Home 2016 January (Page 3)
Banking and Financial Services Sections

Delayed Reaction

By BOB CUMMINGS

Bob Cummings

Bob Cummings

For many employers, their first challenge with the Affordable Care Act (ACA) may be compliance with the new reporting requirements.

Under the ACA, the Internal Revenue Code added IRS Section 6056, which requires ‘applicable large employers’ to file information returns with the IRS and provide statements to their full-time employees about the health-insurance coverage that the employer offered. Under the terms of the ACA, an applicable large employer generally means an employer that had 50 or more full-time employees (including full-time equivalent employees) in the preceding calendar year.

Last month, the IRS released IRS Notice 2016-4, which delays Sections 6055 and 6056 reporting for the 2015 reporting year. Forms 1095-B and 1095-C must now be distributed to employees by March 31, as opposed to the original due date of Feb. 1. If filing by paper, forms 1094-B, 1095-B, 1094-C, and 1095-C must be filed with the IRS by May 31 (changed from Feb. 29). If filing electronically, the forms are due to the IRS by June 30 (changed from March 31). The extended deadlines apply to all filers automatically. In summary, the deadline for distributing forms to employees has been extended two months, while the filing deadline with the IRS has been extended three months.

The original due dates were aligned so that individual taxpayers could use the information contained in the forms to file their individual tax returns. Specifically, the information is needed by individuals to help determine whether they were eligible for the premium tax credit or subject to the individual mandate. The IRS has granted this automatic extension due to the fact that insurers, self-insuring employers, and other providers of minimum essential coverage need additional time to adapt and implement systems and procedures to comply with the reporting requirement.

As a result of this delay, if individuals have not received the information by the time they file their individual tax return, they may rely upon other information received from employers or coverage providers when filing their returns. They need not amend their returns once they receive the forms, but they should keep them with their tax records.

The IRS reinforced that an employer should make a good-faith effort with reporting. If an employer does not comply with the extended deadlines, the employer could be subject to penalties. Applicable large employers must report whether an individual is covered by minimum essential health benefits coverage, and that an offer such was made to each full-time employee.

Applicable large employers will need to file IRS Form 1094-C, Transmittal of Employer-provided Health Insurance Offer and Coverage Information Returns, and IRS Form 1095-C, Employer-provided Health Insurance Offer and Coverage, to report the information required. These 1095-C forms are to be provided by Jan. 31 for the calendar year 2015 coverage periods. (The final versions of these forms will not available until February.)

What qualifies as an offer of ‘minimum essential health benefits coverage?’ Well, the IRS says it is an offer that satisfies all of the following criteria:

1. An offer of minimum essential coverage that provides minimum value and includes 10 minimum essential healthcare services: outpatient services, emergency services, hospitalization, maternity/newborn care, mental-health and substance-abuse services, prescription drugs, rehabilitation (for injuries, disabilities, or chronic conditions), lab services, preventive/wellness programs and chronic-disease management, and pediatric services;

2. The employee’s cost for employee-only coverage for each month does not exceed 9.5% of the mainland single federal poverty line divided by 12; and

3. An offer of minimum essential coverage is also made to the employee’s spouse and dependents (if any).

These new employer-health-benefits reporting forms and instructions look complicated even to benefits professionals, and they will require gathering quite a bit of information. For example, Form 1095-C is a form an employer is supposed to use to give employees the health-benefits information they need to fill out their own tax forms and insurance coverage applications, and to give the Internal Revenue Service, the Employee Benefits Security Administration, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services the information they need to detect individual taxpayers’ violations of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) rules.

An employer is also supposed to send the IRS a 1094-C summary form, or report, on the information provided in the 1095-C forms, along with copies of the 1095-Cs.

The IRS and other agencies are supposed to use the 1094-Cs, together with the 1095-Cs, to detect any problems with employer compliance with the PPACA employer mandate rules described in Internal Revenue Code Section 4980(H).

This is a major new compliance burden for employers, and the IRS and other federal agencies will most likely show some compassion initially for employers who are making a good-faith effort to comply with the rules.

Most benefits-compliance professionals believe the IRS will begin a major enforcement initiative by this May, because as many as 50,000 employer-benefit plans may be audited over the first two years for compliance. Employers should do everything possible to avoid compliance traps that could trigger an audit.

Among the compliance challenges is the requirement that employers must track full-time-equivalent employees. Basically an employer must track all of their part-time employees, even if those employees may likely not get the 1095-C forms. If a part-time employee becomes full-time at any point in the year, even for only a short period, then the employer has to provide the 1095-C form for that individual.

One of the major challenges confronting employers who will have to comply is the fact that so many are still relying on a paper-based benefits-administration system. It will be virtually impossible to do the tracking and the reporting without an automated benefits-administration system. This really spells the end of paper-based benefits administration for employers subject to these new tracking and reporting requirements.  Employers will have to adopt an online benefits-administration technology platform in order to perform both the tracking and reporting requirements under Section 6056.

The good news is that there are a number of outstanding benefits-technology solutions available for employers today. Forward-thinking benefits professionals are rapidly incorporating and delivering technology platforms across their client base.

The benefits business today is also a technology business. From ACA reporting to employee communications; benefits enrollment and administration to HRIS functionality like paid-time-off tracking or onboarding, an extensive array of software and employee services can be provided on one fully integrated platform. This means, as an employer’s benefits needs evolve, benefits professionals can provide added functionality, configurability, sophistication, and services.

Are you ready to navigate the new world of healthcare compliance and reporting? Ask your benefits consultant if they are ready to advise and assist you.

Bob Cummings is CEO and managing principal of Northampton-based American Benefits Group; (413) 727-7211.

Banking and Financial Services Sections

Taking a Hike

When she announced last month that the Federal Reserve would raise its key interest rate by 0.25% — the first rate hike in nearly a decade — Fed Chair Janet Yellen stressed that the move reflected a number of positive trends for the U.S. economy.

“This action marks the end of an extraordinary seven-year period during which the federal funds rate was held near zero to support the recovery of the economy from the worst financial crisis and recession since the Great Depression,” she noted. “It also recognizes the considerable progress that has been made toward restoring jobs, raising incomes, and easing the economic hardship of millions of Americans.”

She admitted that further improvement in the labor market remains but with the economy performing well and expected to continue to do so, a modest increase in the federal funds rate target is appropriate.

But how does that move affect area banks and their customers?

The short answer is, not much — at least not in the short term.

James Sherbo

James Sherbo

“The banking industry anticipated the Fed’s intention to raise rates. So the increase is already baked into the numbers, and I don’t think this announcement will have any effect,” James Sherbo, senior vice president, consumer lending at PeoplesBank, told BusinessWest.

“We’ve been expecting this for a long time,” he added. “We set mortgage interest rates, for example, by looking at the financial markets and bond interest rates. Neither of those have changed very much. We also price ourselves to be competitive in the market.”

The rate increase is a net positive for banks, which have been forced by seven years of low rates to make do with smaller margins between the interest rate they offer depositors and the rates they charge individuals and businesses for loans. And consumers will be affected depending on the types of debt they have.

“It is a very small move. It will be reflected in some changes in borrowing rates,” Yellen said. “Loans that are linked to longer-term interest rates are unlikely to move very much. For example, some corporate loans are linked to the prime rate, which is likely to move up with the fed funds rate, and those interest rates will adjust. There are some consumer borrowing rates, I think credit card rates, that are linked to short-term rates, that might move up slightly. But, remember, we have very low rates, and we have made a very small move.”

Generating Interest

Tami Gunsch

Tami Gunsch

With the first Fed increase in more than years, there are a few ways consumers may see an impact in their financial lives, said Tami Gunsch, executive vice president, retail banking with Berkshire Bank. “The interest rates you pay and earn and the availability of credit are linked to the projections and judgments of Federal Reserve Board.”

The most immediate impact of the Fed rate hike will be on credit-card consumers because those rates are variable and will rise quickly in response to the Fed’s action. Before the move, the average rate on credit-card balances was 11.07%, according to James Chessen, chief economist of the American Bankers Assoc., but they are set to rise in parallel with the 0.25% Fed hike.

Greg McBride, senior vice president and chief financial analyst at bankrate.com, notes that the rate hike will also mean fewer credit-card promotions offering a 0% introductory-period rate. “But it’s not going to happen overnight. As rates go up, the rates on the offers you see will go up. Or, the promotional time period in which the offer is good will shrink.”

As for consumers thinking about buying a home or car, long-term fixed rates won’t change much in the next few months, analysts say, but they will begin climbing late this year and into 2017.

“Rates are pretty low, and they’re not going to change much” in the short term, Dean Croushore, a University of Richmond professor and former Fed economist, told CNN recently.

Historical context is important here, he added. The average interest rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage right now is 3.9% and expected to gradually increase. But the average mortgage rate was about 6.3% 10 years ago, and 7.2% 20 years ago. In other words, it’s still a good time to borrow, and will remain so even when interest rates creep up.

However, borrowers in adjustable-rate loans might want to speak with their lender about the benefits of refinancing into a fixed-rate loan before too long, McBride said.

“Be wary of variable-rate debts such as home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) or even some private student loans that carry variable rates,” he advised. “Pay those down now or look to refinance into a fixed rate. Some lenders will even let you fix the interest rate on the outstanding portion of your home-equity line to protect against a rising rate environment. And if you have an adjustable-rate mortgage that could adjust upward, now is a great time to unload it and refinance into a fixed rate. Otherwise, a series of interest rate hikes could produce some nasty payment increases a year or two down the road.”

In short, Gunsch told BusinessWest, “consumers may anticipate changes in the interest rate they are paying on outstanding credit-card balances on a monthly basis. On the home-mortgage side, consumers may see an impact on monthly payments if they are in variable or adjustable-rate loan product. If a consumer has a fixed-rate mortgage product, their rate will remain the same with no monthly impact.”

Little Impact on Savings

While those rates rise, however, depositors won’t see much improvement in the interest rates they earn on savings. While America’s largest banks have already said they will start charging more interest for loans, they also intend to sit on the additional income. For instance, a JPMorgan Chase spokesman told CNN, “we won’t automatically change deposit rates because they aren’t tied directly to the prime [rate]. We’ll continue to monitor the market to make sure we stay competitive.”

McBride agreed. “We are not going to see an improvement right off the bat,” he said. “A lot of banks are sitting on a pile of deposits, and their margins have really been squeezed by low rates. So the incentives for banks is to pass on higher rates on loans but not deposits so they can breathe some life into that margin.”

Still, the Fed’s action, by most accounts, portends additional increases over the next two years, which will eventually push up interest rates in savings.

Gunsch said depositors will indeed eventually benefit. “From a savings perspective, consumers will most likely experience an increase in the earnings they see on the funds they are saving each month in interest-bearing accounts such as savings and money market or certificates of deposit.”


Go HERE to download a PDF chart of the region’s Banks


Despite the mixed impact on consumers, Yellen reiterated that the Fed’s decision reflects its confidence in the U.S. economy, and that is an overall positive.

“We believe we have seen substantial improvement in labor-market conditions, and while things may be uneven across regions of the country and different industrial sectors, we see an economy that is on a path of sustainable improvement,” she said. “So, in thinking about their labor-market prospects and their financial prospects going forward, I hope they will take this decision as one that signals [the Fed’s] confidence that conditions will continue to strengthen and job market prospects will be good.”

Meanwhile, Gunsch said, consumers just need to pay attention to what’s happening so the changes don’t take them by surprise.

“Now is a time for consumers to review their finances,” she said, “and look for opportunities to save more and manage their monthly expenditures wisely.”

Joseph Bednar can be reached at [email protected]

Features

Entry Point

Dawn Creighton

Dawn Creighton says ‘Foot in the Door’ was inspired by recognized needs within the business community and among women looking to become part of it.

They informally named the program ‘Getting a Foot in the Door,’ because that’s exactly what it can provide to area women who find themselves defined by those terms ‘unemployed’ and ‘underemployed.’

And while this initiative was conceptualized by officers with the Dress for Success (DFS) Western Massachusetts, it represents a broad and intriguing partnership between area institutions that provide an array of services to such women, train them — or someday might employ them.

Some of these institutions include DFS, early-education provider Square One, the YMCA, and employers such as Baystate Health, MassMutual, Columbia Gas, and others, who have agreed to collaborate in an effort to put more qualified individuals, specifically women facing a host of different challenges, in the local workforce pipeline.

Many of these women already have a job, or two, or even three, said Dawn Creighton, Western Mass. regional director for Associated Industries of Massachusetts and president of the DFS Western Mass. chapter, noting that several part-time positions are often needed to make ends meet. But what they don’t have is a career, a plan for how to forge one, or the skills necessary to even, well, get that foot in the door.

“The majority of women who will take part in this program hold low-paying and unstable employment, with a definite lack of upward mobility,” she explained. “What we want to do is help women look at long-term goals, not short-term goals, and realize that there are career paths, not just jobs.

“We want to empower women to look at a career trajectory,” she went on. “We want them to understand that, just because they start as a receptionist, they don’t have to always be a receptionsist.”

The unique program that begins later this month will address all that, said Jennifer Endicott, senior vice president for Strategy and External Relations at Baystate Health, adding that it won’t qualify individuals for technical positions that require a particular skill set. But it will help provide them with the soft skills and confidence that many area employers say are lacking in individuals they’re otherwise willing to train for those positions.

“It’s not really the technical skills that these individuals need — once they’re brought into our organization, or Smith & Wesson, MGM, or anywhere else, we’ll teach them the technical skills,” she explained. “They tend to fail on the soft skills, and a lot of programs out there will provide those soft skills, but no one’s really bringing it together in some kind of a comprehensive program.”

Bringing things together is the broad goal of this initiative, which is designed to improve the employability of participants, introduce them to resources across the region, and provide the tools for greater self-sufficiency.

Dawn DeStefano

Dawn DeStefano says the Foot in the Door program will provide women with something that has eluded many of them — a chance.

Here’s how it works: individuals chosen for one of 25 seats in the program will take part in a 12-week course of study that will yield a National Career Readiness Certificate through the Training & Workforce Options (TWO) program developed by Holyoke Community College and Springfield Technical Community College. Participants who earn that certificate are guaranteed an interview with a preferred employer, including Baystate, MGM, Smith & Wesson, and Columbia Gas, which made the pilot program possible with a $14,000 grant.

The interview is the only thing that’s guaranteed, said Dawn DeStefano, who spent 25 years with the YWCA and recently joined Square One as director of Resource Development, adding quickly that it’s often the break that can start someone down the road to a fulfilling career.

“What we’ve heard loud and clear from marginalized women, people who are just trying to make it in this world, is that they can’t get a call back — they don’t even know how to get an interview,” she said. “This program will provide an opportunity, a connection to employers in this area.”

Getting a Leg Up

Creighton told BusinessWest that DFS, while noted more for supplying clothes and shoes for women in need than for providing a foot in the door, has always had a workforce-development component within its mission statement.

But this pilot program represents a significant escalation of those efforts, she went on, adding that it was fueled by need — and on several levels.

For starters, there are the basic needs of the many who find themselves defined by those workforce terms ‘unemployed’ and ‘underemployed,’ she said, adding that there are many individuals who fall into these categories, despite vacancies at many companies, because they lack both hard and soft skills.

Elaborating, Creighton said the program will target two groups of women — those trying to re-enter the workforce and achieve a measure of work-life balance, and those who are juggling two or three jobs to make ends meet.

Meanwhile, there is a need for qualified help at businesses large and small, in seemingly in every sector of the economy, and at many levels, including ‘entry.’

The Foot in the Door program will address these issues through its 12-week program, the first of which — organizers are already undertaking the search for funding to ensure that there will be more — will begin Jan. 23, with classes at Square One’s facilities in Springfield.

Summing up what participants will learn, Creighton said “essential life skills.” By that, she meant everything from the basics on the responsibilities of being an employee to some technical skills and primers on the many resources available to them.

As for what the program will ultimately provide for its participants, organizers listed everything from a needed dose of confidence to an even-more-needed job interview.

“For a lot of these women, what they really need is a chance,” said DeStefano. “And we’re hoping to give that to them.”

As for area employers, the program should help fill a wide variety of entry-level positions, an overlooked but still-important piece of the current workforce puzzle, said Endicott, who gave Baystate’s perspective.

“Baystate has a number of pipelines for what I would call the professional trades — nurses, doctors, lab techs, medical assistants,” she explained. “But for that entry-level workforce, there’s no real, established pipeline, and we’re getting ready, in the not-too-distant future, to compete for that same workforce with MGM.”

Endicott said there are a number of positions program participants can interview for across several fields, including clerical, food and nutrition, environmental services, and transportation, among others.

And from there, well, there are certainly opportunities to advance within a system that employs more than 10,000 people across the region.

“Baystate is very committed to developing talent and promoting from within,” she explained. “We have a goal as an organization for 60% to 65% of promotions to be from within. So once they’re in Baystate and they develop the technical know-how, they can access all sorts of different programs to help them advance their career.”

And while it will obviously take some time to determine how successful this program is accomplishing its many goals, it is already drawing praise for the manner in which a number of diverse entities have come together in a way that expands each of their roles and also addresses a recognized need.

“This initiative is trying to take the good work that a lot of organizations are doing, like Square One, the YWCA, and Dress for Success, and bring them together to build a program that would create a workforce pipeline,” said Endicott, “and connect the programs in a more collaborative way than has been done in the past.”

Getting Pumped

A few weeks ago, Dress for Success Western Massachusetts received national recognition for the donations it logged during #GivingShoesDay on Dec. 1. Indeed, the group placed eighth in the country for total donations, and one of its contributors, the Westfield News Group, was the second-highest individual donor worldwide, with 200 pairs.

While obviously proud of that accomplishment, the DFS chapter has much bigger goals in mind. By partnering with a number of area groups, it wants to do much more than put a shoe on a foot.

It wants to get that foot in the door. And if this collaborative effort is successful, the area’s business community will take some real steps forward.

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

Opinion

Editorial

A few months before he succumbed to cancer, ESPN anchor Stuart Scott stood at the podium at the ESPY Awards to accept the Jim Valvano Award for Perseverance.

In his moving remarks, Scott, in essence, told those assembled that, when someone’s cancer fight ends, we should refrain from saying that he or she “lost their battle.” That fight is often won, he went on, because the individual confronted the disease with courage, the conviction to live their life to their fullest, and determination not to let cancer dictate whatever time they had left.

Those words certainly rang true recently with the news that Mike Balise, co-owner of Balise Motor Sales, passed away at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute roughly 15 months after being diagnosed with incurable stomach cancer at the age of 50.

There is certainly no debate about who won this fight — Mike did.

He battled the disease with his indomitable humor and determination to continue, for as his long as he could, his work not only with the company, but within the community as well — efforts that ranged from raising awareness of the need for more cancer-treatment facilities in this region (and money to build those facilities) to buying winter coats for area young people in need.

Last September, BusinessWest talked with Mike and some members of his family about his fight, and his determination and courage certainly came through. So much so that one could easily make the argument that no story the magazine has published in its 32-year history resonated more with readers.

Indeed, there were countless calls and e-mails from individuals conveying the message that they were greatly inspired by Mike’s ability to battle a death sentence with poise, dignity, and a desire to focus not on his plight, but on how he could do even more to help others.

A common refrain from those who reached out was, “I’ve never met Mike, but reading this, I wish I could.’’

Those comments, as well as Mike’s long track record of philanthropy and community involvement, resonated with the decision makers at BusinessWest this fall when they convened to decide whom to honor with the magazine’s Difference Maker award next spring.

They considered and then chose to honor Mike, knowing fully well that it was very likely that his seat would be empty at the gala in March. But he will honored along with the others who will be announced in the Jan. 25 issue, because he has been, and remains, an inspiration in so many ways, and is thus clearly worthy of that title Difference Maker, and always will be.

And when his name is introduced to those gathered at the Log Cabin on March 31, it will not be through use of the past tense — because he isn’t done being a Difference Maker. His inspirational life — not simply those last 15 months or so — will ensure that this is the case.

As for that cancer fight, from the minute Mike was diagnosed, everyone knew how it would end. All those who knew Mike could also predict how the battle would be waged: with courage and conviction. And that’s why we shouldn’t say the fight was lost.

Because it wasn’t.

Community Spotlight Features

Community Spotlight

David Ziomek

David Ziomek at the recently opened Kendrick Place, which houses the MassMutual Data Science Center and 34 luxury apartments.

As the new year begins, Amherst officials point to a number of current and planned projects that will improve quality of life and make 2016 a memorable year in terms of economic development.

Construction is underway on multi-use buildings, infrastructure work is planned, the town has hired its first economic development director, and officials are involved in collaborations and partnerships aimed at fueling economic development.

“We’re well-poised to move forward, thanks to the vision and work done by Town Manager John Musante,” said David Ziomek, the interim holder of that title, as he spoke about the well-loved and respected official who died last September. “He really focused on building strong relationships between the town, UMass, Amherst College, and Hampshire College, which is important because our futures and success are intertwined; the colleges are critical economic drivers, not only for our downtown, but for our real-estate and housing market.”

These strong bonds led to the creation of a University-Town of Amherst Collaborative (UTAC) last fall, co-chaired by Ziomek and Nancy Buffone, associate vice chancellor for Community Affairs at UMass Amherst. The group’s first meeting was conducted in October with the goal of examining town/gown relations to discover opportunities for growth and what can be done to capitalize on them.

Ziomek said the panel is focusing on three areas: economic development; housing; and culture, arts, and living.

Economic-development efforts will begin by looking at the availability of space to house spinoff companies from UMass. “Some of them are going to Boston,” Ziomek noted, adding that, although Amherst offers high quality of life, as well as access to a skilled pool of potential employees, research facilities, a large student population, and a full roster of college and university faculty and staff, it can be a challenge for young companies to find suitable space for their needs.

The town has also made a commitment to expand housing, and a market study has been undertaken to determine whether what is needed has been completed. As a result, the town has a strategic plan in place, said Ziomek, explaining that it includes providing more housing for the growing number of retirees who are attracted to Amherst’s walkable downtown and other amenities, as well as more choices for students and people in the workforce.

“We need housing in almost every category, and want to make it as affordable as possible for everyone,” he continued, touting additional reasons why people want to live in Amherst, such as its 3,000 acres of conservation land intersected by hiking trails. Amherst has won awards for agricultural and land preservation, and has four Community Supported Agriculture farms that people buy shares in, Ziomek told BusinessWest.

The third focus on ‘culture, arts, and living’ is an area in which Amherst already excels but still seeks improvement. “We have award-winning plays and performances at the UMass Fine Arts Center and at Amherst College; games played by collegiate sports teams; the Mead Art Museum and Beneski Museum of Natural History at Amherst College; the Amherst Cinema Center, which shows first-run films in a number of genres; and the historic Emily Dickinson Museum,” Ziomek said.

In addition, the Hitchcock Center for the Environment is erecting a ‘living building’ in South Amherst, slated to open next September on the Hampshire College campus. “It will produce all of its own water and energy and will be a wonderful educational and tourist destination,” he explained.

“UTAC has committees and subcommittees made up of citizen volunteers and UMass faculty and staff who are going to look at what we can and do offer,” he went on, “and at what can be done to make our downtown more vibrant, and how we can enrich and promote all of these attractions.”

In this, the first Community Spotlight of 2016, BusinessWest looks at how one of the region’s most vibrant and most livable communities is working hard to become even more of both.

More Than a College Town

There’s a building boom taking place in Amherst. Indeed, ground has been broken for seven major construction projects. However, Ziomek said the most exciting new build is Kendrick Place, a 54,000-square-foot, four-story building on 57 East Pleasant St. that contains 26 luxury apartments and 10,204 square feet of commercial space.

“The apartments are within walking distance of downtown,” he noted. “And they not only have incredible views … there are Zipcars in the garage for residents who don’t own a vehicle and want to use one.”

He added that MassMutual occupies the entire first floor, which it has turned into a data science center staffed by a dozen new employees.

Kendrick Place was built by Archipelago Investments LLC, which has plans for a second development called One East Pleasant Street a short distance away. An old motel will be razed to make way for the multi-use building that will contain 84 units of housing and 6,000 square feet of commercial space.

Archipelago is also building Olympia Place, a privately owned student-housing project with 75 units that is under construction in the fraternity-sorority park on Olympia Drive. Work on the 98,400-square-foot building began in the fall of 2014 and is expected to be completed this summer.

Progress is also occurring in North Amherst, thanks to two major projects, and officials are happy to see revitalization taking place in what is now called the Mill District.

The first new build was the Trolley Barn, which was completed early last year. “It contains four residential units, and the commercial space has become home to a spa and wonderful restaurant called Bread and Butter,” Ziomek said.

In addition, Atkins Farms built a new, 6,600-square-foot satellite retail store called Atkins Farms North across the street from the Trolley Barn that opened last September.

“These projects have been embraced by residents and are bringing new life to North Amherst,” Ziomek said, noting that there is still plenty of space available for redevelopment in the district.

North Amherst also gained 54 new units of housing when the Presidential Apartments opened in September. Some units aren’t finished yet, but they have all been spoken for, and five are earmarked as affordable housing, he told BusinessWest.

Other activity on the housing front includes a three-story, mixed-use building called 417 West Street that opened last October in Pomeroy Village Center in South Amherst. “It has solar panels on the roof and contains 11,628 square feet of commercial space as well as the residential units, which are all occupied,” Ziomek said.

The town works closely with developers, and infrastructure improvements are often planned to enhance their success.

The town recently paved Pine Street and Cowls Road, two of the arteries for accessing North Amherst Village Center, Ziomek said, adding that it also completed $3.2 million worth of water and sewer improvements in advance of the two major projects there.

In addition, town officials took a proactive stance when Archipelago was in the permitting process for Kendrick Place and One East Pleasant Street by applying for and receiving a $1.5 million MassWorks grant to bury utility lines and install new sidewalks and streetscape amenities adjacent to Kendrick Place.

Enhanced parking is also on the drawing board, and the town just held its final forum to get input from business owners and residents, said Ziomek, adding that officials came away with a plan that will include installing new banners pointing out private and public parking spaces.

Officials know they need additional parking, and plan to address that by hiring a consultant to gather data about parking needs on peak weekends. In the meantime, the town plans to spend $1 million redoing the two parking lots outside Town Hall and in front of Jones Library, Ziomek noted.

Amherst is also addressing its energy use, and recently announced plans to build two large solar facilities on the old landfill, which will provide enough electricity for all the municipal buildings.

Access to health and dental care for people in low and moderate income brackets is another area of concern that led officials to form a new partnership.

“We have known for a number of years that there are residents on MassHealth in Amherst whose healthcare needs are falling through the cracks,” said Ziomek. “The nearest place for them to get dental care is in Holyoke, and although some people ride the bus, it takes an hour and 45 minutes to get there. So by the time they get a checkup and return, it uses up almost a whole day.”

This reality led town officials to form a partnership with Hilltown Health Center, giving that facility 4,000 square feet to build a medical and dental clinic in Bangs Community Center. Construction is slated to begin this summer, and the new facility will be named the John P. Musante Health Center in honor of the late town manager.

An active partnership also exists between the Amherst Business Improvement District (BID) and the Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce.

“They held a block party last fall that was attended by more than 7,000 people, and do all they can to attract new businesses and restaurants, as well as promoting the ones that are already here,” Ziomek noted, adding that the BID is also funding a $35,000 fiber-optic feasibility study for the downtown area, as only a few buildings have this service.

Looking Ahead

Ziomek says Amherst’s focus on collaborative efforts will help the town become a better place to live, work, and play.

“We have the ability to concentrate growth where we would like it to be,” he noted, adding that the state Legislature passed a bill last month to incentivize more units of affordable housing.

Amherst’s first economic development director, Geoff Kravitz, was hired recently and began work Jan. 4. His job will include creating an economic development plan, helping to staff UTAC, and continuing to build on the strong relationships forged between the town, UMass, and the colleges.

“We’re very grateful to the private developers who have chosen to invest here and will continue working to secure millions of dollars in local and state funding to help them leverage private reinvestments in our community,” Ziomek said. “Collaboration is key in Amherst.”

 

Amherst at a glance

Year Incorporated: 1759
Population: 37,819 (2010)
Area: 27.8 square miles
County: Hampshire
Residential Tax Rate: $21.22
Commercial Tax Rate: $21.22
Median Household Income: $48,038 (2015)
Family Household Income: $75,469 (2015)
Type of government: Select Board; Town Manager; Town Meeting
Largest employers: UMass Amherst; Amherst College; Delivery Express; Hampshire College
* Latest information available

 

 

 

Health Care Sections

A Patient-focused Leader

Nancy Shendell-Falik

Nancy Shendell-Falik says her role comes down to helping the care teams within the Baystate system focus “on what matters most to patients.”

Nancy Shendell-Falik was recently promoted to president of Baystate Medical Center and senior vice president for Hospital Operations at Baystate Health. That’s a long title and a lot to fit on a business card. It’s also a big job, one she boiled down to leading efforts to continually improve quality and consistency across the expanding Baystate system and maintaining a laser focus on the patient experience.

Patients and family members walking in the Daly Entrance at Baystate Medical Center are greeted by a large sign that reads: ‘Identify Your Caregivers by the Colors They Wear.”

Those words appear beside a picture of a smiling nurse wearing royal-blue scrubs, the color chosen to designate the men and women in that profession. Meanwhile, those in radiology wear black, orderlies wear dark brown, those in rehab wear light gray, and so on.

This program involving standard attire, now in use across the Baystate Health system — which also includes Baystate Franklin Medical Center, Baystate Mary Lane Hospital, Baystate Noble Hospital, and Baystate Wing Hospital — was essentially the brainchild of Nancy Shendell-Falik, although she quickly added that there was a large team that brought the concept to fruition.

Motivation for the standard colors was simple, said Shendell-Falik, recently named president of Baystate Medical Center and senior vice president for Hospital Operations at Baystate Health, who used a few anecdotes to get her main points across about the system’s desire to improve the overall experience for the patient and his or her family.

“One story that struck me concerned a father in the PICU [Pediatric Intensive Care Unit] who was waiting to speak to the surgeon who operated on the child,” she recalled. “A person in OR blue scrubs came in at 6 or 6:30 in the morning, and the father thought, ‘oh my gosh, I’m going to get my questions answered,’ and the person proceeded to empty the garbage. This individual said how challenging it was to determine who was coming in and going out.”

She remembers that there was some minor resistance to the color-coding plan, mostly from individuals concerned about losing some of their individuality. She also remembers how almost all those with angst quickly came around on the concept.

“Now that they’ve lived it, a few have come back to say, ‘I totally get it,’” she told BusinessWest. “Patients now understand who’s coming out in and out, and this provides a less-stressful environment, and employees understand that is how we support what our patients need.”

In many ways, the standardized-colors initiative and the reasons for it speak to Shendell-Falik’s preoccupation with the patient experience — and also effectively sum up a rather broad job description.

When asked to elaborate on it, she said her role comes down to helping the care teams at the system’s five hospitals and other operating platforms “focus on what matters to patients.”

Elaborating, she said this assignment is both an art and a science, and at its core it involves perhaps the most important — but often forgotten skill — in healthcare: listening.

“Rather than just tell people what to do, we want to partner with patients to help them understand their options and respect their wishes,” said Shendell-Falik, who for the previous two years served in a dual position at Baystate Health as senior vice president/chief operating officer and chief nursing officer. “We’re really working on listening, and have been training people across our system on appreciative inquiry. So we’re focused on asking questions so we understand what’s really important and so we can connect with people on a personal level.

“This is a journey for us,” she went on. “We have a goal to be a ‘top 20% in patient experience’ hospital by 2020, and the way to get there is to focus on that human connection, respect what patients want, and treat them as individuals.”

And by doing so, she intends to build a stronger, more flexible system able to respond quickly and effectively to the many changes coming to this industry.

“We are looking to work as a team that is united and aligned, and making decisions that are really building the strength of Baystate Health,” she explained. “We’re looking at how we can create the most sustainable future for Baystate, and how we should reinvest in our organization.”

For this issue, BusinessWest talked at length with Shendell-Falik about her new roles and, more specifically, about her hard focus on the patient experience and how it manifests itself beyond the colors of the scrubs worn by the system’s employees.

Background: Check

By the time she arrived at Baystate in July 2013, Shendell-Falik already knew a good number of the people she was working beside — because they interviewed her for the job she was seeking.

“I must have interviewed with 50 people,” she said with a voice that resonated with pride and a sense of accomplishment. “Mark Tolosky [then president and CEO of Baystate Health] said I might have hit a new record.”

And that intense interviewing process left her not only with a sense of confidence — something that comes when you impress several dozen people enough to win a position that attracted hundreds of well-qualified candidates from across the country, if not around the world — but also a good dose of inspiration.

“I was really inspired by the people I met through that interviewing process,” she explained. “When I came out to Western Mass., I saw how Baystate had been very progressive in building the enterprise from ambulatory sites, physician practices, multiple hospitals, an insurance company [Health New England] … and was really forward-thinking about how we move from a fee-for-service world into an environment that values population health.”

Nancy Shendell-Falik takes leadership roles

Nancy Shendell-Falik takes leadership roles at a hospital that has recently seen significant expansion and a health system that continues to broaden its reach in Western Mass.

In October, Shendell-Falik was promoted to a position — president of Baystate Medical Center — that has traditionally been held by the president of the Baystate system, including the current holder of that title, Dr. Mark Keroack. However, with the recent expansion within the system, the need for this administrative change became apparent, she said.

“As we added two more hospitals, the system is now five hospitals,” she explained. “And with that came the belief that integration across all of the enterprise is really essential, and there needs to be a senior leader focused on that.”

Shendell-Falik brings to the position nearly 35 years of experience in the healthcare sector, both in direct patient care as a nurse and in administration. She has spent much of the past 20 years in leadership roles within the broad and ever-changing realm of patient-care services.

She began her career at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center as a staff nurse in pediatrics. She quickly moved on to roles as head nurse in that department, head nurse of the Young Adult Unit, patient care coordinator of the Young Adult & Independent Care Units, and director of Nursing in the Maternal-Child & Pilot Nursing Unit.

She then went to Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital in New Brunswick, serving over the next seven years in a series of roles, culminating with assistant vice president of Nursing and Patient Services, which she held until 1998, before being recruited back Newark Beth Israel Medical Center.

There, over the next 11 years, she served as vice president of Nursing, then president and senior vice president of Patient Care Services.

She held that same title — as well as chief nursing officer — at Tufts Medical Center in Boston, where she arrived in 2009 in an effort to “expand her horizons,” as she put it, after spending 22 years at Newark.

At Tufts, she led a number of initiatives to improve clinical quality, patient safety, and the patient experience. Among many other accomplishments, she implemented a system of performance scorecards across departments, served as executive sponsor of the Tufts Patient and Family Advisory Council, and sponsored a unique, cutting-edge leadership-education program.

A change at leadership at Tufts in 2012 and that facility’s continued struggles in the ultra-competitive Boston market — “they’re truly the underdog there” — prompted her to seek a change, as well as a specific role.

“Having been a chief nurse for 15 years at that time, I wanted to go to a place that was progressive enough to embrace a chief nursing officer and chief operating officer role,” she told BusinessWest. “That place turned out to be Baystate.

A Healthy Outlook

Actually, Baystate was the first facility to reach out to her — through an executive search firm, said Shendell-Falik, adding that, as a result, this wasn’t a lengthy search for a new opportunity.

That’s because of what holding those two titles together would likely mean in terms of implementing needed change and progress — especially in a welcoming environment like Baystate.


Click HERE to download a PDF chart of hospitals in Western Mass.


“This was the first time Baystate combined the chief nurse and the chief operating officer,” she recalled. “And I think that change resulted from the philosophy that, when you look upon your product as patient care, and excellence in patient care is what you’re striving to achieve, it really helps when everyone is aligned — not only the clinicians, but the support services as well. And that role really helps promote that.”

But to serve in that role, she first had to navigate all those interviews.

If she did, in fact, set a record for most inquisitors, it was because that new position involved so many stakeholders — from dozens of direct reports to the physicians she would be working with day in and day out.

“I was physically back here three times, and two of them were multi-day episodes,” she recalled, adding that there were a number of group interviews.

Over the past two years — during which, as COO and CNO (chief nursing officer), she became the first nurse to sit on the system president’s cabinet —  Shendell-Falik has worked with those who interviewed her to implement a number of changes and new programs, the so-called ‘standard attire’ initiative being the most visible, both literally and figuratively. Those efforts resulted in Baystate Medical Center being named to an elite group of high-performing hospitals by U.S. News and World Report for 2015-16.

Looking ahead, she said the now-larger system — it has added Wing and Noble since she arrived — has to keep a continued focus on patient services and how to improve them, because despite Baystate’s growing presence, patients ultimately have choices about where they go to receive care.

To bring area residents to Baystate’s hospitals, she went, the system has to focus on consistency across the network, quality of care, and that all-important quality — value.

Shendell-Falik said her 35 years of experience on the front lines, in administration, and, specifically, in patient-care services have helped ready her for work leading Baystate Medical Center and the entire system through this period of profound change within the healthcare universe, a time, as she said, marked by movement away from the fee-for-service model that has been in place for so long and toward population health.

She noted that many of those she’s working with, including Keroack, have similar backgrounds with direct patient care followed by years of leading others providing such care.

“It’s an easy conversation to help explain what you need people to do or how you create a vision, because you understand what it takes to care for patients,” she said of her diverse background and that enjoyed by so many others now in healthcare administration. “The years I had as a hands-on provider will always be near and dear to me. And they really created my value system of being a very patient-centered leader.

“I think you also gain credibility when you are able to understand the work of providing direct patient care — and also ask people to be good stewards of the organization,” she went on, “whether that’s ensuring the most effective utilization of our resources or helping people understand that the patient experience is extremely important today, and it’s not something that sits on a back burner.”

Forward Progress

As she talked about her new role — as well as her old one — at Baystate, Shendell-Falik recalled a conversation she had with one of the medical center’s nurses at a donor reception.

“She came up to me and said, ‘I’ve worked at Baystate for more than 40 years; I can now retire because I know there is a nurse at the president’s cabinet table.”

Now, that nurse not only has a seat at the table, but an even more prominent seat as president of the medical center. She intends to use it to create consistency across the system’s many platforms and continue the needed focus on the patient experience.

That includes the colors of the uniforms being worn by the various departments, but that’s only a small part of the story.

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

Banking and Financial Services Sections

Continuing the Momentum

Glenn Welch

Glenn Welch says the community-focused culture at Freedom Credit Union is similar to what he experienced in his previous president’s role at Hampden Bank.

Under 12 years of Barry Crosby’s leadership, Freedom Credit Union dramatically expanded its assets, employee base, membership, lending reach — pretty much all the metrics by which a financial institution is measured. So former Hampden Bank President Glenn Welch, recently chosen to succeed the retiring Crosby, is taking the reins at a time of significant momentum for Freedom. He says the institution will continue to seek out growth opportunities, while maintaining its emphasis on commercial lending and community involvement.

Glenn Welch’s move from Berkshire Bank to Freedom Credit Union wasn’t very far geographically — just a half-mile north on Main Street in Springfield — and, to hear him tell it, perhaps even less of a move culture-wise.

“One of the things I heard before coming here — from at least four people who used to work at Hampden Bank was that Freedom reminded them very much of Hampden with its community orientation,” said Welch, a 17-year veteran of Springfield-based Hampden Bank and its president from 2013 until its acquisition by Berkshire Bank last year.

“You can’t just take people’s money and make loans these days,” he added. “If you’re a community institution, you have to be involved and doing things in the community. That’s how you generate goodwill and increase your customer base.”

After the Berkshire merger, Welch stayed on for several months as executive vice president. But after Freedom Credit Union President Barry Crosby announced his retirement last June and Freedom hired a Boston-based recruiting firm to find the institution’s next president, Welch was among the names chosen as possibilities.

“It was a long process, and we were very thorough,” said Lawrence Bouley, who chairs Freedom’s board of directors. “We brought other candidates forward as well, but found Glenn best fits with our organization, with the commercial background he has, as well as being a local banking leader; he knows the area and knows its people.”

Welch, who spoke with BusinessWest on Jan. 4, his first day on the job at Freedom, agreed that the match is a good one. “Fortunately, I was the one they chose,” he said. “Freedom Credit Union is a very community-minded organization, the same as Hampden Bank was. Plus, they’ve had a real push forward into business lending.”

Specifically, its designation as a low-income credit union allows it to avoid the cap on commercial lending — 12.5% of assets — that most credit unions must adhere to. This, and an aggressive commercial-loan push in recent years, has seen the institution recognized as a top SBA lender in the region, a shift that mirrors Hampden Bank’s commercial-loan growth during Welch’s days at the reins there. “With a real focus on commercial loans here,” he said, “it seemed like a good fit on both sides.”

Specifically, Crosby added, in the past five and a half years, Freedom has gone from no commercial loans to more than $36 million. “It has been slow, steady growth. We’ve grown the department from one individual to five positions.”

That reflects the overall growth of the credit union during Crosby’s tenure. When he came on board in 2003, the bank had one office and 38 employees; today, it boasts 11 locations and 135 employees. Meanwhile, membership has grown in the past 10 years from roughly 16,000 to more than 27,000.

Steady Growth

That growth came both organically and through a series of strategic acquisitions. The credit union’s second branch, in Northampton, came about through a merger with Franklin Hampshire Building Trades Credit Union in May 2004, followed by the opening of a Chicopee branch that November. The following year, a merger with Four Rivers Federal Credit Union brought Freedom offices to South Deerfield and Turners Falls.

Two more branches — in Greenfield and Feeding Hills — opened in 2009, and expansion to Easthampton followed in 2010. A year later, a second Springfield branch opened in Sixteen Acres, and 2012 saw the tenth site open in Ludlow. The most recent office is located in Putnam Academy in Springfield, and is staffed in part by high-school students, many of whom, once they graduate and move on to college, return to work there over winter break. Currently, 12 Freedom employees are Putnam students or graduates.

“With the continued consolidation in the industry,” Welch said, “Freedom having branches up and down I-91 provides a lot of opportunity across the Valley for local decision making.”


Go HERE to download a PDF chart of area credit unions


The broader resources that come with being a larger institution also make it easier to introduce retail and commercial products, Crosby added, from the Freedom@Home online banking platform to a program known as CUPs, or Credit Union Partners, which offers local businesses and organizations a no-cost benefit package for their employees and retirees, including special promotions for checking and savings accounts and several types of loans.

Freedom has placed much importance on financial education as well, educating area youth at schools and colleges from Springfield to Greenfield through its youth-banking and financial-literacy programs.

For each elementary school in the youth-banking program, employees visit schools to accept deposits, review monthly statements, and explain the fundamentals of saving. Meanwhile, high-school students learn about topics like the importance of maintaining good credit and the process of getting a car loan. Freedom also participates in area Credit for Life financial-literacy fairs — a collaborative effort with other institutions — that teach teens about budgeting and making life decisions with their finances.

The credit union has also conducted new-homebuyer seminars through the Puerto Rican Cultural Center and the New North Citizens Council. Welch again pointed out similarities with Hampden Bank’s activities during his tenure, which included Credit for Life and new-homeowner seminars, among other financial-education efforts.

Deep Roots

Freedom Credit Union was chartered in 1922 as the Western Mass. Telephone Workers Credit Union.  From a small office in the telephone company building on Worthington Street in Springfield, the institution grew until it had to find a new, larger home on Main Street.

As a result of telephone-company downsizing and reorganization, the credit union eventually expanded to include select employee groups. But growth was incremental until January 2001, when the institution applied for a community charter, and membership eligibility was expanded to include anyone who lives or works in Hampden, Hampshire, Franklin, or Berkshire county. In January 2004, just after Crosby took over as president, the membership voted to change the name to Freedom Credit Union.

Barry Crosby, left, and Lawrence Bouley

Barry Crosby, left, and Lawrence Bouley agree that Glenn Welch’s experience, community ties, and commercial-lending acumen make him a good fit to lead Freedom.

“When I took over as president 12 years ago, we were still the Western Mass. Telephone Workers Credit Union, but we changed the name to reflect the broader community, and we are now known up and down the Pioneer Valley,” Crosby said.

Indeed, deposits in Franklin County grew from $10 million to $66 million in that time, and from $17 million to $75 million in Hampshire County. Today, Freedom is a $522 million institution.

“We’ve more than doubled our assets and membership in that time,” he went on, emphasizing the importance of a physical presence in communities, even in an age when online banking is extremely popular. “In my opinion, you need brick and mortar in key locations in the market you want to be in. You cannot just do everything online. Even Millennials need to see bricks and mortar to recognize your name.”

He cited the example of Realtors Federal Credit Union, which launched in Maryland as an online-only enterprise. “It didn’t succeed. They thought they’d run that place with 20 people nationwide, but you can’t replace bricks and mortar in key locations.”

Welch agreed. “When the Internet became popular, some people at Hampden thought we didn’t have to build any more branches. But we doubled our branches to 10. People want to come into a bank and recognize the person behind the counter and know the branch manager. Finance is very personal for people. When you don’t have a high level of touch, it just doesn’t work.”

Efforts to broaden that ‘touch’ at Freedom include financial education targeted at the region’s expansive Hispanic population — Springfield is 38% Hispanic, and Holyoke 48%, and the numbers are larger in the school systems — with efforts like Spanish-language financial-literacy articles in regional Latino publications as well as targeted messaging on TV and radio.

Future Look

Welch, who earned his bachelor’s degree in finance at Western New England University and his MBA from UMass Amherst, held a number of positions at Hampden Bank before becoming president there, including chief operating officer, executive vice president, and senior vice president of business banking. Before that, he served as vice president of the Middle Market Banking Group at Fleet Bank.

His deep roots in the region are also reflected by his civic volunteerism in the Pioneer Valley, including serving on the boards of HAPHousing, the Assoc. for Community Living, the Business School Advisory Board at Western New England University, DevelopSpringfield, and Springfield Business Leaders for Education.

He arrives at a growing credit union that continues to expand its services and recently put its staff through additional training to help them better identify member needs and match them with available products and services — an effort to create more members for life.

“We’ve built a great base for the future,” Crosby said. “We have strong capital, we’re regulatory-compliant, and we see great opportunities over the next few years.”

For his part, Welch said Freedom will continue to examine potential expansion of its geographic footprint while broading its commercial-lending reach and cross-selling services to its existing membership base.

“We see a lot of opportunity here,” he told BusinessWest — and a likelihood of continuing more than a decade of strong momentum.

Joseph Bednar can be reached at  [email protected]

Cover Story Sections Top Entrepreneur

Big Y Marks 80 Years of Ideas and Innovation

D'Mour Family

From left, Charlie D’Amour, Matt D’Amour, Nicole D’Amour Schneider, Maggie D’Amour, Michael D’Amour, and Claire D’Amour-Daley.

Roughly 80 years ago, Paul D’Amour, a delivery man for Wonder Bread, was told in fairly uncertain terms that he couldn’t advance in that company because of his name and religion. With this knowledge that doors would not open for him, he made his own door in the form of a small market in Chicopee. We know it today as Big Y. It’s now a $1.7 billion enterprise managed by the second and third generations of the family, a company defined by many adjectives, but especially entrepreneurial. To recognize that legacy, BusinessWest has named the members of all three generations its Top Entrepreneurs for 2015.

They call it the ‘Nice Try’ award.

Big Y Foods started presenting it annually a few years ago, said Claire D’Amour-Daley, vice president of Corporate Communications for the soon-to-be-80-year-old company and member of its second generation of leadership.

It goes, she went on, to an individual or group that conceptualized an idea that looked good on paper, as they say, but just didn’t pan out for one reason or another.

“It’s an honor … but you don’t want to win it too often — one’s enough,” said Michael D’Amour, executive vice president of the company and oldest member of the third generation of leadership as he explained its purpose, relevance, and unique place within the company.

Maggie D’Amour, a store manager in training and another member of that third generation, agreed. “They tried changing the recipe for jelly donuts one year, and the customers really didn’t like it at all. Someone won it for that.”

Overall, the ‘Nice Try’ award, as Michael implied, was conceived as something to be proud of, noted D’Amour-Daley, who said Big Y is a company that puts a premium on innovation, entrepreneurship, ideas, and always looking for better, more efficient ways of doing things. And ‘Nice Try’ embodies all of that and more.

“We honor mistakes because that’s how we learn,” she explained, “and it’s important to learn from your mistakes.”

Founders Gerry, left, and Paul D’Amour

Founders Gerry, left, and Paul D’Amour set an entrepreneurial tone that has defined Big Y throughout its 80-year history.

The award and the philosophy behind it explains why Big Y is still here 80 years after Paul D’Amour, with assistance from his much younger brother, Gerry, and, later, sisters Ann Marie, Yvette, and Gertrude, opened the Y Cash Market in Chicopee. They also explain why the company now logs $1.7 billion in annual revenues; how it’s gone from one 30-foot-wide corner market to 63 supermarkets in Massachusetts and Connecticut; why it continues to expand into new business realms, such as convenience stores with its acquisition of several O’Connell Convenience Plus gas stations; and why it was recently named one of the Best Places to Work by the Employers Assoc. of the NorthEast.

And also why the members of three generations in this family have been named BusinessWest’s Top Entrepreneurs for 2015. (See previous BusinessWest Top Entrepreneurs HERE)

“Since this award was conceptualized 20 years ago, it has gone to companies that have made significant strides over the previous year or two,” said BusinessWest Associate Publisher Kate Campiti, “and also to companies that have displayed a strong entrepreneurial character throughout their existence.

“When it comes to Big Y, it’s a lot of both,” she went on. “This company continues to take bold entrepreneurial steps, such as the purchase of the convenience stores, but it has a legacy of entrepreneurship that goes back eight decades and has been constant throughout this company’s existence.”

Explaining the roots of that legacy, Don D’Amour, CEO of the company and the oldest member of that second generation, again relayed the story of how his father, Paul, a Canadian emigrant, left a decent job delivering Wonder Bread to start his own venture in the middle of the Great Depression.

But this time — he’s told this story often — he provided some keen insight into why.

“At some point, a gentleman at Wonder Bread pulled him aside and said, ‘you’re never going to be promoted in this company — you’ve got the wrong last name, and you’ve got the wrong religion [Catholic],’” he noted. “My dad went home, talked to my mom, and told her pretty much what this guy said. Later, he found there was a small market for sale in Willimansett. He talked to my mom some more and decided to take the plunge.”

His brother would eventually take it with him, after serving in the military, and also after conveying serious doubts about the viability of this business venture in a letter home to his family (more on that in a bit).

In the decades to come, the second generation, and then the second working alongside the third — just as the first worked beside the second — would take plunges of their own, none perhaps as risky as that original leap, but all of them constituting business gambles.

Some have been relatively minor — such as the introduction of in-store floral shops — while others have been considerable in scope, including forays into new markets, new geographic territories, and new ways of doing business.

Summing it all up, Charlie D’Amour, Claire’s brother and the company’s president, said that, despite this company’s proud history, its operating manual has one simple instruction: Look forward, never back.

Marketplace of Ideas

photo of founder Paul D’Amour and co-workers

This photo of founder Paul D’Amour and co-workers in front of the original Y Cash Market is one of a precious few in the archives from the early days.

As they talked about the exploits of their father (Gerry) and uncle, Claire and Charlie decided to move the conversation from inside a replica of the original market at the store’s headquarters on Roosevelt Avenue in Springfield to a nearby wall that holds a photo of Paul D’Amour and a few co-workers standing in front of the Y Cash Market.

They did so to point out, literally, just how tiny that original storefront was. But soon the subject matter shifted to how few items like this one there are in the company’s archives.

In fact, the early history of the venture is so incomplete that the month of the company’s opening in 1936, much less the exact date, is not known. Thus, significant anniversarie tend to be year-long events, and the 80th will be even more so.

Explaining this phenomenon, Charlie D’Amour said it came down to the simple fact that his father and uncle were too busy scripting their story to summon the time or energy needed to record it. As a result, there are few papers and photographs to display or refer back to.

One notable exception is that letter Gerry sent home to his family while in the service. It revealed, in not-so-glowing terms, his thoughts on the prospects for his brother’s entrepreneurial plunge.

“He really had his doubts about the business,” said Charlie while summarizing the missive from memory. “He thought Paul might be wasting his brains and talents on that market.”

Still, Gerry agreed to join the venture after returning from duty, and the rest, is, well, better-recorded history — at least the past half-century or so. And while Gerry was eventually proven wrong in his assessment of the venture’s potential, those first few years amounted to nothing less than a struggle for survival.

“There were a lots of ups and downs — more downs than ups, for sure,” said Don D’Amour. “They almost went bankrupt a few times, but they stuck with it.

“It was a very entrepreneurial start to be sure, and the company has always been entrepreneurial over the years,” he went on. “There’s always been a desire to innovate and try new things.”

Charlie agreed.

“One of the things that Paul and Gerry passed on to all of us was that they were restless in their desire to improve,” he explained. “They were continuously trying to find a better way to do things, and trying to evolve and change as the business evolved. And that continues today; this is a very, very dynamic business. It’s always changing; it’s never the same. We’re certainly not doing business in 2016 the same way were a year ago, let alone five years ago or 80 years ago.”

Being dynamic and entrepreneurial isn’t simply desirable, family members said repeatedly and in different ways, but is quite necessary in a retail landscape that is constantly changing and becoming ever more competitive.

Indeed, while a few decades ago, the company was doing battle largely against other grocery chains, most of them national and international giants, now it is also competing with the likes of Walmart, Costco, online ventures, and pharmacy chains that now have huge frozen-food aisles.

“There’s been a blurring of the channels,” said Charlie as he explained the ongoing shift involving retail outlets. “And that’s made for a much more competitive landscape.”

But, as the timeline above reveals, the company has always been aggressive in seeking new business opportunities and, as Charlie said, better ways of doing things. That chronology highlights everything from the first supermarket to movement into beer and wine sales; from growth through expansion of several smaller grocery chains to expansion into Connecticut and then Eastern Mass.; from the introduction of the World Class Market to expansion into pharmacies.

A common thread with each development has been improving the customer experience, said Charlie, adding that this is another philosophical trait passed down from the first generation.

And while what the company has accomplished is noteworthy, the how is perhaps an even more intriguing story. It comes down, said all those we spoke with, to creating an environment where ideas — including those that wind up earning someone a ‘Nice Try’ award — are encouraged, listened to, and often acted upon.

Making the Sausage

This brings us to the concept of strategic planning, which has greatly evolved itself over the years.

In the beginning — and for several years, actually — this was Paul and Gerry’s assignment, and it was done, in large part, on the fly, Charlie explained. Today, it is much more sophisticated and involves dozens if not hundreds of players.

The mindset is essentially the same, though: looking down the road as far and effectively as one can, anticipating need, envisioning business opportunities to meet those needs, and then making them happen.

This is essentially a 24/7, company-wide activity, but there are organized sessions as well, as two-day corporate retreats, staged every 18 months. These are staged off-site, but instead of exotic locales, the company has opted for local venues such as the Basketball Hall of Fame and downtown Stockbridge.

“We can’t afford a fancy resort — that’s not in the budget,” said Mike, one of several third-generation family members now with a seat at the table at these gatherings.

He noted that these sessions feature lively, open discussions, and egos are, as the saying goes, checked at the door, and titles and last names are not an issue.

“At these meetings, everyone’s basically CEO of the company; everyone’s on the same level,” he explained. “No topic is off-base, there are no sacred cows, and we take a nice, honest check of who we are, what we’re doing, and where we need to be.

“We’ll challenge each other in nice ways,” he went on. “And we’ll sit there, listen, take it all in, and try to understand where everyone’s coming from to make sure that, when we walk out of that room in a day in a half, we’re all in 100% agreement on what we’re doing. We don’t want half the room split or doing something just because my father says we’re going to do it or because Charlie says we’re going to do it. We’re doing it because it’s the right thing for everyone.”

Big Y’s second supermarket

Big Y’s second supermarket, in Northampton, represented one of many entrepreneurial leaps for the company.

Beyond the regular retreats, there are quarterly board meetings and twice-monthly team meetings, said Claire, adding that these and other vehicles are used to help ensure that ideas flow downhill and there is solid follow-up so concepts don’t get left behind.

Charlie agreed, and said there is one more level of management meetings, those involving family members.

“We are a family business, so it’s important that the family understands the role of the family in the business,” he explained. “Another of the things that Paul and Gerry taught is that the business doesn’t serve the family — the family serves the business.”

The various strategic-planning initiatives, as well as a recently penned vision statement, have helped provide the company with another important asset, one often missing at family-run ventures, said Matt D’Amour, another member of the third generation of management and the company’s senior director of Real Estate & Store Development: Alignment.

“One of the benefits of the big meetings is alignment and focus,” he explained. “Everyone is working toward common goals, and having that alignment has been key to our success.”

Mike agreed.

Big Y’s expansion into in-store pharmacies

Big Y’s expansion into in-store pharmacies represented one of many steep learning curves taken on by different generations of the D’Amour family.

“I think we have more alignment now in this company than perhaps we’ve ever had,” he explained. “People understand the vision, they believe in it, and they embrace their role within it. And that’s why I think this is an exciting time for us; we do have that alignment, and we can get a lot accomplished with everyone moving in the same direction.

“People have seen our sales the past few years, which have been stronger than others in the industry, and everyone’s asking what we’re doing,” he went on. “Well, it’s a lot of little things. There’s no silver bullet in this industry; it’s a lot of little things that have worked out over the past several years.”

Seeds of Progress

While Big Y’s story can be summed up as 80 years of entrepreneurial drive, it can also be categorized as the ongoing education of the D’Amour family in the grocery business — all three generations.

“Actually, it’s closer to five, because of the way the generations are staggered,” said Matt, noting the age differences among members of the same generation and how this wide spread of ages represented by family members has helped the company stay relevant.

And generate some humor. Indeed, Paul was 14 years older than Gerry, and subsequently, his son, Don, is significantly older than his cousins, Claire and Charlie — so much so that Charlie likes to joke (although Don certainly doesn’t laugh) that many people think the company’s CEO is his father. Likewise, Don’s daughter, Nicole D’Amour Schneider, says some believe Claire is her sister, not her second cousin.

Whether it’s three or five, there’s been a lot of one generation teaching the next, or older members of one generation teaching younger representatives. And that brings us to Charlie’s often-told story about how one of his many, early, and pointedly unglamorous jobs with the company was delivering produce, specifically watermelons. And as he retold it, he expounded on the philosophy that defined such learning opportunities, and still does, but maybe to a lesser extent.

“I had just gotten my driver’s license; I was 16,” he recalled. “And we needed to have some produce deliveries made. Don said, ‘meet me at our produce warehouse on Avocado Street in Springfield, and be there early.’

“I showed up, Donald put me in the truck, and it was a standard,” he went on. “I said, ‘I don’t know how to drive a standard.’ Then he said, ‘get in, and I’ll show you.’ He drove me around the parking lot once and sent me on me on my way. That was the extent of the training we had back then.”

Big Y’s latest entrepreneurial leap

Big Y’s latest entrepreneurial leap is into the convenience-store realm. This is a rendering of one of the Big Y Express stores in Pittsfield.

Things have changed considerably over the years — Charlie noted that his daughter Maggie’s current training to become a store manager is exponentially more involved than what he experienced in the mid-’70s — but the company’s approach is still grounded in the basic ‘sink-or-swim’ mentality espoused by the company’s founders — or similar phraseology that Charlie summoned.

“You can’t learn to swim by sitting at the side of the pool,” he told BusinessWest, adding that this mindset pertains to not only employees, including (or especially) family members, taking on new responsibilities, but the company taking new plunges, if you will.

As an example of the former, he gestured across the conference room table toward Nicole, who was minding her own business and handling a number of functions for the company, including training of store managers and administration of its formal ideas program, when it was essentially decided four years ago that she would manage the company’s new pharmacy division.

“I knew nothing about running pharmacies, so there was a real learning curve,” she explained. “It was a matter of coming in and running it as a business and taking that perspective, but also breaking down the silos between pharmacy and all the other departments and working more collaboratively together so we were presenting our customers with a one-stop experience.”

When asked what she’s learned over the past four years, Nicole joked that she can now pronounce the names of countless medications she never knew existed. She then turned serious and said that pharmacy, like all other departments in the store, requires a strong customer-service element, as well as an element of entrepreneurship.

“Today, in retail pharmacy, you have to innovate and change in order to survive,” she explained. “We’ve worked hard at getting our folks in the pharmacies to understand that and approach their jobs in a completely different manner. They’re not just pill counters; they really have to engage with our customers and provide unique services.”

As for the latter half of that sink-or-swim mentality, the new-business-opportunities side of the equation, family members cited the expansion into convenience stores and the recent acquisition of the O’Connell facilities.

This represents largely uncharted waters for the company — although the second Big Y supermarket in Northampton had a gas station attached to it in the ’60s, said Charlie — but taking the ship in such directions is certainly nothing new, going back to 1936 and most of the developments that have happened since.

“We took another look at it because a lot of our competitors were getting into it, and as we looked at it, we said, ‘that business has changed,’” he noted, adding that, where once those who frequented such facilities also wanted convenience items, now they’re also interested in eating on the run.

And, given other changes in society, they’re looking to eat healthier than hot dogs turning on a warmer. This plays into one of Big Y’s strengths, Charlie noted, adding that this venture could amount to an opportunity for growth — or the next opportunity, to be more precise.

What’s in Store?

As for what happens next — in the grocery business in general and Big Y in particular — members of both generations offered a collective shrug of the shoulders.

“Where do we see this industry going? It’s going in a few directions, such as to online business, mobile payments, and maybe drones dropping your grocery bags at your front door at some point,” said Mike, adding, as others did, that there will always be a need for the bricks-and-mortar supermarket.

And whatever the future brings, this company will more than likely be ready for it, or out ahead of it, he went on.

One would expect nothing else from an enterprise that honors innovation, ideas, and, yes, those nice tries.

A Big Y Timeline

• 1936: Paul D’Amour, with the help of his younger brother, Gerry, opens the Big Y Cash Market in Chicopee and delivers groceries by bicycle.

• 1947: Paul and Gerry team up as equal partners and incorporate as Y Cash Super Markets.

• 1952: The first Big Y Supermarket opens at 790 Memorial Dr. in Chicopee.

• 1960: Fine wines and beer are added to the supermarket in Northampton, the company’s second.

• 1963: The company buys a second Northampron location and opens Big Y Wines & Liquors.

• 1968: Big Y doubles in size with the acquisition of Jumbo Supermarkets.

• 1970: Big Y expands self-distribution to include everything from bread to bananas.

• 1971: Big Y introduces new technology such as scanning cash registers.

• 1984: The company expands its operations into Connecticut with the acquisition of a supermarket in Stafford Springs. Big Y also purchases the Adams Supermarket chain.

• 1986: As the company turns 50, it boasts 21 stores and 1,600 employees.

• 1990: Express Savings Club program starts, an industry first, to exchange paper coupons with electronic ones.

• 1998: The company’s Store Support Center moves to 2145 Roosevelt Ave. in Springfield, bigy.com is launched, and Big Y Wines & Liquors becomes Table & Vine.

• 2001: The first Big Y Pharmacy & Wellness Center opens in the Longmeadow store.

• 2003: There are now 51 stores, including one in Walpole, the company’s first in the Greater Boston area.

• 2006: Fresh Acres opens in Springfield.

• 2013: Big Y Express opens as the first gas and convenience store.

• 2016: As the company celebrates 80 years, it has grown to 66 locations in Massachusetts and Connecticut and more than 5,600 employees.


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

Features

Dogged Determination

Dave Waymouth and Pip

Dave Waymouth and Pip

Dave Waymouth had an itch to earn his MBA. His dog simply had an itch to escape. Those two worlds collided when Waymouth entered the UMass Innovation Challenge with an idea: to develop and market a more effective pet tracker than the ones he had researched, with some disappointment, on the Internet. Fast-forward two years, and his startup company, PetSimpl, is preparing to unveil a device called Pip, which uses GPS and Bluetooth technology to keep dogs safe, track their exercise levels, and potentially much more.

Dave Waymouth calls his 15-pound dog, Pip, an escape artist.

“We had him for only a short while, and he ran off,” Waymouth told BusinessWest. “I’d never had a dog before; I’d always had outdoor cats, and they go and come back. But a dog follows its nose. So this was a panic moment. I thought, ‘there’s nothing I can do; I hope someone calls the number on the collar.’”

Dog and owner were reunited, but it wasn’t the last time Pip tried to get free. So Waymouth started scouring the Internet for a product that would alert him to potential escapes and help him recover the dog.

“I assumed there were products on the market and searched around. I found stuff for hunting dogs, but they were really expensive and really bulky. One product on the market looked like it would work, but it was expensive, and when I did buy it, it was too big, so I returned it.”

While that struggle was going on at home, Waymouth was running a video-marketing company in Northampton. Its product was a channel on area hotel-room televisions — in fact, the channel that automatically appeared when the TV was switched on — that highlighted local dining and attractions; area businesses paid Waymouth to advertise on the channel.

It was a good idea, one he’d picked up working for larger marketing firms in bigger cities, but he questioned its scalability. Besides, as someone who had studied English and film studies as an undergraduate, he felt he needed more business expertise, so in 2013, he returned to UMass to enroll in the MBA program at the Isenberg School of Management.

There, he was exposed to the Innovation Challenge, a competition during which potential entrepreneurs develop product ideas and pitch them to judges. That’s when he thought of his dog.

“Honestly, the night before the application for the competition was due, I was sitting there saying, ‘I’ve got to think of an idea. I should just pick something that excites me and go with it.’”

His idea was a canine GPS tracker small enough to fit even compact dogs, yet with much better reliability and battery life than the products he had researched online. “That was the innovation — we’d keep it small and have 10 times the battery life of similar devices.”

petsimplLOGOFast-forward two years, and that idea has become a company called PetSimpl, and a tracking device called — of course — Pip, which alerts owners with Bluetooth if a dog leaves a pre-set area and activates a GPS tracker on a smartphone app to locate the furry runaway. When the dog is in the ‘safe zone,’ the device operates at minimal power, extending typical battery life to about three months between recharging sessions.

Currently in the final stages of production, after which it will be shipped to customers who preordered it, Pip is also a kind of “Fitbit for dogs,” Waymouth said, serving not only as a tracker, but also as a way to monitor a dog’s activity levels using that same app.

“We can tell you how much exercise he’s getting during the day and how far he’s walked. It’s useful for people with dog walkers, especially, to make sure the dog is getting a long-enough walk. Parents can use the app to keep track of their kids walking the dog. I found a lot of parents are excited about being able to check all this stuff. We’re using technology that’s already out there, but in a way that’s useful for day-to-day pet care.”

In this, the latest in a series of articles highlighting entrepreneurial endeavors across the region, BusinessWest sheds some light on a device that promises to improve the lives of dogs — and the people who worry about them.

Idea to Reality

The Pip product didn’t appear overnight. Rather, it emerged from the supportive world of startup incubators and crowd-funding campaigns.

“I’m a big tech guy. While I was in video marketing, and I studied English and film in college, I had been taking things apart from a very young age.”

Still, he went on, Pip was only an idea at first, not anything resembling a company. But what the UMass Innovation Challenge, and later the MassChallenge accelerator program in Boston, gave him was a chance to have that idea validated by others, and to develop a real business plan.

“That gave us a ton of exposure, and we were able to partner with Verizon,” he explained. “When they saw it, they offered us a good deal to put it in their network.”

Verizon’s saturation coverage of the country gives PetSimpl needed cachet in the tech world, he explained. “The U.S. is the world’s largest pet market, and we’re a tiny company, so we don’t have to take over the world just yet. It’s good to be attached to a large name brand; other networks are not as reliable.”

Dave Waymouth (left, with Seth Berggren)

Dave Waymouth (left, with Seth Berggren) says he hasn’t been too aggressive in marketing Pip, preferring to launch at a manageable pace.

During his four months with MassChallenge, during the second year of his MBA program at Isenberg, Waymouth was staying with a family friend near Boston from Monday through Wednesday, taking classes online, then returning to his home in Northampton and attending a couple of classes on campus on Thursday and Friday. Fortunately, he said, the culture at Isenberg is to be flexible with students balancing MBA studies with, well, trying to make it in business. “They helped me finish my degree while starting this company.”

Around the same time, Scott Foster, president of Valley Venture Mentors and someone Waymouth considers a mentor, tipped him off about VVM’s accelerator program in Springfield — a much closer commute than Boston. So he enrolled in that four-month program, where he eventually won $32,500 in VVM’s Accelerator Awards — the second-highest award among 29 participants — to further fund the development of Pip.

Meanwhile, he launched a Kickstarter campaign, with an initial goal of $50,000, to verify that sufficient demand existed in the market. “We felt, if we got to that point, there were enough people interested out there to make it a viable product,” he told BusinessWest. “We didn’t want the Kickstarter to go too viral, since a lot of companies take on way too many orders and get overwhelmed.”

The campaign wound up raising $75,000 on the strength of more than 400 preorders, and Waymouth has since continued taking preorders — at a slightly higher price — from people who came across PetSimpl too late to take part in the Kickstarter campaign.

“We haven’t really been marketing it,” he said, “but just letting people find us as we get ready to ship out the first batch.”

Collaring a Problem

One of Waymouth’s main concerns has been the reliability of the Bluetooth signal, but he reports that it outperforms 90% of cellphones. “We’re now just finishing the casing, which is what holds the circuit board together. We had to make it waterproof and minimize how far it hangs off the collar.”

Noting that Pip has gone through six or seven designs, he noted that product development early on, without funding, was extremely difficult.

However, before the final round of the UMass Innovation Challenge, he won a grant for a couple thousand dollars, which he used to hire an electrical engineer to look at his basic designs and see if he could turn it into a circuit board.

Waymouth had to be resourceful early on, such as when he bartered office space at MassChallenge for his first website design. But once the Kickstarter campaign was over, he was able to hire his first employee, Seth Berggren, as hardware lead. Patrick Kearney came on soon after as software lead.

“I became a master of getting people interested and excited with the promise of future success,” he said of not only his team, but those who preordered. “I’m happy to say, everything I promised to them, we’ve followed through on. Patrick was just going to develop the app for us, but fell in love with the product and came on full-time. Everyone is juggling multiple roles. And we have six or seven people involved as contract workers.”

The team has faced down a number of thorny — often literally — problems.

“We were unwilling to satisfy ourselves with the status quo,” Waymouth said, explaining that pet trackers he had researched have a tendency to catch on branches while the dog runs in the woods.

Some companies have designed devices with a stronger snap that holds it together, only to find that the whole collar gets pulled off. PetSimpl’s solution is to attach the device around the collar, with the circuit board on one side and the battery on the other, the whole piece sliding around the collar so that the smallest piece possible hangs over.

The company promises to develop additional products in the future, among them a pet door that opens only for a Pip-equipped animal, and a programmable food dispenser that knows when and how much food to release.

But for now, Waymouth said, he’s excited to get the first iteration of Pip manufactured and shipped.

“Thankfully, our competition has stumbled a little bit, shipping products too early. The customers who have ordered Pip understand that, and will wait for a product that works,” he explained. “Our main competition [among startups] is a Silicon Valley company with millions in funding, so, in many ways, we’re definitely the little guys, trying to do this in Western Massachusetts. But we feel confident, and hopefully we’ll have some good reviews at launch, and we’ll move forward from there.”

Paws and Effect

Waymouth has looked into non-battery-powered options for Pip. Solar power intrigues him, but with such a small device, solar power could prove erratic, especially for dogs with long fur. “There’s no point if you can’t get the signal. That’s a huge problem.”

But he and his team will continue to hone their product in any way that makes sense, he said, again repeating the mantra that the pet-owner market is an enthusiastic and loyal one, as long as a product does what it promises. And when the promise is to keep a family member from running away, that’s a serious pact indeed.

“This particular product has had a huge uphill battle,” he said. “Since people learned about GPS, they’ve been trying to create a viable GPS tracker, and the challenge has always been size, battery life, and performance. We’ve had a lot to overcome, because it’s difficult to convince investors who have tried these crappy products over the past 10 years and say, ‘yes, I’ve seen this, and it failed.’ We’ve studied the same history they have, and we have answers, but some investors didn’t want to touch it.”

However, many were willing to back PetSimpl and the Pip tracker, and Waymouth will soon learn whether he made the right move putting video marketing on the back burner and watching his career go to the dogs.

“It takes longer to launch a physical thing than a service,” he told BusinessWest, “but the sky’s the limit if we get a good product out there. So we’re excited.”

Joseph Bednar can be reached at [email protected]

Building Permits Departments

The following building permits were issued during the month of December 2015.

AMHERST

Autozone Parts Inc.
373 Northampton Road
$574,000 — Construct a 7,381-square-foot structure

PCJ Riverside Partners, LLC
15 Montague Road
$88,000 — Remove old and install new roof

Summerlin Trust
11 East Pleasant St.
$3,500 — Commercial installation of a hood-exhaust system

Town of Amherst School Department
70 Southeast St.
$36,000 — Remove old roof and install new

William Russell
18 Main St.
$18,500 — Install roof, fascia, chimney, gutters

CHICOPEE

Sunshine Village
75 Litwin Lane
$70,000 — Metal retrofit for roof

WE 77 Champion Dr., LLC
77 Champion Dr.
$50,000 — Install 19 replacement windows

Whisperwood Realty, LLC
41-53 Lemuel Ave.
$25,500 — Install a fire sprinkler system

HADLEY

Advanced Auto
346 Russell St.
$25,000 — Install shelving and fixtures

Elements Massage
379 Russell St.
$40,000 — Interior renovation

Texas Roadhouse
282 Russell St.
$1,118,000 — Construction of a 7,163-square-foot restaurant

LUDLOW

Chapin Greene Condo Association
66 Chapin Greene Dr.
$1,400,000 — Commercial alterations

Ludlow Police Department
612 Chapin St.
$685,000 — Roof replacement

SML Industries
15 Dana Way
$134,500 — Roof replacement

Westover Golf Course
West St.
$685,000 — Roof replacement

NORTHAMPTON

Mananto Holdings, LLP
36 King St.
$8,000 — Replace cafe entry doors

Manhan Narrow, LLC
196 Pleasant St.
$10,000 — Install office-replacement windows

Pioneer Valley Photovoltaic
49 Gothic St.
$47,000 — Install roof-mounted solar array

Unitarian Church
220 Main St.
$12,000 — Strip south side of roof and install new metal roof

PALMER

James D. Smith
1384 Main St.
$8,500 — Remodel new location for spa

Little Rest Remodeling Company
2001 Calkins Road
$5,000 — Seal and wrap insulation

Mapleleaf Distribution Services
14 Third St.
$9,000 — Exterior renovations

Phillips B. Carpenter
1239 Park St.
$17,000 — New roof

SPRINGFIELD

Baystate Health
3350 Main St.
$18,000 — Interior renovation to create office

Dan Rosow
1244 Boston Road
$10,000 — New roof

Opus Duram, LLC
1043 Sumner Ave.
$157,000 — Interior renovations

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Mark Patel
50 Morgan Road
$51,000 — Re-roof

Scaper, LLC
120 Interstate Dr.
$20,000 — Add three antennas

Departments Real Estate

The following real estate transactions (latest available) were compiled by Banker & Tradesman and are published as they were received. Only transactions exceeding $115,000 are listed. Buyer and seller fields contain only the first name listed on the deed.

FRANKLIN COUNTY

GREENFIELD

40 Allen St.
Greenfield, MA 01301
Amount: $155,000
Buyer: Deborah H. Squires
Seller: David J. Chula
Date: 12/08/15

629 Bernardston Road
Greenfield, MA 01301
Amount: $400,000
Buyer: David J. Donoghue
Seller: Christopher M. Goodwin
Date: 12/04/15

367 Country Club Road
Greenfield, MA 01301
Amount: $155,283
Buyer: US Bank
Seller: Lois M. Sanders
Date: 12/07/15

113 Hastings St.
Greenfield, MA 01301
Amount: $195,000
Buyer: Edith K. Drury
Seller: Virginia Pechin Keen IRT
Date: 12/09/15

284 High St.
Greenfield, MA 01301
Amount: $305,000
Buyer: Green Man Enterprises LLC
Seller: Richard E. Sigda
Date: 12/03/15

55 White Birch Ave.
Greenfield, MA 01301
Amount: $155,742
Buyer: US Bank
Seller: Lance E. Mitchell
Date: 12/09/15

LEVERETT

11 Church Hill Road
Leverett, MA 01054
Amount: $270,000
Buyer: Hannah L. Muszynski
Seller: Edith H. Riddle
Date: 12/04/15

118 North Leverett Road
Leverett, MA 01054
Amount: $180,000
Buyer: Adam V. Wellen
Seller: Ann J. Delano
Date: 12/03/15

MONTAGUE

46 High St.
Montague, MA 01376
Amount: $195,000
Buyer: Jacqueline M. Krzykowski
Seller: Catherine R. Balboni LT
Date: 12/04/15

57 Mormon Hollow Road
Montague, MA 01349
Amount: $125,000
Buyer: Meagan L. Veith
Seller: Phillip J&N J. Szenher RET
Date: 12/07/15

ORANGE

25 Bartlett Lane
Orange, MA 01364
Amount: $245,000
Buyer: Aleesha C. Watson
Seller: Bassett RT
Date: 12/07/15

160 Chase St.
Orange, MA 01364
Amount: $149,000
Buyer: Felicia N. Atherton
Seller: Jerry L. Aldrich
Date: 12/04/15

665 East River St.
Orange, MA 01364
Amount: $119,000
Buyer: Wells Fargo Bank
Seller: Eliane B. Monteiro
Date: 12/03/15

17 Main St.
Orange, MA 01364
Amount: $169,000
Buyer: Michael G. Morse
Seller: Blast Tech Inc.
Date: 12/08/15

SHELBURNE

1155 Mohawk Trail
Shelburne, MA 01370
Amount: $340,000
Buyer: Pamela J. Miner
Date: 12/04/15

SUNDERLAND

44 Mount Toby Woods
Sunderland, MA 01375
Amount: $570,000
Buyer: John W. Campbell
Seller: Barry J. Gallerani
Date: 12/02/15

150 Old Amherst Road
Sunderland, MA 01375
Amount: $255,000
Buyer: Valley Building Co. Inc.
Seller: Frederick Weinberg
Date: 12/08/15

HAMPDEN COUNTY

AGAWAM

20 Allison Lane
Agawam, MA 01030
Amount: $250,000
Buyer: Maria Spano
Seller: Drzal, Alice, (Estate)
Date: 12/07/15

64 Belvidere Ave.
Agawam, MA 01030
Amount: $185,500
Buyer: Courtney M. Barbieri
Seller: Steven W. Hershowitz
Date: 12/08/15

40 Cherry St.
Agawam, MA 01030
Amount: $205,000
Buyer: Daniel Brady
Seller: FNMA
Date: 12/02/15

67 Highland St.
Agawam, MA 01030
Amount: $174,300
Buyer: Melhem F. Salloum
Seller: Hanibal Technology LLC
Date: 12/09/15

119 Maple St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Amount: $152,000
Buyer: FNMA
Seller: Kimberly S. Miner
Date: 12/07/15

627 North Westfield St.
Agawam, MA 01030
Amount: $262,000
Buyer: Charles Devins
Seller: Hillside Development Corp.
Date: 12/09/15

77 Parkview Dr.
Agawam, MA 01030
Amount: $239,900
Buyer: Matthew J. Maynard
Seller: Theodore J. Gingras
Date: 12/04/15

31 Ridgeview Dr.
Agawam, MA 01030
Amount: $124,339
Buyer: FNMA
Seller: Michael J. Demars
Date: 12/08/15

18 Wildflower Lane
Agawam, MA 01001
Amount: $389,900
Buyer: Dinesh B. Patel
Seller: Brian P. Mullins
Date: 12/02/15

BLANDFORD

22-R Birch Hill Road
Blandford, MA 01008
Amount: $200,000
Buyer: James E. Stockseth
Seller: Allen, Thomas W., (Estate)
Date: 12/04/15

CHICOPEE

103 Acrebrook Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $183,000
Buyer: Paige L. Vandermyn
Seller: Frank Bogdanovich
Date: 12/02/15

104 Bardon St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $178,500
Buyer: Michael L. McKnight
Seller: Samantha T. Basnet
Date: 12/02/15

13 Brouillard Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Amount: $180,000
Buyer: Jennifer Sibilly
Seller: Barry J. Brouillard
Date: 12/04/15

20 Concord St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $250,000
Buyer: Mary G. Corrado
Seller: James Newcity
Date: 12/08/15

503 East St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $142,500
Buyer: Gerard A. Leclair
Seller: Kevin P. Fontaine
Date: 12/04/15

66 Lagadia St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $216,500
Buyer: Brenda Kroeber
Seller: Frank Stefanik
Date: 12/01/15

22 Luther St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Amount: $165,000
Buyer: Ricardo C. Borges
Seller: Margaret B. Koziol
Date: 12/04/15

104 Madison St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $196,000
Buyer: Erik O. Cubi
Seller: Victor M. Felix
Date: 12/04/15

619 McKinstry Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $150,000
Buyer: Luis M. Torres
Seller: Wieslaw Szczubelek
Date: 12/04/15

161 Meadow St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Amount: $160,000
Buyer: Pioneer Housing LLC
Seller: Keith G. Rudzik
Date: 12/04/15

476 Montcalm St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $147,000
Buyer: Michael J. Oparowski
Seller: Justin G. Constantilos
Date: 12/09/15

77 Nash St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $128,634
Buyer: US Bank
Seller: Donald J. Dugas
Date: 12/07/15

123 Prospect St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Amount: $167,000
Buyer: Jared S. Johnson
Seller: Peter P. Pavalyuk
Date: 12/01/15

53 Sanford St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Amount: $154,900
Buyer: Patrick Perez
Seller: Carrie L. Smith
Date: 12/01/15

35 Shirley St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $158,500
Buyer: Adam Bartusewich
Seller: Gail M. Boone
Date: 12/09/15

47 Victoria Park
Chicopee, MA 01020
Amount: $149,000
Buyer: Rosa Guzman
Seller: Jeannine I. Lareau
Date: 12/09/15

EAST LONGMEADOW

6 Garland Ave.
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Amount: $165,000
Buyer: William O. Kerr
Seller: Thomas A. Ryan
Date: 12/07/15

296 North Main St.
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Amount: $825,000
Buyer: Quercus Properties LLC
Seller: Pecousic Assoc. Ptnshp.
Date: 12/07/15

83 Nottingham Dr.
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Amount: $690,000
Buyer: William P. Garvey
Seller: William P. Laplante
Date: 12/07/15

23 Porter Road
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Amount: $219,000
Buyer: Donald J. Wiswall
Seller: Julie J. Drzymalski
Date: 12/07/15

GRANVILLE

23 Cross Road
Granville, MA 01034
Amount: $160,000
Buyer: Daniel E. Franklin
Seller: Evans, Lorraine M., (Estate)
Date: 12/03/15

HAMPDEN

21 Allen Crest St.
Hampden, MA 01036
Amount: $203,000
Buyer: Raymond C. Bartolucci
Seller: Jeffrey D. Hecht
Date: 12/07/15

51 Ridgeway Road
Hampden, MA 01036
Amount: $225,000
Buyer: Erica M. Davenport
Seller: David J. Farioli

HOLLAND

24 Forest Park Dr.
Holland, MA 01521
Amount: $189,000
Buyer: Charles Cloutier
Seller: Thomas A. Laplante
Date: 12/04/15

HOLYOKE

99 Meadowbrook Road
Holyoke, MA 01040
Amount: $160,000
Buyer: Christopher Dangelo
Seller: Louis R. Redfern
Date: 12/07/15

43-45 Portland St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Amount: $132,360
Buyer: Nationstar Mortgage LLC
Seller: Lisa J. Robert
Date: 12/01/15

LONGMEADOW

39 Birchwood Ave.
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Amount: $300,000
Buyer: Deeba A. Zaher
Seller: Marjorie Farnan
Date: 12/03/15

72 Crescent Road
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Amount: $350,000
Buyer: Raymond Christensen
Seller: Jamie B. Quinn
Date: 12/08/15

37 Lynnwood Dr.
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Amount: $340,000
Buyer: Mutharasu Sivakumar
Seller: Jonathan M. Retchin
Date: 12/01/15

749 Maple Road
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Amount: $875,000
Buyer: VK Heritage LLC
Seller: IE Realty LLC
Date: 12/08/15

N/A
71 Roseland Terrace
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Amount: $213,000
Buyer: Frank A. Langone
Seller: Irene E. Beron
Date: 12/04/15

48 Silver Birch Road
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Amount: $430,000
Buyer: Alexander Cohen
Seller: Ellis Goldberg
Date: 12/08/15

58 Yarmouth St.
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Amount: $190,980
Buyer: USA HUD
Seller: Tripp, Thomas M., (Estate)
Date: 12/02/15

LUDLOW

34 Carmelinas Circle
Ludlow, MA 01056
Amount: $299,200
Buyer: Crown Castle Towers 9 LLC
Seller: Silva Real Estate Service
Date: 12/01/15

188 Fuller St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Amount: $369,000
Buyer: Fuller Future LLC
Seller: Joaenn M. Grybosh
Date: 12/02/15

108 Loopley St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Amount: $257,500
Buyer: Selenia E. Cruz
Seller: Susan Y. Weinstein
Date: 12/04/15

295 Winsor St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Amount: $195,000
Buyer: Robert E. Costa
Seller: Bogdan A. Mastalerz
Date: 12/02/15

MONSON

214 Bumstead Road
Monson, MA 01057
Amount: $160,000
Buyer: Jason P. Allen
Seller: Ralph J. Coolong
Date: 12/04/15

PALMER

2006 Calkins Road
Palmer, MA 01069
Amount: $145,000
Buyer: Joyce G. Campbell
Seller: Marcia A. Cichon
Date: 12/01/15

3037 High St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Amount: $136,900
Buyer: Joseph C. Harris
Seller: Toni J. Gunn
Date: 12/09/15

3003 Oak St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Amount: $195,000
Buyer: Richard A. Brown
Seller: Edmund J. Stokowski
Date: 12/07/15

1094 Pleasant St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Amount: $155,000
Buyer: Joseph J. Skowyra
Seller: Kenneth L. Fitzgibbon
Date: 12/08/15

RUSSELL

961 Blandford Road
Russell, MA 01071
Amount: $226,000
Buyer: Marcus Houston
Seller: Clarence S. Rowley
Date: 12/04/15

41 Westwood Dr.
Russell, MA 01071
Amount: $241,000
Buyer: Jay M. Smith
Seller: Charles R. Margarites
Date: 12/09/15

SOUTHWICK

196 Berkshire Ave.
Southwick, MA 01077
Amount: $417,000
Buyer: Richard M. Kellett
Seller: Ralph H. Ramsdell
Date: 12/01/15

26 Crystal Dr.
Southwick, MA 01077
Amount: $300,000
Buyer: Brian G. Kendall
Seller: Eugene F. Petit
Date: 12/04/15

307 Granville Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Amount: $223,000
Buyer: Michael J. Goneau
Seller: Matthew J. Maynard
Date: 12/04/15

7 Reservoir Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Amount: $323,100
Buyer: Citimortgage Inc.
Seller: Slawamir Kuzmicki
Date: 12/03/15

SPRINGFIELD

40 Audubon St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Amount: $194,764
Buyer: Nationstar Mortgage LLC
Seller: Jason S. Donaldson
Date: 12/08/15

624 Boston Road
Springfield, MA 01119
Amount: $316,500
Buyer: American Dream Estate LLC
Seller: Stoughton L. Smead
Date: 12/01/15

155 Carnavon Circle
Springfield, MA 01109
Amount: $155,000
Buyer: Iris G. Rodriguez
Seller: Bennye N. Crawford
Date: 12/04/15

15 Dianna Dr.
Springfield, MA 01101
Amount: $239,900
Buyer: Stephen Yankson
Seller: Sodi Inc.
Date: 12/03/15

115 Donbray Road
Springfield, MA 01119
Amount: $124,900
Buyer: Tiana M. Davis
Seller: David M. Murphy
Date: 12/01/15

93-95 Edgeland St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Amount: $175,000
Buyer: William Holmes-Murphy
Seller: Visionary Realty LLC
Date: 12/02/15

400 Forest Hills Road
Springfield, MA 01128
Amount: $185,000
Buyer: Julian S. Tenczar
Seller: Letendre, Jeannine M., (Estate)
Date: 12/07/15

63 Glenham St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Amount: $133,900
Buyer: Cherie C. Burton
Seller: Linda B. Szklarz
Date: 12/04/15

236 Harkness Ave.
Springfield, MA 01118
Amount: $127,000
Buyer: Kyle E. Velez
Seller: Francis J. Boudreau
Date: 12/04/15

33 Kittrell St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Amount: $150,000
Buyer: Justin K. Barroso
Seller: Steven M. Vigneault
Date: 12/04/15

26 Lorenzo St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Amount: $137,500
Buyer: Luz E. Santos
Seller: Mona A. Vancicni
Date: 12/04/15

22 Maplewood Terrace
Springfield, MA 01108
Amount: $245,000
Buyer: Jose Aviles-Torres
Seller: Yehuda Dery
Date: 12/02/15

22 Mayflower Road
Springfield, MA 01118
Amount: $118,500
Buyer: Marcus J. Catlett
Seller: Andre E. Vaine
Date: 12/08/15

101 Miller St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Amount: $147,900
Buyer: Frank C. Salas
Seller: Attaford LLC
Date: 12/07/15

42 Perkins St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Amount: $166,777
Buyer: JJJ 17 LLC
Seller: Joseph Eadie
Date: 12/08/15

745 Plumtree Road
Springfield, MA 01118
Amount: $174,000
Buyer: Meghan K. Healy
Seller: Ronald J. Sullivan
Date: 12/08/15

37-39 Prentice St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Amount: $126,000
Buyer: Richard H. Cataldo
Seller: Lapa, Katherine J., (Estate)
Date: 12/08/15

66 Roosevelt Ave.
Springfield, MA 01118
Amount: $198,000
Buyer: Samuel Delvalle
Seller: Joseph M. Marullo
Date: 12/04/15

5 Sedgewick St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Amount: $120,000
Buyer: Jordan C. Leonard
Seller: Amanda M. Gonzalez
Date: 12/04/15

22-24 Somerset St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Amount: $140,000
Buyer: Peter S. Ellis
Seller: Edward P. Cerrone
Date: 12/04/15

152 Wachusett St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Amount: $145,050
Buyer: Household Finance Corp. 2
Seller: Richard J. Sacco
Date: 12/01/15

51-53 Winthrop St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Amount: $138,971
Buyer: FNMA
Seller: George Kahi
Date: 12/08/15

143 Woodlawn St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Amount: $135,000
Buyer: Alan Rosario
Seller: James W. Fiore
Date: 12/04/15

106 Wrenwood St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Amount: $162,000
Buyer: Jeffrey J. Kristek
Seller: Brian G. Kendall
Date: 12/04/15

WEST SPRINGFIELD

61 Bosworth St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $120,000
Buyer: Ramis Afrailov
Seller: CGS Realty LLC
Date: 12/01/15

15 Boulevard Place
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $158,000
Buyer: Benjamin J. Scott
Seller: Matthew B. Pioggia
Date: 12/04/15

70 Carriage Lane
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $340,000
Buyer: Dan Le
Seller: Chidiac, Badui, (Estate)
Date: 12/04/15

57 Herrman St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $165,000
Buyer: Tatyana V. Krasun
Seller: Steven P. Nicora
Date: 12/03/15

41 High St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $193,891
Buyer: US Bank
Seller: Paul Jaeger
Date: 12/08/15

375 Lancaster Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $203,000
Buyer: Earl Burney
Seller: David H. Judge
Date: 12/04/15

112 Main St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $174,740
Buyer: Aminata D. Diedhiou
Seller: Zenon Pardave
Date: 12/08/15

1183 Morgan Road
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $205,000
Buyer: Peter B. Chlastawa
Seller: Anthony A. Hannoush
Date: 12/04/15

110 Old Barn Road
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $235,000
Buyer: Henry M. Mushi
Seller: Margaret R. Valentine
Date: 12/09/15

635 Piper Road
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $246,623
Buyer: US Bank
Seller: Joseph L. Kitt
Date: 12/07/15

309 Woodmont St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Amount: $215,000
Buyer: Zenon Pardave
Seller: David W. Tourville
Date: 12/08/15

WESTFIELD

8 Columbia St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Amount: $148,000
Buyer: Scott Snyder-Perusse
Seller: FNMA
Date: 12/04/15

32 South Maple St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Buyer: Mark E. Ethier
Seller: Gary A. Conroy
Date: 12/09/15

WILBRAHAM

24 Carla Lane
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Amount: $409,900
Buyer: David Mahan
Seller: Custom Homes Development Group LLC
Date: 12/01/15

610 Glendale Road
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Amount: $339,000
Buyer: George C. Pidgeon
Seller: David A. Gilfor
Date: 12/03/15

6 Lance Lane
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Amount: $247,000
Buyer: Jose A. Vargas
Seller: Mark S. Szydlowski
Date: 12/03/15

468 Springfield St.
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Amount: $263,000
Buyer: Brad J. Kane
Seller: Jeffrey Fontaine
Date: 12/09/15

8 Squire Dr.
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Amount: $489,000
Buyer: Jeffrey M. Fontaine
Seller: Suzanne F. Murphy
Date: 12/09/15

HAMPSHIRE COUNTY

AMHERST

76 Chestnut St.
Amherst, MA 01002
Amount: $310,000
Buyer: Chestnut St Realty Partners
Seller: Cynthia J. Mussinan
Date: 12/04/15

384 Middle St.
Amherst, MA 01002
Amount: $507,500
Buyer: Dano J. Weisbord
Seller: Joel Ouellette
Date: 12/04/15

910 South East St.
Amherst, MA 01002
Amount: $902,500
Buyer: Abida Adnan
Seller: Shaul Perry
Date: 12/04/15

682 Station Road
Amherst, MA 01002
Amount: $475,000
Buyer: Ekaterina D. Vavova
Seller: Abida Adnan
Date: 12/04/15

BELCHERTOWN

37 Fletcher Ave.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Amount: $355,000
Buyer: Joseph C. Black
Seller: Steven D. Rose
Date: 12/04/15

85 Howard St.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Amount: $191,500
Buyer: Scott E. Baronas
Seller: Marianne Burno
Date: 12/04/15

234 Michael Sears Road
Belchertown, MA 01007
Amount: $215,000
Buyer: Ryan P. Johnson
Seller: Crane, Mary Rose, (Estate)
Date: 12/09/15

312 South St.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Amount: $389,000
Buyer: Gerald R. Maloney
Date: 12/02/15

EASTHAMPTON

15 Emily Lane
Easthampton, MA 01027
Amount: $309,000
Buyer: Kevin Slate
Seller: Elizabeth A. Armstrong
Date: 12/09/15

9 Fort Hill Road
Easthampton, MA 01027
Amount: $349,900
Buyer: James J. O’Malley
Seller: Ryna Russell
Date: 12/04/15

11 Strong St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Amount: $214,400
Buyer: Bank New York Mellon
Seller: Timothy J. Young
Date: 12/04/15

GOSHEN

124 Spruce Corner Road
Goshen, MA 01032
Amount: $140,000
Buyer: Lauren M. Culver
Seller: Richardson, F. D., (Estate)
Date: 12/01/15

GRANBY

32 East St.
Granby, MA 01033
Amount: $350,000
Buyer: Daniel R. Moroney
Seller: Nathan A. Swistak
Date: 12/04/15

HADLEY

199 North Maple St.
Hadley, MA 01062
Amount: $150,000
Buyer: 199 North Maple NT
Seller: Zion Korean Church
Date: 12/04/15

HATFIELD

2 Prospect St.
Hatfield, MA 01038
Amount: $220,000
Buyer: Matthew J. Hunter
Seller: Gratl, Barbara A., (Estate)
Date: 12/04/15

72 School St.
Hatfield, MA 01038
Amount: $338,625
Buyer: Hatfield School St. Properties
Seller: Hatfield Properties & Storage LLC
Date: 12/09/15

MIDDLEFIELD

11 Clark Wright Road
Middlefield, MA 01243
Amount: $188,000
Buyer: Scott T. McCoy
Seller: John J. Kozynoski
Date: 12/09/15

55 Town Hill Road
Middlefield, MA 01243
Amount: $210,000
Buyer: David C. Nurse
Seller: Jack I. Joseph
Date: 12/07/15

NORTHAMPTON

88 Bancroft Road
Northampton, MA 01060
Amount: $910,000
Buyer: Held RT
Seller: Patricia J. Walsh
Date: 12/01/15

117 Barrett St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Amount: $309,000
Buyer: Brent D. Visser
Seller: Edward J. Harvey
Date: 12/03/15

157 Bridge St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Amount: $380,000
Buyer: Louise C. Humiston
Seller: Manuel T. Morocho
Date: 12/01/15

19 Columbus Ave.
Northampton, MA 01060
Amount: $595,000
Buyer: Samuel W. Craig
Seller: Peter A. Pacosa
Date: 12/08/15

41 Hillside Road
Northampton, MA 01060
Amount: $455,000
Buyer: Alan J. Irish
Seller: Shirley D. Tallent RET
Date: 12/07/15

201 Main St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Amount: $1,350,000
Buyer: Sierros Family Ent. LLC
Seller: Elizabeth Hanson
Date: 12/03/15

60 Maple St.
Northampton, MA 01062
Amount: $327,400
Buyer: KSM Properties LLC
Seller: Droescher Myers LLP
Date: 12/01/15

40 Ridgewood Terrace
Northampton, MA 01060
Amount: $255,000
Buyer: Amanda C. Dixon
Seller: Steliana Naumescu
Date: 12/03/15

205 South St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Amount: $429,500
Buyer: Anton M. Broekman
Seller: Lathrop Home Inc.
Date: 12/01/15

8 Westwood Terrace
Northampton, MA 01062
Amount: $172,000
Buyer: Tracy J. Lisewski
Seller: Francis T. Grover
Date: 12/07/15

PELHAM

66 Daniel Shays Hwy.
Pelham, MA 01002
Amount: $133,673
Buyer: Deutsche Bank
Seller: Stanley C. Wojtkielewicz
Date: 12/02/15

PLAINFIELD

120 Pleasant St.
Plainfield, MA 01070
Amount: $301,888
Buyer: Brenda L. Light
Seller: Robert Baker
Date: 12/04/15

SOUTH HADLEY

434 Granby Road
South Hadley, MA 01075
Amount: $140,000
Buyer: Jesse S. Dubois
Seller: Collingwood, Evelyn M., (Estate)
Date: 12/04/15

25 Kimberly Dr.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Amount: $312,000
Buyer: Michael R. Sobon
Seller: Patrick W. Laskey
Date: 12/04/15

WARE

93 Doane Road
Ware, MA 01082
Amount: $205,000
Buyer: David S. Desroches
Seller: Edward L. Lavella
Date: 12/03/15

20 Sherwin St.
Ware, MA 01082
Amount: $185,000
Buyer: Scott E. Stuckenbruck
Seller: Lorraine M. Naglieri
Date: 12/01/15

WORTHINGTON

116 Huntington Road
Worthington, MA 01098
Buyer: Deborah Dreschnack
Seller: FNMA
Date: 12/08/15

Bankruptcies Departments

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

Balcom, Thomas S.
201 Dunmoreland St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/10/15

Bean, Doris J.
6 Louise St.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/14/15

Berthiaume, Yvonne C.
P.O. Box 533
Ware, MA 01082
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Bigelow, Evan M.
250 West St., Apt. 23
Ware, MA 01082
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Brown, Charles E.
30 Memory Lane
Orange, MA 01364
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Campbell, Natasha D.
382 Pleasant St., Apt. 1
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/08/15

Canada, Wayne E.
Canada, Annie M.
20 Woodbridge Road
Chicopee, MA 01022
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Clark, Sandra
90 Brighton Ave.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/14/15

Cruz, Wilfredo
12 Fairhaven Dr.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Dargie, Michael D.
150 Ashland St., Suite 411
North Adams, MA 01247
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/14/15

DIY Brewing Supply
Bernier, Michael James
37 Hampshire St
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 12/08/15

Dussault, John A.
Dussault, Anita H.
22 East St. Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/04/15

Eveleigh, Christopher D.
153 High St.
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/15/15

Feliberty, Santo
207 Jasper St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Gambino, Santo Salvatore
10 Old Thompson St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/02/15

Gourde, Kelly A.
a/k/a Crate, Kelly A.
64 Northridge Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/08/15

Gower, Douglas A.
92 Felix St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Greenough, Scott C.
Greenough, Eva D.
a/k/a Camp, Eva D.
101 Laurence St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/11/15

Griffin, Deborah L.
a/k/a Baronoski, Deborah Lynn
82 Stanton Ave.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 12/04/15

Harris, James S.
Harris, Gail H.
45 River Road
Erving, MA 01344
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 12/14/15

Kiefer, Melissa D.
7 Parker Ave, Fl. 1
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/09/15

Kootnz, Mark Lehman
7 Salem Place, Unit 7
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Laferriere, Ronald Richard
Laferriere, Hazel Mary
69 Lathrop St. Apt. 15
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/07/15

Laquer, Maribel
50 Clifton Ave.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/14/15

Lee, Linda M.
a/k/a Sienko, Linda M.
133 Powell Ave.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/10/15

Lewis, Francis M.
8 William St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/11/15

Lyons, Kelly P.
a/k/a Coyne, Kelly P.
54 Yorktowne Court
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 12/03/15

Mominee, DianaJo
149 Powell Ave.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/09/15

Morley, Jeremy David
73 Squawfield Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/07/15

Mosier, Tessie Marie
4 Caroline Circle
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/01/15

Murphy, Timothy M.
23 Lake Ave.
Great Barrington, MA 01230
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Nielsen, Scott J.
Levine, Elinor
171 Gray St.
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/05/15

Ouimette, Jerri A.
542 White St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/14/15

Package Machinery Company Co.
80 Commercial St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/03/15

Pelletier, Paula L.
Martinez, Annette
15 State Road
Whatley, MA 01093
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/09/15

Porter, Donald M.
Porter, Sara L.
10 Almon Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/10/15

Progressive Electric
Long, Michael Joseph
P.O. Box 0931
Northampton, MA 01061
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/10/15

Ringwood, Betty Ann
P.O. Box 96
Colrain, MA 01340
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/15/15

Robideau, Judith A.
6 Bush Ave., Apt 1
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/03/15

Roux, David J.
Roux, Jennifer L.
13 Leahey Ave.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Sacchetti, Sylvia S.
230 Hungerford St.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 12/04/15

Tuck, Jonathan Paul
25 Lee Road
South Deerfield, MA 01373
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Valentine, David Rosario
372 West St.
Pittsfield, MA 01201
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Voyevodina, Tatyana
5 Woodlawn St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Waddell, Ann Thompson
P.O. Box 419
Stockbridge, MA 01262
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 11/30/15

Daily News

SPRINGFIELD — Western New England University College of Business students recently collaborated with White Lion Brewing Co. to create an in-depth market-research report to help the company expand its reach outside of the Pioneer Valley. White Lion Brewing, the first craft brewery in the city of Springfield, recently cracked the Valley Advocate Beerhunter’s “Must Try Craft Beers” list.

The university students began their research last spring, culminating in their final report in December 2015.

White Lion was part of Valley Venture Mentors’ inaugural accelerator cohort last year, and a finalist for competing in the Accelerator Awards in April, winning seed money with data collected by the Western New England University student team.

“I was very impressed by the level of detail and amount of research the students conducted,” Berry said. “We walked away with a complete analysis on what is working, where we can improve, and what differentiates us from other breweries in our region. It was a pleasure and an honor for me to work with them over the past year.”

In addition to working closely with Berry and holding several meetings, the students employed a second team of marketing students to help develop promotional ideas and concepts for White Lion craft beer. With the assistance of Table & Vine stores, the students were permitted to administer surveys to customers for their market research, and provided Berry with a variety of insights for the future growth of his company.

“There is nothing more fulfilling than helping students shine among business professionals and helping them carve their reputation in the business community as up-and-coming graduates of Western New England University,” said Janelle Goodnight, professor for both the market-research and marketing-management courses.

Daily News

HOLYOKE — For the last 18 months, volunteer Matt Sheehan has been scanning and uploading more than 1,000 historic postcards of Holyoke to create a public online collection and exhibit hosted by Wistariahurst Museum.

The collection had been amassed over the years and housed in the archives at Wistariahurst. The cards, ranging in date from 1876 to 1990, illustrate the changing appearance of Holyoke over the years and highlight beloved attractions such as Mt. Tom, the Summit House, and Mountain Park. The scanned images may be viewed for free online at wistariahurst.org/postcard-collection.

Volunteer Matt Sheehan did not know what he was getting involved with when, in 2014, he was directed toward three plain-looking boxes by Penni Martorell, Holyoke’s city historian. As it turned out, the boxes housed approximately 1,900 Holyoke postcards. With an eye for organization and detail, Sheehan proved up to the task, sorting, cataloguing, and scanning each postcard. Today, two of the three boxes of vintage postcards have been made accessible on the Wistariahurst website, and he expects to finish by this summer.

“Matt has been phenomenal in his attention to detail and organization in getting the project done,” said Martorell. “I know the citizens of Holyoke and general public are going to really enjoy perusing this collection online. These will certainly bring you down memory lane.”

The online postcard collection reflects the diverse history of the immigrant industrial city of Holyoke. It is divided into three series: Mountain Park and Mt. Tom, landmarks, and Holyoke views. Of particular significance are the postcards pertaining to Mountain Park, one of several trolley-car amusement parks built adjacent to American cities just before and after the start of the 20th century; it closed in 1988. Many of the postcards include handwritten notes, offering a peek at voices from the past.

“I began my service to Wistariahurst while between jobs and seeking to expand upon my professional background,” Sheehan said. “Now my volunteer role here has gone far beyond gaining experience. It has been rewarding and fulfilling to be a part of the Wistariahurst community. I am especially proud that my work has led toward making some of our materials more accessible, navigable, and presentable in a 21st-century environment.”

Daily News

HOLYOKE — The Baker-Polito administration recently announced the availability of $9.2 million in Skills Capital Grants for vocational-technical equipment investments to improve the quality of education and vocational training, provide career technical training to increase program capacity, and enable students to improve their skills to meet the needs of employers in the Commonwealth.

“The skills gap is real across the country, and many companies cannot find the talent they need to fill positions and further develop their local economic impact,” said Gov. Charlie Baker. “By investing in capital equipment at vocational and technical schools that are focused on training, we will ensure more residents get the skills they need to get good-paying jobs in growing industries across the Commonwealth.”

State officials announced the availability of the Skills Capital Grants at the future site of Holyoke Community College’s (HCC) Center for Culinary and Hospitality Excellence, located in the heart of the Holyoke Innovation District, which is experiencing significant investment and growth. The center is being funded by a $1.75 million capital grant from the former Manufacturing Training Equipment Grant program, which is being combined with the Vocational Opportunity Challenge Grants to create the new Skills Capital Grant. The Holyoke grant was awarded from a prior funding round. High demand for career training programs like Holyoke’s led to the creation, and expansion in scope, of the Skills Capital Grant program.

“We are proud and excited to see the expansion of Holyoke Community College’s Culinary Arts program into a larger center which will provide critical skills to our residents for jobs available that are available now,” said Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse.

Added HCC President William Messner, “Holyoke Community College is committed to continuously improving our academic program offerings. We have invested $20 million in such efforts over the past few years in areas directly related to regional employment opportunities, including this culinary center, as well as healthcare, STEM fields, and adult literacy. We are pleased to be able to expand our culinary and hospitality program at a critical time for the region and look forward to increasing the educational opportunities for hundreds of local residents.”

The Skills Capital grants will range from $50,000 to $500,000, and while the grants do not require a match, applicants are encouraged to demonstrate cash and/or in-kind matches.

Eligible applicants include Massachusetts schools, institutions, and organizations that provide career/vocational technical education programs, including all Chapter 74-approved vocational tech schools, community colleges, and providers of training programs that meet the federal Perkins Act definition of career and technical education. Grant applications must be submitted by Jan. 29.

Daily News

PITTSFIELD — Berkshire Medical Center has been recognized for excellence in joint replacement and pulmonary care by Healthgrades, the leading national online resource helping consumers make informed decisions in order to find the right doctor, the right hospital, and the right care. For the second year in a row, Healthgrades gave BMC its Joint Replacement Excellence Award and ranked it among America’s 100 Best Hospitals for Joint Replacement.

BMC has also received, for the eighth consecutive year, the Pulmonary Care Excellence Award. In addition, BMC achieved numerous five-star rankings for the treatment of illnesses and surgical procedures. A five-star rating indicates that BMC’s clinical outcomes are better than expected when treating the condition or conducting the procedure being evaluated.

BMC’s joint-replacement surgery and pulmonary-care services are among the top 5% in the nation as measured by lowest risk-adjusted mortality/complications, according to the evaluation from Healthgrades. Every year Healthgrades evaluates hospital performance at over 4,500 hospitals nationwide for 33 of the most common inpatient procedures and conditions.

“We are proud of the exceptional quality of care our physicians, nurses, and staff deliver to our community in all specialties,” said David Phelps, president and CEO of Berkshire Health Systems. “The consistent excellent outcomes achieved by BMC and our clinicians and staff give our community confidence that the care they receive right here at home is equal to or better than the most elite hospitals in the nation.”

BMC also achieved Healthgrades five-star ratings for sepsis, repiratory failure, treatment of diabetic emergencies, total knee replacement, total hip replacement, hip-fracture treatment, pneumonia, COPD, and bariatric surgery. It also earned Healthgrades’ Critical Care Excellence Award and Women’s Health Excellence Award, and was named among the nation’s top 10% for Critical Care and Women’s Health.

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

Jose Rodriguez v. Ruby Tuesday Inc.
Allegation: Non-payment of earned vacation time and lost wages: $20,840
Filed: 11/9/15

HAMPDEN SUPERIOR COURT

Jaime Serrano v. Karen Kupfer, M.D. and New England Surgical Group
Allegation: Medical malpractice:
$1 million
Filed: 10/21/15

Rebecka St. Peter v. Baystate Gas d/b/a Columbia Gas of MA
Allegation: Negligence causing personal injury: $31,500
Filed: 11/3/15

Schletter Inc. v. Bach Towing, James E. Lawrence, and Leonard Eremento
Allegation: Non-payment of services, labor, and materials: $100,000
Filed: 10/23/15

HAMPSHIRE SUPERIOR COURT

Energy Electric Co. Inc. v. James J. Welch and Co. Inc. and Cottage Square Apts., LP
Allegation: Non-payment of goods sold and delivered: $78,000
Filed: 11/9/15

Nadine Mazard v. Gengras Motors Inc.
Allegation: Breach of contract: $88,000
Filed: 11/25/15

NORTHAMPTON DISTRICT COURT

American Express Bank, FSB v. Joanne Puc and Bar-Tini
Allegations: Default on balances owed: $8,673.06
Filed: 12/9/15

American Zurich Insurance Co. v. Dependable Drywall Inc.
Allegations: Recover insurance premiums and account annexed: $13,928
Filed: 12/5/15

SPRINGFIELD DISTRICT COURT

Charles Greenhaus v. NER Investments, LLC
Allegation: Failure to pay severance: $25,000
Filed: 12/9/15

Jose Reyes v. City of Springfield
Allegation: Negligence in road maintenance causing vehicle damage: $3,433.14
Filed: 11/9/15

UWM Holdings Inc. v. Consolidated Waste Water Services, LLC
Allegation: Failure to pay for use of transfer station and disposal services: $12,241
Filed: 11/5/15

Minore’s Meats Inc. v. Mason Market, LLC
Allegation: Non-payment of goods sold and delivered: $10,146.93
Filed: 11/5/15

Chamber Corners Departments

AMHERST AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

www.amherstarea.com
(413) 253-0700

• Jan. 12: Chamber Annual, noon to 6 p.m., at Osteria Vespa, 28 Amity St., Amherst. Help us show our gratitude to our current chamber board President Nancy Buffone and welcome our new chamber board President Julie Marcus. Cost: $25 for members, $30 for non-members.

• Jan. 13: Chamber After 5, 5-7 p.m., at Energia Fitness, 173 Russell St., Hadley. This will be an evening of networking, mixing, and mingling. Light appetizers and adult beverages will be served. Cost: $10 for members; $15 for non-members.

 

GREATER CHICOPEE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

www.chicopeechamber.org
(413) 594-2101

• Jan. 13: Multi-chamber Lunch & Learn with Robert McDonald, noon to 1:30 p.m., at Storrowton Tavern, 1305 Memorial Ave., West Springfield. Topic: “Run an Effective Meeting.” Learn how to provide common rules and procedures for deliberation and debate in order to place the whole room on the same footing and speaking the same language. Tickets: $35 per person.

• Jan. 20: Salute Breakfast, 7:15-9 a.m., at Munich Haus Restaurant, 13 Center St., Chicopee. Cost: $23 for members, $28 for non-members.

• Jan. 27:  Business After Hours, 5-7 p.m., at Masse’s American Bistro, 1329 Memorial Dr., Chicopee. Sponsored by the Greater Chicopee and South Hadley/Granby Chambers of Commerce. Cost: $5 for members pre-registered, $15 for non-members.

 

GREATER EASTHAMPTON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

www.easthamptonchamber.org
(413) 527-9414

• Jan. 21: Annual Meeting, 5-8 p.m., at The Delaney House, 3 Country Club Road, Holyoke. Join with your fellow Greater Easthampton Chamber members, 5-8 p.m., as we elect directors and officers for 2016, along with annual awards voted by members. Hosted by the Delaney House, 3 Country Club Road, Holyoke. Sponsored by Easthampton Savings Bank. Business Person of the Year: Janel Jorda, Web-tactics Inc.
Business of the Year: Duseau Trucking, LLC. Community Service of the Year: Greg Malynoski, Look Memorial Park and Garden House. Presidents Award: to be announced at dinner. New this year,
Ambassador of the Year: to be announced at dinner. Tickets: $35 per person. Register online at easthamptonchamber.org.

 

GREATER HOLYOKE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

www.holycham.com

• Jan. 13: January Coffee Buzz, 7:30-8:30 a.m., at Holyoke Medical Center, 575 Beech St., Holyoke. The Chamber Coffee Buzz is a networking event designed to help our members make connections before starting the workday, and is open to all members of the GHCC. The event takes place on a quarterly basis on the second Wednesday of the month at various member locations. Meetings will include networking and a continental breakfast, followed by introductions from each attendee, business presentations by the host (optional), and time to exchange business leads and information at the end of each meeting. We are fortunate to offer these events free of charge to our members thanks to our series sponsor, Lyon & Fitzpatrick, LLP. Although non-members are welcome to attend, non-members are limited to two Coffee Buzz events before joining the chamber.

• Jan. 14: Legislative Coffee Hour, 7:45-9 a.m., at the Summit View/Hamel’s Catering, 555 Northampton St., Holyoke. Join Hampden County District Attorney Anthony Gulluni as he discusses the challenges and opportunities facing the Commonwealth, Holyoke, and area businesses for the upcoming year. Cost: $25 for members with reservation, $35 for all others.

• Jan. 15: Leadership Holyoke, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. A series of seven days comprise Leadership Holyoke 2015-16. Faculty members from Holyoke Community College will participate as instructors and facilitators, and community leaders will participate as speakers and discussion leaders. Tuition is by program and is due at the start of the course. The fee also covers continental breakfasts, the graduation luncheon, and a trip to the State House in Boston. Tuition costs $595.

• Jan. 28: Winners Circle 2015 Reception, 5-7 p.m., at the Yankee Pedlar, 1866 Northampton St., Holyoke. This event honors local and state elected officials. Cost: $27. Call the chamber for tickets or more information at (413) 534-3376.

 

GREATER NORTHAMPTON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

www.explorenorthampton.com

• Feb. 3: February Arrive @ 5, 5-7 p.m., hosted by Union Station, 125A Pleasant St., Northampton, sponsored by Keiter Builders Inc. and others to be announced. Arrive when you can, stay as long as you can. A casual mix and mingle with your colleagues and friends. Cost: $10 for members.

 

GREATER WESTFIELD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

www.westfieldbiz.org
(413) 568-1618

• Jan. 11: Mayor’s Coffee Hour, 8-9 a.m., hosted by Tiger’s Pride Restaurant, Westfield Technical Academy, 33 Smith Ave., Westfield. Free and open to the public. Call Pam at the chamber office at (413) 568-1618 to register.

• Jan. 13: Chamber After 5 Connections, 5-7 p.m., at Roots Aquatics, 217 Root Road, Westfield. Refreshments will be provided. Join us for a great networking opportunity and don’t forget your business cards. Cost: $10 for members, $15 cash for non-members. To register, call Pam at the chamber office at (413) 568-1618.

• Jan. 25: Estate Planning & Asset Protection Workshop, 8-9:30 a.m., at Holiday Inn Express, 39 Southampton Road, Westfield. Presented by attorney Albert Gordon. Cost: free for chamber members, $30 for non-members. To register, call Pam at the chamber office at (413) 568-1618. Coffee and pastries provided.

• Jan. 13: Multi-chamber Lunch & Learn with Robert McDonald, noon to 1:30 p.m., at Storrowton Tavern, 1305 Memorial Ave., West Springfield. Topic: “Run an Effective Meeting.” Learn how to provide common rules and procedures for deliberation and debate in order to place the whole room on the same footing and speaking the same language. Tickets: $35 per person. To register, call Pam at the chamber office at (413) 568-1618.

 

WEST OF THE RIVER CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

www.ourwrc.com
(413) 426-3880

• Jan. 13: Multi-chamber Lunch & Learn with Robert McDonald, noon to 1:30 p.m., at Storrowton Tavern, 1305 Memorial Ave., West Springfield. Topic: “Run an Effective Meeting.” Learn how to provide common rules and procedures for deliberation and debate in order to place the whole room on the same footing and speaking the same language. Tickets: $35 per person. Sponsorship opportunities avaiable. For more information, contact the chamber office at (413) 426-3880, or e-mail us at [email protected]

• Feb. 3: Wicked Wednesday, 5:30-7:30 p.m., at Partners Restaurant, 485 Springfield St., Feeding Hills. Wicked Wednesdays are monthly social events hosted by various businesses and restaurants. These events bring members and non-members together to network in a laid-back atmosphere. Cost: free for chamber members, $10 at the door for non-members. For more information, call the chamber office at (413) 426-3880 or e-mail [email protected].

• Feb. 18: Networking Lunch, noon to 1:30 p.m., at Lattitude, West Springfield. Must be a member or guest of a member to attend. Enjoy a sit-down lunch while networking with fellow chamber members. Each attendee will get a chance to offer a brief sales pitch. The only cost to attend is the cost of lunch. Attendees will order off the menu and pay separately that day. Note we cannot invoice you for these events. 
For more information, call the chamber office at (413) 426-3880 or e-mail [email protected].

• Feb. 24: Legislative Breakfast, 7-9 a.m., at Storrowton Tavern, 1305 Memorial Ave., West Springfield. The breakfast will feature a panel of legislators, including state Sen. James Welch, state Sen. Donald Humason, state Rep. Nicholas Boldyga, state Rep. Michael Finn, Agawam Mayor Richard Cohen, and West Springfield Mayor Will Reichelt. Cost: $25 for members, $30 for non-members. For more information on ticket sales, call the chamber office at (413) 426-3880 or e-mail [email protected].

Departments People on the Move

The Sisters of Providence Health System (SPHS) announced that three physicians have been named to expanded leadership roles for Mercy Behavioral Health Care and Providence Behavioral Health Hospital (PBHH) in Holyoke.
• Dr. Maria Russo-Appel, who has served as the chief medical officer of PBHH for the past year, has been appointed to the position of vice president of Mercy Behavioral Health Care. In this role, Russo-Appel will lead the psychiatric care and behavioral health service lines, including PBHH, for SPHS;
• Dr. Robert Roose, who has been serving as chief medical officer of Addiction Services of SPHS for the past the two and a half years, will have expanded responsibilities in a dual role as CMO/vice president of Addiction and Recovery Services, Mercy Behavioral Health Care, and will assume both medical and administrative leadership responsibilities for all addiction-treatment and recovery-service lines; and
• Dr. Gaurav Chawla, who has been serving as chief of Psychiatry, will assume the role of chief medical officer, Mercy Behavioral Health Care, and lead new SPHS initiatives in behavioral health, such as integration of behavioral health in both primary care and integration into population health management.

•••••

Partners for a Healthier Community (PHC) has confirmed Jessica Collins as its executive director. Collins is a nine-year veteran of the Springfield-based nonprofit, where she previously served as interim executive director and deputy director. She will be leading the institute’s expansion of services in research and evaluation, coalition building, and policy advocacy. “Communities of color, members of the LGBT community, and people with disabilities face significant disparities in health in our region,” Collins said. “Our mission is to address these inequities so that all people will have what they need to lead healthy lives.” PHC was recently awarded the contract to lead the Community Health Needs Assessment for the 10 regional hospitals in Western Mass. in collaboration with the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission and the Collaborative for Educational Services. “This assessment documents the existing health needs of each community and provides the data necessary to develop effective strategies to address health inequities,” Collins said. Added Rev. Karen Rucks, PHC’s board chair, “having a local public-health institute to serve Western Mass. is invaluable. The staff of Partners for a Healthier Community bring an understanding of the context and communities in our region to their services. They are committed to building capacity in our region to better understand how to use data and to collect and report on specific issues that are worthy of collective attention.” Prior to coming to PHC, Collins led community-based participatory research projects including the Shape Up Somerville program focused on the prevention of childhood obesity in Cambridge and Somerville. Other nationally recognized community-health initiatives led by Collins include efforts to address substance abuse and suicide prevention, as well as preschool oral health. In addition, Collins announced the hiring of Jessica Payne as senior research associate. Payne brings 25 years of experience in program development, evaluation, and needs assessment. She has extensive knowledge of regional communities and public-health initiatives, and collaborates with partners and informants of varied backgrounds relative to age, gender, socioeconomic status, race, ethnicity, occupation, and region. Since 1988, her company, Jessica Payne Consulting, has provided research and evaluation services in the healthcare, education, community-development, marketing, and culture and arts industries.

•••••

Jules Gaudreau, president of the Gaudreau Group in Wilbraham, was recently inducted as president of his industry’s national trade organization, the National Assoc. of Insurance and Financial Advisors (NAIFA). “It will be a great privilege and responsibility to lead an association of over 42,000 professionals who help American families achieve financial security,” Gaudreau said. “I look forward to advocating on their behalf in Washington and throughout the country as I have done for over 25 years here in Massachusetts.” One of the nation’s oldest and largest associations representing the interests of insurance professionals and financial advisors, NAIFA is the only organization that serves and represents insurance and financial advisors regardless of the products they sell or the focus of their practice. Members include insurance agents, financial advisors, multi-line agents, and health-insurance and employee-benefits specialists. NAIFA’s mission is to advocate for a positive legislative and regulatory environment, enhance business and professional skills, and promote the ethical conduct of its members.

Company Notebook Departments

Adam Quenneville Replaces Roof for Boy Scouts of America

SOUTH HADLEY — Adam Quenneville Roofing, Siding and Windows had the honor of replacing a roof for the Boy Scouts of America at the Moses Scout Reservation in Russell. Once the summer home of Horace Moses, the Manor House and the 1,200 acres of property were donated to the Boy Scouts of America Western Massachusetts Council in 1945, after its previous campsite was destroyed by a hurricane. The building is about 100 years old and is one of many buildings on the property. “The Manor House has not been used in about eight years,” said David Kruse, scout executive and CEO. “Thanks to Adam Quenneville and his team, we are excited to get it back up and running for this year’s summer camp.” The Manor House is just one of the many buildings on the Boy Scout property in need of repairs. With the help of community and volunteer donations for supplies, Quenneville — owner of Adam Quenneville Roofing, Siding, and Windows — was able to do his part by donating the labor to replace the roof. “As a father of three, two of which are young boys, this project was very important to me,” he said. “The Boy Scouts teach boys self-confidence, ethics, and leadership skills, which I believe are the foundation for great leaders.”

Elms College Athletics to Add Men’s, Women’s Outdoor Track Teams

CHICOPEE — The Athletics Department at Elms College will add men’s and women’s outdoor track teams in 2017. “I’m excited about the prospect of adding this new sport to the 15 other men’s and women’s sports we already sponsor,” said Ellen McEwen, director of Athletics at Elms. “This addition to our Athletics Department can be very successful in this geographical area, especially under the leadership of our cross-country coach, Matt Dyer, who has a very strong background in the area of track. He put together the program proposal for us, and will be coaching both the men’s and women’s teams.” The team will be about more than sport, according to Dyer. “We really care about giving back and carrying out the mission of Elms College and the Sisters of St. Joseph,” he said. “Our cross-country team does a multi-day, overnight service trip each fall, and I’m sure we will continue some similar mission and service work with our track programs. We really love and enjoy the process of working hard and growing together not only as students and athletes, but as people trying to serve a higher cause.” Dyer has just completed his fourth season as head coach of the men’s and women’s cross-country programs at Elms. Hired in August 2012, he has helped direct both teams to successful finishes in the New England Collegiate Conference; the women’s team came in second in 2013 and 2014, and the men’s team was third in 2015. He was named NECC Women’s Coach of the Year in 2013.

WNEU Engineering Students Finish Strong in Solar Decathlon

SPRINGFIELD — Engineering students from Western New England University (WNEU) traveled to the campus of the University del Valle in Cali, Colombia, in late November to complete construction of team PANAMASS’ 800-square-foot, fully solar-powered home, as part of the inaugural Solar Decathlon Latin America and Caribbean 2015 competition. Team PANAMASS’ entry is called the SMART house, which is based on five characteristics in its design: sustainable, modular, recyclable, aesthetic, and tropical. After 10 days of intense evaluation by a several panels of judges, the SMART house was awarded first place in Energy Efficiency and third place in Energy Balance. This competition, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy and the Colombian government, challenges university student teams around the world to design and build sustainable houses based on innovation and clean-energy technologies. Team PANAMASS is a partnership made up of students and faculty from Western New England University and Universidad Tecnológica de Panamá. There were 15 teams representing nine countries, including Panama, Peru, Mexico, Colombia, Uruguay, Spain, Germany, England, and the U.S. WNEU was the only participant representing the U.S. Five Western New England University students and Engineering Professor Kenneth Lee were in Colombia for the construction phase of the house. Students include civil engineering senior Andres Otero and juniors Brian Wodecki, Jhonatan Escobar, Gabby Fosdick, and Katrina DiGloria. This competition provided the students with a unique international experience to work alongside with faculty and students from Tecnológica de Panamá and to experience Colombian culture for two weeks. This solar decathlon embraced a theme of social-justice housing and encouraged designs built for tropical climates in high-density urban locations, and the use of recycled materials, affordability, optimal energy production, and maximum efficiency. The SMART house is built with recycled shipping containers and includes three bedrooms and one bathroom.

DiGrigoli School of Cosmetology Honored by Modern Salon

WEST SPRINGFIELD — Modern Salon has named the 2015 class of Excellence in Education honorees in its sixth annual program recognizing leadership and best practices among cosmetology schools. DiGrigoli School of Cosmetology was chosen to represent excellence in the category of Community Involvement, Marketing Innovation, School Culture. “We received applications from cosmetology schools across the country and look forward to celebrating all the 2015 Excellence in Education honorees and sharing their stories. It is truly a great time to pursue a beauty education and career, and the program at DiGrigoli School of Cosmetology exemplifies that fact,” said Modern Salon Editorial Director Michele Musgrove. Paul DiGrigoli, president and CEO of the DiGrigoli School of Cosmetology, added, “I’m so grateful to have such a stellar faculty and team. They have supported and created an environment of positivity and energy that constantly and continuously helps take our students’ minds and careers to another altitude. I am proud to say that the future professionals who graduate from the DiGrigoli School of Cosmetology have received jobs from some of the best salons in our area. We will continue to reach for greater heights to provide all of our students with higher education, and we are so honored to be receiving this prestigious award for the fourth year in a row.”

Briefcase Departments

Pittsfield to Welcome MassDevelopment TDI Fellow

PITTSFIELD — MassDevelopment has selected Pittsfield, Brockton, and New Bedford for its second round of Transformative Development Initiative (TDI) fellows to advance local redevelopment visions in those cities’ TDI districts. The fellows, who will have experience in city planning, community partnership building, real estate, and economic development, will work in their host districts for three years in collaboration with local partnerships. These fellows follow the successful initial placements earlier this year in Springfield, Haverhill, and Lynn. “This grant is another recognition that Pittsfield is moving forward,” said state Sen. Ben Downing (D-Pittsfield). “Support through the TDI program will help revitalize the Tyler Street corridor and build on the great work of local business and community organizations.” MassDevelopment is accepting qualifications for these new fellows positions, which will begin in spring 2016, on its website. Staff members from Peabody and Worcester will participate in this round as adjunct fellows, joining cohort activities such as monthly meetings, skills building, site visits, and regional leadership development. Brockton, New Bedford, and Pittsfield are three of the 10 Gateway Cities selected in December 2014 as the pilot TDI districts in development, along with Haverhill, Holyoke, Lynn, Peabody, Revere, Springfield, and Worcester. As a part of the program, each will receive a range of real-estate-development services to support local visions for redevelopment, and to catalyze and leverage investments and economic activities. Everett and Malden are receiving directed regional planning and implementation assistance to advance their districts’ TDI visions. “The first three fellows have quickly become indispensable parts of the economic-development communities in Haverhill, Lynn, and Springfield by partnering with local organizations to create redevelopment opportunities,” said MassDevelopment President and CEO Marty Jones. “We look forward to the new faces that will arrive in Brockton, New Bedford, and Pittsfield to support those cities’ visions.”

State Adds 19 to Green Communities List

BOSTON — The Baker-Polito administration announced that 19 more cities and towns have been designated Green Communities by the Department of Energy Resources (DOER) and will receive more than $3.1 million for local clean-energy and energy-efficiency projects. The Western Mass. communities added to the list, and their funding, include Adams ($166,865), Bernardston ($131,290), Egremont ($138,570), Stockbridge ($139,625), West Springfield ($222,765), and Windsor ($137,880). “The Green Communities program demonstrates state and local governments can work together to save energy and taxpayers’ money, while making the Commonwealth a healthier place to live,” said Gov. Charlie Baker. “These 19 communities will be able to invest in energy efficiency and renewable energy, reducing energy costs and reducing their carbon footprints.” Added Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, “helping cities and towns reduce their energy consumption allows them to channel their financial savings into other municipal needs, like public safety, education, and municipal buildings. These grants further reiterate the Commonwealth’s ability to work with municipalities to ensure Massachusetts continues to be a leader in clean energy and energy efficiency.” The 155 Green Communities are cities and towns of all sizes that range from the Berkshires to Cape Cod and are home to 54% of Massachusetts’ population. All Green Communities commit to reducing municipal energy consumption by 20% over five years. “Through the Green Communities program, DOER is able to work with municipalities to find clean-energy solutions that reduce long-term energy costs and strengthen local economies,” said Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Matthew Beaton. “The commitment and hard work of these 19 communities to reduce their energy use and undertake clean-energy projects will help Massachusetts continue its leadership in energy efficiency, renewable energy, and emissions reductions.”

Holiday Sales Up 7.9% This Year

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The holiday shopping season isn’t quite over yet — many of those who received gift cards have yet to hit the stores — but a study has shown that it is already a solid one for retailers. Indeed, retail sales were up 7.9% between Black Friday and Christmas Eve compared to the same period a year ago, according to MasterCard SpendingPulse, which studies transaction and survey data on purchases made with credit cards, cash, and checks. The report found that e-commerce provided crucial holiday momentum this holiday season, with sales up 20% in that realm.

Defense-contract Work Contributed $20B to State Economy in FY 2013

AMHERST — The Commonwealth’s defense-contract work supported more than 88,000 workers and contributed more than $20 billion to the Massachusetts economy, while Massachusetts military installations directly or indirectly supported more than 57,000 jobs with a total economic contribution of more than $13 billion, in fiscal year 2013, according to two new UMass Donahue Institute reports. Massachusetts companies exemplifying the connections between the defense sector and small businesses include Holyoke’s Meridian Industrial Group, which does machining for portable MRI equipment; Southampton’s J&E Precision Tool, which produces components for Black Hawk helicopters, periscopes, and F-22s and F-35s; and CPI Radant Technologies Division in Stow, which develops components for military aircraft. “The Commonwealth’s six bases and defense-related firms continue to have a major impact on the Massachusetts economy, both in terms of jobs and dollars,” said Gov. Charlie Baker. “Academia, business, and technology — three of the Commonwealth’s top sectors — play a role in our installations and defense contracts, helping this industry serve as an economic driver. We look forward to their continued growth and contribution to Massachusetts.” The Massachusetts Military Asset and Security Strategy Task Force and MassDevelopment commissioned the reports. The first studied the impact of the Commonwealth’s six military installations — Barnes Air National Guard Base, Fort Devens Reserve Forces Training Area, Hanscom Air Force Base, Joint Base Cape Cod, U.S. Army Natick Soldier Systems Center, and Westover Air Reserve Base — and the Massachusetts Army National Guard and the U.S. Army Reserve. The second report studied the defense industry’s contribution to the New England economy, finding that, in fiscal year 2013, New England defense contracting generated nearly $49 billion and more than 218,000 jobs.

College Farm Market Project Launched with $25,000 Grant

GREENFIELD — The Rural Community College Alliance has awarded a $25,000 grant to Greenfield Community College (GCC), Community Involved in Sustaining Agriculture (CISA), and the Franklin Community Co-op (FCC) to fund a new collaborative College Farm Market Project (CFMP). GCC farm and food systems and business majors will work as interns with CISA and FCC to enhance and expand on existing opportunities with farmers’ markets in the Pioneer Valley. The project’s goal is to develop a replicable model for coordinating food- and farm-focused education, marketing, and sales that support the growing sustainable farm movement in Western Mass. The RCCA grant will fund six three-credit paid internships for GCC students while the costs of the credits earned are covered by other grants the college has won. Three interns will work at FCC, and three will work at CISA. The grant also provides funds to defray some of the partner-agency staff time needed for this project and for staff to attend national and regional conferences to share information about the project with other colleges and organizations. This grant brings together three organizations that have significant impact on regional farm and food systems and will enhance coordination around food justice and development of farmers’ markets. The internships housed at FCC will continue the work of fall 2015 GCC interns to create a mid-week farmers’ market in Greenfield, seeing its development from its opening this spring through the remainder of the summer and fall. At CISA, the GCC interns will focus on broader regional issues that affect farmers’ markets in general, further food justice and SNAP matching efforts, provide replicable templates for building market business structures, and expand the customer base for locally grown foods that promote sustainable models for farm viability. Staff and administrators from the three organizations will meet regularly to develop long-term structures for interorganization collaboration for strengthening agricultural cooperative supports in the region. “This project enhances the learning of our students in farm and food systems and in business through work experience in which they can apply their academic work,” said Christine Copeland, SAGE assistant and internship coordinator at GCC. “It’s great for their career prospects, and they also make professional contacts and network with people in their field.”

State Issues Grants to Three Area Farms

BOSTON — The Baker-Polito administration recently announced that five Massachusetts farms with land permanently protected from development through the state’s Agricultural Preservation Restriction (APR) Program — including three in Western Mass. — have been awarded $400,000 in grant funding for infrastructure improvements. “These agricultural investments help create jobs and make Massachusetts’ farms more competitive in the national and global marketplace,” said Gov. Charlie Baker. “Our administration is committed to supporting Massachusetts’ vibrant agriculture industry, which provides fresh, healthy food for the Commonwealth’s residents.” The local grantees include Burnett Farm in Adams, $50,000 for barn expansion; Luther Belden Farm in Hatfield; $100,000 for dairy infrastructure improvements; and the Kitchen Garden in Sunderland, $75,000 for produce packing and storage building. The APR Improvement Program, established in 2009, is funded by the federal Farm and Lands Protection Program and is administered by the Department of Agricultural Resources. The program also provides recipients with technical and business-planning assistance to identify the best use of funds to improve farm infrastructure and productivity. Since 2009, AIP has provided more than $3.5 million in total grants (average $66,509 per farm) and $330,150 in technical assistance (average $6,229 per farm) to Massachusetts APR farms that own a combined total of more than 7,000 acres of protected farmland.

Departments Incorporations

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

ADAMS

CT Plunkett PTG Inc., 14 Commercial St., Adams, MA 01220. Erin Mucci, 37 Upton St., Adams, MA 01220. Charitable and educational purposes; bring together persons interested in welfare of CT Plunkett Elementary School of Adams students; promote free-flow of ideas by teachers, parents, and children; assist teachers in programs for children to become good citizens; use meeting forum for suggestions or ideas by parents, teachers, and students to develop potential of children, community, and the school; support educational and arts enrichment activities and programs for the school and community.

AMHERST

Woodside Daycare Center Inc., 155 Woodside Ave, Amherst, MA 01102. Catherine Epstein, 90 Spring St., Amherst, MA 01002. Charitable and educational purposes to provide day care, nursery, child care, and related educational services in the greater Amherst area.

BRIMFIELD

Laser Converting Concepts Inc., 109 Brookfield Road, Brimfield, MA 01010. Gregory Flamand, same. Laser manufacturing.
CHICOPEE

Templo Misionero El Buen Smaritano, 48-C Riverview Terrace, Chicopee, MA 01013. Teresa Martinez, same. Preach the word of God; reach to those in need; teach the gospel.

CLARKSBURG

North County Church of the Rebellion Inc., 28 Cross Road, Clarksburg, MA 01247. Jesse Leydet, 17 Phelps Ave., North Adams, MA 01247. Printing, publishing, designing, creation, assembly and shipping of merchandise.

HOLYOKE

The Miracle League of Western Massachusetts Inc., 106 Chapin St., Holyoke, MA 01040. Ernest Fitzell Jr., same. Provide special needs children a chance to play baseball and other sports.

SHELBURNE FALLS

Charlemont Historical Society Inc., 7 Avery Brook Road, Shelburne Falls, MA 01370. Beth Bandy, 7 Avery Brook Road, Charlemont, MA 01370. Collect, preserve, and display objects, records, and folklore of historic significance of Charlemont’s earliest habitation, and maintain a museum for these artifacts; provide organization for those interested in preserving, researching, and maintain local history of Charlemont; familiarize citizens with Charlemont’s history, and increase interest in local history and traditions through exhibits, educational programs, publications, and historical records.

SPRINGFIELD

Family Business Center of Pioneer Valley Inc., 1500 Main St., Suite 2700 Bulkley, Richardson and Gelinas, LLP, Springfield, MA 01115. Ira Bryck, 255 Strong St., Amherst, MA 01002. Charitable and educational purposes to provide educational programs for family and closely held businesses and opportunities for educational interaction among such business owners, and related charitable and educational purposes.

Real Estate Rehab Inc., 408 Sumner Ave., Springfield, MA 01108. Gerald Beaulieu, same. Commercial and residential construction.

United Professional Horsemen’s Association Chapter 14 Inc., 1500 Main St., Suite 2700 Bulkley, Richardson and Gelinas, LLP, Springfield, MA 01115. John Lampropolous, 99 Amesbury Road, Newton, NH 03858. Non-Profit organization to better the conditions of those engaged in the pursuit of equine related activities; support research to improve horses; promote development of higher degree of efficiency for its members in their efforts to improve general conditions of the show horse industry.

WARE

Your Deal Source Inc., 277 Palmer Road, Ware, MA 01082. Matthew Woodward, 20 Beach Dr., West Brookfield, MA 01585. Retail store.

WEST SPRINGFIELD

The Sangria Shack Inc., 15 Sagamore Road, West Springfield, MA 01089. Anthony Martone, same. Wine production.

WILLIAMSBURG

Girls on the Run of Western MA Inc., 10 North St., Williamsburg, MA 01096. Alison Berman, same. Religious, charitable, scientific, literary and educational purposes to educate and prepare girls for a lifetime of self-respect and healthy living.

DBA Certificates Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of December 2015.

AGAWAM

Abella’s Skin & Nail
159 Main St.
Jennifer Mallalieu

The Sharper Edge
99 Maple St.
Russell Scalise

AMHERST

Amherst Community Solar
326 Pelham Road
Lucas Krupinski

Amherst Hairstylists
15 Pray St.
Caren Bisbee

Amherst Healing Arts
409 Main St.
Karen Kerin

MT Taqueria Mexican
31 Boltwood Walk
Marleny Amaya

CHICOPEE

Chicopee Jiffy Lube
2017 Memorial Dr.
Steven Roberts

Daigle’s Truck Master
57 Fuller Road
Jeffrey Daigle

Elegance Salon & Spa
974 Chicopee St.
Myriam Vega

Krystle Kleen Inc.
235 Meadow St.
Michael Robare

Monro Muffler & Brakes
461 Memorial Dr.
Joshua Morrison

Tony’s Flooring
14 Simard Dr.
Anthony Lasorsa

HADLEY

JC Mattress Company
8 River Dr.
Justin Carlson

Leon’s Auto Sales
64 East St.
Leon Szymborn

Marshall’s
325 Russell St.
Marshalls of MA Inc.

Mobile Robotics
110 North Maple St.
Charles Brown

Old Navy
339 Russell St.
Old Navy

Texas Roadhouse
280 Russell St.
Texas Roadhouse

TJ Maxx
454 Russell St.
TJX, Inc.

HOLYOKE

B & B Real Estate
59 Cherry St.
Edward Brunelle

Barbieri Express
12 Crescent St.
Kevin Barbieri

KW Property Management
97 Locust St.
Kenrick Williams

Western Mass College Nights
920 Main St.
Ryan Spence

NORTHAMPTON

Chasa Cafe Inc.
159 Main St.
Thondup Tsering

Happy Valley Auto Restoration
40 Williams St.
Gregory Goff

L & R Cleaning Services
21 Wilson Ave.
Richard Tucci

PALMER

Coin Pal
69 East Palmer Park Dr.
Edward Goodfield

Helping Hands
60 Randall St.
Paula Haley

Mayberry’s Portable Welding
229 Peterson Road
Peter Mayberry

Pioneer Stump Grinding & Plowing
1113 Thorndike St.
Kyle Tassineri

SPRINGFIELD

Ace of Blades Barber
932 Boston Road
Evangelo Gonzalez

Action Management
70 Monticello Ave.
Gary Michael

Always Drywall
199 Cabinet St.
Michael Sares

Amiracle Construction
225 Durant St.
Jonathan Hall

Baystate Home Infusion
211 Carando Dr.
Brian Simonds

Bealfire Stone
67 Fort Pleasant Ave.
Dashay Miles

Bhakta Pradan
33 Ruskin St.
Bhakta Pradan

Big City Builders
42 Arbutus St.
Steven J. Brantley

Breakthrough Fitness
481 Breckwood Blvd.
Shosana Porter

Busy Bee Store
494 Central St.
Mohammad Tanvir

Cardicci Couture
1 Allen St.
Craig Williams

Crafted in Style
96 Albermarle St.
Naomi Howard

Crystal Clear Home Cleaners
2141 Main St.
Ed Kostyuko

Evins Brantley Construction
91 Dunmoreland St.
Evins C. Brantley

Racing Mart
1037 St. James Ave.
Abbas Younes

Ron’s Oil Burner Service
97 Groton St.
Robert Alan

SISS
67 Wollaston St.
Alexander Buor

Spotless Office Cleaning
26 Lafayette St.
Juliet Davis

Springfield Auto Service
731 Liberty St.
Boris Altman

Truong Nguyen Cafe
392 Dickinson St.
Son Nguyen

Z Tech Towing
18 Kenwood Park
Rafael Zayas

WESTFIELD

Home Access Solutions
352 Shaker Road
Chadwick Berndt

Miha Welding
57 Tannery Road
Artem Girich

WEST SPRINGFIELD

AAA Xtreme Paintball
683 Westfield St.
Joseph O’Malley

AC Motor Express, LLC
339 Bliss St.
John Nekitopoulos

Cost Klippers
2260 Westfield St.
Kalie Kopezynski

Crayata, LLC
70 Windsor St.
Tammy L. Pierson

Gabriel Gladiator Training
130 Myron St.
Gabriel Goncalves

Toch Supply Company
104 Hillcrest Ave.
Aric Nunes

Agenda Departments

Springfield Museums January Lectures, Tours

Jan. 14, 21, 28: The Springfield Museums’ monthly lecture and tour schedule continues in January with the popular Museums à la Carte lectures, which take place each Thursday at 12:15 p.m. in the D’Amour Museum of Fine Arts. Admission is $4 ($2 for members of the Springfield Museums), and visitors are invited to bring a bag lunch (cookies and coffee are provided). For more information about Museums à la Carte, call (413) 263-6800, ext. 488. This month’s lectures include: Jan. 14: “Why, How, and the 343:  Better Angels, The Firefighters of 9/11” in which Dawn Howkinson Siebel, artist and creator of the “Better Angels” exhibit, shares her personal journey in creating this fascinating and powerful exhibit; Jan. 21: “Leaving Our Mark: In Celebration of the Pencil — Artist’s Words and Views,” in which Steve Wilda, artist and organizer of “Leaving Our Mark,” will be joined by other artists featured in the exhibit, including Doug Gillette, Bill Simpson, Lesley Cohen, and Luciana Heineman; and Jan. 28: “The Klondike Gold Rush: A Chicopee Man Goes to the Yukon in 1898 (and Back),” in which Robert Romer, professor emeritus at Amherst College, brings to life the story of Chicopee’s John Gibson, an Irish immigrant who set out for the Klondike to seek his fortune. As part of the Museums’ members-only “Continuing Conversations” series, museum docent Jim Boone will lead a guided gallery discussion immediately following the Jan. 14 talk at the Wood Museum of Springfield History, and docent Pat McCarthy will lead a post-lecture gallery discussion on Jan. 28 at the D’Amour Museum of Fine Art.

Choking Prevention

Jan. 18: Cooley Dickinson Hospital is offering an educational program for anyone who would like to learn how to respond to a basic choking emergency. The course is appropriate for those who work in the food-service industry or anyone who wants to learn basic choking-relief skills. For those who work in food service,  completion of this course satisfies 105 CMR 590.001 State Food Code requirements. The one-hour class costs $20 per person, and certification is good for two years. The class runs from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the Dakin Conference Room at Cooley Dickinson Hospital. To register or for more information, call the Cooley Dickinson Professional Development Office at (413) 582-2400 or e-mail [email protected].

Difference Makers

March 31: The eighth annual Difference Makers award program, staged by BusinessWest, will be held at the Log Cabin Banquet & Meeting House. Details on the event will be published in upcoming issues of the magazine. Difference Makers is a program, launched in 2009, that recognizes groups and individuals that are, as the name suggests, making a difference in this region. The magazine’s editor and publishers have chosen this year’s class, which will be profiled in the Jan. 25 issue.

Daily News

LONGMEADOW — Fazzi Associates, a national research firm specializing in serving the home-health and hospice industry, has named Spectrum Home Health & Hospice Care of JGS Lifecare in Longmeadow a national best-practice home-health agency.

Based on feedback from patients through Fazzi Associates’ HHCAHPS (Home Health Care – Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) survey system, Spectrum has been recognized for having consistent and excellent patient satisfaction survey results in 2014. Spectrum placed in the top 25th percentile of Fazzi’s National Patient Satisfaction database, and earned Fazzi Associates’ Patient Satisfaction Award of Distinction.

“Agencies named as national best-practice agencies are proven leaders and have excelled in one of the most important measures of an agency’s quality program — patient satisfaction,” said Gina Mazza, partner and HHCAHPS director. “This is a commendable accomplishment, demonstrating superior performance in patient satisfaction in 2014.”

Results are based on a comparative analysis of agencies involved in Fazzi Associates’ HHCAHPS survey system for a 12-month period. The goal of the survey is to help consumers make better decisions about their choice of a home-health agency.

“Achieving this recognition is a result of our team of dedicated nurses who give our patients 100% of their energy, attention, compassion, and expertise each and every day,” said Sarah Jackson, executive vice president of Spectrum Home Health & Hospice Care. “To be recognized for such outstanding outcomes is a tribute to their dedication and outstanding care.”

Daily News

SPRINGFIELD — In the months prior to 9/11, firefighter Peter Freund had been considering a career change after 23 years with the FDNY. One week after he perished at the World Trade Center, Freund’s family received a letter confirming his acceptance to teach high-school mathematics.

Described by some as “a living saint,” chaplain Mychal Judge was the first FDNY casualty listed on 9/11, entry number 0001. His helmet was later presented as a gift to the Pope.

A proud first-time uncle, firefighter William Johnston, had been looking forward to the baby shower on Sept. 30. His remains were found at Ground Zero that afternoon.

These are just a few of the stories that await visitors who come to view “Better Angels: the Firefighters of 9/11,” a new traveling exhibit at the Lyman & Merrie Wood Museum of Springfield History opening Tuesday, Jan. 12 and running through July 10. The exhibit features 343 portraits by artist Dawn Howkinson Siebel, one for every New York City firefighter lost in the World Trade Center attacks. Together, the images create a wall measuring 21 feet long, allowing visitors to come face to face with men who made their living running toward danger and saving lives, even at the risk of their own.

Siebel, a current resident of Easthampton, was living in Colorado at the time of the attacks, but had been a longtime resident of Manhattan in the years prior. Inspired when the New York Times printed photos of all 343 fallen FDNY members, Siebel set out to paint a portrait of every firefighter lost on that fateful day. Over the next few years, she painstakingly hand-painted each portrait onto a block of charred wood. In total, the exhibit took 3,000 hours and over six years to create.

In her artist statement for the exhibit, Siebel said, “these 343 firemen represent New York, the FDNY, their selfless profession, and also — in the way of heroes — the possibility that each of us may rise to the ‘better angels’ of our own nature.”

To mark the opening week of the exhibit, Siebel will speak at the weekly Museums à la Carte lecture on Thursday, Jan. 14 at 12:15 p.m.

Daily News

AGAWAM — With close to 900 members concentrated in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, the Employers Assoc. of the NorthEast (EANE) unveiled the regional findings from the 2016 National Business Trends Survey conducted by the Employer Associations of America.

Results from this comprehensive survey of 1,242 organizations, covering 2,814 employer locations and 45 U.S. states, indicate that the majority of executives surveyed remain optimistic for 2016, are confident they will award pay increases, will provide a heightened emphasis on recruiting, and plan to increase training budgets that focus on developing their existing employees.

“Here in the Northeast, we certainly understand that regulatory compliance is a concern, and we are heartened to see more companies looking to increase staff,” said Meredith Wise, president of the Employers Assoc. of the NorthEast. “We are also encouraged by the commitment of businesses in the Northeast to technology, processes, and people.”

The top three distinctions for the Northeast from the findings appear to be:

• Regulatory compliance is a bigger concern. In comparison to the national average, Northeast companies view the cost of regulatory compliance as a greater challenge, both in the short and long term. The data shows 32% of the Northeast regional responses expressing concern in the short term versus 27% of the national responses. On a long-term basis, 42% of the Northeast regional responses see regulatory compliance as a serious challenge, whereas nationally the average checks in at 34%.

• There appears to be a greater consensus on the part of Northeastern business to invest in technology equipment, lean and other process improvements, and training. All measures were responded to more favorably and at a higher rate than in comparison to the national norms. Overall, 70% of executives surveyed in the Northeast said they would be making new investments in people, facilities, and/or equipment in 2016 versus only 62% nationally.

• More companies are looking to add staff. While the majority of surveyed executives indicated that they would be increasing staff in 2016, a greater percentage of Northeastern executives — 59% — plan on adding staff when compared to the national norm of 52%.

Daily News

SPRINGFIELD — With a permit from the city of Springfield in hand, MGM Springfield is set to begin demolition of the Zanetti School this week. This sign of construction progress follows the project’s recent state and city environmental and zoning approvals.

The former elementary school suffered some of the worst damage caused by the 2011 tornado that tore through Springfield’s South End, and last year served as the backdrop for MGM Springfield’s groundbreaking.

Final site preparations will begin today and include moving in construction equipment, reinforcing safety protocols, and general site set-up. On Tuesday, demolition will commence and is expected to last up to several weeks. Abutters received notice last week of the pending activity on the site.

MGM Springfield, a more than $950 million resort, is slated for 14.5 acres of land between Union and State streets, and between Columbus Avenue and Main Street. For more information, visit www.mgmspringfield.com.

Daily News

CHICOPEE — The MBA program at Elms College has been accredited by the International Assembly for Collegiate Business Education (IACBE). This accreditation also includes a reaccreditation for the college’s undergraduate business program.

“This is exciting because IACBE accreditation not only validates the quality of our business education and our commitment to program excellence, but also enhances the employability of our graduates and offers significant value to their employers,” said Kim Kenney-Rockwal, MBA program director at Elms College.

IACBE accreditation of a higher-education institution is mission-driven and outcome-based, and indicates the business program’s effectiveness. The process of accreditation involves a comprehensive self-study in which the school demonstrates that it meets the IACBE’s evaluation criteria. Following the self-study, an independent team of professional peer reviewers conducts a site visit, and then the IACBE’s board of commissioners reviews the site-visit report and delivers its decision.

Only eight schools in all of Massachusetts are IACBE-accredited. These schools demonstrate “a commitment to continuous improvement, excellence in business education, and advancing academic quality,” according to the IACBE website. “Accreditation means that the academic business unit’s programs are sufficiently strong to be considered as high-quality programs, and that the academic business unit is functioning effectively (e.g., is producing excellent student-learning outcomes).”

Walter Breau, vice president of Academic Affairs at Elms, noted that “our undergraduate business and MBA programs are already recognized in the community as student-centered with a focus on quality, rigor, and ethics. IACBE accreditation of all of our business programs — accounting, management and marketing, sport management, healthcare management and the MBA — reinforces that reputation.

The business programs at Elms College will be eligible for reaccreditation in seven years, Kenney-Rockwal said. “During that time, we will submit interim progress reports on what we are changing and enhancing every couple of years.”

Daily News

NORTHAMPTON — Richard Venne, president and CEO of Community Enterprises Inc., announced the election of new officers to one-year terms at the recent board of directors meeting.

Elected to officer positions for one-year terms are William Donohue, chair, Children and Family Law, Springfield; Donald Miner, vice chair, Loomis Communities, South Hadley; Joanne Carlisle, clerk/secretary, Stop & Shop Inc., Springfield; and Brittney Kelleher, treasurer, Westfield Bank, Springfield. Deborah Omasta-Mokrzecki, Amherst College, was elected as a new member for a three-year term.

Existing members elected to additional three-year terms include Donohue; Carlisle; Miner; Mary Beth Davidson, Travelers, Hartford, Conn.; Kate LaMay-Miller, Multi-Media Impact, Hadley; and Albert Lognin, HARC, Hartford, Conn.

Community Enterprises is a human-service organization that provides employment, education, housing supports, and day supports for people with disabilities. It is headquartered in Northampton and maintains 27 service locations throughout Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, and Kentucky. The nonprofit organization, which started as a small program at Northampton State Hospital, has grown to a $22.5 million business.

Daily News

PITTSFIELD — Berkshire Bank has announced it will honor 30 high-school seniors in Massachusetts, New York, Connecticut, and Vermont for their volunteer service through its foundation’s annual Scholarship Awards Program.

The program will award $45,000 in total scholarship dollars to students who have exemplified community service through their volunteer efforts, have succeeded academically, and demonstrate a financial need. Additionally, students must attend a high school that is located in a county with a Berkshire Bank office.

Through the program, 30 scholarships of $1,500 will be awarded to high-school seniors who will be attending a two- or four-year college in the fall. Applicants must have a minimum 3.0 GPA and a family household income under $75,000 to be eligible to apply. Students must apply online at www.berkshirebank.com/scholarships by Wednesday, March 23. An independent team of more than 200 bank employee volunteers will review the applications and select this year’s recipients.

Scholarships will be awarded in the geographic regions where Berkshire Bank branches are located, with 14 available in Massachusetts, 11 in New York, two in Connecticut, and three in Vermont. Additional information about this year’s program can be obtained through the bank’s website or by contacting Berkshire Bank Foundation at [email protected].

Daily News

BOSTON — Gov. Charlie Baker, Boston Mayor Martin Walsh, House Speaker Robert DeLeo and executives from the Massachusetts Competitive Partnership (MACP) joined leaders from across state government, healthcare, and the technology sector at Boston Children’s Hospital this week to announce a comprehensive public-private partnership designed to accelerate the competitiveness of the Commonwealth’s digital healthcare industry.

“Our administration is committed to making Massachusetts a national leader in digital health by partnering with private industry, convening key stakeholders, and addressing market gaps,” Baker said. “This emerging industry cluster has the potential to become a powerful driver of job creation across the Commonwealth, while also unlocking new advances in improving patient care and lowering health care costs.”

Digital health, or eHealth, is a rapidly growing sector at the intersection of healthcare and information technology and, according to a report by Goldman Sachs, represents an approximately $32 billion market opportunity over the next decade. The sector spans a variety of technologies including electronic health records, consumer wearable devices, care systems, payment management, big-data analytics, and telemedicine, among others, and has close connections to the state’s technology and life-sciences sectors. Massachusetts is well-positioned for success in digital health as host to world-class healthcare and academic institutions, a strong startup culture, significant venture-capital investment, a healthy life-sciences sector, and roughly 250 existing digital-health companies.

The initiative will bring public, private, academic, and healthcare leaders together to build a stronger and more connected statewide digital-health ecosystem. To support digital health startups, the city of Boston, Massachusetts eHealth Institute at MassTech, and MACP announced the establishment of a digital-health-innovation hub. The initiative will provide space, programming, and a strong industry network for digital health startups and will serve as a Boston hub for the industry. Programming through the hub will be managed and operated by MassChallenge.

MACP also announced several private industry-led initiatives that will help accelerate growth in the digital health sector, including innovative approaches to provide private funds for digital healthcare companies that are starting up in, located in, or planning to re-locate to Massachusetts.

MACP also facilitated the development of standardized software, technology, and sponsored research agreements and user guides to make it easier for entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and the private sector to do business with academic institutions, including the UMass system, Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Northeastern University, and Partners HealthCare.

MACP will also host a second year of its Mentorship Speaker Series, with a focus on digital health, connecting high-level, experienced industry leaders across the state with entrepreneurs of emerging companies to discuss how to start and grow a successful tech business in Massachusetts.

“The innovation economy comprised of the life-sciences and digital-technology sectors is the future growth engine of our Commonwealth,” said Dr. Jeffrey Leiden, who led the Digital Health Initiative on behalf of MACP. “It has been a privilege for me to lead this outstanding group of public- and private-sector partners toward our shared goal of accelerating the growth of the digital-healthcare industry in Massachusetts. With the strengths of our universities, academic medical centers, and life-sciences companies, Massachusetts is uniquely positioned to succeed in digital healthcare, and I’m thrilled to be part of the team that will make it happen.”

Daily News

SPRINGFIELD — On Tuesday, Jan. 13, the Ronald McDonald House of Springfield will hold a press conference to announce the celebration of its 25th anniversary serving families in need in Western Mass.

“We have been honored to have the ability to serve as a home away from home to the thousands of families who have stayed here,” said Craig Carr, one of the original founders of the facility. The press conference will discuss upcoming events taking place this coming year to help celebrate this historic milestone, while raising much-needed funds to help support the programs and services the House conducts on a year-round basis.

“Honoring our founders and donors will be the focus of our gala celebration, and the money raised will enable us to positively impact our House residents and support outreach efforts into neighboring communities,” said Margaret “Meg” Beturne, the organization’s current advisory board president. “A spring volunteer event will pay tribute to innumerable persons who have touched the lives of everyone connected with our House. An appreciation reception in May will pay tribute to the teen board and their advisors who have contributed countless volunteer hours and raised money through ongoing fund-raising efforts. Together, we will make a significant difference for those most in need of our caring services.”

Joined by Springfield Mayor Dominic Sarno and other special guests, the press conference will take place at 34 Chapin Terrace, Springfield, at 10:45 a.m. Tours of the House and light refreshments will be provided.

Since 1991, when the Ronald McDonald House of Springfield opened its doors, families have received supportive services in the comfort of a home-like environment. The 21-bedroom house offers families the privacy of their own bedroom and bath, a large communal kitchen to prepare their meals, a large dining area, a TV room, a playroom, a laundry room, and a library.

Ronald McDonald House has a mission to provide a home away from home for families of children who are being cared for in local hospitals. Area hospitals served include Baystate Medical Center’s Children’s Hospital, Providence Behavioral Health Hospital, Shriner’s Hospital for Children, Mercy Medical Center, and Clarke School for Hearing and Speech, to name a few.

The Springfield facility serves not only families from the four counties of Western Mass. and Worcester County, but families from all over the world who have come to the Pioneer Valley to seek treatment at a local medical center. A donation of $15 per night, per family is requested, but the House never turns down families without the means to pay.

Daily News

SUNDERLAND — Blue Heron Restaurant and its executive chef, Deborah Snow, are featured in The Berkshires Cookbook, a new work by Jane Barton Griffith, author of Knead It! The chapter on the Blue Heron includes a brief history of the restaurant and its owners, as well as recipes for three of the restaurant’s signature dishes: pan-seared sea scallops, housemade ricotta with local honeycomb, and pomegranate custard.

The Berkshires Cookbook explores the stories behind the rich culinary traditions of Western Mass., a region known to many as a food hub and a leader in the sustainable-food movement. Of the 88 recipes showcased in The Berkshires Cookbook, 60 are the author’s original creations, while the rest were donated by farmers and chefs from across the region. Griffith’s text is accompanied by photographs by Barbara Dowd, which reflect the rich colors and textures of the region’s landscapes and food.

Other local restaurants and producers featured include Bistro Les Gras, Pierce Bros Coffee, Hungry Ghost Bread, Blue Hill Farm, and Coco and the Cellar Bar.

Copies of The Berkshires Cookbook are available for sale at the Blue Heron, as well as many local booksellers and online. The list price is $24.95.

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WARE — Country Bank recently sponsored an educational presentation called “The Brain Show.” Students from Ware Middle School, Charlton Middle School, Knox Trail in Spencer, and Converse Middle School in Palmer were asked to participate in a game-show-like presentation which tested the students’ knowledge in history, math, science, art, music and financial education.

“The Brain Show presentation allowed us to promote financial education as well as many other subjects in a way that speaks directly to students, all while working together as a team,” said Jodie Gerulaitis, financial education officer at Country Bank. “Principals and students acknowledged this show as the most exciting presentation they had seen in years. Students were not the only ones dancing and learning; the teachers had a blast too.”

Country Bank also sponsors the Savings Makes Sense program and the award-winning Credit for Life program in area communities.

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SPRINGFIELD — According to Skoler, Abbott & Presser, P.C., one of the best ways employers can improve business operations is by updating or creating an employee handbook. Just as a company grows and changes, so do federal and state laws, and employee handbooks should be updated annually to reflect these changes.

Each company is unique, and one of the biggest mistakes employers make is to print a generic employee handbook from the Internet. Businesses should consider developing a handbook that includes policies specifically tailored to the company’s industry. A company handbook also needs to carefully outline policies that will help decrease the risk of both litigation and liability. Properly drafted, an employee handbook can be a valuable document in the workplace, for both employers and employees.

Companies that already have an employee handbook must be sure that the handbook is completely up to date. Employers creating a handbook for the first time should carefully consider the structure and policies to incorporate into the handbook. Here are six reasons why your handbook needs an update in 2016:

• Changes to Massachusetts law. Paid sick time and domestic-violence leave are two of the major changes to Massachusetts law that have resulted in revisions to company handbooks. If your handbook does not include these policies, it’s out of date.

• E-mail, social-media, and technology policies. In this day and age, it is important for an employer to outline social media and technology expectations. Employers should properly delineate how to use electronic communications, and employees should be notified if the company plans on monitoring computers and phones. Although it is important for employers to outline best practices for social media, companies should not be overly restrictive, as this could potentially violate employee rights in the workplace.

• Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA). Companies with 50 or more employees must grant an eligible employee up to a total of 12 workweeks of unpaid leave during any 12-month period for the birth and care of a newborn child of the employee, for placement with the employee of a child for adoption or foster care, to care for an immediate family member with a serious health condition, or to take medical leave when the employee is unable to work because of a serious health condition. If a company is covered by the FMLA, it is important to properly outline employee eligibility requirements, procedures, and guidelines for when the employee returns to the workplace to make the transition well-organized for both the employer and employee. FMLA regulations changed in 2010. If your handbook has not been revised since then, your FMLA policy is out of date.

• At-will statements. All employment in Massachusetts is ‘at will,’ which means that either the employee or the employer can choose to end the employment relationship at any time, with or without cause or notice. But if the employee handbook doesn’t clearly indicate this important status at the beginning of the handbook, it can create problems down the road. Outlining at-will employment expectations in your handbook will help clear up any confusion about the nature of employment and potentially prevent costly litigation.

• Overtime, vacation, and sick time. It is also important for employers to clearly outline attendance policies in the workplace. The employee handbook should address which employees are eligible for overtime pay and also the internal process for approval of overtime. It is also important to stipulate that excessive absences are grounds for termination to avoid any ambiguity with the employee.

• Anti-harassment and discrimination policies. Not only is it vital that employers make it clear that no unlawful harassment will be tolerated in the workplace environment, but they should also clearly outline avenues for employees to report complaints of harassment or misconduct. Employees who have witnessed or experienced harassment should know there will be no retaliation for reporting complaints in good faith. Employers should specifically address this in employee handbooks to prevent being held vicariously liable.

“If your employee’s handbooks are collecting dust, updating them for 2016 is a perfect way to review policies new and old,” said attorney Marylou Fabbo, an active partner in the firm. “Not only does an updated employee handbook serve as an outline for managing employment conflicts, it can also serve as legal evidence that company policies are up to date.”

For more information and news about employment law, visit skoler-abbott.com.

Daily News

BOSTON — Gov. Charlie Baker and the Mass. Department of Public Health (DPH) announced that $700,000 will be awarded to police and fire departments in 40 communities heavily impacted by the Commonwealth’s opioid epidemic, facilitating the purchasing, carrying, and administering of the opioid-overdose-reversal drug naloxone.

“This grant will help save more lives as our administration continues to pursue new and wide-ranging tools to combat the opioid epidemic, including the ability for medical personnel to intervene with those who have overdosed,” Baker said. “We look forward to continuing to work with the Legislature to pass meaningful reforms, and are pleased to support our first responders’ access to immediate, life-saving resources.”

Last year, the administration established a bulk purchasing fund allowing first responders in municipal entities to access the state rate for naloxone purchases and, when available, receive an additional discount. Baker has also filed legislation to provide medical personnel with the power to intervene with patients suffering from addiction, control the spread of addictive prescription opioids, and increase education about substance-use disorder for providers and in the community.

“Today’s announcement, along with the creation of the bulk purchasing fund, will increase the amount of naloxone available in hot-spot communities where it is needed most,” said Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito. “These resources will help ease the costs of medication, enabling our firefighters and police officers to save more lives.”

Grants for $10,000 to $50,000 are being awarded to the following communities: Attleboro, Barnstable, Beverly, Boston, Brockton, Chelsea, Chicopee, Everett, Fall River, Falmouth, Fitchburg, Framingham, Haverhill, Holyoke, Lawrence, Leominster, Lowell, Lynn, Malden, Medford, New Bedford, North Attleboro, Peabody, Pittsfield, Plymouth, Quincy, Revere, Salem, Saugus, Somerville, Springfield, Stoughton, Taunton, Waltham, Wareham, Westfield, Weymouth, Winthrop, Woburn, and Worcester.

“There is no faster and more effective way to reverse an opioid overdose than to administer naloxone,” said state Health and Human Services Secretary Marylou Sudders. “It is imperative we do everything we can to counteract the epidemic of opioid addiction by providing as many first responders as possible the opportunity to use this life-saving medication.”

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WEST SPRINGFIELD — Balise Motor Sales has been awarded the Kia Motors America franchise for the Springfield Metro area.

The all-new Balise Kia is targeted to open for business by the end of the first quarter of 2016 at 603 Riverdale St. in West Springfield, next to Balise Mazda.

Kia is a rapidly growing brand with a full lineup of models such as the Optima, Sportage, and Sorrento. “Kia is one of the fastest growing brands in the U.S., and we’re excited to welcome the Kia franchise into the Balise family,” said Bill Peffer, president and chief operating officer of Balise Motor Sales. “This acquisition provides another great opportunity to strengthen the Balise portfolio throughout New England.”

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WARE — Country Bank has been supporting local communities for many years, not only through donations, but also with volunteers working at local community events, participating in parades and road races, serving dinner on Thanksgiving Day, feeding the homeless, collecting trash, and building houses for Habitat for Humanity, to name a few efforts.

In 2015, the volunteer program at Country Bank was taken to the next level with the implementation of the Country Bank Cares Community Volunteer Program. This new program offers volunteer opportunities at various events throughout the year to Country Bank staff. Each volunteer hour is logged, and at the end of the year, staff members who volunteered 10 hours or more are awarded a grant to a charity of their choice for either $100 or $250, depending on their total time volunteered.

A total of 109 Country Bank staff members participated in this new program for a total of more than 800 hours of volunteer service. Of those 109, 32 qualified for a grant, for a grand total of $4,100 donated by Country Bank.

“I couldn’t be more pleased at the success of our first year of the Country Bank Cares Program,” said Deb Gagnon, corporate relations officer. “Our staff really came forward and helped out at various events in our towns, and as a result, many nonprofits will benefit from the donation dollars. It is amazing to see the commitment from our staff members and the bank through this program.”

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WESTBOROUGH — Columbia Gas of Massachusetts is reminding customers of important safety tips during cold, snowy, and icy conditions this winter season.
 To be safe and avoid hazards, customers should:

• Keep natural-gas meters clear of snow and ice to ensure they are visible and pathways are accessible at all times should you require maintenance by Columbia Gas employees.

• Keep natural-gas meters clear to ensure proper venting.

• Remove snow from the meter with hands or a broom. Never use a shovel or kick or hit the meter to break away the snow and ice. If the meter is encased in ice, contact Columbia Gas for assistance at (800) 677-5052.

• Keep fresh-air and exhaust vents for natural-gas appliances free of snow, ice, and debris to prevent equipment malfunction and the presence of carbon monoxide.

• Use care when removing snow and ice from your rooftop, and do not cover or bury the natural gas meter when doing so.

• Use caution when removing snow from flat rooftops, especially in commercial and industrial buildings, to prevent damage. There may be heating and cooling equipment and electric or fuel lines that may not be visible under the snow.

• Make sure all appliances and heating equipment are inspected annually by a licensed professional and are operating properly.

• Never use stoves, ovens, or outdoor grills as a source of heat.

• Check your carbon-monoxide detectors and smoke detectors to ensure they operate properly.

• If you smell natural gas, leave the area and call 911 from a safe location.

“The safety and comfort of our customers is the number-one priority at Columbia Gas, especially during the cold winter months,” said President Steve Bryant. “We ask that everyone take the time to check on their families and neighbors, particularly those who are elderly or in need of special attention.”

For more winter safety tips and information, visit www.columbiagasma.com.