
Filed: 3/17/11

HAMPDEN
SUPERIOR COURT
Bank of America v. Alactronic Inc.
Allegation: Non-payment of a small-business loan: $135,077.38
Filed: 1/24/11

David Leishman v. Patient EDU, LLC; Steven Graziano; and Michael Schulman
Allegation: Non-payment of a promissory note: $150,000
Filed: 3/1/11

Dhanesh Dookhran v. Baystate Affiliated Practice Organization
Allegation: Breach of employment contract and non-payment of wages: $36,490.42
Filed: 2/18/11

Gail Hill and Johnny Mayweather, as guardians of Dwayne Mayweather v. Guidewire Inc.
Allegation: Negligent supervision in a group home causing harm: $182,781.92
Filed: 2/14/11

McNair Business Machines Inc. v. KRM Equipment
Allegation: Misappropriation and misuse of trade-secret information: $250,000
Filed: 3/1/11

Raymond and Kim West v. Sunnyside Corp., JKM Construction, and D.L. Bean Company Inc.
Allegation: Negligence in construction of a housing community causing flooding to adjacent property: $407,812
Filed: 3/3/11

Robert Donahue, M.D. v. Cataract and Laser Center West, LLC; John Frangie, M.D.; Nancy Balin, M.D.; and John Papale, M.D.
Allegation: Breach of fiduciary duties and breach of partnership agreement: $145,000
Filed: 3/4/11

HAMPSHIRE SUPERIOR COURT
Viola A. Benoit v. Cooley Dickinson Hospital, et al
Allegation: Negligence in elevator maintenance causing injury: $30,103.52
Filed: 4/13/11

HOLYOKE
DISTRICT COURT
Day International v. Berkshire-Westwood Graphics Group Inc.
Allegation: Non-payment of goods sold and delivered: $57,930.16
Filed: 3/7/11

NORTHAMPTON
DISTRICT COURT
Border Concepts Inc. v. Angelo’s Garden Harvest Inc.
Allegation: Non-payment of landscape and garden-related goods: $5,725.46
Filed: 4/26/11

SPRINGFIELD
DISTRICT COURT
Comcast Spotlight Inc. v. Nissan of Bourne
Allegation: Non-payment of advertising services: $19,886.79
Filed: 3/11/11

Chase Management Services Inc. v. Bayview Loan Servicing Inc. and IB Property Holdings
Allegation: Non-payment of labor and services: $18,889.54
Filed: 3/14/11

Company Notebook Departments

Elms, HCC Launch Joint Programs
CHICOPEE — Elms College will launch two new accelerated degree-completion programs for Holyoke Community College (HCC) alumni and students beginning in August. Classes will be taught on the weekends by Elms faculty on the HCC campus, earning students bachelor’s degrees within 20 months. The Health Services Administration program will prepare students to serve in management positions in the health care industry. The Early Childhood Leadership program will provide students with a background in human resources, staff development, fiscal accountability, and legal issues necessary for assuming leadership roles in the field. This program is designed for experienced early-childhood educators who are not seeking PreK-2 licensure in Massachusetts. The new programs augment the existing degree offerings, which currently include accounting and information systems, business management, and psychology. “This joint program is faster and less expensive than the traditional route, enabling students to quickly see the rewards of higher education realized in their careers,” said Betty Hukowicz, associate academic dean of the Division of Graduate Studies and Continuing Education at Elms. For more information, call the Elms at (413) 265-2490.

Big Y Donates $100,000 to Japan Earthquake and Tsunami Relief
SPRINGFIELD — In response to community interest in helping the millions of people affected by the Japan earthquake and Pacific tsunami, Big Y World Class Markets recently hosted a customer donation program in all of its 58 Massachusetts and Connecticut stores. For four weeks following the March earthquake and tsunami, Big Y collected donations from customers and employees, resulting in a total of $100,000 for the American Red Cross Japan Earthquake and Pacific Tsunami Relief Fund. Funds were raised through a special in-store customer/employee donation program and through employees in all other Big Y locations from the Store Support Center to distribution centers. A formal check presentation to the American Red Cross Pioneer Valley Chapter was staged May 25. Big Y President and COO Charles D’Amour, along with Jeff Hamel, store director for the Cooley Street Big Y, presented the contribution to Paige Thayer, deputy director of chapter support for the Pioneer Valley Chapter. Big Y customers and employees have a strong tradition of supporting those in need, according to D’Amour.  Past initiatives include campaigns to support relief efforts following both international and domestic disasters such as the 2004 tsunami, Hurricane Katrina, and more. Following the January 2010 earthquake in Haiti, Big Y World Class Markets collected donations from customers and employees, resulting in a total of $108,277.32 for the American Red Cross International Response Fund.

Tighe & Bond Rated a Top National Design Firm
WESTFIELD — The Engineering News-Record (ENR) has again ranked Tighe & Bond among the top 500 design firms in the nation. ENR ranks companies on the previous year’s gross revenue for providing design services to domestic and international markets. The firm ranked 309th in ENR’s 2011 report, a reflection of its 2010 annual gross revenue of $32 million. “Although the recession in the engineering and construction industry seems to have bottomed out and the market is turning around slowly, the market is still soft, and that means competition remains tough,” said David Pinsky, president, in a statement. “However, as this rating suggests, our firm has more than held its own in these economically challenging times. In fact, this year marks our 100th anniversary. We owe our longevity and success, at least in part, to our careful strategic planning and our commitment to deliver the highest-quality services to our clients on time and within budget.” In other company news, the Boston Business Journal ranked Tighe & Bond as one of the largest engineering firms in Massachusetts. In its 2011 Book of Lists, the magazine ranked Tighe & Bond 15th among 25 top-billing firms.

Winstanley Partners
Wins ADDYs
LENOX — Winstanley Partners recently walked away with two gold ADDY awards. The agency was lauded for two entries created for its client, Smith & Wesson, based in Springfield. The first, a trade-show display for Walther America, a line of firearms imported by Smith & Wesson, won in the sales promotion category. The display featured photographed products on clean white backgrounds to portray a sense of high-tech, high-quality German engineering. The second entry won in the consumer or trade publication category, and highlighted the agency’s work with a Smith & Wesson company, Thompson/Center. A product promotion of the T/C Venture firearm included a bold headline, denoting anything “less” as a ridiculous proposition. Ralph Frisina, creative director for Winstanley Partners, noted in a statement that both executions were recognized for breathing new life into a category that has suffered in the past from a lack of sophisticated approaches and design. “Winning at the regional ADDYs this year was particularly rewarding because, for the first time, the participants included some of Boston’s largest ad agencies,” said Frisina. The annual ADDY competition is presented by the American Advertising Federation and locally by the Advertising Club of Western Mass. to honor exceptional work in advertising and marketing.

Hampden Bank Opens 10th Office
SPRINGFIELD — Hampden Bank opened its 10th office at 977 Boston Road on May 24, featuring a ribbon-cutting ceremony with Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno and Thomas Burton, president and CEO of Hampden Bank. William Marsh III, senior vice president/division executive, and Peg Daoust, manager of the Boston Road office, were also on hand for the festivities. Lobby hours are Monday through Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Thursday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The bank features a drive-up window and SUM ATMs.

Entrepreneur Recognized for Performance
HOLYOKE — Rick Frasier, owner of the Sears Hearing Aid Center at Holyoke Mall at Ingleside and Eastfield Mall in Springfield, recently earned the prestigious 2010 Platinum Club Award from the Miracle-Ear franchise organization. Miracle-Ear presents the award to the top franchisees in their network for achievements in adhering to compliance standards and excelling in four weighted sales-performance categories. “It’s an honor for Frasier to be recognized amongst peers for this award,” said Diana Beaufils, senior vice president of franchise operations of Miracle-Ear. “This annual competition drives all of our franchisees to do their best in a friendly battle to deliver great service and the latest in hearing-aid technology to their customers.” The Platinum Club Award is Miracle-Ear’s longest-running contest among franchisees. This year’s winners earned a trip for two to the Netherlands Antilles. “Our Platinum Club winners represent the best of the best in an organization that prides itself on delivering world-class quality and service,” added Beaufils.

Comcast Introduces Xfinity Signature Support
BOSTON — Comcast Corp. recently launched a 24/7 technical-support and equipment-protection program for 1.8 million Comcast subscribers in Eastern
Mass., Southern N.H., and Maine, for the growing number of home-electronics devices — like laptops, home networking equipment, gaming consoles, wi-fi-enabled smartphones, and tablets — people are using to connect to Comcast’s services. Called Xfinity Signature Support, this service offers customers a single source for troubleshooting and support for their computers, home networks, and many other devices and is another step in the company’s focus on delivering an end-to-end exceptional customer experience backed by the Comcast Customer Guarantee. Comcast expects to offer the service in Western Mass. later this year, as well as to the rest of the U.S. not currently receiving the service. The new offering enables customers to select an enhanced level of technical support with monthly subscription plans and one-time support options, and is offered in addition to the 24/7 support Comcast already provides for its video, high-speed Internet, and phone services.

Building Permits Departments
The following building permits were issued during the month of May 2011.

CHICOPEE

Age Institute of MA Inc.
11 St. Anthony St.
$395,000 – Interior alterations at Willimansett Nursing Home – East

Age Institute of MA, Inc.
546 Chicopee St.
$338,000 – Interior alterations at Willimansett Nursing Home – West

Diocese of Springfield
110 Cyman Dr.
$50,000 – Build a covered porch

EAST LONGMEADOW

Go Graphix
31 Benton Dr.
$60,500 – Tenant fit-out

Olympia Sport
446 North Main St.
$82,500 – Tenant fit-out

GREENFIELD

Jimbob Realty, LLC
1 Main St.
$10,000 – Exterior renovations

United Arc of Franklin & Ham Inc.
219 Silver St.
$7,000 – Construct exterior fire escape stairs

HOLYOKE

Mountain Park, LLC
1 Mountain Park Road
$72,000 – Construct stage support building

LUDLOW

Timely Professional Condo Association
185 West Ave.
$25,000 – Replace siding

NORTHAMPTON

Academy of Music
274 Main St.
$9,000 – Install a catwalk

Bermor Limited Partnership
84 Main St.
$67,000 – Renovate interior including restrooms

Maplewood Shops, Inc.
2 Conz St.
$43,000 – Remodel bathroom

Robert Cummings
320 Riverside Dr.
$60,000 – Enlarge conference room and other interior renovations

Smith College
32 Paradise Rd.
$5,250 – Repair rear section of roof

SOUTH HADLEY

E-Link
7 Gaylord St.
$190,000 – Renovations

Mount Holyoke College
50 College St.
$49,000 – Install new sheet metal

Mount Holyoke College
50 College St.
$41,000 – Install new sheet metal

SPRINGFIELD

City View Commons II
26 Summit St.
$70,000 – Building renovations

City View Commons II
48 Fort Pleasant Ave.
$902,000 – Building renovations

City View Commons II
270 Locust St.
$902,000 – Building renovations

City View Commons II
449 Taylor St.
$150,000 – Building renovations

Mercy Hospital
300 Stafford St.
$14,000 – Renovations

Rivers Landing, LLC
1150 W. Columbus Ave.
$125,000 – Alterations to existing roof

WESTFIELD

Centro Heritage SPE6, LLC
231 East Main St.
$80,000 – Interior renovations

Leonard Belcher, Inc.
439 North Elm St.
$115,000 – Remodel Dunkin Donuts

Lower Mill, Inc.
77 Mill St.
$564,000 – Office build out of first floor

Sections Supplements
Some Basic Steps for Taking Control of Your Money

Doug Wheat

Doug Wheat


If you are like most people, you are anxious and concerned about the economy, your job, and the future. While we may have a limited impact on the world around us, we can each take control of our own financial situation to ease our concerns. Whether you are wealthy or not, having specific financial goals and a plan for achieving them will help you be more in control of your financial life.
If you have a financial plan in place, make sure you review it on a regular basis. Life can take unexpected turns, and your financial planning may need to be appropriately altered. If you started implementing some changes to your finances but ran into a roadblock, got bogged down in the details, or your life got too busy, now is a great time to pick up where you left off.
Here is a challenge for you to complete this summer. Read through this article detailing nine basics of financial planning. Pick two action items that would be helpful to you, and implement them in June. In July, read a personal-finance book and pick two more action items to implement. You will be on your way to taking control of your finances for the next decade.
• Spend Less Than You Earn: While there are many different strategies for financial planning, no strategy will work unless you spend less than you earn. It doesn’t matter if you make $30,000, $100,000, or $250,000 per year; spending more than you take home each month will make all of your plans collapse. The amount you spend in a year is the result of hundreds of independent decisions. How are you making these decisions? Do you know the difference between your wants and your needs? If you have trouble spending less than you earn, it’s time for you to do some research and some experimentation to find a system that helps you have some money left at the end of every week. One alternative to a traditional budget is the ‘first-step cash management’ system that suggests dividing your money into separate bank accounts, each with a different purpose.
• Have a Cash Reserve: Having cash in the bank is a type of insurance against the unexpected. At some point everyone will face an unexpected large bill, possibly a car-repair bill or a hole in the roof. If you have cash on hand, you can pay the bill without going into debt. Should you lose your job, it is doubly important to have resources available until you can secure new employment. A good goal is to have three months of expenses available in cash; six months would be even better. It is helpful to put your cash reserve in a place that makes it difficult to spend, such as a separate bank.

• Pay Off Debt: Debt can be useful and sometimes unavoidable whether you are paying for college, a medical bill, or a new refrigerator. The average American household with credit-card debt owes $14,743 and pays nearly $2,000 in interest expense per year, according to creditcards.com. It is no surprise that 69% of people with credit-card debt find it difficult to save, according to a 2011 America Saves survey. Whatever the source, you will be better served by paying it off as quickly as possible. You might try the ‘snowball’ method of debt repayment. With this strategy, after you pay off one debt, you add its monthly payment to the next debt on your list until all debts are paid off. Unless you have no other choice, don’t use credit to make additional purchases.
• Establish Specific Goals: Too many people live on a day-to-day basis without thinking about their priorities and developing plans to reach them. The more specific you can make your goal, the easier it becomes to measure your progress. For example, instead of simply having a goal of paying off your credit-card debt, add a date by which you want to have a zero balance and figure out your monthly payment to make it happen.
• Multiply Your Money: We all know the best time to start saving is early, and the second-best time is now. There are lots of competing uses for our money, but the power of compounding is not available to us until our money is invested and earning money. When our money is earning money, then our wealth can build much more rapidly. A 25-year old who saves $1,000 per year for 40 years and earns 5% interest will have $133,880 at age 65. A 35-year-old who saves $1,000 per year for 30 years and earns 5% interest will have $74,083 at age 65. Starting to save early can give you a big jump on meeting a long-term goal.
• Understand Account Types: Tax-advantaged accounts are available to help all of us meet some of our most important goals. Understanding the difference between these accounts will help you minimize the taxes you pay and maximize the money you have available to reach your goals. There are essentially three types of accounts: tax-free, tax-deferred, and taxable. With tax-free accounts, both the money you put in the account and the money earned in the account can be taken out tax-free. Retirement Roth IRAs and 529 Educational Savings Accounts are two examples of tax-free accounts.  If you make a contribution to a tax-deferred account, it will reduce your taxable income this year, but withdrawals of both your contributions and earnings in the future are considered income, and you will owe income tax on it. Traditional IRA accounts, 401(k) accounts, and 403(b) accounts are examples of tax-deferred accounts. For a taxable account, you owe income tax and capital-gains tax each year based on your earnings. Taxable accounts include savings accounts and brokerage accounts.
• Invest in a Diversified Portfolio: Since we cannot predict the future, investing in a diversified mix of assets will help you weather economic storms or drops in the market while also having better growth potential than a savings account alone. Being diversified becomes more important as you get older and have accumulated money that you do not want to lose. There are many strategies for building a diversified portfolio. If you don’t have the opportunity to research the subject, a default choice can be either a retirement fund based on your age or an educational fund based on the age of your child. Try to find investment products with low fees.
• Prepare for Pitfalls: It is important to be prepared for unexpected events. Having a cash reserve is one way to be prepared. Having insurance and wills in place is another. Most people have health, automobile, and homeowners insurance because they are often mandatory and it is easier to see a relationship between risk and benefits. However, people often don’t realize their vulnerability to misfortune in other areas of their lives. According to the Social Security Benefit Administration, approximately 30% of 20-year olds entering work today will become disabled before they retire, and 1 in 6 Americans will die before reaching age 67. Finding cost-effective means to insure against the risks we all face will provide you and your family financial security if the unexpected happens.
• Expand Your Learning: Personal finance is a complicated subject with a number of different facets. There is a wealth of information available on the Internet as well as in publications such as Money, Kiplinger Personal Finance, and Smart Money. Basic books on financial planning include Personal Finance for Dummies by Eric Tyson, The Millionaire Next Door by Thomas Stanley and William Danko, and The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom by Suzy Orman. Even if you don’t like dealing with money, reading a few personal-finance items every year will help keep you up-to-date and better-able to plan for your future.

Early-Career (approx. age 23-35) Action Items:
• Establish a cash reserve equal to 3-6 months of expenses.
• Make a plan to pay off non-mortgage debt by a specific date.
• Invest in a 401(k) retirement account at least up to your employer’s match but hopefully 10% of your salary or more.
• Utilize a Roth IRA retirement account if you don’t have a retirement plan at work.
• Pay yourself first by setting up automatic transfers into a long-term savings or investment account.
• Watch your expenses. It is easy to burn through money on nights out or daily coffee. Make sure you are spending less than you are taking home.

Mid-Career (approx. age 36-50) Action Items:
• Make specific mid- and long-range goals and develop a plan to meet them.
• Pay off non-mortgage debt and kick the debt cycle by building up your savings.
• Step up your retirement savings in your 401(k) to 10% or 15% of your salary if you are not already doing so. The default investment option can be a target date fund based on your age.
• Review your insurance needs, including term life insurance and disability insurance.
• Establish a will, health care proxy, and power of attorney.
• Start saving for your kids’ college in a 529 account. The default investment option can be a target date fund based on your son or daughter’s age.

Pre-retiree (approx. age 51-64) Action Items:
• Review your long-range goals and adjust your spending and savings to meet them.
• Develop a realistic budget.
• Consider fully funding your 401(k) with $16,500 per year plus $5,500 per year in step-up contributions for people over age 55.
• Make sure your investments are diversified.
• Review your Social Security benefit information.
• Consider paying off your mortgage before you retire to increase your cash flow when you don’t have a job.
• Don’t sacrifice your retirement to pay for your kid’s college.
• Consider how you will pay for future health care costs, including long-term care.

Retiree (age 65 and up) Action Items:
• Determine your income, including pensions and Social Security.
• Set up your investments to transfer money to your checking account on a monthly basis. Starting with a 4% withdrawal rate can help make your money last.
• Finalize a realistic budget based on your income and asset withdrawals.
• Consider part-time work or delaying retirement if your numbers do not add up.
• Review your will, health care proxy, and power of attorney.

Doug Wheat, CFP is director of Family Wealth Management Inc. in Holyoke; www.fwmgt.com

Chamber Corners Departments

ACCGS
www.myonlinechamber.com
(413) 787-1555

• June 15: ACCGS Annual Meeting, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Marriott Springfield. Tickets: $40 for members; $60 for non-members. Speaker: Greg Bialecki, secretary of Housing and Economic Development. For more information and to purchase tickets call (413) 787-1555.

CHICOPEE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.chicopeechamber.org
(413) 594-2101

•  June 10: Global to Local — A Workshop Series, Part 3 Growth Strategy: A New Approach, 8 a.m. to 11 a.m., Hampton Inn Chicopee, 600 Memorial Dr.  Cost: $65 for members, $75 non-members.

FRANKLIN COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.franklincc.org
(413) 773-5463

• June 24: Annual Meeting and Legislative Breakfast, 7:30 – 9 a.m., Eaglebrook School.

GREATER HOLYOKE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.holycham.com
(413) 534-3376

• June 15: Chamber After Hours, 5-7 p.m., Wistariahurst Museum. Sponsored by Sunshine Village. Admission is $5 for members; $10 cash for non-members. For more information, call (413) 534-3376 or sign up at holyokechamber.com.

• June 23: Job Fair, presented by the Greater Holyoke Chamber of Commerce, CareerPoint, Chicopee Chamber of Commerce, and Elms College. Hosted by Elms College, 291 Springfield St., Chicopee. Please check holyokechamber.com for details.

GREATER NORTHAMPTON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.explorenorthampton.com
(413) 584-1900

• June 21: June Meet & Eat Breakfast, 7:30-9 a.m., Smith College Conference Center, Elm St., Northampton. Cost: $15 for members.

NORTHAMPTON AREA YOUNG PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY
www.thenayp.com
(413) 584-1900

• June 9: Party with a Purpose, the NAYP Non-Profit Board Fair, 5-8 p.m., at the
Smith College Conference Center, Elm Street Northampton. Free for NAYP members as well as Easthampton, Northampton, and Amherst Chamber members; $5 for non-members.

WEST OF THE RIVER CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.ourwrc.com
(413) 426-3880

• June 15: Table Top, 4:30-7:00 p.m, Fathers & Sons, 214 New Bridge St. West Springfield. This event will feature tabletop displays of various businesses. The WRC is looking for sponsors of this event. For more information, call (413) 426-3880.

GREATER WESTFIELD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.westfieldbiz.org
(413) 568-1618

• June 8: WestNet, the after 5 networking event,  5-7 p.m. Hosted by the YMCA of Greater Westfield @ Camp Shepard. Come and shoot hoops to support the chamber’s Scholarship fund. Tickets: $10 for members; $15 for non-members. For more information, call  (413) 568-1618; [email protected].

• June 10: Chamber June Breakfast, hosted by: Tekoa Country Club, 459 Russell Road, Westfield. Registration begins at 7:15 a.m.; program, 8-9. Guest Speaker: Timothy Brennan, executive director, Pioneer Valley Planning Commission. Sponsors: Platinum Sponsor: First Niagara; Gold Sponsors: Westfield State University, United Bank, Noble Health Systems; Silver Sponsor Westfield Bank. Tickets: $25 for members; $30 for non-members. For more information, call (413) 568-1618; [email protected].

• June 20: 50th Annual Golf Tournament, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., at Tekoa Country Club, 459 Russell Road, Westfield. Title Sponsor: United Bank. For morte information or to sign up, call Sandy Sorel at (413) 779-0075.

YPS-YOUNG PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY OF GREATER SPRINGFIELD
www.springfieldyps.com

• June 9: Martini Magic, 6-9 p.m., Max’s Tavern at The Basketball Hall of Fame, 1000 West Columbus Ave., Springfield. Join YPS at Max’s Martini Magic and help support the Ronald McDonald House. The event will include a creative selection of cocktails, exquisite hors d’oeuvres, carving stations, and live music. Tickets: $65 per person.
A $10 discount will be given to YPS members who purchase their tickets before May 27. Tickets are limited. For reservations please contact AnnMarie Harding at [email protected]; or by phone at (413) 746-6299, Ext. 381.

• June 19: Lighthouse’s 1st Annual ‘Cue it up for Employment’ Billiards Tournament,  3 p.m., Smith’s Billiards, Worthington Street, Springfield. Doors open at 3; match play begins at 4. Sponsored by: Mercy Medical Center, Burger King, Sisco, and YPS. Tickets: $20 for players; $10 for spectators. Player tickets are limited. For reservations please contact Jeff Trant at [email protected], or call (413) 736-8974, Ext. 101. All proceeds benefit Lighthouse, a division of Human Resources Unlimited, a 501(c)(3) not for profit organization serving disabled and disadvantaged adults.

Sections Supplements
Why Your Retirement Plan Is Still One of the Best Ways to Build Wealth

Charlie Epstein

Charlie Epstein


While there are unlimited approaches to accumulating wealth, your company’s ERISA-qualified retirement plan still provides one of the best ways for you as the owner and your employees to create sustainable wealth, all on a tax-favorable basis.
Let’s examine some of the unique features of this timeless mechanism that shouldn’t be overlooked.

Convenience
Establishing a qualified retirement plan, either a profit-sharing, 401(k), or, yes, even a pension plan (cash balance), has never been simpler and less costly. Today, most major retirement-plan providers or independent third-party plan administrators can establish, design, and administer your plan for minimal cost. And if total assets in your plan are large enough, i.e., in excess if $5 million, the cost will be picked up or reimbursed by the carrier.

Capital Creation
When I ask business owners what their retirement plan is, they unanimously say, “Charlie, you’re sitting in it!” Yes, your business and your ability to turn a profit each year and eventually sell that business and sail off into the sunset will always be your greatest wealth-accumulation vehicle.
But what if the best-laid plans don’t come true? What if continued globalization and commoditization reduce your margins until you have no business to sell? Or if your kids eliminate that option for you by coming into the business? While your business will always be your ‘first economy,’ paying for your current lifestyle, your retirement plan can become your ‘second economy’ for creating wealth on a tax-favorable basis. With a properly designed plan, you can begin to capitalize your company by transferring taxable income or corporate earnings today into to tax-deferred dollars for tomorrow’s future paychecks.
A standard 401(k) plan affords anyone the ability to invest a maximum of $16,500 per year, $22,000 if you are over 50. This is a sizable amount for the average income earner and, invested over a long term, would allow them to create enough wealth to replace their income in retirement. But for the owner of the company (or a professional service corporation), depending on your company demographics, a properly designed combo profit-sharing/cash-balance pension plan will allow you to shift $100,000 to 300,000 a year from your corporate earnings to your retirement-plan economy, all on a tax-favorable basis.
Over a 20-year period, this would create a significant amount of wealth outside of your company and enable you to generate an income for life, in the event that you are unable to sell your business.

Asset Protection
Real wealth accumulation should also be protected from unforeseen forces, and I don’t just mean a prolonged bear market. Accumulating wealth inside your qualified plan affords you the asset protection of an offshore island trust without the expense or the travel. Qualified assets are creditor-proof, and in today’s litigious society, that is a valuable attribute for securing and creating real long-term capital creation and wealth.
OPM
As Danny Devito taught us in the funny movie Other People’s Money, the best way to accumulate wealth is with someone else’s money. A qualified plan allows you, the business owner, access to tax dollars you would have otherwise given to Uncle Sam each year on your taxable wages or corporate dollars. Inside your qualified plan, you are afforded the luxury of investing and maximizing the government’s money for your future benefit.
This can accomplished with either Uncle Sam’s pre-tax basis dollars or with after-tax Roth contributions. Both offer the power of OPM. Best of all, your employees will enjoy the investing power of Uncle Sam’s money, and your OPM as well, should you provide a company match or profit-share contribution.

Fiduciary Care
The investment options available in today’s high-tech retirement plans are almost limitless, from mutual funds to ETFs, stock-brokerage windows, managed money, etc.
More importantly for you and especially participating employees of your company-sponsored plan, an ERISA-qualified plan offers the highest ‘standard of care’ in the investment world. That is a fiduciary standard of care.
Simply stated, you, as the plan fiduciary-sponsor, must operate the plan and manage its assets for the exclusive benefit of the plan’s participants and their beneficiaries. Achieving this standard is always a slippery slope. However, today’s major retirement platforms offer both limited and full-scope (section 3(21) and 3(38)) investment fiduciaries and managers who can take on these prudent roles and responsibilities for you. (Most businesses today outsource; you can do the same inside your retirement plan.) These providers take on the fiduciary liability and ensure that the quality of investment options for you and your employees is rigorously monitored and managed. Past performance is never guaranteed, but a superior investment lineup can be.
In summary, your company’s retirement plan, properly designed, managed, and administered, is an ideal mechanism for wealth creation. Don’t underestimate this time-tested approach for capitalizing your business and creating greater financial peace of mind for you and your employees.

Charlie Epstein is president of Holyoke-based Epstein Financial; (413) 932-6236.

Law Sections
Law-school Graduates Find Evidence of a Soft Job Market

LawSchoolDPartThey entered law school just as the economy started to collapse and the legal field began to downsize in dramatic fashion. The members of the Western New England University School of Law class of 2011 knew early on in the pursuit of their degree that the job market wouldn’t be healthy when they graduated, and thus they are not surprised by what are generally meager prospects. Some have managed to find quality jobs, but many are looking at an immediate future clouded by question marks.

Peter Meggers described himself as one of the fortunate ones … and then quickly tacked on an adverb to punctuate that assessment.
“I’d guess I’d say I’m one of the extremely fortunate ones,” said Meggers, a member of the class of 2011 at the Western New England College School of Law, who will soon be carrying a business card that identifies him as an associate with the Hartford-based firm Halloran & Sage.
He told BusinessWest that he’ll be handling a diverse mix of duties, but probably a steady diet of insurance defense work to start, and will be earning a salary that exceeds expectations grounded mostly in anecdotal evidence about what he would likely find in the job market.
Much of that evidence came in the form of commentary from friends of colleagues who are simply not as fortunate as Meggers, and whose job-search results would more closely resemble the norm than the exception.

Art Gaudio

Art Gaudio says the laws of supply and demand clearly indicate a need for fewer law-school graduates for the foreseeable future.

“From what I hear, not everyone is having much luck,” he said, referring to classmates. “It’s pretty grim out there right now.”
Melanie Stevens, another of those in the ‘fortunate’ category, agreed. She has a job waiting for her at the Portland, Maine-based firm Friedman, Gaythwaite, Wolf & Leavit pending her passing the Maine bar exam. But most of her classmates are not faring as well.
“From what I’m hearing, it’s awful out there,” she said. “There are no jobs, and when you do find a job, the firm wants attorneys who have experience. I don’t know many people who have been able to find a job.”
Art Gaudio, dean of the law school, says he probably won’t have a very clear picture of just how the latest graduates of Western New England College School of Law are faring in their search for employment until next February. That’s when the results of a survey of that class, detailing where they are working and in what capacity, should be in. (The school waits nine months after commencement for this exercise because history has shown that this is a suitable timeframe to give graduates time to pass the bar and conduct a job search.)
But he has a pretty good idea what that survey will show.
Indeed, he predicts only slight improvement after this past February’s results, which revealed that 77% of all graduates and 83% of survey respondents had found work in the legal field. (When times are better, that first number is closer to 90%).
This modest trend northward shows that, while the recession is technically over, recovery has been slow, and many businesses still lack the wherewithal or confidence (or both) to add employees, said Gaudio, adding that law firms of all sizes fall into this category. Meanwhile, if firms are hiring, they are generally being more selective about who they bring on, simply because they can, with many experienced lawyers looking for a job, or a better one, after industry-wide downsizing at the height of the downturn.
As a result of all this, the employment picture remains fuzzy not merely for the class of 2001 but for the foreseeable future as well — so much so that the law school is cutting admissions for next fall by 20%, from 125 down to 100, a move consistent with what other institutions are doing, Gaudio continued, adding that the simple laws of supply and demand dictate such action.
“At least for the short term, the need for lawyers is down, and the faculty here is taking a proactive stance on this,” he said. “We’re going to reduce the number of people we’re admitting, at least for now, and the reason is what’s happening on the demand side. Why should we put out lawyers who can’t get jobs?”
Similar reductions have come during other severe economic downturns, Gaudio told BusinessWest, citing the early ’80s and early ’90s as examples. The duration of these challenging periods varies, he went on, but this one will likely be longer than normal because of the severity of the economic turmoil and the decline in demand for a number of legal services, from real estate to business transactions to simple wills, which people are apparently content to put off until their economic situation improves.
Eventually, though, the job market will bounce back, said Gaudio, as the economy inevitably improves and, perhaps more importantly, the huge numbers of Baby Boom-age lawyers begin to retire in large numbers.
For this issue and its focus on law, BusinessWest talked with several members of the class of 2011. Most of these individuals have jobs with firms or attractive clerkships lined up, but collectively, they relate a story of a still-lackluster job market.

Offering Testimony
Those who donned caps and gowns for ceremonies at Springfield Symphony Hall on May 21 began their journey through law school in September 2008, or just as the bottom was falling out of the U.S. economy.
By then, the stock market, which was still above 12,000 in early June, was moving south of 9,000 and seemingly losing a few hundred points a day. Financial giants were either going under — Lehman Brothers, for example — or getting bailed out by the federal government, like AIG.
The Great Recession that ensued took its toll on virtually every sector of the economy, including the legal profession, as firms of all sizes responded to sharp reductions in real-estate, transactional, and corporate work by laying off staff, cutting salaries, and imposing formal and informal hiring freezes.
Matters were worst for the class of 2008, said Gaudio, noting that, by the time they’d passed the bar, the job market was in tatters. Things weren’t much better for those graduating in 2009, but there was some improvement for last year’s class, and the needle continues to move in the right direction, but in modest increments, and certainly not fast enough for many of this year’s class.
With no hard data on the class of 2011 coming for another eight months, Gaudio based his projections for the most recent graduates on the experiences of the class of 2010 and commentary from several sources, including the National Assoc. of Law Placement, that matters are slowly improving.
“Many of them [members of the class of 2010] were able get jobs, and the kinds of jobs they were looking to get, but there just weren’t as many as in the past,” he said, again speculating that this year’s graduates will fare slightly better.
But testimony from some of the fortunate ones would indicate that, while the market may well have improved, finding a good job takes persistence, a varied résumé, and a little luck as well.
Meggers took what in better economic times would be considered a typical route to his job at Halloran & Sage, which has a number of offices in Connecticut. He applied at the firm at the beginning of his second year, and earned one of three highly sought-after summer associate’s positions. A month after that 12-week assignment was over, he was offered permanent employment.
For most members of his class, it’s been a longer, harder search, and one that is likely just beginning. “I’d have to say that only a small percentage of people in my class have solid jobs right now, and many of those who do have jobs had to settle for something less than what they wanted.”
And this has left more than a few second-guessing their decision to go to law school, he continued, adding that many members of his class have large amounts of debt and earning potential (for the immediate future, anyway) that doesn’t justify the advanced degree.
Stevens had a similar assessment.
“Most people I know don’t have jobs and don’t know what they’re going to do when they pass the bar,” she told BusinessWest, adding that many are already looking for work outside the legal field. “Everyone’s fear is that loans are going to come due in the fall and no one’s going to be able to pay them.
“Everyone thought that, if you went to law school, you’d have job offers — and that changed very quickly over the last years,” she continued, adding that while most are not surprised by the sluggish job market, they are nonetheless disappointed. “It’s scary right now; there are just no jobs. And that made commencement somewhat bittersweet; people were happy to be done with law school, but in the back of their minds they’re wondering where they’re going to find something and when.”
Rob Preziosi is another of the fortunate few. He’s been accepted into the Army Judge Advocate General (JAG) Corps, and will be attending JAG School in Charlottsville, Va. perhaps as early as next February. But while his path is clear, most of his classmates are confronting question marks.
“Unfortunately, I know of plenty of smart, capable colleagues that simply have no prospects,” he said.
Robin Gallagher, who has secured a clerkship in the Federal District Court in Hartford and is quite content with that assignment, said that, in this tough job market, those faring well, or at least better, managed to diversify their experiences in law school.
“Those who participated in a number of areas, like Moot Court, Law Review, externships [as she did, in Federal Court in Springfield], and public-interest opportunities, are the same ones that are finding jobs,” said the South Windsor, Conn. resident. “Some people are disappointed with the job opportunities that are out there, but I’ve found that the people who took greatest advantage of the opportunities available in law school are the ones finding work now.”

Degree of Difficulty
For the longer term, the job prospects for recent law-school graduates will eventually improve, said Gaudio, noting that, while the recession may push back the retirement date for many Baby Boomers in the legal profession, members of that large constituency will ultimately move on.
“And we’ll need to replace those people,” he continued, putting himself in that category, having graduated from law school 44 years ago. “Eventually, I think there’s going to be considerable improvement on the demand side.”
For now, though, good jobs are at a relative premium, and for many members of the class of 2011 — those outside the ‘extremely fortunate’ category — it may be a while before they can put to use those skills they’ve acquired over the past three years.

George O’Brien can be reached at [email protected]

Features
Partners Come Together for Ambitious Book Drive

It’s called a “worldwide day of action.”
That’s the name that the United Way has given to a program that represents a significant expansion of its annual Day of Caring program staged each September.

Dora Robinson

Dora Robinson

“It was decided that one day simply isn’t enough,” said Dora Robinson, executive director of the United Way of Pioneer Valley, noting that there will be several such days of action over the next year.
The first, coming up on June 21, will have a hard focus on the broad subject of literacy, and a very aggressive goal: collecting 5,000 books for a variety of child-literacy programs, including the Hasbro Summer Learning Initiative (HSLI), which works to bridge the gap in learning that occurs when many area young people leave school for the summer months. Other programs include Link to Libraries and Book It.
To reach that lofty goal, the United Way, a long-time supporter of the HSLI, will conduct the Connect to Reading Book Drive, and is working with a number of partners on this initiative, including BusinessWest and its Difference Makers for the past three years, as well as sponsors of that event. Other partners include Link to Libraries, the Irene E. and George A. Davis Foundation, Girls Inc., the Springfield Public Library, and the Holyoke Public Library.
The Difference Makers program was initiated two years ago, and soon after the first winners of the award were feted, an initiative was announced making literacy an ongoing priority for the recipients of that honor, and a matter to which they would contribute time, energy, and imagination. To date, these efforts have focused mostly on the HSLI and collecting books to support that effort.
In each of the past two years, several hundred books have been collected, and the efforts have culminated in a book-distribution and read-aloud program at the Dunbar Community Center.
“This year, as the United Way devotes a day of action to efforts to promote literacy in this region, BusinessWest and its Difference Makers are partnering with the United Way and other groups to not only collect books, but also bring needed attention to this important issue, said Kate Campiti, associate publisher and advertising director for BusinessWest.
Each of the Difference Makers is being asked to make a commitment to collect 70 new books or the equivalent amount of money, Campiti continued, adding that recent sponsors of the event will also be invited to take part in the campaign.
And while the book drive is the focus of the June 21 day of action, this will actually be a lengthy drive that will take place between June 16 and July 5, said Robinson, adding that the drive will kick off with an elaborate read-aloud program and book-collection effort at the Barnes & Noble in Holyoke. For those books purchased at that store between June 16 and June 25, Barnes & Noble will donate 15% of the total spent toward the purchase of more books.
On the actual day of caring, a book-distribution effort will be staged at the Boys & Girls Club of Greater Holyoke (and co-hosted by Girls Inc.), as well as an initiative to register young people for library cards at area libraries.
Susan O’Connor, director of the HSLI, said the United Way’s campaign will serve to bring additional awareness to the Hasbro program, and spotlight efforts to address the summer learning gap that impacts thousands of area young people.
“While the average home has 13 books per child, low-income homes have fewer than one book per child,” said O’Connor, adding that this summer’s campaign has the stated goal of collecting at least one book for every child in Hampden County involved in the HSLI (roughly 1,300), and certainly hopes to far exceed that number.
“Children who don’t have summer learning opportunities lose three months of reading every summer, which can accumulate into a two-year gap in reading by the sixth grade,” O’Connor continued. “Given that two-thirds of our children in Springfield and more in Holyoke are not proficient readers by grade 4, which is when we like to see children become proficient, we simply must keep the learning faucet on during the summer.”
For those interested in helping the United Way in its book-collecting efforts, the following list of suggested titles has been compiled by HSLI administrators. Other books are also welcome. Books can be dropped off at the United Way of Pioneer Valley in Springfield, Odyssey Books in South Hadley, Olive Tree Books in Springfield, and BusinessWest, which has offices at 1441 Main St. in Springfield.

Kindergarten and Grade 1

Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak
Swimmy by Leo Lionni
Charlie Parker Played Bebop by Chris Raschka
Caps for Sale by Esphyr Slobodkina
My Color My World/ Mis Colores Mis Mundo by Maya Christian Gonzales
ABC: An Amazing Alphabet Book by Dr. Seuss
Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss (and Huevos Verdes con Jamon)
Hop on Pop by Dr. Seuss
The Cat in the Hat by Dr. Seuss
Biscuit series by Alyssa Satin Capucilli (as an early reader)
The Very Hungry Caterpillar, by Eric Carle
The Very Quiet Cricket, by Eric Carle
My Colors My World by Maya Christian Gonzales

Grades 2 and 3

Not Norman by Kelly Bennett
How I Became a Pirate by Melinda Long
The Relatives Came by Cynthia Rylant
Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain by Verna Aardema
The Rough-Face Girl by Rafe Martin
Winners Never Quit! by Mia Hamm
A Chair for My Mother by Vera B. Williams
Cherries and Cherry Pits by Vera B. Williams
Giraffes Can’t Dance by Giles Andreae
The Big Orange Splot by Daniel Pinkwater
The Paperbag Princess by Robert N. Munson
Bring Me Some Apples and I’ll Make You a Pie by Robbin Gourley
A Bad Case of Stripes by David Shannon

Grades 4 through 6

Lon PoPo: A Red Riding Hood Story for China by Ed Young
Pink and Say by Patricia Polacco
Wilma Unlimited by Kathleen Krull
The Boy on Fairfield Street by Kathleen Krull
Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo
Maniac Magee by Jerry Spinelli
The Voice that Challenged the Nation: Marion Anderson and the Struggle for Equal Rights by Russell Freed
Henry’s Freedom Box: A True Story from the Underground Railroad by Kadir Nelson
Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein
The Lorax by Dr. Seuss
The Boy on Fairfield Street by Kathleen Krull
Rosa by Nikki Giovanni
Holes by Louis Sachar
Love That Dog by Sharon Creech
The Giver by Louis Lowry
The Encyclopedia Brown series by Donald J. Sobol
Diary of a Wimpy Kid series by Jeff Kinney

Chapter Books for All Teens

Missing Mae by Cynthia Rylant
The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros
The Outsiders by S.E Hinton
The Skin I’m In by Sharon G. Flake
Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli
A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle
Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins

Picture books for All Ages

Martian’s Big Words by Doreen Rappaport
Just the Two of Us by Will Smith
The True Story of the Three Little Pigs by Jon Scieska
Click, Clack, Moo by Doreen Cronin
Barack Obama: United States President by Roberta Edwards

Spanish Read Aloud For Young Ages

Buenas Noches, Luna (Goodnight Moon) by Lois Elhert (age 3-6)
Tu Mama es una Llama? (Is Your Mama a Llama?) by Deborah Guarino (ages 3-6)
El Gato en el Sombrero (The Cat in the Hat) by Dr. Seuss (ages 3-6)
Huevos verdes con jamón (Green Eggs and Ham) by Dr. Seuss (ages 3-6)
La Oruga Muy Hambrienta (The Very Hungry Caterpillar) (board) by Eric Carle (ages 3-6)
Cinco Monitos Brincando en la Cama/Five Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed (Bilingual edition: English and Spanish) by Eileen Christelow
Un Renacuajo (Diary of a Wimpy Kid Series #1) (ages 6-9)
Esperanza Renace (Esperanza Rising, Spanish-language edition) (ages 6-9)
La Telarana de Carlota (Charlotte’s Web, Spanish-language Edition) by E.B. White (ages 6-9)
Ramona Empieza el Curso (Ramona series, Spanish-language edition) by Beverly Cleary (ages 6-9)
Dinosaurios al Atardecer (Dinosaurs Before Dark: Magic Tree House Series #1, Spanish-language edition) (ages 6-9)
The Complete Book of Starter Spanish, Grades Preschool-1 (bilingual)
Siempre Te Querre by Robert N. Munsch (ages 6-9)
Corduroy (Spanish-language Edition) by Don Freeman (ages 6-9)
Harry Potter y la Piedra Filosofal (Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, Spanish-language edition) by J.K. Rowling (ages 9-12)
La Ciudad de Las Bestias (City of the Beasts, Spanish-language edition) by Isabel Allende (ages 9-12)
Cajas de Carton: Relatos de la Vida Peregrina de uno Nino Campesino (The Circuit: Stories from the Life of a Migrant Child, Spanish-language edition) by Francisco Jimenez (ages 9-12)
El Principito (The Little Prince, Spanish-language edition) by Antoine de Saint-Exupery (9-12)
Antes de Ser Libres (Before We Were Free, Spanish-language edition) by Julia Alvarez (ages 9-12)
Las Cronicas de Narnia (The Chronicles of Narnia, Spanish-language edition) by C. S. Lewis (ages 9-12)
El León, la Bruja y el Ropero (The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Spanish-language edition) by C. S. Lewis (ages 9-12)
Junie B. Jones Tiene un Pio Pio en el Bolsillo (Junie B. Jones Has a Peep in Her Pocket, Spanish-language edition) by Barbara Park (ages 9-12)
En el Tiempo de las Mariposas (In The Time of the Butterflies, Spanish-language edition) by Julia Alvarez (teens)
Crepúsculo (Twilight, movie tie-in, Spanish-language edition) by Stephenie Meyer (teens)
De Como las Muchachas Garcia Perdieron el Acento (How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents, Spanish-language edition) by Julia Alvarez (teens)
Matar un Ruisenor (To Kill a Mockingbird, Spanish-language edition) by Harper Lee (teens)
El Dador (The Giver) by Lois Lowry (teens)
El Príncipe Caspian (Prince Caspian) (Spanish-language edition) by C.S. Lewis (teens)
Hermanas (Sisters) (Bilingual Spanish-English edition) by Gary Paulsen (teens)
Marcada (Marked, Spanish-language edition) by P.C. Cast (teens)

Features
City of Homes Boasts an Inviting Mix of Amenities

From left, Chris DeVoie, John DeVoie, and Don Watroba say Hot Table was so successful in 16 Acres that they expanded to a second, downtown location, which is also thriving.

From left, Chris DeVoie, John DeVoie, and Don Watroba say Hot Table was so successful in 16 Acres that they expanded to a second, downtown location, which is also thriving.

John DeVoie, his brother, Chris DeVoie, and Don Watroba opened Hot Table in the 16 Acres neighborhood of Springfield in 2007. The restaurant specializes in paninis, and the trio chose Springfield as the site for their new business because the city is their home and they are Springfield natives.
“We love the place and want to see it thrive,” John said. “We also saw an opportunity, as there was an underserved market there. Western New England College, which is now a university, was right across the street, and Springfield College was right down the street. And the college community didn’t even have a local coffeehouse.”
Their success led the restaurateurs to open a second location on Main Street in 2009, which is 1,000 feet larger and boasts an outdoor patio. John said the downtown site has also drawn a large crowd, and their location has one of the highest concentrations of working people in one location in Western Mass.
“I couldn’t be happier about our growth and the fact that we have expanded under the current economic conditions,” he told BusinessWest. “Everyone has to come into Springfield eventually, whether it’s for jury duty, to go to the hospital, or to see a lawyer, and the density of the population and traffic provides a real opportunity for businesses.”
The diverse population and the fact that economic incentives abound in the city are among the strong motivating factors for entrepreneurs and established businesses looking to relocate their operations, said Mayor Domenic Sarno, now winding down his second two-year term in office.
“The city is the economic engine for the region, and we have incentives for any and all businesses, from the mom-and-pop operations to businesses on a larger scale,” he said, adding that economic help can be found via initiatives like the city’s small-business loan program, which lends companies up to $20,000, its neighborhood storefront program, and special tax assessments that add gradual increments to a company’s tax bill after an expansion.
Bruce Stebbins, administrator for business development, explained that the city will exempt the value of improvements for a period of time and gradually ease them into a company’s tax bill. “The state also offers tax credits, because we are designated as a Gateway City, so we consider ourselves an affordable location for companies looking to serve the Northeast market,” he added.
Sarno cited access to broadband as another advantage. The city has allowed the Mass. Broadband Institute to thread a 21st-century communications network through a network of underground conduits that will result in broadband service up to 1,000 times faster when it is complete.
Business property exists in many neighborhoods, and the city has worked hard to streamline its permitting process. Christopher Moskal, interim chief development officer, said officials have spent three years on the project and eliminated many of the hoops businesses once had to jump through.
“We bring all of the necessary departments to the table for a one-stop shopping experience so businesses can get the permits they need quickly and save money,” he said.
Carl Frattini, director of business development for Northeast Utilities, says the city is easy to work with. “Our solar program focuses on using restricted-use properties such as brownfields to accommodate large-scale PV facilities. These projects offer economies of scale that make them more cost-effective, but they often have complex permitting requirements,” he explained.
“On May 12, we announced the Indian Orchard Solar Facility, a 2.2-megawatt project located on a 12-acre brownfield site in the Indian Orchard section of Springfield,” he continued. “The city was well-organized, particularly the Springfield Redevelopment Authority, and they did an outstanding job working with us to make this project happen. Given the time and resources necessary to develop these types of projects, it’s more than reassuring to know the city, along with community stakeholders like the Indian Orchard Citizens Council, are ready and willing to collaborate.”
Sarno cited other benefits of operating a business in Springfield. “We have a railroad, and the Springfield Technical Community College Enterprise Center is a great place for startups. And the city offers a complete toolkit for new and expanding businesses,” he said.
For this, the latest installment of ‘Doing Business In,’ BusinessWest looks at the current conditions in the City of Homes, and why there are some good reasons to consider the unofficial capital of Western Mass. as a place to locate or expand a venture.

It’s Elementary
Chet Wojcik is a real proponent of Springfield. He moved Alliance Medical Gas from North Carolina to Agawam in July 2010, and the following January, the owner and CEO relocated the firm to the Scibelli Enterprise Center in Springfield.
“We wanted to be in a building that was historically preserved, and all of the state and federal resources are in this building,” Wojcik said, ticking off agencies that range from the Mass. Small Business Development Center Network to the federal Small Business Administration to SCORE.
Wojcik has taken advantage of activities staged by the STCC Business Incubator, also located in the downtown site. “This city is pro-business,” he said.
Available property includes public and private sites that run the gamut from the former School Department headquarters on 195 State St. to sites in the Hollywood section of the South End that are included in the South End Redevelopment Plan, which has spurred a great deal of infrastructure work in the last few years.
“There are business parcels in every neighborhood, and we feel we can offer workforce-planning programs that businesses need to succeed in Springfield,” said Moskal. “We work hand-in-hand with them to provide skilled labor.”
An example of this is a collaborative effort between the School Department and Smith & Wesson, which brings high-school juniors and seniors into the company for hands-on experience and mentoring programs. “They are introducing their line of business to prospective high-school graduates,” Moskal said.
Nicholas Fyntrilakis, assistant vice president of Responsibility for MassMutual in Springfield, agrees that the city has a lot to offer. “This is MassMutual’s 160th anniversary. The business started as one person in a rented office and has grown to a Fortune 500 company,” he said. “Springfield has provided us with a terrific workforce locally and regionally, and is a terrific place to live and work. For those thinking of planting a flag in Springfield, we are centrally located with great access to highways, a nearby airport, and broadband fiber optics. Plus, the city is really committed to helping small businesses grow and transition.”
Fyntrilakis is also on the board of the nonprofit corporation DevelopSpringfield, which is dedicated to advancing development and redevelopment projects and expanding revitalization within the city.
“We offer grants up to $10,000 to businesses on Main Street and State Street,” he said, explaining that companies are required to provide 25% in matching funds for improvement projects. “It is a really nice initiative that is unique to Springfield. The economy and demographics of the city are also diverse, and the general climate toward business is positive.
“Folks are eager to support businesses, and many have had a lot of success,” he added, pointing to the Puerto Rican Bakery on Main Street and Red Rose Pizzeria, which started out small and has grown exponentially over the years to include a banquet facility.
Mary Ellen Scott says Springfield is the center of all of the activity in Western Mass. She opened United Personnel 26 years ago, and believes it is a perfect place for business owners who want to be situated in an urban setting, but also want to forge strong connections in the community.
“I grew up in Boston and lived in New York City for 10 years, and I believe Springfield is a great place for people to live,” she told BusinessWest. “It’s a smaller city and a place where people develop relationships. If I lived in New York City, I probably would not know the mayor personally or the president of MassMutual. You can walk down Main Street and say ‘hi’ to five people you know in one block.”
Scott, a member of the Economic Development Council of Western Mass., added that Springfield has a ready supply of labor. “My company is in the business of supplying people, and there is a diverse workforce in Springfield,” she said, adding that United is able to fill employers’ needs for positions in offices, light-industrial settings, manufacturing, and more.

At Home with the Idea
“Springfield also has easy access to highways for distribution purposes. And there is a lower cost of living here than in Hartford, Boston, or New York City, which means savings for employers,” Scott continued, listing more reasons why business owners and managers should give the community some consideration as a landing spot.
“The city has its issues,” she continued, “but the pleasure of living here far outweighs them, and city officials are really trying to make it a better place.”

Opinion
UMass Amherst Stuck in Cycle of Turmoil

What’s happening at UMass Amherst with regard to Chancellor Robert Holub is disturbing on a number of levels — from the leaking of information from a supposedly confidential professional review, which led to a front-page Boston Globe story detailing Holub’s probable ouster, to the momentum-halting turnover in the chancellor’s office, which is suddenly becoming chronic. And everything in between.
As we write this, Holub is reportedly in negotiations designed not to save his job, but apparently to strike some kind of settlement that will allow him to leave on something approaching his terms. Unless something unforeseen happens, he’ll soon be the former chancellor, ushering in yet another period of transition at the state university’s largest campus — meaning turnover in the top ranks of the administration, stress and uncertainty at the lower ranks, still another strategic plan of action, and large amounts of doubt about just where this institution is headed.
Meanwhile, a capable administrator who has implemented some sound programs and created some real progress in the school’s efforts to get to that proverbial next level will be gone, and some of those initiatives will likely die on the vine.
But these aren’t the biggest problems facing the Amherst campus. No, the biggest concern is a system that promotes this revolving door and leaves the Amherst campus as the ‘flagship’ school in name only.
But let’s back up a minute. Holub is gone, or soon to be gone, because of what that prison captain in Cool Hand Luke famously called a “failure to communicate.”
It’s not that Holub doesn’t possess this skill, it’s more a case of him just not using it, or using it enough — the primary case in point being his proposal to create a new medical school in Springfield in partnership with Baystate Health.
When you decide to formally study such a concept — which is a very good idea, by the way, one that would help with everything from revitalization efforts in Springfield to filling a critical need for more doctors in the state — but don’t tell some of the key players, including the president of a university system that already has a medical school in Worcester, that’s bad. Very bad.
But does the punishment in this case — Holub’s ouster — fit the crime of not communicating as effectively as most people would like? We don’t think so, although we appear to be in the minority. In any case, the school will now lose an administrator who excelled at town-gown relations, made significant strides forward in efforts to make the university a much bigger force in the city of Springfield, and who wasn’t afraid to take bold steps like moving the school’s football program up to the Football Bowl Subdivision.
If Holub goes, as expected, an interim will be named, a nationwide search will be launched, a new chancellor will be hired, several top administrators will be replaced, and many departments will experience  upheaval. And in three or four years, we can do it all again, making the process of transforming this school into a top-flight research institution lengthier and more difficult.
Perhaps a chancellor will be found who can provide real leadership and stay for six or seven years, but that’s not likely given the crush of politics that is part and parcel to this job and the fact that the chancellor simply doesn’t have the power befitting that of someone who leads a so-called flagship campus.
And he’s not likely to get that power — which would come if the president of the university was also the chancellor of the flagship school, a model followed in other states — any time soon, because of those aforementioned politics and the simple fact that the chancellors of the campuses in Boston, Lowell, and Dartmouth wouldn’t want to cede any of their power.
As we said at the top, what’s happening in Amherst is regrettable and disturbing. But the worst thing about it is that this is apparently a trend, and one that seems likely to continue.

Features
He’s Kept His Focus on Job Creation and Retention

Allan Blair

Allan Blair President of the Economic Development Council of Western Mass.


Allan Blair says his passion for photography started taking form just before his first son, Colin, was born in 1978.
“My wife was getting close with him, and I said to myself, ‘you better figure out how to take pictures,’” Blair recalled, adding that he bought a camera and managed to gain a degree of competence just as he was also becoming a father.
Over the years, he’s taken his hobby to a different level — and many different places — as the walls in his office attest. There are some framed photos from a trip several years ago to the town of St. Andrews in Scotland (the famous golf course, the world’s oldest, appears in the background in one of them), where Colin studied for a year. There are also a few scenes from Amsterdam, which Blair visited as part of a contingent from Western Mass. on one of the first international flights out of Bradley Airport in 2008 — a short-lived program, as it would turn out. And there’s an intriguing shot of an indoor mall in Melbourne taken while Blair was visiting his younger son, Justin, while he was studying in that Australian city.
“My wife, Sheila, has a better eye than I do,” he explained, “so she’ll often identify subjects or approaches to subjects that I don’t see, and I execute the photograph; it’s good teamwork.”
While some friends and colleagues are aware of Blair’s proficiency with a camera, most are more attuned to his efforts with regard to another form of big-picture developing. Indeed, as president of the Economic Development Council (EDC) of Western Mass., Blair is the individual most closely associated with the region’s overall economic health and well-being, and efforts to improve it.
This is a job that comes fully loaded with rewards, challenges, and expectations (many of them inherently unreasonable, he said, but more commentary on that later). It is also what Blair calls a complex, multi-faceted extension of his first real job, as a vocational counselor with the state Division of Employment Security, now known as the Division of Employment & Training, and subsequent work administering the Springfield chamber’s jobs program.
The common denominator, he said, is putting people to work, an assignment he finds both tremendously important and quite fulfilling.
“The one common thread that always stuck with me was that the importance of a job to a person’s feeling of worth is almost inestimable,” he explained. “Every person, no matter how down and out and destitute they might have been, wanted to be self-reliant; they wanted to be able to take care of their family.
“It’s somewhat ironic, the circuitous route I’ve taken,” he went on. “Being on the job-creation side, trying to provide the jobs or attract the jobs for people like those I worked with all those years ago, seems like closure, coming full-circle. Instead of working with individuals, I’m working with companies and regions and municipalities to create jobs and retain jobs.”
This task of putting people into employment situations has evolved considerably over the past 40 years, said Blair, speaking to his tenure in the broad realm of economic-development-related work. “It’s a different mindset; it’s not so much real-estate-based any more as it is business-to-business growth,” he explained, noting that in the past, much more emphasis has been placed on selling the region and recruiting companies here. “It’s a transition that’s been taking place over the past 30 years or so, and it has accelerated in the 21st century, where technology has been adopted to products and processes.”
And it has become much more difficult, he continued, as the cost of doing business in this region becomes an increasingly negative factor, as the regional and national economy moves increasingly away from manufacturing, and, perhaps most important, as the gap widens between the skills necessary for today’s technology-centered jobs and the skills most area residents possess.
The size of this gap became readily, and disturbingly, apparent with the deep economic downturn that started more than three years ago, said Blair, and it now looms as the biggest challenge for the region moving forward.
“In all my career, I’ve never seen such a dislocation between the skill preparation of the worker and the skill requirements of the new jobs,” he said. “There are going to be some who can make the transition and retool, and there are going to be many who can’t.”
For this, the latest in the ongoing series called Profiles in Business, Blair talked at length about this gap and the challenges it presents, as well as the many ways in which economic-development work has changed over the years.

Definitive Answers
When asked for his working definition of the phrase economic development, Blair gave a slight smile and a nod that indicated he’s been asked that question quite often over his career, and had a well-thought-out answer.
“I’ve given my definition of economic development to different groups over the years, and the more experienced I get, the more that definition morphs a little bit,” he explained. “Economic development, as I see it, is creating increasing investment in our region — and, ultimately, a city or town — that generates increased tax revenue to the municipality and the state and creates jobs; that’s my simple definition.
“But if I were to expand it, I would say that it is really also community development,” he continued, “because in order to have an environment that is conductive to those investments being made, you need to have a municipality as a host that can provide adequate services to the company and municipalities where the workers live that provide good school systems, public safety, and neighborhoods to keep those employees in our market. I see it as two sides of the same coin; the growth in taxes for any city or town enables that community to improve and increase the level of service it provides to both companies and residents, and as a result we all benefit, if it all works.”
Blair has been honing this definition since not long after he graduated from UMass Amherst and took that job with the Division of Employment Security, one that made a lasting impression and, in many ways, set a tone for his life’s work.
“That job with DES probably had one of the biggest influences on my future career and my perspective,” he told BusinessWest. “I was responsible for dealing with unemployed teenagers and trying to help them determine some sort of vocational choice, and often it meant referring them to the [chamber’s] jobs center, where in those days they got a stipend to go to school and either earn a GED or learn a trade.
“Over the years, as I’ve experienced the downsizing of our manufacturing sector and the big job losses at the Van Norman plant, American Bosch, and the Armory, those good-paying jobs that were family-supporting jobs were lost,” he continued, “and I never forgot the lessons I learned in those first four years after I was out of college about the importance of work.”
From his work with the chamber’s jobs center, Blair went on to become the organization’s vice president of administration and finance, a post that involved considerable legislative work. He eventually became executive vice president, and left in 1984 to become president of Westover Metropolitan Development Corp., which manages several industrial parks on land that was once part of Westover Air Force Base.
In 1993, he added the title of president of Westmass Area Development Corp. after that entity, which developed a number of industrial parks first in Springfield and then other cities and towns, successfully emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. And in 1996, Blair became the first president of the EDC, an umbrella agency that includes a number of economic-development groups, including Westover, Westmass, the Greater Springfield Convention and Visitors Bureau, and other organizations.
In the mid-’90s, while doing all this, Blair took on another challenge, or detour, as he called it — earning his juris doctor from Western New England College School of Law. The four-and-a-half-year odyssey of night school was a learning experience on a number of levels, he told BusinessWest, adding that his pursuit of a law degree posed some challenges and taxed his schedule, while also providing him with career flexibility and, ultimately, some acquired analytical skills for his chosen day job.
“Just as I finished, and I got notification that I’d passed the bar, was when the EDC was created,” he explained. “I had to make a choice between a law career and this career, and I chose this. But the experience in law school provided a unique framework for looking at things, and in the world I’m in, with a lot of real-estate work, there were immediate applications for what I was learning at night.
“I found it to be really exciting and interesting,” he continued. “That may sound crazy to people who went to law school right out of college and probably hated the experience, but as a mid-lifer doing it with all my life experiences to date, it was really interesting to see how it all fit together.”
He credits his family with helping him to manage what was an even more complicated process of balancing life and work, and providing needed inspiration. “I wasn’t around much in those days, but I used to make it home for dinner, even on law-school nights, just to look my kids in the eye and give my wife a kiss on the cheek and say, ‘I’m still around, and don’t forget it,’” he said. “There were many nights when my kids and I were studying in the same room together, and that was pretty neat; Colin graduated from high school the same year I got through the bar, so that was a major celebration.”
It was a capped off with a trip to Wimbledon, where the tennis-loving Blair family took in a few matches — and Allan took several hundred pictures.

Moving Experiences
There have been some celebrations in his professional life, as well.
Indeed, Blair listed off a number of accomplishments from his career, including the broad category of industrial-park development, or creation of those neighborhoods that sparked the kinds of investments he spoke of. Such parks have been created in Chicopee at Westover, and also Agawam, East Longmeadow, Westfield, and other communities, resulting in the creation or retention of thousands of jobs.
Individual success stories include the recruitment of Emery Air Freight to Westover in the mid-’80s early in his career (another short-lived triumph, as major players FedEx and UPS soon dominated the market); bringing Sundor Brands, later to be acquired by Procter & Gamble, to Airpark West; attracting C&S Grocers to the north side of Westfield, where it built a massive freezer warehouse, in the mid-’90s; and the improbable rescue of Westmass from bankruptcy.
“In 1991, when they filed, I got involved with a number of people in the effort to salvage their properties and holdings because of my belief in having these neighborhoods available for expansion,” Blair told BusinessWest. “This was the first not-for-profit bankruptcy in Massachusetts that was successful, and it took a lot of hard work and imagination to make it happen.”
In recent years, the major economic-development triumphs have been fewer, different in nature, and more difficult to quantify and qualify, said Blair, adding that the recession has taken a hard toll on development efforts in this region and many others. Meanwhile, much of the workload for groups like the EDC has evolved and diversified over the years, becoming less real-estate focused. This is a process that really began in the ’70s, he explained.
“The source of jobs today is very different from when I started with Westover in the early ’80s, or even when I was with the chamber in the ’70s, when we were relying upon a number of very large employers, particularly in manufacturing, but also in financial services,” he told BusinessWest. “And most of those companies grew here — they developed out of someone’s garage into these great things or they fell from the Armory as intellectual property that propagated around the region and grew. Almost none of them moved into Western Mass.; they grew in here.
“The job-creation strategy in those days was to attract another big manufacturer that wanted to be around this big nest of companies, but even then, the growth was incremental,” he continued. “The difference today is that, while we’re still going to try to attract that prospect that’s looking around the country or the Northeast — we still need to have that flag out and about in front of those decision makers — most of our growth is going to come from small businesses, and with them, growth is in fives, 10s, and 20s at a time.”
And to accomplish growth of this nature, the region needs to have a different infrastructure in place than the one that has existed in recent decades — one that nurtures entrepreneurship and innovation, he explained, adding that, ironically, the region grew into a manufacturing mecca more a century ago because of such an environment.
“Most all of the big companies we have today — and that list includes MassMutual, Smith & Wesson, Big Y, the hospitals, and the colleges — and the plethora of smaller companies all started when someone had a good idea and took a risk,” he continued. “Today, we’re spending a lot of our time working on making sure that we have a robust infrastructure that supports new-business formation, provides ample capital for growth, and has plenty of mentorship and interactive opportunities for people to nurture their good ideas, because that’s where our future is.
“We’ve turned a lot of attention to the process of understanding it, figuring out what can enhance it, and then trying to put these things in place with partners who have more interest or more resources to bear,” he went on. “The problems of small businesses are different, and we need an infrastructure that can address them.”

Getting the Picture
Accompanying these changes in overall philosophy with regard to economic development have been several factors — many of them beyond the control of leaders in this region — that have made the tasks of job creation and retention much more difficult, said Blair as he addressed the subject of expectations regarding the EDC, and how he believes many of them are not realistic.
The biggest of these factors is the recession, which is over from the textbook-definition standpoint only, he said, adding that the prolonged downturn has created stagnancy and quiet — in both a literal and figurative sense — unlike anything he’s witnessed in his lengthy career.
“The phone literally stopped ringing for almost three years,” he explained. “Those phone calls from brokers, site selectors, and real-estate people inquiring about opportunities to invest in the region just stopped. And with growth literally halting and corresponding layoffs and contractions happening, the ranks of the unemployed grew exponentially. And probably the most compelling comment on this period as we look back on it is going to be that the rebound that’s coming is going to be more of a jobless recovery than anyone anticipated.
“It’s not just that the number of jobs may be down,” he continued, “but that the new jobs created will be very different from the skill sets of the people who are unemployed.”
This sizable gap poses a dilemma for economic-development leaders, he went on, noting that it creates questions about whether the region should continue trying to attract knowledge-based jobs for which many residents are simply not qualified, as it has for several years now, or shift the focus to industries with lower-skilled jobs, such as distribution.
“And this has implications for everything,” he told BusinessWest, “implications for marketing, land use — if you decide to go after more distribution than manufacturing, for example, the amount of land used is greater, so you’re chewing up that resource faster — and other factors. I don’t have the answer, but this has created a need for us to re-examine some of our strategies and targets.”
Another factor is the cost of doing business in this region, he said, adding that, despite the efforts of state and local officials to mitigate the overall impact, those numbers are more of an issue than ever before.
“By virtue of where we are in the world, those costs are higher than in lots of other places,” Blair explained. “In the ’50s, ‘60s, and ‘70s, it wasn’t that far out of whack with the rest of the country, and it didn’t matter anyway because the products were being produced here and companies wanted to stay.
“Today, if we as a state are not nurturing businesses that are producing high-value products that can absorb the underlying costs of doing business, we’re going to lose the manufacturing that we currently have,” he continued. “And the only way for companies to create those products is to be constantly innovating, finding that new thing, putting that new tweak on an existing product, designing a machine that makes something 10% cheaper so they can continue to stay on top and be unique and competitive.”
All this brings Blair to perhaps his most critical observation — that effective economic development requires more partnerships than ever before, with players that can assume key roles in creating an environment that fosters entrepreneurship and innovation and then provides the support network needed to help businesses get to the proverbial next level.
“The economic-development effort is much more of a partnership today than it ever was,” he said. “It always had to be, but there was a lot more room for lone rangers to go out there and make a deal, drag a company back, and put it in a building. Today, it’s such a complex decision-making exercise as to where a company locates that there has to be a broader circle of partners. That includes the planners, the municipal economic-development people, and higher education and other workforce-talent-development people, because that’s the biggest issue companies face.
“The circle of those of us involved in economic development, the collaborators, is much bigger today than ever before,” he continued. “And it has to continue to be flexible because of the sheer complexity involved. We’ve done a good job of responding to this change, this evolution, and we have to continue doing so, because if we don’t, we’re going to lose.”
While coping with all this change and evolution, Blair said he also has to deal with the high expectations for the EDC, a situation magnified by the recession and the critical need for jobs, especially in urban centers trying to reinvent themselves.
“When things are this difficult, people look to organizations like ours for solutions,” he explained. “They expect, because we have the leadership of our region involved, that we’re going to figure out some solutions and somehow put the resources there to make things happen. But those solutions are not easy to recognize.
“I’m sure that people are disappointed that we haven’t been able to create more jobs and attract more jobs to this region,” he continued. “I can say definitively that it’s not for lack of effort and it’s not for lack of trying to find a new, smarter, better way of doing what we do; things have just changed, and it’s going to take a while for us to get back in the game. And if misery loves company, we’re certainly not the only ones facing this.”

A Developing Story
Now 62, Blair told BusinessWest that, while he’s not fixated on the subject, thoughts of retirement and what it might be like enter his head every so often.
“At some point, you turn the corner,” he said, “and realize that you won’t be here for the next cycle of whatever it is you’ve been working on for years and years — someone else will be doing that.”
There will be several options if he decides to stay active professionally when that day comes, he continued, referring to his vast experience in real estate and other economic-development matters, not to mention that law degree he earned 15 years ago.
For now, though, he is focused on that career-long devotion to putting people into jobs and leading the region’s response to change in how that assignment is carried out. “I love what I do, and I’m still totally committed to working with our region for our economic growth and benefit.”
As the economic-development landscape continues to evolve, and recruitment of companies to Western Mass. absorbs less of his time, there will likely be fewer opportunities to add to that collection of photos in his office.
But then again, his attention has always been on the really big picture.

George O’Brien can be reached at [email protected]

Agenda Departments

Classic Cars and Classic Music
June 10: The Holyoke Parks & Recreation Department and Wistariahurst Museum on Cabot Street invite area residents to enjoy a night of live entertainment and fun on the grounds of Wistariahurst, beginning at 6 p.m., with classic cars and music by Patrick Tobin, known for his international touring Tribute to Frank Sinatra. While attendees stroll the grounds and gardens, antique autos will be out for viewing. The family event is free and open to the public. Seating is not provided, however, so attendees are asked to bring a lawn chair or blanket, since the program is outdoors. For more information, call the museum at (413) 322-5660 or visit www.wistariahurst.org.

HR and Social Media Workshop
June 16: Representatives from Royal LLP and the Vann Group will present a free seminar titled “Social Networking Media and the Workplace: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly” from 8:30 to 10 a.m. in the NUVO Bank community room, 1500 Main St., Springfield. Discussion will include the benefits and the drawbacks of using social media during the recruiting and hiring process as well as within the workplace. Registration begins at 8:15 a.m., and seating is limited. To register, contact Ann-Marie Marcil at [email protected] or call (413) 586-2288.

40 Under Forty Gala
June 23: BusinessWest will present its 40 Under Forty Class of 2011, at a not-to-be-missed gala at the Log Cabin Banquet & Meeting House, beginning at 5 p.m. The 40 Under Forty program, initiated in 2007, has become an early-summer tradition in the region. For more information call (413) 781-8600, ext. 100, or visit www.BusinessWest.com.

Skinner Family Tour
June 25: The curators of Wistariahurst and the Joseph Allen Skinner Museum will host a jaunt around Holyoke and South Hadley to learn more about the lives of the Skinner family from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. William Skinner and his descendants are famed as much for their philanthropic gifts to social and educational institutions in this region as they are for business innovation and expertise in producing the highest-quality silk thread and satin fabrics. As manufacturer of Skinner’s Satins, William Skinner came to be widely known, and his own success was generously extended to Holyoke and the working people who lived there. The Skinner family supported the construction of a chapel, a hospital, a city library, a gymnasium, a coffeehouse, and a state park. The program includes transportation and tours of various Skinner venues including Wistariahurst, the Skinner Chapel of the United Congregational Church, and the Orchards (former home of Joseph Skinner and his family), and will conclude with a tour of the Joseph Allen Skinner Museum. Tickets are $25 per person, $20 for students and seniors. To make a reservation, call (413) 322-5660.

Summer Business Summit
June 27-28: The Resort and Conference Center of Hyannis will be the setting for the Summer Business Summit, hosted by the Massachusetts Chamber of Business and Industry of Boston. Nominations are being accepted for the Massachusetts Chamber, Business of the Year, and Employer of Choice awards. The two-day conference will feature educational speakers, presentations by lawmakers, VIP receptions, and more. For more information, visit www.masscbi.com.

Jazz & Art Festival
July 8-10: A Mardi Gras theme will kick off the 5th annual Hampden Bank Hoop City Jazz & Art Festival on July 8, featuring Glenn David Andrews with the Soul Rebels, and hosted by Wendell Pierce, star of the HBO series Treme. The celebration, planned at Springfield’s Court Square on the Esplanade, continues throughout the weekend with a lineup of world-class entertainment. On July 9, performances are slated by Marcus Anderson, the UK Kings of Jazz Groove, Down to the Bone, 17-year-old jazz newcomer Vincent Ingala, and Gerald Albright. On July 10, performances begin with the Eric Bascom Quintet, followed by Samirah Evans and Her Handsome Devils. Kendrick Oliver and the New Life Orchestra will also perform, and Latin jazz performer Poncho Sanchez will close out the festival. Organizers will also be increasing the number of merchandise vendors, artisans, and crafters, as well as food vendors. For more information, visit www.hoopcityjazz.org.

Western Mass. Business Expo
Oct. 18: Businesses from throughout Hampden, Hampshire, Franklin, and Berkshire counties will come together for the premier trade show in the region, the Western Mass. Business Expo. Formerly known as the Market Show, the event, produced by BusinessWest and staged at the MassMutual Center in Springfield, has been revamped and improved to provide exposure and business opportunities for area companies. The cost for a 10-by-10 booth is $700 for members of all area chambers and $750 for non-members; corner booths are $750 for all chamber members and $800 for non-members; and a 10-by-20 booth is $1,200 for all chamber members and $1,250 for non-members. For more information, log onto www.BusinessWest.com or call (413) 781-8600, ext. 100.

Bankruptcies Departments
The following bankruptcy petitions were recently filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court. Readers should confirm all information with the court.

Affordable Acupuncture
Rivenson, Alan Paul
5 Highland Dr.
Great Barrington, MA 01230
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Aiken, Amy B.
29 Pomeroy St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Aiken, Randall G.
40A Hadley Village Road
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Allard, Deborah A.
89 Brentwood St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Angelica Brothers Electric
724 Main St.
Holyoke, MA 01040-5440
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/11

Angell, Stewart J.
Angell, Megan E.
45 Mansfield St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Banks, Michael A.
16 Silver St.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Beaudry, Eric E.
Beaudry, Amy B.
65 Mountain Road
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Bell, Mark B.
5 Hummingbird Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Berthiaume, Joseph
Berthiaume, Carolyn J.
43 Asselin St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Bistrek, Travis O.
Bistrek, Christy L.
31 High St.
Shelburne Falls, MA 01370
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/02/11

Bullett, Michael L
Bullett, Dawn M.
449 1/2 East Main St.
North Adams, MA 01247
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Burns, Leroy R.
Burns, Irene M.
248 Cole Ave.
Williamstown, MA 01267
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/17/11

Butler, Ruth M.
35 West St.
Granby, MA 01033
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Campofredano, Donald G.
Campofredano, Dorothy L.
a/k/a Johnson, Dorothy
a/k/a Desrosiers, Dorothy
144 Sikes Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Canales, Samuel
Canales, Belen M.
55 Cass St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Carlson, Brenda
160 Freenam Road
PO Box 781
Charlton, MA 01507
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Carpenter, Christine A.
163 Pleasant St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Cassavant, Eric H.
Cassavant, Charlene L.
a/k/a Jones, Charlene
381 Springside Ave.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/11

Chan-Ali, Kim
115 Bellevue Ave.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Codding, James A.
Codding, Brigitte
950 Allen St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Cook, Thomas B.
18-20 O’Connor Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/11

Costigan, Gary Joseph
65 Maplewood Ave.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Crosier, John F.
Crosier, Leigh B.
35 East Orchard Ter.
Adams, MA 01220
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Damon, Clifford L.
Damon, Sharon M.
260 Ridge Road
Athol, MA 01331
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Darrin, Melissa C.
18 Saint Anthony St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Davis, Linda L.
79 Meadow St., Apt. 2L
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/11

Davis, Talonda C.
37 Gerald St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/21/11

DiGrigoli, Peter
25 Cliffwood St.
Lee, MA 01238
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/11

Dobbert, Colleen E.
149 Ashton Ave.
North Adams, MA 01247
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Drew, Vickie J.
73 Barrett St. #2090
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Drinkwine, Barry
Drinkwine, Michelle
120 Paramount St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Dryjowicz-Burek, Alan F.
184 Hubbard St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Ercolino, Linda A.
a/k/a Velthouse, Linda A.
50 Cleveland St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Ferriter, Tara Jean
17 Willow St.
North Adams, MA 01247
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Flanders, Theresa M.
11 Francis St.
Greenfield, MA 01301
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Gaouette, Leonidas
Gaouette, Carla
103 Bardwell St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Gassett, Erin L.
a/k/a Piatt, Erin L.
312 Regency Park Dr.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Gebo, Heidi Lynne
366 Montague City Road
Turners Falls, MA 01376
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Gero, Melissa A.
81 Woodcrest Circle
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/11

Giarratano, Anthony C.
4 Rose Court West
Great Barrington, MA 01230
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Gore, Brian
414 Chestnut St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Greenhalgh, Patrick Y.
1063 East Mountain Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Guiel Construction, LLC
Guiel, Allen Richard
63 Chesterfield Road
Williamsburg, MA 01096
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Gulielmetti, Susan
671 Bay Road, Apt. 1
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Hagberg, Stephen S.
111 East St.
Ware, MA 01082
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Hansen, Jessica D.
P.O. Box 910
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Hanson, Jonathan
Hanson, Patti
58 East Longmeadow
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/26/11

Hayden, Jill R.
117 Lorraine St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Hayes, John M.
665 East Main St.
Orange, MA 01364
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Hervieux, Mary C.
54 Bruni Ave.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/11

Hill, Tamara W.
646 Alden St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Hodgkins, Peter S.
15 Navin Ave.
Lee, MA 01238
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Holmgren, John
Holmgren, Joy S.
481 Leadmine Road
Sturbridge, MA 01566
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Honea, David H.
48 Greenwich St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/11

Hopkins, Theresa L.
227 Robbins Ave.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Hudson, Joseph Lawrence
386 Hermitage Dr.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Jackson, Gloria J.
32 Hampton Ave.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Jacob, William Shawn
14 Cedar Lake Dr.
Sturbridge, MA 01566
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Jerusik, Lori A.
17 Jeanette Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Jette, Susanne C.
PO Box 325
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/11

JKM Custom Builders, LLC
McComb, Joshua Kane
McComb, Breanne M
a/k/a Hawkins, Breanne M.
1 George Ave.
Turners Falls, MA 01376
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Johnson, Edward C.
7 Stebbins Road
Monson, MA 01057
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/11

Julian, Jacqueline C.
58 Emmett St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/11

Jurik, Michael Anthony
PO Box 475
Shelburne Falls, MA 01370
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Kaleta, James W.
Kaleta, Melissa A.
11 Cherry St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Kneeskern, James K.
Kneeskern, Muriel A.
94 Senator St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/11

Knight, Deborah L.
950 Blandford Road
Russell, MA 01071
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Knight, Deborah L.
950 Blandford Road
Russell, MA 01071
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Lastowski, Richard A.
Lastowski, Kathleen J.
218 Montague City Road
Turners Falls, MA 01376
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Lavalle, Frank Robert
538 Springfield St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Lavalley, Wesley W.
Lavalley, Sharon L.
56 Glendale St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Leavitt, Amanda
72 Paige St.
Athol, MA 01331
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Lemarier, Nicole M.
57 Water St.
Granville, MA 01034
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Lewis, Adam J.
25 Congress St.
Athol, MA 01331
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Lowe, R. Dennis
a/k/a Lowe, Richard D.
83-B Blunt Road
Great Barrington, MA 01230
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Lund, Carol
82 Hewitt St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Lyon, Gregory J.
P.O. Box 482
Granby, MA 01033
Chapter: 12
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Magical Beadstalk
Spier-Kalmar, Terry Ellen
47 Brookline Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Mantzios, John M.
116 Tolpa Circle
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Matthews, Roland A.
Matthews, Tammy S.
338 Vine St.
Athol, MA 01331
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/30/11

McBain Home Remodeling
McBain, Wesley H.
a/k/a Parsley, Wesley H.
McBain, Danielle M.
91 Springfield St.
Three Rivers, MA 01080
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

McCarthy, Joanne Ellen
102 Popular Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

McClenathan, John R.
a/k/a Tinker, John
13 East Howe St., No. 3
Orange, MA 01364
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/23/11

McGeoghan, Joann Mary
75 Christopher Lane
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Medina, Jose
44 Ashley St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/11

Michalak, Anthony
Michalak, Carolyn
6 Varney St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Miller, Thomas F.
Miller, Cheryl A.
103 West Crystal Brook Dr.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Minor, Bernard S.
Minor, Lorraine M.
29 Pinecrest Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Montemagni, Rachel A.
a/k/a Lepage Montemagni, Rachel A.
141 Saint James Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Morris, Norman E.
Morris, Elizabeth A.
69 South Hampton Road
Amesbury, MA 01913
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Morton, Thomas R.
16 Fairgrounds Ave.
North Adams, MA 01247
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Moses, Kimberly Ann
28 Birchwood Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Mousseau, William J.
Mousseau, Lori A.
116 South Main St.
Athol, MA 01331
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/22/11

Ortiz, Audrey J.
Ortiz, Luis M.
5 West School St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Parks, Leslie R.
a/k/a L’Kuicha Parks
86 Princeton St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Perez, Elba
188 Wollaston St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Perez, Margarita
a/k/a Kareh, Margarita
300 East Main St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Petrin, Adelaide Patricia
7 Oak Knoll Dr.
South Deerfield, MA 01373
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Poprovo, Mark Joseph
Poprovo, Lynette H.
a/k/a Campbell, Lynette H.
419 Montcalm St., Apt. 47
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/11

Prevost, Tammy S.
119 Berkshire Ave.
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/22/11

Puustinen, Carla L.
25 Congress St.
Athol, MA 01331
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Ramos, Joanny
135 Jackson St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Remillard, Kara L.
132 Newton St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/11

Richard, Susan Hannah
a/k/a Race, Susan
464 Chestnut St.
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Richards, Angela M.
a/k/a Hebert, Angela Marie
P.O.Box 966
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Rivera, Armando
593 South Bridge St
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Romero-Benitez, Marylyn
35 Springdale Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Rosario, Felix
123 Massasoit St.
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/11

Roy, Jason T.
Roy, Aimee M.
a/k/a Procopio, Aimee
61 Pine Grove Dr.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Ryan, John W.
Ryan, Rachel L.
a/k/a Machart, Rachel
a/k/a Tworkowski, Rachel
a/k/a Sinclair, Rachel
128 Mechanic St.
Orange, MA 01364
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/30/11

Sanchez, Carmen D.
77 Tokeneke Road
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Schieppe, Carrie A.
a/k/a Pierce, Carrie A.
100 Russell Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Sias, Annemarie
a/k/a Spear, Annmarie
155 Woodland Dr.
Hampden, MA 01036
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Siefken-Watt, Jennifer L.
a/k/a Kratovil, Jennifer
94 Kensington St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Sikes, Bruce William
4 Hillside Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Soderberg, Brendon M.
Soderberg, Stephanie L.
24 Stafford Road
Wales, MA 01081
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Sokhom, Ping
155 Baystate Road
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/17/11

Spaulding, Brian A.
Spaulding, Jillian E.
64 Audubon St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Spooner, Christina L.
a/k/a Prouty, Christina L.
157 Harugari St.
Athol, MA 01331
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Springfield Limo Airport & Car
Zamboni, Dino J.
Zamboni, Susan A.
12 Iroquois Lane
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/11

Sterner, Gail A.
37 Smith St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Stetson, Melissa Anne
202 Gifford St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/11

Tabb, Kevin B.
111 Glenoak Dr.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/02/11

Taylor, William A.
Taylor, Joanne C.
86 Morton St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Thompson, Georgette Annmarie
72 Garfield St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Thorng, Kimsuor
155 Baystate Road
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/17/11

Thorpe, Jason G.
119 Montague City Road
Greenfield, MA 01301
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/11

Torres-Montes, Elias
415 East River St.
Orange, MA 01364
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/23/11

Tremblay, Gerard N.
Tremblay, Tara A.
48 Flint St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/11

Wallace, David C.
Wallace, Jane L.
2 Howe Road
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Wellspeak, Ronald D.
549 Russell Road Apt. 13D
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/11

Whitlock, Sharen Jennice
37 Bacon Road
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Williams, Alice R.
38 Ahrend Circle
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/11

Wilson, Princess G.
a/k/a Giarratano, Gail
4 Rose Court West
Great Barrington, MA 01230
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Wood, David H.
17 Lincoln St.
Greenfield, MA 01301
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/11

Woods, Edwina D.
65 Quebec St.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/11

Zapasnik, Stanley P.
Zapasnik, Diane L.
30 Fritscher Road
Barre, MA 01005
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/11

Zelaya-Oseguera, Mercedes
415 East River St.
Orange, MA 01364
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/23/11

Law Sections
You Should Prepare Now to Prevent Future Problems

Hyman G. Darling

Hyman G. Darling


Maintaining your estate plan is very important, regardless of your health or age. In fact, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has already drafted a will for you, so if you want to make your own decisions about the distribution of your assets, the only way to do so is through your own will. But that’s just the first step.
This year has brought many state-specific changes in laws that require an update of your plan. For instance, in Massachusetts, there is a new homestead declaration law, which was enacted to provide an automatic exemption for homeowners. There is an additional increased exemption available if it is claimed; however, a document must be prepared, notarized, and recorded in order to become effective.
In addition, the federal law relative to estate taxes has changed so that the exemption is now $5 million per person, but only for two years. Then you must also consider your own state-specific tax laws and tax rates. Since no one knows what the law will be in two years, you shouldn’t count on the $5 million exemption forever, and therefore should plan around an anticipated reduction in the exemption.
Additional documents also need to be revised regardless of the size of your estate. One of the most important is the health care proxy, also known as a health directive, advance directive, or living will in some states. This is not just for the elderly. In fact, everyone over the age of 18 should have one, and this includes your college-age kids, because hospital privacy laws may actually prevent you from obtaining information about them if they become hurt or sick. Three of the most-highly publicized cases regarding the right to die included Karen Quinlan, Nancy Cruzan, and Terri Schiavo, all relatively young women who did not have a health care proxy in place.
This document allows you to designate who will be your decision maker in the unfortunate event of incapacity, as well as whether you wish to be kept alive by machines, and donate your organs. It also may include directives for funeral arrangements, such as cremation, burial, memorials, etc.
The power of attorney is another vital document that every individual should have. It nominates an individual or an entity, such as a bank or trust company, to make financial decisions for you when you become incapacitated and are unable to attend to your own financial matters. This would include paying bills, attending to investments, maintaining or selling a residence, paying a mortgage, filing tax returns, and all other financial matters.
Please note that the person nominated under the power of attorney does not have to be the same person who is serving for health-related decisions. This is an important concept, and the people that you nominate may serve different roles and have different strengths in performing various tasks. Care should be given when making these decisions to select the most appropriate, responsible, and trustworthy individuals to carry out these duties. If you already have a health proxy and power of attorney, it may be appropriate to review them at this time to be sure that the individuals named are still able and competent to make these decisions.
Your will should also be reviewed to be sure that the individuals who are named as executors and beneficiaries remain appropriate for the tasks. If your child or grandchild is named as a beneficiary and has financial or marital problems, or has been declared disabled, it may be appropriate to have their share held in a trust as opposed to providing an outright distribution for them. If a trust is being established, care should be given to choose a trustee who will be capable and willing to attend to all financial affairs.
Consideration for guardians to care for your minor children if you are unable to do so is another important consideration. Please also consider this if you are a grandparent caring for your grandchildren.

Financial Matters
Other areas of concern that must be considered include retirement planning and financial planning. It’s never too early to plan for retirement and provide funds for your children’s education. Setting up so-called 529 Plans, as well as establishing IRAs, Roth IRAs, and funding a 401(k) and other qualified plans, are a necessity. Funds that are contributed at an early age may contribute significant appreciation with compounding and will provide for additional retirement funds to augment whatever your private pension or Social Security may fund.
Other considerations in your planning process include verifying beneficiary designations of life insurance, annuities, and retirement plans. Be sure that the individuals named are still appropriate and listed in the correct percentages and amounts. Also, charitable planning is a major consideration if you want charitable deductions, either during your lifetime or upon your death. Long-term care insurance is also important if you want to alleviate the need to spend private funds for long-term care, be it institutionalized care or home care. The sooner and earlier a policy is purchased, the less costly the premiums, and the more likely you will be insurable, since medical issues may prevent coverage in the future.
In addition, preparing an inventory of your assets, making a list of your professional advisors, and also providing your login names and passwords to online accounts should be completed, so if you become disabled or pass away, there won’t be any delay or problems in accessing those accounts and paying your bills. This includes social-media sites, because your family may wish to create an online memorial or take your pages down.
Nobody likes to contemplate what the future inevitably holds, but it is critically important to follow through on the planning process and complete the necessary documents to minimize taxes, avoid probate, and preserve assets for the next generation.

Attorney Hyman G. Darling is chairman of Bacon Wilson, P.C.’s Estate Planning and Elder Law Departments. His areas of expertise include all areas of estate planning, probate, and elder law. He is a frequent lecturer on various estate-planning and elder-law topics at local and national levels, and he hosts a popular estate-planning blog at bwlaw.blogs.com; (413) 781-0560; baconwilson.com.

Departments Picture This

Send photos with a caption and contact information to: ‘Picture This’
c/o BusinessWest Magazine, 1441 Main Street, Springfield, MA 01103 or to [email protected]

Reading Aloud

Reading1Kensington Elementary School in Springfield recently hosted two guest readers as part of Link to Libraries’ ongoing read-aloud Program. At left top, BusinessWest Editor George O’Brien is seen with his fourth-grade class, while left below, Peter Rosskothen, co-owner of the Delaney House and Log Cabin, and a regular participant in the program, reads to another fourth-grade class.
Reading2The read-aloud program is presented six times a year by the nonprofit Link to Libraries, which brings in area business people to read to students in Springfield and Holyoke public schools. Students each receive a book and book bag to begin their own home library, and the school library receives between 175 and 200 new books.








Branching Out

PNCUThe Polish National Credit Union (PNCU) staged a ribbon-cutting ceremony on May 5 to celebrate the grand opening of its new full-service branch location at 25 East Longmeadow Road in Hampden. From left are: Jeffrey Ciuffreda, executive director of the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield; PNCU President James Kelly; and state Rep. Brian Ashe, D-Longmeadow.





Check Presentation

GraingerGrainger Co. staff present a $5,000 check from the Grainger Foundation to STCC Student Activities Director Andrea Tarpey and STCC Foundation Director William Kwolek. The Grainger Foundation also presented $5,000, in checks of $1,000, to five local food pantries. More than 1,400 food items donated by the STCC community were divided among the food pantries.





Howdy Awards

gscvbThe 2011 Howdy Awards for Hospitality Excellence, which honor frontline hospitality employees in the Pioneer Valley, were presented at ceremonies at the Log Cabin on May 10. At left, the winners are (from left) Amanda Malone of Chandler’s Restaurant at Yankee Candle Flagship in South Deerfield (Food category); Khia Eagan of the 7-Eleven store in Sunderland (Retail/Business category); Bob Aubrey of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield (Attractions category); Elise Wright of the Belchertown United Church of Christ (Public Service category); Melanie Smith of Six Flags New England in Agawam (Howdy Spotlight Award winner); Mary Mercier of the Yardhouse in South Hadley (Beverage category); Tony Rogers of the Comfort Inn & Suites in Ludlow (Accommodations category); Jason Guzman of Valet Park of America in Springfield (Transportation category); and Judy Brinn of Peter Pan Bus Lines in Springfield (Unseen Hero category). gscvb1At below left, Melanie Smith, national tour and travel representative at Six Flags, is seen after receiving the Howdy Spotlight Award with Greg Chiecko of Eastern States Exposition (left) and Peter Rosskothen of the Log Cabin Banquet & Meeting House and the Delaney House. Smith was honored with the Spotlight Award for her ongoing efforts on behalf of the Pioneer Valley hospitality and tourism business. She also serves currently as chairman of the group tour committee for the Greater Springfield Convention & Visitors Bureau, a position previously held by Chiecko and Rosskothen.


Parking Lot Party

1
2
3The East of the River 5 Town Chamber of Commerce (ERC5) welcomed more than 100 people from the business community to a unique networking event, held in the parking lot of the Eastwood Shops in Wilbraham on May 12. The event, the ERC5 Parking Lot Party, was organized based on the belief that all the best business happens in the parking lot, after the official meeting has ended. The party included food, music, a mobile video-game unit, classic cars, a cyber café, and, of course, networking opportunities. From left top: Jocelyn Walker (left) of Turley Publications, Cheri Mills (center) of Webster Bank, and Maureen Turmel of the Gaudreau Group promote the Boston Road Business Assoc., an event sponsor; Eric Rackliffe of AT&T Mobility helps Barbara Kolosowski, from the Springfield Boys & Girls Club, check in on Facebook; Ed Nunez of Freedom Credit Union gears up for a round of Guitar Hero. Games2U served as the Game Time sponsor for the event.











Springfield’s 375th Birthday Bash

Pancake
Neal
Pancake2
Pancake4The City of Homes celebrated its 375th birthday in style on May 14 with a variety of events and activities, ranging from the annual pancake breakfast — still the world’s largest — to a parade that drew more than 1,500 marchers; from musical performances to Civil War re-enactments at the Springfield Armory; from fireworks to ceremonies involving the Massachusetts Army National Guard, which was also celebrating its 375th anniversary. Scenes from the day included, left from top, a look down Main Street as the pancake breakfast commences; Springfield High School of Science and Technology Director of Bands Gary Bernice, far right, who received a commemorative plate for his many contributions to the event, is seen with, from left, Brigadier General Paul Smith, assistant adjutant general of the Massachusetts Army National Guard, U.S. Rep. and former Springfield Mayor Richard Neal, and current Mayor Domenic Sarno; the contingent from Baystate Health makes its way down the parade route; Neal is seen with several graduates of Elms College, which staged commencement exercises at the MassMutual Center that morning.
Pancake4
Pancake 40
canon












More scenes from Springfield’s 375th birthday celebration: left, Donald D’Amour, chairman and CEO of Big Y World Class Markets, receives an honorary key to the city from Mayor Sarno (Big Y, celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, sponsored the fireworks display); below, the contingent from ABC 40/Fox 6 makes its way down the parade route; at bottom, re-enactors prepare to shoot a cannon as part of the ceremonies at the Armory.

Photos from The Spirit of Springfield

Commercial Real Estate Sections
Know the Rules to Avoid Any Unintended Consequences

Carolyn Bourgoin

Carolyn Bourgoin


Maximizing one’s current tax deduction for rental real-estate losses requires planning and an awareness of the maze of rules that must be considered in order to avoid any unintended consequences. Focusing on some of the more overlooked areas will help taxpayers to avoid some of the potential pitfalls in the passive loss rules.
The passive-activity-loss rules were enacted in 1986 as a means of discouraging taxpayers from investing in activities whose primary purpose was to generate losses to offset various sources of income. The PAL rules prohibit offsetting passive losses with income from non-passive activities, such as salary, professional fees, interest, dividends, or income from a business in which the taxpayer materially participates. As a result, losses from passive activities can only be used to offset income from other passive activities. If there is an excess of passive losses over passive income in any tax year, the excess loss is suspended and carried forward indefinitely, until passive income is generated or the property is sold.
One way taxpayers have tried to generate passive income in order to utilize passive losses is by leasing their personally owned commercial property to a related business. Under the passive-loss rules, it would seem that any net rental income generated by this arrangement would be classified as passive income. However, if the taxpayer materially participates in the trade or business to which the commercial building is being rented, then a set of rules known as the self-rental rules will cause the rental income to be recharacterized as non-passive.
The self-rental rule holds that an otherwise-passive rental activity will be treated as non-passive if the activity generates net income and the taxpayer rents that property to a trade or business in which the taxpayer materially participates. A taxpayer is considered to materially participate in an activity if he or she is involved in the activity on a regular, continuous, and substantial basis. This is determined when a taxpayer’s involvement falls under one of seven tests defined in the IRS regulations.
Though net rental income from such an arrangement is recharacterized as non-passive income, a loss from such a related-party leasing activity would not be subject to the self-rental rule and would be considered passive.
Due to the inconsistent results of the self-rental rule, its validity has been challenged by taxpayers in the courts. However, the courts have upheld the self-rental rules, and so taxpayers must plan accordingly taking these rules into account.
Actively participating in a rental real-estate activity may allow taxpayers to deduct a loss of up to $25,000 against non-passive income. A taxpayer will be considered actively participating if he or she makes key management decisions, such as deciding on rental terms, approving new tenants, or approving capital expenditures. The term ‘active participation’ does not require regular, continuous, and substantial involvement.
Additional requirements to qualify for the $25,000 loss allowance include owning at least 10% of the rental property (can aggregate ownership with spouse) and having AGI that doesn’t exceed specified levels.
Taxpayers may want to consider selling an activity that continually generates passive losses. Disposition of an entire interest in a passive activity in a fully taxable transaction will permit the taxpayer to deduct any suspended losses from the activity.  Where the disposition is by gift, however, a different set of rules applies. First, the donor loses the benefit of the suspended losses; second, the tax basis of the transferred property is increased by the amount of any PALs allocated to such interest. In the case of a partnership interest that has been gifted, a donee must increase his outside basis by an amount equal to the donor’s suspended PALs. Thus, the transfer of an interest in a passive activity by gift does not allow the donor to take a deduction for any suspended losses associated with the property.
Qualifying as a real-estate professional is another option that should be explored. If a taxpayer qualifies as a real-estate professional, rental real-estate interests are not automatically treated as passive activities. This testing is done annually. The following requirements must be met in order to qualify as a real estate professional:
• More than one-half of the personal services performed by the taxpayer in trades or businesses during the tax year are performed in real property trades or businesses in which the taxpayer materially participates; and
• The taxpayer performs more than 750 hours of services during the tax year in real property trades or businesses in which the taxpayer materially participates.
A taxpayer does not have to work full-time in real estate to qualify as a real-estate professional. However, a taxpayer must be able to establish by any reasonable means, such as calendars, appointment books, etc., that he materially participates in the operation of a rental real-estate property in order to treat that property as non-passive. Each rental real-estate interest is treated as a separate activity for purposes of the material participation testing unless an election is made to group interests.
This article provides a few considerations for planning how to maximize passive loss deductions from rental real estate. As always, you should consult your tax advisor or legal advisor regarding applying this general information to your specific situation.

Carolyn Bourgoin is a senior manager in the Tax Division of Meyers Brothers Kalicka, P.C., a public accounting firm in Holyoke; (413) 536-8510.

Sections Supplements
Construction Industry Benefits from Manufacturing Deduction

Cheryl Fitzgerald

Cheryl Fitzgerald

What was once an incentive for manufacturers who exported now benefits many more taxpayers. Better yet, you don’t even need to export to benefit.
A tax incentive enacted to help offset the repeal of a tax break for U.S. exporters actually benefits many contractors and engineers as well. This tax incentive provides a deduction for many U.S. businesses that’s allowed for both regular tax and alternative minimum tax (AMT) purposes. The deduction has become known by many different names. It’s been called, among other things, the ‘U.S. production activities deduction,’ the ‘domestic production activities deduction’ (DPAD), and the ‘domestic manufacturing deduction’. For simplicity’s sake, we’re calling it the DPAD deduction.
The DPAD deduction equals a percentage of the net income from eligible activities — 9% after 2009. However, the amount of the deduction for any tax year may not exceed the taxpayer’s taxable income or, in the case of individuals, the taxpayer’s adjusted gross income.
As noted above, the DPAD deduction equals a percentage of the net income from eligible activities. Among the more common eligible activities are:
• The manufacture, production, or growth of tangible personal property, in whole or in significant part within the U.S.;
• The construction of real property in the U.S.; and
• The performance of engineering or architectural services in the U.S. in connection with real property construction projects in the U.S.
Purely sales activities aren’t eligible for the deduction, nor are purely service activities, except for construction, engineering, and architectural services.
Construction activities are eligible for the DPAD deduction, but only if the construction is of real property performed in the U.S. The real property may consist of residential or commercial buildings; permanent structures (like docks and wharves); permanent land improvements (like swimming pools and parking lots); oil and gas wells, platforms, and pipelines; and infrastructure (like roads, sewers, sidewalks, and power lines). Real property doesn’t include machinery unless it’s a “structural component” — for example, an elevator.
Examples of businesses conducting eligible construction activities are residential remodelers; commercial and institutional building construction contractors; foundation, structure, and building exterior contractors; structural steel and pre-cast concrete contractors; and electrical, plumbing, heating, and air-conditioning contractors.
Eligible construction activities don’t include tangential services such as hauling trash and debris, and delivering materials, even if the tangential services are essential for construction.
Construction includes ‘substantial renovation,’ but not decoration (or redecoration).
Substantial renovation does not include mere cosmetic changes, such as painting. However, painting is an activity constituting construction if it’s performed in connection with other activities (whether or not by the same taxpayer) that constitute the erection or substantial renovation of real property.
For purposes of the rules allowing the DPAD deduction for U.S. real property construction activities, real property construction includes substantial renovation of real property. Substantial renovation means the renovation of a major component or substantial structural part of real property that materially increases the value of the property, substantially prolongs the useful life of the property, or adapts the property to a new or different use.
For example, a plumbing contractor’s installation of a plumbing system in a new building may qualify as a construction activity eligible for the DPAD deduction. However, replacing the fixtures in the bathroom of an existing house won’t qualify because the job isn’t connected with a construction activity — unless the work is performed as part of a substantial renovation.
The DPAD deduction is allowed to all taxpayers — individuals, C corporations, farming cooperatives, estates, trusts, and their beneficiaries. The deduction is passed through to the partners of partnerships and the owners of S corporations (not to partnerships or the S corporations themselves), and may be passed through by farming cooperatives to their patrons. And, despite the deduction’s history, it’s fully available to taxpayers who don’t export.
In addition to taxable income limitations, the amount of the DPAD deduction can’t exceed 50% of the business’s ‘W-2 wages’ paid to employees working in the qualified activity. This means that businesses operated as sole proprietorships or partnerships with no employees aren’t eligible for the deduction.
There’s a lot more to the DPAD deduction — for example, determining whether your particular business construction activities are eligible for the deduction, how to compute the net income from activities that are eligible, and how to determine the amount of the deduction when you’ve got income from both eligible and ineligible activities. The statutory rules are complicated, and the IRS has issued voluminous — and equally complicated — guidance on those rules. You should contact your accountant if you think that your constructing business activities may fall into a category that would allow for this deduction.

Cheryl Fitzgerald is a senior tax manager with the public accounting firm Meyers Brothers Kalicka, P.C., in Holyoke; (413) 536-8510.

Sections Supplements
Amherst Construction Company Has a Solid Foundation

Donald Teagno, left, and Louis Gallinaro

Donald Teagno, left, and Louis Gallinaro say the majority of the work handled by Teagno Construction is in residential settings.

When Donald Teagno was young, he never dreamed he would preside over an award-winning construction firm that would weather three recessions, employ 20 people, and specialize in historic renovations, museum work, and other niche services.
In fact, when the founder and president of Teagno Construction Inc. (TCI) in Amherst graduated from the UMass School of Education in the early ’70s, his plan was to teach English.
“I taught for six months at the junior-high-school level,” he recalled. “But I was in a fairly conservative school district, and I couldn’t use the creative techniques I had been taught at UMass.”
After that experience, he decided to embark upon an entirely different pathway that would allow him to utilize his natural talents. “I had always been pretty handy, and I started working as a carpenter for a developer in Amherst,” he said.
While doing so, Teagno became acquainted with a few local architects who needed work done on their own homes. He accepted one job at a time that included making custom furniture for some of his clients. By 1974, word of mouth had spread, and he began operating under the business name ‘Donald Teagno Building Contractor.’
“I was a lone carpenter and a sole proprietor,” he told BusinessWest. “When I became busier, I took on a partner. And little by little, the jobs got larger until I had three or four people working for me. But I had no preconceived notions that I would end up where I am today.”
However, by 1985, the company had grown substantially, and he incorporated under the name Teagno Construction. But he continued working in the field alongside his employees until it became necessary for him to remain in the office to give estimates and keep up with up with his payroll and other paperwork.
Leaving the construction sites to do office work was not an easy transition for the craftsman. “There are certain times during our company’s history when we made major leaps, and his was one of them,” Teagno explained. “But it was very difficult for me to delegate work to other people; I wanted things done in a certain way with a certain quality. Little by little, I was able to relax, once I was sure my reputation was being supported by my employees. But it was a slow process.”
In the early years, he worked almost exclusively with homeowners, putting on additions and doing interior renovations. “It was almost all negotiated work, but in 1985 I started doing larger jobs and branched out into multi-family work and the competitive market. And after about 10 or 15 years, I had built a reputation by doing unique projects,” he said. “We are not famous for it, but we have jacked up buildings to replace foundations, which we started doing in the ’80s.”
One of those jobs resulted in some recognition. TCI is certified by the state as a historical contractor, and its work on an 18-unit row house on South Street in Northampton won an award for historic preservation.
“We did a total renovation and extensive structural repairs there,” he explained. “The building was sliding down, and we had to pick up the foundation, level it, then pour a new foundation underneath it, which can cause some of the plaster inside to crack. These jobs are especially challenging, as it is really hard to figure out their cost. In the process of picking up a house, you find its weak points, so you have to look at it carefully to determine any problems that may arise. In the worst-case scenario, a project will become cost-prohibitive.”

On the Home Front
TCI’s portfolio is diverse and includes work in museums and local colleges. “We even built a ski lodge — the Swift River Inn in Cummington — which is now a school,” said general manager Louis Gallinaro. “And our marquee project on the industrial side was building All Saints Church in South Hadley.”
But the majority of the company’s projects have always been in the residential setting. It is in this realm where the business began and the reason TCI remains so sensitive to its customers’ ideas, thoughts, and feelings.
“Our residential work all started with my reputation for quality work and attention to people’s needs,” Teagno said.
In fact, almost 90% of his work comes from customer referrals. He does little advertising and relies mainly on word of mouth.
Teagno says he has been able to weather three recessions, two of them quite severe in nature, due to his company’s diversity, his commitment to listen closely to what customers say they want, and his quality work. In fact, these are core values that are adhered to during every project, although, on commercial jobs such as restaurant renovations, timing sometimes takes precedence.
“When you listen to people closely, you are able to do what they want in the way they want it,” Gallinaro explained.  “Most homeowners have never done this type of work before, and they want to be educated about the entire process.”
Teagno says his employees take the time to inform and explain exactly what they are doing each step of the way, which helps clients feel comfortable.
“Each customer is a whole new experience. We don’t just build things, we have relationships with our customers. And you can’t put a price on a relationship,” he said.
“We want them to have a good experience, so we do the absolute best job we can. Listening to our customers is not lip service for us, and it’s not always in our best financial interest. It would be easier to cut corners to save money, but we don’t do that.”
He says most homeowners are more concerned about quality workmanship than the length of time a project will take to complete.  Working in the industrial/commercial arena is a different story, however, as venues such as restaurants have opening dates and tight timelines.
Competitive bidding for such jobs makes up about 25% of TCI’s portfolio, and results in added benefits for residential customers. “It keeps our pencils sharp and allows us to give more value when we negotiate work with homeowners,” Teagno said.

Making History
TCI Inc. has done a considerable amount of work in local museums. Its most noteworthy project was a renovation made to the Emily Dickinson Museum in Amherst.
It was built as a private residence around 1856 and is the site where Dickinson composed the majority of her 1,800 poems. “We helped create the visitor’s room within the structure. One section was renovated extensively, but we left portholes in some of the wall sections so people could see how the building was initially constructed,” Gallinaro said.
He told BusinessWest that it was a privilege to work in such a historic setting. “We got to walk on hallowed ground in a building that is on the state and federal register.”
However, working on such old structures presents a stern set of challenges.
“Historic buildings were not built to the same standards we have today; in order to do the work, you need a good foundation, which is how the whole thing started,” Teagno explained, alluding to his firm’s diverse specialty work and the first time he had to raise a building to lay a new foundation. “I was brought in to make some repairs when I was on my own, and the jobs I got after that became increasingly challenging.”
The company is also responsible for renovating the Words and Pictures Museum in Northampton, which has since closed its doors. “The building had all kinds of structural issues. It had been renovated many times and was compromised over the years,” Teagno said.
TCI has also done work at local colleges, which runs the gamut from dormitory renovations to building new science labs and structures, such as an 18,000-square-foot classroom and administration building for the Bement School in Deerfield. Another noteworthy project was the construction of a 10,000-square-foot day-care center for Mount Holyoke College.
“We have also done a number of renovations for medical and dental facilities,” Gallerino said. “Nine years ago, we converted the gas station across the street into a successful practice. The building had been closed for years before we started the work.”
In addition, the company has built and renovated many area eateries, sometimes working in the same building more than once. “Restaurants are usually complicated because they involve a lot of equipment along with special heating and plumbing requirements and fire-safety issues,” Gallinaro said. “And the people we work with all have different needs.”

Plane Speaking
But no matter who their client is, their approach remains the same.
Teagno’s employees go in with an ear to the ground, making sure they understand the meaning behind a customer’s words so they can transform their dreams into reality.
It’s an interesting way to do business and perhaps not that far afield from the creative teaching methods Teagno wanted to employ long before he started his unique construction company.

Sections Supplements
The B-G Companies Continue to Make Degrees of Progress

James Reidy, operations manager of B-G Mechanical Services

James Reidy, operations manager of B-G Mechanical Services

The B-G Companies, launched as a small plumbing outfit more than 80 years ago by a German immigrant, remained a small family shop for decades afterward. But the past 30 years have seen significant expansion of the HVAC venture, which now boasts an impressive footprint across New England. Today, it’s making a name for itself in energy-efficiency projects, being sure to stay on the cutting edge of an industry that remains highly competitive.

It may no longer be a family business, but B-G Mechanical Services still feels like family to James Reidy.
“There are a lot of long-time people here,” said Reidy, the Chicopee-based company’s operations manager. “I’m one of the newer people, and I’ve been here 11 years.”
That stability speaks to the long-term success of an HVAC firm launched more than eight decades ago which boasts an impressive footprint in New England. Today, the B-G name — which includes sister company B-G Mechanical Contractors — is backed by the clout of its parent company, Pennsylvania Power & Light Corp. (PPL), one of the largest energy conglomerates in the U.S., which bought the outfit in 2000.
B-G is comprised of several divisions that handle very different types of work, Reidy explained.
“Here in the service division, we do smaller projects, and the crux of our business is contract maintenance,” he explained. “We’ll go to your building, change your filter, check your belts, and do whatever else is needed for your equipment to maintain it. When we see something wrong, we’ll let you know, and can hopefully repair that for you.”
A second division handles special projects, including design-build work for existing customers and smaller projects up for bid, up to around $1 million, Reidy explained. “They have engineering expertise and guys who are equipped to go out and do smaller projects.”
Meanwhile, B-G Mechanical Contractors performs mainly bid and spec work for larger projects, he explained, for both private companies and municipal properties.
“Our business contracting does a lot of school work; that seems to be a good niche for us,” Reidy said. “Plastics is very big around here, and we have a lot of customers involved in that, and we have a lot of customers in the printing industry, too.
In addition, “if a town needs a contractor, we’re big enough to handle just about any need from any town around here,” he added. “We’re unionized; if we really need extra manpower, we can call the hall, and hopefully they’ll have a few guys on the bench, ready to come to work.”
Just as B-G has been ready to answer the call for the past 80-plus years.

Steady Growth
B-G was started as a family business in the 1920s by German immigrant Bruno Goeldner. In 1956, he passed it on to his son, William, who incorporated the company in 1957. William’s son, Robert, joined the company in 1960 and became CEO upon William’s retirement in 1969. That was when what had been a small outfit began to grow and expand.
In 1970, Pioneer Plumbing and Heating was formed, prospering until the late ’70s, when it was merged with what had long been known as Bruno Goeldner Plumbing and Heating. The new entity was incorporated as B-G Mechanical Contractors Inc.
“Bob built B-G from a little plumbing shop into one of the premier mechanical firms in all of New England,” Reidy said. “In addition to B-G Mechanical Contractors, he started B-G Service, Titan Mechanical in Hartford, and Millennium Builders in Rocky Hill. Those were his four basic companies. He really built it from a mom-and-pop plumbing shop to a real contracting firm. He turned it into what it is today.”
In 2000, Robert Goeldner sold his companies to PPL. “Pennsylvania Power and Light owns 13 contracting companies from Virginia to Boston,” said Reidy, noting that the conglomerate recently bought Tennessee Electric Co. and Louisiana Power & Light Co.
Locally, B-G’s focus is mainly on commercial and industrial work, he emphasized, “but we have occasionally been involved in homes — bigger homes that have commercial systems in them.” Larger customers range from UMass and Holyoke Community College to Hartford’s post offices and the city of Springfield.
We’re fortunate that we have UMass; there are a lot of projects up there,” Reidy said.
“We also do a lot of work at Yale, which has a big endowment and is always doing projects. They’re a good customer, and we like dealing with them.”
These days, in the wake of the recession, “we find that municipalities are strapped; budgets are cut because tax revenue is down, and towns don’t have the money to spend on infrastructure.” But having a wide range of services and a broad client base helps shelter the company somewhat.
“We’re fortunate that, even with the downturn in the economy, we’re diversified enough to survive,” he said. “If people don’t want to replace a system, they’ll service parts of it. So it’s one end of what we do, or another. It’s busy.”

Lean and Green
He’s especially excited about the company’s forays into alternative-energy projects, such as the recent installation of new boilers and and other equipment for Springfield’s municipal buildings after the city undertook what is known as an ‘energy makeover.’
“There are companies that will come into a facility, or a city like Springfield, and do an energy audit on all the buildings, and come up with recommendations on how to save a certain amount of money,” Reidy said. “Then they’ll turn around and give you guarantees on that. Then a contractor — in this case, B-G — will come in and install these energy improvements.” The company has also completed similar work for the Worcester Housing Authority.
In addition, “we recently completed a geothermal project right here in Springfield, for the Local 7 electrical union,” Reidy said. “We installed a geothermal refrigeration system that heats and cools their building, and they’re receiving good savings from that installation.”
B-G has also begun taking on more photovoltaic work, such as the installation of 100 rooftop solar panels at the Hampshire County Jail.
“That’s a fast-growing industry,” Reidy said. “I think people are starting to pay attention to efficiency all the way down the line, from large projects to small pieces of equipment for homes.
“We’ve done quite a few green-building projects,” he continued. “Its time has come, as people keep looking for ways to save money. It’s a perfect storm, if you think about it: fuel costs are up, people are more aware of the environment now, and conservation is kicking in.”
That economic consideration is key, though, to getting many people to move toward energy-efficient solutions. “In my own experience, I converted from oil to gas in my home this year and saved 50% on the fuel bill,” Reidy said. “That’s a quick payback, and that’s what people want, a quick payback. They want to know, ‘how many years will it take for this investment to pay me back?’ Energy efficiency today is huge.”

Up to Speed
Even as B-G embraces these trends, it has seen the HVAC field in general become more challenging on many levels, but more exciting as well.
“The speed at which jobs get done has increased dramatically; everything is faster, faster, faster,” Reidy said. “And the computer has changed the building automation controls amazingly. Every piece of equipment today has some kind of plug-in computer board. It makes troubleshooting the equipment so much easier. It reminds you of when service is due, reminds you of filter changes … all that is done through the computer today; it’s all automated. That’s probably the biggest change in the industry.”
In addition, he said, “there have been a lot of changes in the way pipes are put together — quicker, faster, better — that saves labor in projects.”
Being faster also means staying nimble against what has become stiffer competition in recent years, he told BusinessWest.
“We’re finding that competition keeps you moving faster because, if you’re not out knocking on doors, someone’s going to be out there in front of you,” he said. “We’re finding, when we bid on projects here in Springfield, guys from Rhode Island, Boston, and New York are here to bid on the work, because they know the work is here.”
In other words, even a struggling economy hasn’t cooled off business too much for this ‘little plumbing shop’ that has become much more.

Joseph Bednar can be reached at [email protected]

Chamber Corners Departments

ACCGS
www.myonlinechamber.com
(413) 787-1555
n June 3: ERC5 Annual Meeting, 7:15-9 a.m., Twin Hills Country Club, Longmeadow.
Tickets: $20 for members; $30 for non-members . Speakers: Suzanne Strempek Shea and Tom Shea on “Keeping it Local.” For more information and to purchase tickets call (413) 787-1555
n June 15: ACCGS Annual Meeting, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Marriott Springfield. Tickets: $40 for members; $60 for non-members. Speaker: Greg Bialecki, secretary of Housing and Economic Development. For more information and to purchase tickets call (413) 787-1555.

CHICOPEE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.chicopeechamber.org
(413) 594-2101
n June 1: Annual golf tournament at Chicopee Country Club; 10 a.m. start. For more information, please contact the chamber at  (413) 594-2101
n June 10: Global to Local — A Workshop Series, Part 3 Growth Strategy: A New Approach, 8 a.m. to 11 a.m., Hampton Inn Chicopee, 600 Memorial Dr.  Cost: $65 for members, $75 non-members.

FRANKLIN COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.franklincc.org
(413) 773-5463
n June 24: Annual Meeting and Legislative Breakfast, 7:30 – 9 a.m., Eaglebrook School.

GREATER HOLYOKE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.holycham.com
(413) 534-3376
n June 8: Holyoke Chamber of Commerce Annual Meeting. Program at 4 p.m. followed by social hour and dinner; The Log Cabin Banquet & Meeting House, 500 Easthampton Road, Holyoke. Tickets: $25. For reservations, call (413) 534-3376 or register online at holyokechamber.com.
n June 15: Chamber After Hours, 5-7 p.m., Wistariahurst Museum. Sponsored by Sunshine Village. Admission is $5 for members; $10 cash for non-members. For more information, call (413) 534-3376 or sign up at holyokechamber.com.
n June 23: Job Fair, presented by the Greater Holyoke Chamber of Commerce, CareerPoint, Chicopee Chamber of Commerce, and Elms College. Hosted by Elms College, 291 Springfield St., Chicopee. Please check holyokechamber.com for details.

GREATER NORTHAMPTON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.explorenorthampton.com
(413) 584-1900
n June 1: June Arrive @5, 5-7p.m. A casual mix and mingle with your colleagues and friends. Hosted by Hotel Northampton, A2Z Science & Learning Store & The Northampton Education Foundation, 36 King St., Northampton. Sponsored by: Calvin Coolidge Nursing & Rehabilitation Center for Northampton, Webber & Grinnell Insurance. Cost: $10 for members; $15 for non-members.
n June 21: June Meet & Eat Breakfast, 7:30-9 a.m., Smith College Conference Center, Elm St., Northampton. Cost: $15 for members.

NORTHAMPTON AREA YOUNG PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY
www.thenayp.com
(413) 584-1900
n June 9: Party with a Purpose, the NAYP Non-Profit Board Fair, 5-8 p.m., at the
Smith College Conference Center, Elm Street Northampton. Free for NAYP members as well as Easthampton, Northampton, and Amherst Chamber members;
$5 for non-members.

WEST OF THE RIVER CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.ourwrc.com
(413) 426-3880
n June 15: Table Top, 4:30-7:00 p.m, Fathers & Sons, 214 New Bridge St. West Springfield. This event will feature tabletop displays of various businesses. The WRC is looking for sponsors of this event. For more information, call (413) 426-3880.

GREATER WESTFIELD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
www.westfieldbiz.org
(413) 568-1618
n June 8: WestNet, the after 5 networking event,  5-7 p.m. Hosted by the YMCA of Greater Westfield @ Camp Shepard. Come and shoot hoops to support the chamber’s Scholarship fund. Tickets: $10 for members; $15 for non-members. For more information, call  (413) 568-1618; [email protected].
n June 10: Chamber June Breakfast, hosted by: Tekoa Country Club, 459 Russell Road, Westfield. Registration begins at 7:15 a.m.; program, 8-9. Guest Speaker: Timothy Brennan, executive director, Pioneer Valley Planning Commission. Sponsors: Platinum Sponsor: First Niagara; Gold Sponsors: Westfield State University, United Bank, Noble Health Systems; Silver Sponsor Westfield Bank. Tickets: $25 for members; $30 for non-members. For more information, call (413) 568-1618; [email protected].
n June 20: 50th Annual Golf Tournament, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., at Tekoa Country Club, 459 Russell Road, Westfield. Title Sponsor: United Bank. For morte information or to sign up, call Sandy Sorel at (413) 779-0075.

YPS-YOUNG PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY OF GREATER SPRINGFIELD
www.springfieldyps.com
n June 9: Martini Magic, 6-9 p.m., Max’s Tavern at The Basketball Hall of Fame, 1000 West Columbus Ave., Springfield. Join YPS at Max’s Martini Magic and help support the Ronald McDonald House. The event will include a creative selection of cocktails, exquisite hors d’oeuvres, carving stations, and live music. Tickets: $65 per person.
A $10 discount will be given to YPS members who purchase their tickets before May 27. Tickets are limited. For reservations please contact AnnMarie Harding at [email protected]; or by phone at (413) 746-6299, Ext. 381.
n June 19: Lighthouse’s 1st Annual ‘Cue it up for Employment’ Billiards Tournament,  3 p.m., Smith’s Billiards, Worthington Street, Springfield. Doors open at 3; match play begins at 4. Sponsored by: Mercy Medical Center, Burger King, Sisco, and YPS. Tickets: $20 for players; $10 for spectators. Player tickets are limited. For reservations please contact Jeff Trant at [email protected], or call (413) 736-8974, Ext. 101. All proceeds benefit Lighthouse, a division of Human Resources Unlimited, a 501(c)(3) not for profit organization serving disabled and disadvantaged adults.

Court Dockets Departments

The following is a compilation of recent lawsuits involving area businesses and organizations. These are strictly allegations that have yet to be proven in a court of law. Readers are advised to contact the parties listed, or the court, for more information concerning the individual claims.

HAMPDEN SUPERIOR COURT
Baystate Gas Co. v. Springfield Water and Sewer Commission
Allegation: Negligence in water-system maintenance causing damage to defendant’s gas pipe system: $105,729.73
Filed: 3/7/11

Cooper Excavating and Trucking Inc. v. the Concrete Kings
Allegation: Failure to pour a concrete floor suitable for supporting heavy equipment: $71,000
Filed: 3/18/11

Leonard Belcher Inc. v. Caldwell’s Corner, LLC and Robert A. Germinara
Allegation: Non-payment of goods sold and delivered: $25,808.45
Filed: 3/7/11

Melissa D. Williams v. Superior Mortgage Corp.
Allegation: Deceit pertaining to pre-approval mortgage certificate: $30,000
Filed: 3/15/11

Nicholas Katsoulis v. Spartan Brake and Muffler Shop
Allegation: Negligence causing a fire resulting in loss of business and damages to tenant on the property: $117,000
Filed: 3/17/11

Ronald and Brenda Tyson, as administrators of the estate of Richard Tyson v. the Yankee Candle Co. Inc. and Patrick J. Zak
Allegation: Injury in the workplace causing death: $1,047,000
Filed: 3/16/11

T.D. Bank v. Nick Cerio’s Kempo’s Karate
Allegation: Non-payment of three promissory notes: $45,054.49
Filed: 3/11/11

Westbank v. Sweeney Transportation Inc.
Allegation: Complaint for breach of contract and unjust enrichment: $47,399.36
Filed: 3/8/11

HAMPSHIRE SUPERIOR COURT
Beth Sjogren-Miller v. UMass Memorial Healthcare Inc.
Allegation: Breach of employment contract: $100,000
Filed: 4/29/11

Jessica Baceski v. Lia Honda of Northampton
Allegation: Employment discrimination: $25,000+
Filed: 4/20/11

HOLYOKE DISTRICT COURT
The Darcy Co. v. Miller Development Enterprise
Allegation: Non-payment for goods and services: $7,896.87
Filed: 2/25/11

NORTHAMPTON DISTRICT COURT
Patrick J. Melnick Jr. v. Tommy-Car Corp.
Allegation: Breach of warranty and failure to fix car clutch: $2,484.94
Filed: 5/5/11

SPRINGFIELD DISTRICT COURT
Citadel Broadcasting Co. v. the Cleaning Co.
Allegation: Non-payment of advertising services: $6,197.12
Filed: 3/18/11

Hardy Ansah v. Bucknell Transmission Inc.
Allegation: The defendant caused damage to the plaintiffs’ motor vehicle: $20,000
Filed: 3/15/11

Western Mass. Electric v. Hampden County Food and Beverage Corp.
Allegation: Non-payment of utility services: $11,997.66
Filed: 3/3/11

Agenda Departments

Fundraising for Nonprofits Workshop
May 25: The Association of Fundraising Professionals will present a workshop titled “Strategic Planning for the Development Office” from 8 to 11:30 a.m. at the Delaney House, Route 5, Holyoke. Nat Follansbee, associate head for external relations at the Loomis Chaffee School, Windsor, Conn., will lead the hands-on training. Follansbee will demonstrate how to maximize fundraising success through effective strategic planning. The cost is $50 for members, $65 for non-members in advance. Breakfast is included. For more information or to register, visit www.afpwma.org.

Paradise City Arts Festival
May 28-30: The Three County Fairgrounds in Northampton will once again come alive with one of America’s most spectacular fairs of fine crafts, paintings, and sculpture during the Memorial Day weekend. The Paradise City Arts Festival is also a great way to spend a holiday weekend at the height of spring, with live music, food, and an outdoor sculpture garden. Festival organizers note that there’s new work by all 260 artists, and performers scheduled include Ameranouche, Samirah Evans and Her Handsome Devils, Roger Salloom, and Jessica Freeman. Additionally, Salloom will present an award-winning documentary about his career that is airing nationally this spring. Restaurants participating in the festival include the Eastside Grill, India House, Spoleto, Mama Iguana’s, Great Wall, Amber Waves, Pizzeria Paradiso, and Bart’s Homemade Ice Cream. Food offerings will include strawberry tartlets, pomegranate chicken kabobs, fish tacos, and Thai green curry, as well as the standards, blackened short ribs, blackened scallops, and bananas foster bread pudding with spicy chocolate sauce. In addition, Paradise City’s silent art auction will benefit the Breast Form Fund, which offers financial assistance to uninsured and under-insured women to purchase breast prostheses and post-mastectomy bras after breast-cancer surgery. A special themed exhibit titled “The Nature of Beauty” is also planned in the arena. Hours are Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and Monday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tickets: $12 for adults, $10 for seniors, $8 for students, and free for ages 12 and under. For more information, visit www.paradisecityarts.com.

HR and Social Media Workshop
June 16: Representatives from Royal LLP and the Vann Group will present a free seminar titled “Social Networking Media and the Workplace: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly” from 8:30 to 10 a.m. in the NUVO Bank community room, 1500 Main St., Springfield. Registration begins at 8:15 a.m. Seating is limited. To register, contact Ann-Marie Marcil at
[email protected] or (413) 586-2288.

40 Under Forty Gala
June 23: BusinessWest will present its 40 Under Forty Class of 2011 at a not-to-be-missed gala at the Log Cabin Banquet & Meeting House beginning at 5 p.m. The 40 Under Forty program, initiated in 2007, has become an early-summer tradition in the region. For more information on the event or to order tickets ($60 per person, with tables of 10 available), call (413) 781-8600, ext. 10, or visit
www.businesswest.com.

Summer Business Summit
June 27-28: The Resort and Conference Center of Hyannis will be the setting for the Summer Business Summit, hosted by the Mass. Chamber of Business and Industry of Boston. Nominations are being accepted for the Mass. Chamber, Business of the Year, and Employer of Choice awards. The two-day conference will feature educational speakers, presentations by lawmakers, VIP receptions, and more. For more information, visit www.masscbi.com.

Jazz & Art Festival
July 8-10: A Mardi Gras theme will kick off the 5th annual Hampden Bank Hoop City Jazz & Art Festival on July 8, featuring Glenn David Andrews with the Soul Rebels, and hosted by Wendell Pierce, star of the HBO series TREME. The celebration, planned at Springfield’s Court Square on the Esplanade, continues throughout the weekend with a lineup of world-class entertainment. On July 9, performances are slated by Marcus Anderson, the UK Kings of Jazz Groove, Down to the Bone, 17-year-old jazz newcomer Vincent Ingala, and Gerald Albright. On July 10, performances begin with the Eric Bascom Quintet, followed by Samirah Evans and Her Handsome Devils. Kendrick Oliver and The New Life Orchestra will also perform, and Latin jazz performer Poncho Sanchez will close out the festival. Organizers will also be increasing the number of merchandise vendors, artisans, and crafters, as well as food vendors. For more information, visit www.hoopcityjazz.org.

Western Mass.
Business Expo
Oct. 18: Businesses from throughout Hampden, Hampshire, Franklin, and Berkshire counties will come together for the premier trade show in the region, the Western Mass. Business Expo. Formerly known as the Market Show, the event, produced by BusinessWest and staged at the MassMutual Center in Springfield, has been revamped and improved to provide exposure and business opportunities for area companies. The cost for a 10-by-10 booth is $700 for members of all area chambers and $750 for non-members; corner booths are $750 for all chamber members and $800 for non-members, and a 10-by-20 booth is $1,200 for all chamber members and $1,250 for non-members. For more information, log onto www.businesswest.com or call (413) 781-8600, ext. 100.

Bankruptcies Departments

The following bankruptcy petitions were recently filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court. Readers should confirm all information with the court.

AB Auction Plus
Houle, Arnold Lee
121 Turner Falls Road
Montague, MA 01351
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Barnard, Peter A.
19 Knox St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Basile, Eugene L.
Basile, Sally A.
59 Shawinigan Dr.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Bovee, Cynthia Lynn
a/k/a Dearborn, Cynthia Lynn
15 Willow St.
Adams, MA 01220
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Bredenbeck, Patricia A.
229 Miller St., Apt. F
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Bryden, Shirley A.
96 Hastings St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Carlin, Steven Paul
Carlin, Theresa Louise
26 Corey Colonial
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Corbin, Donald L
Corbin, Mary C.
One Foxrun Lane.
Brimfield, MA 01010
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Cordi, Tina M.
15 Hazen St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Czupryna, Walter M.
Czupryna, Diane A.
176 Dunhamtown Palmer Road
Brimfield, MA 01010
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Davis, Doreen L.
21 Quaboag Valley Co-Op
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/13/11

Dinh, Nina Tuyet Nga
6 Bissonnette Circle
Southampton, MA 01073
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Douchette, Jerome A.
365 Tokeneke Road
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Dowd, Mary C.
a/k/a Cronin-Dowd, Mary Austin
333 Ohio Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/13/11

Dzuris, Leslie D.
1286 Granby Road #57
Westover Trailer Park
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Febus, Carmen L.
81 Conz St., Apt 602
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Fiore, Anthony J.
Fiore, Angela M.
205 Shady Brook Lane
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Gregory, Jeffery Edward
Gregory, Rhonda Jean
412 Elm St.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/13/11

Halas, Timothy John
15 Pisgah Road
Westhampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Henderson, Jennifer Lynn
8 Twelfth (12th) St.
Turners Falls, MA 01376
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Hohenberger, Ann T.
15 Village Road
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Hunt, Dolores A.
P.O. Box 636
Otis, MA 01253
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Kennedy, Tanya L.
37 Imperial Ave.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Keyes, Elaine T.
131 Bridge St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Knight, Kathleen Marie
Knight, James Edward
P.O.Box 147
Windsor, MA 01270
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

LeBlanc, Philip A.
LeBlanc, Samantha L.
100 Line St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Lee, Jonathan W.
Lee, Teresa D.
a/k/a O’Connor, Teresa D.
205 Stebbins St.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Legein, Joseph T.
Legein, Jenna C.
a/k/a Marszalek, Jenna Christine
111 Feeding Hills Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Link, Patricia Ann
5 Sutton Court
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Lizana, Arnold J.
111 Ingersoll Grove
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Negron, Jorge L.
Negron, Jessica
a/k/a Ortiz-Torres, Jessica
4 Eastland St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/13/11

Nowak, Richard J.
Nowak, Jean A.
22 Frederick St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/13/11

Paige, Clifford F.
Paige, Mary Eve
23 Newell Cross Road
Rowe, MA 01367
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Pannozzo, Dominic A.
11 Maple Lawn Dr.
Monson, MA 01057
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Parent-Dorsey, Laura Jean
108 Warren St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Pasek, Chester J.
20 School St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Poulin, William J.
12 Main Road
Gill, MA 01354
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Sawyier, Georgia P.
310 Stafford St., Apt.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Spink, Debra A.
120 Beacon Dr.
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Steiner, Louis
10 Congress St.
Greenfield, MA 01301
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Terlik, Brian Wade
134 Woodbridge Road
Chicopee, MA 01022
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Thornhill, David Ross
Thornhill, Tameka Lynn
66 Pineview Circle
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Tobey, Linda J.
26 Balis St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/15/11

Turcotte, Joanne C.
155 West St., Apt. 9C
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Viens, Jennifer A.
13 Darlene Ave.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Vogel, Michael L.
10 Memory Lane
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/12/11

Warner, Dale L.
a/k/a Healy, Dale L.
74 Ferry St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/14/11

Building Permits Departments
The following building permits were issued during the month of May 2011.

AGAWAM

Town of Agawam
750 Cooper St.
$34,000 — Main entrance upgrade at the library

CHICOPEE

Community Care Resources
41 Woodlawn Dr.
$12,000 — Remodel bathroom

D&D Chicopee Realty, LLC
576 Chicopee St.
$25,000 — Renovations

Margaret Jodoin
37 Telegraph Ave.
$90,000 — New roof

EAST LONGMEADOW

Healthtrax
45 Crane Ave.
$57,500 – 2,800-square-foot fit-out

Silverson Machine
355 Chestnut St.
$341,000 — Office renovations

GREENFIELD

CFM Buckly North, LLC
95 Laurel St.
$6,000 — Install countertop and cabinet island in the instructional kitchen

HOLYOKE

Mountain Park, LLC
1 Mountain Park Road
$194,000 — Construct concession facility

LUDLOW

May Lau
12 Lakeview Ave.
$7,500 — Alterations

NORTHAMPTON

All Smiles, LLC
69 Bridge St.
$3,000 — New roof

David Murphy
44 Conz St.
$6,000 — Roof repairs

Gerard Wallace
16 Paquette Ave.
$3,000 — Repair 20 feet of foundation

Smith College
49 Elm St.
$5,258,000 — Renovate interior of Northrop and Gillette houses

Trident Realty Corp.
76 Main St.
$17,000 — Interior renovations on third floor

SOUTH HADLEY

E-Link
7 Gaylord St.
$4,413,000 — Renovations

Mount Holyoke College
50 College St.
$20,000 — New cell tower

PiP Printing
49 Lamb St.
$10,000 — Install new canopy

US Industrial
7 Gaylord St.
$982,000 — Alterations

SPRINGFIELD

405 Armory Street, LLC
405 Armory St.
$15,000 — Change of use from Blockbuster to Verizon Wireless

City View Commons II
102 Armory St.
$244,000 — Building renovation

City View Commons II
26 Federal Court
$256,000 — Construct new management office building

City View Commons II
95 Federal St.
$1,205,000 — Building renovations

Packard Group, Inc.
904-912 Main St.
$143,000 — Renovate building for use as restaurant

Springfield Water & Sewer
174 Avocado St.
$7,000 — New roof

Texas Roadhouse
380 Cooley St.
$33,000 — Renovations

WESTFIELD

First Congregational Church
18 Broad St.
$112,000 — Alterations

Lumber Center, Inc.
44 Broad St.
$70,000 — Renovate small office building

Susan & Zak Francis
1414 Russell Road
$66,000 — Addition to existing auto repair garage

Sections Supplements
Remember That People Work with You, Not for You

It’s been said that it’s lonely at the top. But it doesn’t have to be. Even the Lone Ranger wasn’t alone. He had Tonto. Alexander Graham Bell had Watson. And Thomas Edison had William Hammer. So why is it that so many executives today feel so alone and disengaged?
According to a recent Gallup Management Journal survey of U.S. workers, there are three types of employees: engaged, not engaged, and actively disengaged. The survey reported that 29% of the respondents are engaged, working with a passion and feeling a profound connection to their company. The not-engaged group, those who have mentally ‘checked out’ of their jobs, made up 56% of the respondents. The remaining 15% are actively disengaged, not only unhappy at work but acting out their unhappiness and undermining what their more engaged co-workers are trying to accomplish.
Maybe even more surprising, the study found that the actively disengaged group includes as much as 10% of executive-level employees. The Gallup study showed further that engaged employees are both more productive and more profitable. They tend to stay with their companies longer, are safer, and develop better relationships with the company’s customers. It follows, then, that actively disengaged employees are the ‘one bad apple’ effectively spoiling the whole bunch. And the effects are even more devastating if that bad apple is the person sitting in the executive suite.
What has happened here? Why are so many executives unhappy at work? Experience with unhappy people tells us that, very often, their unhappiness is a result of feeling as if something in their lives is out of control. While each individual case will vary, finding the part of your life that is not in control, not in balance, will help you to become more comfortable with your entire life.
Will Rogers once said that, “if you’re riding ahead of the herd, take a look back every now and then and make sure it’s still there.” Most top-level executives recognize that they didn’t get to the top by themselves. They’re like the turtle on the fencepost. He doesn’t know how he got there; he just knows he had help. Here are some tips to find a little more peace in the corner office.

• Recognize that no one works ‘for’ you. They may work for themselves, they may work for their family, or they may work for your customers, but they don’t work for you. They work with you. Developing a sense of team, shared responsibility for success, and shared accountability for non-success will go a long way toward making you a trusted part of the team again.

• Develop a culture of caring. Make friends at work. Find your ‘Tonto.’ The Gallup survey showed that fully 76% of engaged employees strongly agreed with the statement “I have a friend at work with whom I share new ideas.” It doesn’t matter what your position is in your company. People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care. Ask them about themselves. Then shut up and listen to the answers.

• Create a controlled sense of urgency. Athletes understand this concept beautifully. Football players respond to the snap of the ball with a controlled sense of urgency. Basketball players, hockey players, and baseball players all understand the urgency that must accompany the missed shot, the face-off, or the crack of the bat. A controlled sense of urgency will energize both you and your team.

• Persist. In his book, Half Time — Changing Your Game Plan from Success to Significance, Bob Buford says that there is nothing in life less important than the score at halftime. No matter what your age, your position, your success, or lack thereof, you have the opportunity to do new and exciting things with your life in the second half. Re-evaluate, reinvent, reposition, and go for it.

• Have fun. Join the ‘Compliment of the Day Club.’ Find somebody doing something right, every day, and celebrate it publicly. It’s easy to find people doing things wrong. Change the lenses through which you view your company. Look for the good, not the bad. Change your perspective — and celebrate!

Bottom Line
For anyone who has been there, the top spot in a company can be a lonely place. Typically they have worked hard, made sacrifices, and dedicated themselves to their job and their company. Then they get there and wonder, is this all there is? Now what?
Both personally and professionally, senior-level executives need to repeatedly take stock of where they are. You must recognize and remember that you didn’t get there alone. You must re-engage yourself in your life, both at work and at home. You must remember that your purpose lies in your service to others, to your family, to your employees, and to your customers.
You must care. Do that, and it won’t be so lonely at the top.
Good luck.

James S. Bain, MBA, is an author, speaker, consultant, and coach. He is the founder of Focus on the 5, a division of Falcon Performance Institute, a consulting and corporate-training firm focused on productive performance; www.falconadv.com

Opinion
The Importance of Summer Jobs

It is mid-May. The last of the area college commencement ceremonies are taking place, and the region’s high schools will be saluting the classes of 2011 in a few weeks. Classes are long over for a few thousand area college undergraduates, and all those high schools will soon be shutting things down for the summer.
Add all this up, and there are a great many young people across the four counties of Western Mass. who are already looking for work or soon will be. It is our hope that, despite a still sluggish economy, many of them will be able to find it.
We have long touted the importance of summer jobs to the overall economic health and vitality of the region, and in this day and age, they are perhaps more critical than ever, and for a number of reasons.
Most importantly, there will likely be more people looking for such positions, primarily because there are fewer permanent jobs for several constituencies, especially those college graduates. And there is also a need — perhaps greater than ever — to introduce young people to this region’s business community and the world of work.
For these reasons and many others, we hope that area businesses, through their own initiative or in concert with organizations like the Regional Employment Board of Hampden County, find the means, the courage, the confidence, or whatever you choose to call it to add a body or two for the summer months. No, the economy isn’t as strong as most would like it be or thought it would be by this time, but bringing on summer help is important to this region’s overall vitality.
Why? For starters, first jobs, or second jobs, as the case may be, do more than put a few dollars in someone’s pocket — although that is an important consideration as well. These jobs can and often do build character and provide lessons that simply can’t be learned in a classroom.
No matter how old one is, he or she almost always remembers their first job, their first boss, and lessons learned about being punctual, showing up on time because other people are depending on them, working as part of a team, and absorbing information about work and life from people who are a few years or several decades older.
Such experiences are priceless, and very often, they are quite enjoyable, whether they come at Six Flags (or Riverside Park, to the thousands of Baby Boom-generation members who worked there) operating a ride or a midway game, at Big Y bagging groceries, at Friendly’s making Jim Dandies and Fribbles, at Rocky’s Hardware loading bags of crabgrass killer into customers’ trunks, or at countless other area companies.
And while summer jobs are important for the young people who get them, they are equally important for the individual businesses that hire them and the region as a whole. That’s because one of the ways to keep young talent in the area is to introduce them to the companies that shape our business community. Meanwhile, it is critical that young individuals acquire the practical skills and people skills they will need to succeed in the modern workplace.
And there’s another important factor at play here. When young people are working and earning a paycheck, they are far less likely to be out on the streets and getting into trouble.
It would be very easy for companies large and small to say that there is just too much uncertainty with the economy to hire any additional help for the summer. It would also be easy for smaller ventures to say that just don’t have the time, patience, or inclination to bring on young people in need of training and direct supervision.
We hope such businesses look beyond what’s easy and do what in most cases is right for them and right for the region, and give a young person — or two, or three — a summer job.

Features
He’s a Driving Force in the Business Community

Tom Burton,  President and CEO of Hampden Bank

Tom Burton, President and CEO of Hampden Bank

Tom Burton calls it “the Beauty.”
That’s the name he gave to a 1953 Buick Super he acquired more than 20 years ago and now displays at several car shows each summer. As he talked about it, Burton said it is most definitely not the kind of vehicle most Baby Boomers — and he’s among the older members of that generation at 65 — set out to put in their garage upon being bitten by the “old-car bug,” as he called it,
“This is not a car you dream of having as a kid; most guys think about the old muscle cars — the Camaros, Mustangs, Firebirds, or Chargers,” said Burton, president and CEO of Hampden Bank, adding that, while he also likes those hugely popular models that now carry big price tags, he never really looked at anything other than that huge, chrome-laden, four-door sedan. Part of the reason was a fairly limited budget for this pursuit, but there was much more to it, as he explained in a recent issue of the bank’s newsletter, which focused on the broad subject of hobbies.
“When I was 7, my father purchased his first brand-new car,” he wrote in a piece titled “The Last Buick.” “Tragically, when I was 10, he died of cancer. Needless to say, my mother was saddled with me and my two younger brothers and that Buick for many years. Without a breadwinner, there was little money to replace the Buick when it became tired and old, and upon turning 16, it was the vehicle I learned to drive.
“By that time, it was totally obsolete, and I was ashamed to take it out on a date,” he continued. “Fortunately, my teenage self-esteem was redeemed when it was replaced by a somewhat used, very uncool, but more presentable Chevy Nova. Although I didn’t appreciate the significance of the Buick at the time, when it came to making a choice on the purchase of a classic car, there was no other.”
“The Beauty"

“The Beauty,” making one of its summertime appearances outside its garage home.

It wouldn’t be a stretch to say Burton is a lot like the car that now has its own heated garage and gets regular pampering. Like the 58-year-old sedan, he represents stability, not flash; dependability, not speed — although he says the eight-cylinder Buick still has plenty of giddyup if one is so inclined, although the gas mileage is quite poor. “I don’t know what it is; I just know it isn’t good.”
Yet the bank president and the Super would both earn a good number of style points.
In his 18 years at the helm, Burton has overseen pronounced growth — from $150 million in assets to just under $600 million, and from four offices to 10 — while also orchestrating a change in operational mission, from a bond bank to one that now has a large portfolio of loans, both residential and commercial.
And he’s taken the bank public, a step he considered the best option to attain the capital needed to fuel an expansion plan that has taken the institution well beyond its roots in downtown Springfield.
Looking ahead, he said that Hampden, like all the banks in this region, have to essentially fight their way through this time of general sluggishness in the economy and be positioned for the day when the housing market rebounds and business owners regain the confidence needed to seek capital for expansion and new ventures.
“Loan demand has been very slow; it’s starting to pick up a little bit, but it’s nowhere near where it should be,” he explained. “There’s a hesitancy on the part of business owners to undertake expansions and hire employees, because they’re still uncertain about their future.”
For this, the latest in its Profiles in Business series, BusinessWest talked at length with a business executive who’s been a driving force, figuratively and it seems literally as well, in the region’s business community and, especially, the financial-services sector.

His Big Brake
Burton told BusinessWest that this is actually the second Buick Super he’s owned. The first was in relatively poor condition — “it was a lot junkier” — when he bought it, and he didn’t do much with it.
He found the second in North Carolina after a fairly lengthy search on an Internet that was then still very much in its infancy. After successfully negotiating a price, he had it shipped north. Burton said it doesn’t get out of that heated garage much — it still has only 44,000 miles on it — but he does display it at several area cruise-night gatherings, including a huge show in East Granby that features between 600 and 800 cars. He’s even won a few trophies at such events.
As hobbies go, this one can get fairly expensive — Burton has a plastic model of a 1953 Buick Skylark on the bookshelf in his office, a car that would fetch $125,000 to $150,000 on the open market because so few were made — but not all-consuming … if one keeps things under control, of course. “It can certainly become work if you have too many,” he explained. “At one time I had two cars, and that really became work, and I found that I can have one and thoroughly enjoy that one car instead of doing two or more.”
Besides, he has a number of other things on his plate at the moment, especially leadership of the bank through a period that, while it certainly doesn’t compare with the landscape-changing turmoil of the early ’90s, comes with its own set of more modest but still-intriguing challenges (more on them later).
Burton brings to this assignment an interesting background, one with its foundation in accounting, not banking. Indeed, he spent 23 years at KPMG, and didn’t even count banks among his clientele until he was roughly seven years into his tenure at the then-Big 8 firm’s Springfield office.
His “route,” as he called it, stretched from Hartford into Southern Vermont and New Hampshire, and eventually it included several financial institutions, including what was known then as Hampden Savings Bank.
In 1991, KPMG had a downsizing in its partnership ranks — about 25% of them left or retired. “And that left a lot of pressure on those who remained, including myself,” said Burton. “We went from four partners in our banking group down to two, and that was pretty stressful.”
Elaborating, he said he started to explore other career opportunities, including the opening in the president’s office at Hampden Savings.
“It was a small mutual bank, and I saw it as an attractive lifestyle change,” Burton said of his decision to pursue and eventually take the position after it was offered to him. “I knew banking … I had been working in it through tax and audit work and some consulting for a lot of years, and thought it would be a good opportunity for me.
“We were coming out of a very, very difficult recession at the time,” he continued, noting that banks tapping CPAs as presidents and other top executives was not uncommon during that turbulent period when financial stability was the top priority moving forward. “Prior to that time, the road to becoming a CEO at a bank was through the lending area, and having that lending discipline was important; what they found out was that the lenders didn’t do such a good job, so they said, ‘maybe we need some finance people.’”
The bank he took over didn’t look at all like the one he presides over now, an evolution he says is part of a much broader change that has come to the industry over the past two decades.
“This bank was very different then; it had only 29% of its assets in loans, and subsequently very few loan problems,” he explained, adding that the bulk of the holdings were in bonds. “Six weeks after the annual meeting in February 1994, there was a sharp rise in interest rates that led to the worst bond market since 1927; bonds just collapsed.”
In response, the bank expanded into residential and then commercial lending, with the latter being a pattern repeated at some other community banks, thus dramatically changing the business-lending landscape.
“The local savings banks that traditionally did just mortgages, except for maybe a few consumer loans, all got into business banking,” he explained. “So now, in this marketplace, they dominate the business-banking market — the Uniteds, Chicopees, Westfields, and ourselves are dominating that area.
“The commercial-banking landscape is diminished, and the savings banks have really taken over the commercial-banking realm,” he continued. “We filled a void; we needed to expand, and with the consolidation of the commercial banks, there was an opportunity for the savings banks, who filled that in. And all the commercial lenders we’ve hired, and that others have hired, came from commercial banks, so the players, the individuals, are very much the same people.”

Of General Interest
Hampden also expanded geographically, and boasts five branches in Springfield, (including one in Indian Orchard), two in Longmeadow, and one each in Agawam, West Springfield, and Wilbraham.
Such growth requires capital, however, and in 2006, Burton and the rest of Hampden’s leadership team decided the best course was to take the institution public, a move that mirrored several other area institutions and provided needed flexibility, said Burton.
One of the many aspects of taking a bank public is the resulting change with regard to the dissemination of information, said Burton.
“Transparent” was the word he used to describe how an institution must look and act. Among other things, this means that people like Burton are limited in what they can say and when they can say it.
“You have to let everyone know everything at the same time,” he explained, adding that this has been a learning process for those at the bank. And with that as a backdrop, he talked about the present and future in very general terms and with mostly predictable language.
“Our five-year plan is to simply grow the bank,” he said. “We’ve always done well in this marketplace, especially when there’s been turmoil.”
And by that, he meant mergers and acquisitions, or a further consolidation of the local banking community. Hampden, like most all community banks, fares well when regional institutions doing business in the area become part of much bigger regional or national banks.
As for whether Hampden might become part of such an acquisition, Burton would say only that the bank has been approached on several occasions, but there has been nothing but talk to date.
“We’re a very nice franchise, and we’re attractive to other institutions,” he explained. “We’d be offended if we weren’t invited to lunch every now and then. But our goal is to remain independent.”
Pressed for comments about the current state of the industry and what’s ahead for Hampden and the financial-services industry in general, Burton started by simply recalling a question from someone in the audience at a recent shareholders meeting — and his answer.
“He was asking when the bank was going to increase the dividend,” Burton recalled. “My response was, ‘when I feel comfortable that we can consistently have good quarters.’ My concern was that we’d have some quarters and we may have some that are not so good. The consistency isn’t there just yet.
“Things are starting to look a little better,” he continued, referring to banks’ bottom lines in specific. “Everyone seems to be posting profits — some of them of them are very small, but they are profits — and that should continue. We’re through the worst, things are starting to get better, but we’ve got a ways to go before companies start to feel really comfortable that they can make an expansion or they can hire employees and they won’t have to reverse those decisions.”
While working to help achieve that consistency he spoke of, Burton is keeping busy with many other things. He’s active in the community, with interests ranging from Western New England College (he’s an alumnus), where he has served on the board for many years, including a stint as director, to the Springfield Symphony Orchestra, for which he’s also been a long-term board member. He also plays some golf; he’s a member of Longmeadow Country Club.
He’s also following the professional exploits of his three sons. Tom, the oldest, is an attorney in the Boston area specializing in alternative-energy companies; his middle son, James, is in retail, while his youngest, Sean, is a college music professor.
Which brings Burton to another intriguing subject, a trumpet that dates back to when his father bought the Buick. A Pan American model, the instrument, which has been passed down to several family members, has lost much of its plating, “but still has a lot of character.”
Burton said bank employees have made some several entreaties for him to play it at the jazz festival the bank sponsors each summer, but he has thus far rejected those invitations, and plans to continue that pattern.
“Most definitely not,” he said when asked if there might be an appearance this summer. “I wouldn’t embarrass myself or put people through that.”
And then, there’s the Buick, and the approaching summer, which is its time to shine — in more ways than one.

In the Driver’s Seat
On the day he talked with BusinessWest, Burton was readying for a trip to a Florida, where he and his wife, Kathy, have a condo and spend several weeks a year. He was also planning on bringing the Buick over to Robbie’s Auto Repair on the corner of State Street and Columbus Avenue in Springfield for some work on the master brake cylinder, which had been leaking.
“He [Robbie] takes a great interest in old cars — I think he likes working on them more than he does the modern ones,” said Burton, adding that he brings the Super in at least a few times a year for needed service and replacement parts to keep it running smoothly.
Just like the bank he leads.

George O’Brien can be reached at [email protected]