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Baiging Li played forward for two Chinese professional basketball teams in the late ’80s before he took advantage of a rare opportunity to come to the United States — and Springfield College — to study sport management.

Since graduating, he has become, as he described it, a serial entrepreneur of sorts.

He started by creating a business focused on teaching Tai Chi, a Chinese system of physical exercises designed especially for self-defense and meditation, and has successfully grown that venture, establishing classes in many area clubs, senior centers, and health care facilities. Later, he started another business featuring tours of his native country. Over the past several years, he has led hundreds of people, many of them Tai Chi students, on visits to different areas of China.

His latest venture, one that seems laden is potential, is called ChinaAccess. It specializes in China/U.S. business development, and focuses specifically on helping business owners make connections — and eventual partnerships — with Chinese manufacturers.

As he shaped each of those ventures, Li leaned heavily on the Mass. Small Business Development Center Network (SBDC). A state agency (the only one anyone knows of that is based in Western Mass.), the center provides a wide range of free, one-on-one counseling, training, and capital support to people who want to do everything from start a business to sell one.

"We act as an objective, experienced set of eyes and ears for people who need some help getting started or to the next level," said Diane Fuller Doherty, director of the SBDC’s Western Mass. Regional Office, located in the Andrew M. Scibelli Enterprise Center at Springfield Technical Community College. "We’re there to be a resource for people facing the many challenges of business today."

In Baiging Li’s case, the center helped with everything from business plans to obtaining a green card, said Fuller Doherty, who told BusinessWest that Li has always had entrepreneurial drive — and also many valuable connections in China. What he needed was some help with the details and the hurdles that challenge all small business owners, from initial financing to deciding how much insurance to carry.

Georgianna Parkin, state director of the SBDC, said the agency has become an effective economic development resource over its 25-year existence, as it works to both create and retain jobs. It addresses this goal through a network of offices, or consortium, that includes the Isenberg School of Management at UMass-Amherst (the lead institution) and also Boston College, Clark University, Salem State College, UMass-Dartmouth, UMass-Boston, and the Mass. Export Center.

"The statistics show that small businesses are the backbone of the nation’s economy," she told BusinessWest. "We work to strengthen that backbone."

In recent years, the SBDC, funded by the U.S. Small Business Administration, the state, and UMass and other consortium members, has worked to dispel the notion that it works only with, small mom-and-pop operations, said Parkin. She told BusinessWest that ’small’ is a relative term when it comes to classifying businesses. By some definitions, that word describes those with 500 employers or fewer, and by others, the benchmark is 100 employees, she said, adding that the SBDC has assisted companies in both categories.

Still, the bulk of its work, especially in Western Mass., is with companies with 10 or fewer employees. In many cases, the businesses are sole proprietorships, as is the case with Deliso Financial and Insurance Services.

Jean Deliso, founder, told BusinessWest that after years of working for a large financial services company in Florida, she wanted to return to her native Springfield and start her own business. She went to the center for counseling because, while she was confident in her ability to help individuals make sound investment decisions, she knew she could use help with such matters as marketing her business — and even picking a name for it.

"When you’re a sole proprietor, getting help is important; this is a lonely game," she explained. "I don’t have a board of directors, no business this size does. It’s great to have a resource like this with knowledgeable people who can say, ’yes, you’re doing it right,’ or ’no, you’re not.’"

BusinessWest looks this issue at how the SBDC has counseled business owners like Deliso and Li and, in the process of doing so, become a driving force in job creation has for the region.

Foreign Concepts

In two months, Li plans to lead of small contingent of Western Mass. business owners on a trip to the Shandong region of China. Located between Beijing and Shanghai, it is home to roughly 93 million people and businesses in fields ranging from agricultural manufacturing and production to auto making.

The purpose of the junket — with all or most of the expenses paid for by the Chinese government — is to help forge partnerships between Chinese industry groups and individual companies and U.S. business owners who are being advised, and in some cases told, by major clients to find ways to collaborate with China and other countries where the cost of doing business is considerably lower than it is here.

Keith Stone is one such business owner, and he may well be on the plane in October.

Stone, president of Agawam-based Interstate Manufacturing Company (IMC), and also a relatively new client of the SBDC, told BusinessWest that Hamilton Sundstrand, a division of United Technologies Corp. and one of his largest customers, wants him to partner with companies in India and China, in an effort to secure both high quality and low cost for its parts.

Stone is now working with Li in what promises to be a lengthy process to establish such partnerships. And Stone credits help from the SBDC with putting him in a position where he can take such a bold step.

Indeed, when Stone first visited the Mass. Small Business Development Center (SBDC), his business was a critical crossroads.

IMC was created to make tools and fixtures required for the assembly of parts — primarily for the aerospace industry. Following 9/11, virtually every company that did business in that sector was hit and hit hard, and Interstate was one of them.

The company fought successfully to avoid bankruptcy, and business eventually improved somewhat. But even this past spring, Stone wasn’t sure if his entrepreneurial venture was going to survive.

His visit to the SBDC and one of its advisors, Alan Kronick, was broad in nature, Stone told BusinessWest, adding that he was looking for some advice and direction on how to remain competitive in a changing marketplace. Kronick and other counselors provided assistance in several areas, but especially with the complex process of being positioned to bid for projects with defense contractors.

"Alan understood what I was going through, and he’s helped keep me focused on where I am and where I need to be," said Stone. "It’s great to have a fresh perspective on things on things like cash flow, projections, and different ways to cut expenses; he can see things that I can’t."

Stone’s story is typical of how the SBDC works to help companies get in business and stay in business, thus fueling economic growth in all regions of the state.

"Small businesses are truly the engine driving economic development, especially in Western Mass., said Fuller Doherty. "This is where most of our net new jobs are coming from; entrepreneurs are providing jobs not only for themselves, but many other people."

Over the years, the Western Mass. office of the SBDC has helped hundreds of individuals like Deliso, Stone, and Li. Between Oct. 1, 2003 and Sept. 30, 2004 (the latest statistics available), the office assisted 618 clients, providing more than 2,626.25 hours of counseling.

More than half of those clients sought assistance in the broad category of business startup, said Fuller Doherty, noting that there are many other areas of counseling, ranging from business plan and loan package development to strategic needs assessment and marketing/sales.

In general, the center helps small business owners stay on track, said Deliso, noting that entrepreneurs like herself are versed in their particular area of expertise — in her case, accounting and financial planning — but not necessarily in the many facets of running a business.

"Take marketing for example," she said. "They helped me develop a marketing plan and figure out where and how I should be spending my money. Those are the kinds of things small business owners need help with."

Name of the Game

Richard Green came to the SBDC last spring, when he was entertaining thoughts of opening his own insurance agency. A long-time insurance industry veteran, Green drafted a preliminary business plan earlier this year, and drew some encouraging remarks from his lawyer, who nonetheless advised him to seek a second opinion.

"He told me that I was in the middle of the forest and needed to find a way to see through the trees," Green recalled. "He said I needed another pair of eyes."

Those eyes turned out to be Fuller Doherty’s, and Green recalls that she didn’t sugarcoat anything about the process of getting his venture off the ground.

"They’re not there to pat you on the back, tell you everything’s great, and send you out there," he explained. "They ask the hard questions, starting with whether you have what it takes to be in business for yourself."

An evaluation process revealed that Green did indeed have the requisite desire, talent, and capital to start his own venture. Richard Green Insurance Inc. opened for business on Elm Street in Hampden earlier this summer; a grand opening is set for later this fall.

During the process of getting his business started, Green said he turned to the SBDC for counseling on matters ranging from office furniture — the center provided names of area dealers — to what to name his venture.

"Putting my name on the company wasn’t my first choice," he revealed. "But people at the center told me that I should use my name and then stand behind it."

Deliso said she faced the same dilemma. As she began the process of starting her venture, Deliso said she was wary of putting her family name on it. Her grandfather, Joseph Deliso, was a successful entrepreneur and founder of HBA Cast Products, while her parents started several other ventures, including Tool Craft and Pioneer Tool.

"That name was one of the reasons I left the state," she said. "I didn’t want to be merely my grandfather’s granddaughter; I wanted to do it on my own.

"But people at the center got me to see that this was a name that people associated with success, and it was a name I should utilize," she continued. "That was a real turning point for me; that was the right decision to make and they helped me make it."

The center has helped Li make a number of right decisions in his decade-long association with the agency. While some of his needs and challenges are unique — obtaining citizenship, for example — most are fairly typical.

"The center has been very helpful with all of my businesses," he said. "In the beginning, a lot of things were unclear to me, like how to make a plan, contact people, and follow through; they’re helped with all those things.

"They’re teaching me ways to look at the big picture," he continued. "That’s where my focus needs to be."

As for the October trip to China, Li said he is using the SBDC as a resource to help identify area businesses, such as Stone’s, that might benefit from what he called the ultimate learning experience.

"Through this visit, people will have a clear idea of how Chinese business operates," he said. "That’s important, because partnerships are how companies here and there are going to be successful."

Bottom-line Analysis

Assessing his entrepreneurial exploits to date, Li said that, like all business owners, he is continually reviewing his ventures with an eye toward continued growth and profitability. In other words, he’s not resting on any laurels.

"You can’t do that," he said, adding that the learning process that is part and parcel to being a successful business owner never really ends.

"I still have many things still to learn about business," he told BusinessWest, adding that he considers himself lucky to have a resource like the SBDC. "They’ve kept me going in the right direction."

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

Departments

Adams, Wendy Rey
6 Jacob St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Aldrich, Jeffrey P.
30 Marlborough St.
Pelham, MA 01002
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 07/02/05

Allen, Michael R.
61 North Main St, Apt
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Baceski, Tina M.
75 St. James Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Barrett, Sandra R.
66 Acker Circle
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Belanger, George A.
Belanger, Claire M.
50 Clark St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/06/05

Birdwell, Devita Lyne
226 River Dr.
Hadley, MA 01035
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/04/05

Booth, Eleanor J.
95 North Westfield St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Borek, Matthew J.
56 Nagle St.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/30/05

Brescia, Joseph F.
87 Prospect St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/14/05

Brice, Priscilla
PO Box 663
West Springfield, MA 01090
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/11/05

Chambers, Florence
414 Chestnut St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Cintron, Jacqueline
470 Berkshire Ave.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/03/05

Craven, Dawn M.
64 York St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/14/05

Cubi, Christina B.
25 Yoerg Circle
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Daviau, John E.
19 Naomi St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/02/05

Davies, John W
370 Mill Valley Road
Plot 49
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Demears, Helen A.
125 Main St., Apt. 207
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Dexheimer, David
106 Pasco Road
Springfield, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Dion, Joey M.
41 Goodell St.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Disanti, Michael A.
79 Jared Dr.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/11/05

Doucette, Tammy L
888 St. James Ave.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Dowd, Paul T.
80 Summer St.
Barre, MA 01005
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Drewnowski, Paul
Drewnowski, Glenna
25 School St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Dugre, Richard L.
88 Providence St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Dunbar, Harold J.
3 Summer St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Elliott, Christine Marie
45 Chapel St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/04/05

Faille, Rose Mary
12 Hockanum Road, Apt. A
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/04/05

Figueroa, Ketty
40 Wallace St.
Springield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Fontaine, Robert E.
Fontaine, Mary E.
27 New York Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Franco, Lydia
124 Brandon Ave.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Frogameni, Joseph D.
Frogameni, Diane M.
114 Emerson Road
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Ganiolus, Helen
96-98 Palmer Ave.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

George, Christopher M.
71 Crestview Dr.
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Godbout, Richard P.
6 Pioneer Way
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Granger, Beverly A.
70 Walnut Street, #106
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Guimont, Jacqueline L.
55 Maple St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Haber, Douglas E.
32 Maple St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Haracz, Lisa Marie
26 Crown St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/04/05

Hennessey, Colleen T.
4 Brookline Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/10/05

Hiltbrand, Michael R.
5 Green Ave.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Hoar, Joshua A.
52 Plain St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Hodges, Kristin S.
89 Autumn St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Holland, Robin Lynn
93 Clarendon St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/03/05

Hynan, Frank J.
20 New Broadway
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Jaskulski, Christopher J.
51 Dogwood Lane
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Johnson, Troy Marcel
49 Fort Pleasant Ave.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/03/05

Kahelalis, Dennis R.
34 Frink St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Kenney, Melanie Anne
266 Grove St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

King, Davin E.
269 Chicopee St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Kingsley, Gene M.
79 Casino Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/06/05

Kopecky, Jessica
5J Brandywine Dr.
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Krzywda, John J.
2 Chase Place
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Kulzer, Michael P
Kulzer, Laurie A.
2 Russellville Road
Southampton, MA 01073-9506
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Labrie, Paul A.
c/o Attorney Brunelle
505 Newton St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/10/05

Lalla, Lori A.
42 Woodlawn St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 07/15/05

LaMountain, Marion R.
1151 A Elm St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Lanier, Clementine
107 Fenwick St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Laramee, Karla N.
130 Lavoie Ave.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/14/05

Lareau, Donald Joseph
Lareau, Jeannine Irene
47 Victoria Park
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Leak, Marlon
Leak, Roberta
42 Phillips Ave.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Leas, Brian Durand
Leas, Yary Carmen
112 Oak Street, Apt. 10
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Leclerc, Elizabeth A.
25 Rankin Ave.
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Lempke, Kurt
350 West St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Liese, Mark L.
421 North Main St., #26
Leeds, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/14/05

Lourakis, Steven A.
196 Meadow St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Major, Renner E.
237 Arnold Ave.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Malanson, Frances L.
64 Will Palmer Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Maldonado, Jorge L.
71 Cochran St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Mansi, Kevin F.
Mansi, Susan B.
163 Florida Dr.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Martinez, Orlando L.
Martinez, Gloria E.
270 Walnut St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/14/05

McCoy, Raymond J.
McCoy, Christina M.
3 Taylor St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/09/05

Mozdzanowski, Lisa M.
56 Tolpa Court
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Mozdzanowski, Paul
30 Leona Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Myers, George W.
51 Garfield Ave.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/02/05

Norwood, Kurt A.
Norwood, Liliian
6 Fox Run Dr.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Nowak-Bouben, Renata M.
17 Ross Road
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/06/05

Ocasio, Julio
c/o Jadeline Gonzalez
30 Lowell St.
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/11/05

O’Connor, John J.
O’Connor, Cynthia L.
283 Water St.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/11/05

Pandey, Vijai B.
Pandey, Lalita
22 Raymond Dr.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/11/05

Paul, Sheila A.
48 Day St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Perez, Julio R.
54 Ringgold St., Apt.
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/06/05

Perrier, Cheryl A.
67 New Ludlow Road, Apt. 1
Granby, MA 01033
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Perrier, Robert R.
165 East St.
Southampton, MA 01073
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Perry, Audra R.
69 Wilkes St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Petrovsky, Jr., Joseph J.
32 Mosely Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Pierog, Christopher D
811East St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Polastri, Barbara A.
205 1/2 Sargeant St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Quintana, Jesus A.
Quintana, Ramona
PO Box 70531
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Rappaport, Theo L.
296 Kenmore Dr
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Reyes, Noemi
71 Cochran St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Ribeiro, Francisco
Ribeiro, Carmela
111 Clydesdale Lane
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Richards, Leslie Ann
56 Laurel St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Richardson, Edna L.
419 Montcalm St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/03/05

Roberts, Wanda B.
54 Southwick St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/12/05

Robitaille, Kevin E.
50 Orange St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Rodriguez, Luz M.
54 Ringgold St., Apt.
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/06/05

Rojas, Jose M.
Rojas, Maria E.
112 Farnum Dr.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Safford, Steven J.
441 Chapin Road
Hampden, MA 01036
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 07/06/05

Sanchez, Maria V.
52 Barber St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Santangelo, Diane Marie
81 Conz St., Apt 717
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Santerre, Gary R.
Santerre, Laurie Jean
50 Finch Road
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/15/05

Sattler, Darlene M.
21 Magnolia Terr.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/11/05

Sefton, Randy N.
19 Goodell St.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Shay, Cynthia Jean
350 Meadow St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Sliwa, Daniel Eugene
Sliwa, Katherine Jane
62 Davenport St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/03/05

Smith, David A.
Smith, Michelle P.
100 Grimard St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Stebbins, Jr., Richard L.
54 Hope St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Stevens, James V.
38 Fernwood Dr.
Hampden, MA 01036
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/10/05

Tetreault, Laura M.
25 Prince Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Thibault, James P.
Thibault, Lori J.
55 Tumbleweed Road
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Thibodeau, Ronald J.
Thibodeau, Darlene M.
78 Charpentier Boulevard
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/13/05

Ugolini, Robert P.
1649 Suffield St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/05/05

Valenti, Marilyn M.
229 Miller St.; Lot F2
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Waller, Barbara A.
276 Mandalay Road
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/07/05

Wilson, Theresa M.
14 Arbutus St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Windsor, S. Lucille
113 North Blandford Road
Blandford, MA 01008
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Zaler, Veronica L.
35 Windemere St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/08/05

Zmich, Krzysztof
48C Colonial Circle
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Zorn, Terri Lynne
108 West St.
West Hatfield, MA 01088
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/14/05

Zurawski, Max Anthony
185 Pleasant St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 07/01/05

Departments

The following building permits were issued during the month of June & July 2005.

AMHERST

Amherst College Trustees
Converse Hall
$3,200 — Interior renovations to create additional office space

Amherst College Trustees
Merrill Science Building
$73,400 — Partial re-roof

Amherst College Trustees
Moore Dormitory
$317,500 — Install sprinkler system

David B. Brown
320 North Pleasant St.
$137,500 — Convert existing residential and commercial building into two-family dwelling after fire damage

Gillen-Gray Development Corp.
409 Main St.
$2,500 — Construct partition wall

Peter Grandinico
41 Boltwood Walk
$8,000 — Alter to combination food market and caf»

Slobody Development Corp.
101 University Dr. A2
$83,640 — Build out portion of first floor for office space

Slobody Development Corp.
101 University Dr. B5 — Build out portion of 2nd floor for
office space

Stavros Foundation Inc.
210 Old Farm Road
$310,000 — Renovate and repair for office/ storage use

Theta Chi
496 North Pleasant St.
$125,000 — Renovations

Trustees of Hampshire College
Merrill House Bldg. C
$78,000 — Install sprinkler system

Trustees of Hampshire College
Greenwich House 2
$25,913 — Extend roof overhang

Trustees of Hampshire College
Greenwich House 3
$25,913 — Extend roof overhang

CHICOPEE

C.L.T. Realty
945 & 947 Chicopee St.
$395,500 — Build package store

City of Chicopee
617 Montgomery St.
$74,801,000 — Build Chicopee Comp High School

Larry Katz
307 Grattan St.
$144,000 — Build mezzanine with offices at Arnold’s Meats

Service Net
64 Rivers Ave.
$10,000 — Construct room

EAST LONGMEADOW

Health Trax
45 Crane Ave.
$194,560 — Create office space

HOLYOKE

PBHQ Whitney Inc.
330 Whitney Ave.
$30,000 — Renovate offices

NORTHAMPTON

Big Y Foods Inc.
162 North King St.
$750,000 — Renovate exterior facade

City of Northampton
140 Pine St.
$11,000 — Partition walls to divide Room B9

City of Northampton
125 Locust St.
$219,690 — Replace barn roof

City of Northampton
212 Main St.
$9,550 —Construct 2 partition walls and doors – 2nd floor school department

Kollmorgan Corporation
347 King St.
$148,000 — Install elevator shaft

Kollmorgan Corporation
347 King St.
$25,000 — Install display area in reception area

Maplewood Shops Inc.
2 Conz St.
$6,000 — Replace hood system for cooking school

Northampton Co-operative Bank
8 Main St.
$49,000 — Build three conference rooms and kitchen

Northampton Realty LLC
293 King St.
$6,000 — Erect illuminated ground sign, Lia Honda

Northampton Realty LLC
293 King St.
$2,600 — Erect illuminated
wall sign – Honda

Philip Dowling and Bruce Tolda
881 North King St.
$4,500 — Relocate store to
rear storage area

Village Hospital Hill LLC
Earle Street
$4,845 — Repair bus stop

SPRINGFIELD

Baystate Medical
759 Chestnut St.
$267,000 — Renovate auditorium

Boston Medical Center
354 Bernie Ave.
$126,000 — Interior build-out

JC Penney
1655 Boston Road
$250,000 — Interior and exterior renovations

Mass Mutual
1500 Main St.
$155,000 — Alterations and expansion of Suite 2504

Mass Mutual
1295 State St.
$758,923 — Construction of corporate aircraft hanger

Mass Mutual
1500 Main St.
$27,500 — Interior renovations

Mass Mutual
1500 Main St.
$146,000 — New office space, Suite 1500

Morris Roofing
142 Hancock St.
$35,000 — Addition to existing office

PVTA
2908 Main St.
$67,400 — Interior renovations

Walmart
1105 Boston Road
$31,000 — Construct Subway shop

WESTFIELD

Brian Allen TRM
Reservoir Road
$15,000 — Cingular Wireless antenna

Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of July 2005.

AGAWAM

Caskets of New England
662 Springfield St.
Richard Martin

DLB Computer Technology
37 Rosie Lane
Duane Couture

Eclectibles
141 Christopher Lane
Michael Pepper

Eric’s Plumbing & Heating
21 Washington Ave.
Eric Hollander

Hwangs School of Taiwan
270 Maple St.
Todd Rubner

Maid To Impress
230 School St.
Jamie Pavelcsyk

THG Construction
6E Mansion Woods
Thomas Johnson

Wildflower Business Transcriptions
32 Wildflower Lane
Judith Gonyea

AMHERST

All About Amherst
232 East Pleasant St.
Lynda Faye

ATG Worldwide
495 Old Farm Road
Michael Aronson

Custom Market & Cafe
491-A Pine St.
Mulva LLC

Light & Small Guitars
10 Winston Court
Uri Henig

Panda East
103 North Pleasant St.
Kuo Tieng Lee, Pao Lin Wu

The Travel Loft
266 North Pleasant St.
Deborah and Norman Walsh

CHICOPEE

Aiello Carpet Cleaning
145 Syrek St.
James Aiello, Tina Nicodemus

Better Living Sunrooms
317 Meadow St.
Edward Kus

The Cake Center
143 East Main St.
Maria Padykula

The Cleaning Agents
P.O. Box 86
Rochelle Ryan

D & M Remodeling
245 East Main St.
Denis Biley

Donna’s Hair Design
757 Chicopee St.
Donna Kozak

E & B Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning
16 Elmer Dr.
Betty Vazquez

E & J Home Improvements
29 Linden St.
James Despires

Generations Salon
97 Main St.
Mary Beaudoin

The Hair Team
19 White Birch Plaza
Maxine Partyka, Christine Fedak

Hank’s Variety
457 Granby Road
Mohammad Anjum

Izzy’s Auto Sales
562 Chicopee St.
Isaiah Salloom

KD Realty
125 Nash St.
Kevin and Dennis Corley

Little Brazil Caf»
140 Exchange St.
Luciano Santos

M & D Alterations
8 Center St.
Liliya and Golina Mironova

Mass Data Systems
15 Westport Ave.
Gary Parnicky

Mulligan’s Pub
621 Center St.
Stephen Scott, Carlo Sarno

Pelland Electrical Contractors
28 Boger St.
John Pelland Sr.

HADLEY

The Collector’s Corner
367 Russell St.
Kenneth and Emily Ekstein

Fancy Nails
367 Russell St.
Mui Loc Vong

General Co.
32 North Maple St.
James Ting

Whimseyville
14 Bristol Lane
Laurel Kushi

HOLYOKE

AOK Auto Storage
120 Front St.
John Goehring III

Bamboo House
2223 Northampton St.
Neil Wong

Bodega 24H
154 High St.
Pamela Antonetty

Corner’s Delight Grocery & Deli
95 High St.
Luis Alvarado Sr.

Fire Brook Stables
470 Rock Valley Road
Erica McElway

Positronic Design
391 Pleasant St.
David Caputo

Union Mart
297 Apremont Highway
Gulam Safeer

LONGMEADOW

D & B Transport
115 Williamsburg Dr.
Robert Koch

Carlson GMAC Real Estate
18 Commerce Way
Eastern MA Real Estate Inc.

GMAC Real Estate
18 Commerce Way
Eastern MA Real Estate Inc.

Harry Guitars 162 Bliss Road
Harold Neunder

Neumann Print Technologies
57 Glenbrook Lane
Sandra Neumann

The New England Relocation Group
18 Commerce Way
Eastern MA Real Estate Inc.

NORTHAMPTON

Ann Podolske Writer/Editor
92 Blackberry Lane
Ann Podolske

Ever Bloom Orchids
221 Pine St.
James Page

Half Moon Books
7 Pearl St.
David Ham

Hard Knocks Press
17 Summer St.
Michael Kirby

Jaime L. Gauthier Professional Pet Sitter
132 South St.
Jaime Gauthier

 

Mark’s Home Maintenance & Appliance Repair
52 Pinebrook Curve
Mark Monska

Pelorian Digital
1 Front St.
Richard Rasa

SOUTH HADLEY

Garand Design
21 Ferry St.
Margaret Garand

Little Brown House Daycare
24 Hollywood St.
Kimberly Desrochers

Wave Racers
10 Forest Dr.
Kristian Reynolds

SPRINGFIELD

ARK Enterprises
11B Thompson St.
Robert A. Robert J. and Petrolin Kelly

Athena’s by Joannie
138 Lumar St.
Joan Jarest

D & A Laborers
78 Sycamore St.
Albert Sweeney

D & W Towing
45 Glenwood St.
Ausbaldo Adoeno

Eagle Express
51 Lester St.
Julio Valazquez

Easy Variety & Checks
494 Central St.
Heman Patel

Fashionable Persuasion
54 Randolph St.
Patricia Grattan

Felix’s Auto Repair
914 Sumner Ave.
Felix’s Exxon Inc.

H & J Showcase
88 Dimmick St.
Hazel Suttler

Jenkinsville LLC
54 Dawes St.
Richard Jenkins

J Trade
35 Willow St.
Julia Stewart

KML Transportation
75 Steuben St.
Kevin & Kelly Lepore

Latina & Co.
876 Sumner Ave.
Yanitza Nogile

Lawnscapers
102 Valley Road
Michael Solin

Liberty Multi Services
141 Woodside Ter.
Namanh Phan

Lovely Nails
737 Liberty St.
Kim Le Neuyen

Main Connection
2662B Main St.
Jacqueline Abair

Millennium Auto Detailing
89 Fox Hill Road
Audrya Davis

911 Security
91 Bowles St.
Ramm Cruz

Platinum Auto Spa
263 Hancock St.
Michael McCarthy

R & S Family Fashion
2460 Main St.
Luis Liriano

Ready Rock Productions
70 Wallace St.
Kareem Henderson, Clifton Stovall,
Kimble Reaves

Tapestry Health
39 Mulberry St.
Tapestry Health Systems Inc.

Webcloseout.com
47 Narragansett St.
Ahma Sarrage

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Advanced Landscaping
955 Piper Road
Allan Beiermeister

AFM
73 Verdugo St.
Vitaliy Pchelka

The Basket Case
80 Pine St.
Ginette LeClerc

Bill’s Neon Service
151 Wayside Ave.
William Guerrin

Davis Chiropractic
900 Elm St.
Marjorie Davis, D.C.

Edible Arrangements
1702 Riverdale St.
Lisa Beachemin

Gooseberry Farms
201 Gooseberry Road
Leonard Lapinsky

I.G.B. Consulting
36 Ames Ave.
Igor Borsukov

Inspiria Salon & Day Spa
1586 Riverdale St.
Colleen Secovich

Just Rite Auto Trim Inc.
27 Heywood Ave.
Jerome Corcoran

Mr. Fashion 25 Bliss St.
Pasquale Stirlacci

Northeast Funding
22 West St.
Nicole Ogoke

Popmanual
1111 Elm St.
Robert Thompson

The Superior Cleaners
935 Riverdale St.
Raymond Menard Jr.

Taco Bell/Pizza Hut #19805
298 Memorial Ave.
Taco Bell of America Corp.

WESTFIELD

Coastal Construction
151 North Road
Zeke Rozell

CWI
63 Country Club Dr.
Richard Doiron

D & R Contractors
28 Chestnut St.
David Dudley

Direct Rewards
33 Morningside Dr.
Eleni Margoupis

European Headlines
420 Union St.
Tatiana Lazareva

For K-9s & Felines
45 Southwick St.
Nicole Skala

The Hamptons Salon
1029 North Road
Michelle Denis

Handled With Care Gifts
35 Wildflower Cir.
Prescillia Harman

Home Improvements Unlimited
77 Mill St.
Stephen Barihault

Lighthouse Fellowship
110 Union St.
Pari Hoxha

Rock Locks Inc.
174 Elm St.
Gary Judycki

Therapeutic Massage Center
24 School St.
Peter Wilson

Cover Story
Berkshire Brewery Drafts A Success Strategy
Cover 8/1/05

Cover 8/1/05

Berkshire Brewing Company Inc. has been growing by hops and bounds since its inception in 1992. Growth has been so quick and profound that principals Chris Lalli and Gary Bogoff now find themselves at a crossroads. Do they want to remain a local brewer or take that next big step?

Hops, like those climbing the brick walls of Berkshire Brewing Company (BBC) in South Deerfield, are plants essential to creating a great beer. They typically survive for decades, plant deep roots where they grow ‚ and grow rapidly.

The life of a hop vine as a metaphor for their own business isn’t lost on BBC founders Chris Lalli and Gary Bogoff, who grin up at their own decorative hop plants and shake their heads at how fast they spring up the side of the building. Then they turn to look at a recent expansion of their brewery, and do the same.

BBC just completed its third expansion since opening its offices and brewery two years after the business began in 1994. The company also has a satellite warehouse operating in West Boylston, Mass., and is planning a third location in Enfield, Conn., to meet the sales and distribution demand that is steadily expanding its reach across the Northeast.

As Bogoff puts it, the company is currently in a situation where the "tail’s wagging the dog." Sales are healthy, growth has been steady, and local and national respect for BBC’s products ‚ 14 beers, nine of which are produced year-round ‚ has created a momentum so brisk that Bogoff and Lalli have to hustle to keep pace.

Any CEO will tell you that a pressing need for expansion based on growth, rather than in an effort to foster it, is a good problem to have. But the principals of BBC agree, however, that the company’s success has now brought them to a critical crossroads, and they must now decide which way to turn.

"We always wanted to be a local brewery, and we have worked very hard to establish ourselves," said Bogoff. "Now that we have, the big questions is: What’s the next step?"

Never before, he explained, have he and Lalli been in a position to choose how big BBC gets. Now, they must decide whether to graduate from ’local brewery’ and become a ’regional brewer,’ which would necessitate shipping to states outside of the company’s current service area and piercing the national market ‚ essentially, becoming a different kind of business.

"Before, it was a simpler world," Bogoff said, harkening back to the early days, when the duo brewed their first few barrels together in a basement in Springfield. "There was always plenty of room for us to grow. Now, it comes down to a choice. Whatever we do, we want to stay profitable and efficient. But microbrew means small business, and we don’t want to forget that, which is easy to do when you start doing battle in the national marketplace."

Indeed, the national market is not so distant a destination for BBC as it once was. Of the 1,500 microbreweries and pubs brewing their own beer across the country, BBC rates 67th in terms of production volume. Herein lies the quandary that Lalli and Bogoff find themselves mulling more and more often, though, in terms of how large the company’s scope should become: in spite of that stellar rating on the national scale, 99% of the company’s beer is sold within a 60-mile radius of the South Deerfield brewery.

"What we’ve done is based very much on customer service, quality, freshness, and catering to the local market," Lalli said. "We’re very cautious about expanding; we’re respected in this marketplace, and we have established our niche. So, is bigger necessarily better?"

A Stout Following

Still, Lalli and Bogoff concede that the consumer-driven success of their products is an ongoing trend that cannot be ignored. The various strategies they employed to get their company going and to maintain good sales are now what is pushing the co-founders to entertain options for growth and change, starting with a simple business plan and some Yankee ingenuity.

Already, BBC beers can be found on tap or in the coolers of liquor stores across Western Mass. and, increasingly, across the state, as well as in parts of Connecticut, Vermont, and Rhode Island, making them some of the most prominent microbrews in the Northeast. But the partners are quick to point out that microbrews don’t just go head to head with each other to win space behind the bar; they also have to face the behemoths of the beer world ‚ Budweiser is the first name on their tongues ‚ that spend 60% of their revenue on national marketing.

"When we started, we definitely began at the bottom of the learning curve," Bogoff explained. "We were going to do draft business only, forging relationships with local bars, with no marketing budget whatsoever. We didn’t realize how competitive the beer industry actually is. We met with a lot of closed doors."

Lalli and Bogoff were forced into bottling just to make ends meet, and in the process, they stumbled upon a few marketing ploys, reminiscent of the success of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, that helped create a brand and a hook for the small company.

For example, they put themselves on the labels of their beers, smiling out from 22 oz. bottles with frothy mugs and toothy grins, and coined a number of pithy phrases that now accompany every case and keg they ship, including "Things are looking up!" and the company’s mission statement, "It’s all about the beer."

But in order to compete in what is quite literally a saturated market with sparse marketing dollars, the brewers decided to continue to focus on offering good service and great products, though with a twist: they made a conscious effort to brew an ’American ale,’ a light-bodied drink with mass appeal, that might even impress the Bud drinkers who represent 50% of the market.

The tactic worked ‚ that American ale, BBC’s Steel Rail Extra Pale Ale, was a hit, and eventually spurred the results that the owners had been looking for. Whereas most breweries glean the bulk of their profits from bottling, Lalli explained, BBC is now doing a majority draft business, about 65%.

"Steel Rail is also about 65% of our business," he said, noting that BBC continues to pay attention to the market, offering popular styles of beers such as India pale ales, seasonal brews, or flavor-infused ales. "And our market is the most unique you’ll see anywhere. It crosses all social lines; our fans are new drinkers and they’re old agers, and our beers are in the finest restaurants, and in VFWs."

Local Watering Hole?

Lalli and Bogoff also attribute BBC’s success to its constant attention to its identity as a locally owned, locally loyal entity. Lalli said it translates into good business to create a following not only through a great product, but a great reputation for partnering with other local businesses and organizations in an effort to support the regional economy. Norse Farms in Whately, for instance, provides the raspberries for BBC’s Raspberry Strong Ale. Dean’s Beans in Orange provides the coffee beans for the Coffeehouse Porter, and 10% of the sales of Shabadoo Black and Tan Ale, named after a friend who passed away, go to help the Western Mass. Food Bank.

"We would be nothing without support," Bogoff said, "so it’s important, but it also makes a whole lot of sense, to give back and keep collaborating with other people."

Other such partnerships have been forged with Franklin County and, specifically, the town of South Deerfield, which played a key role in getting BBC off the ground at its flagship location, a former cigar manufacturing plant on Railroad Street.

The two partners said they were turned away by several communities in the area, and were getting frustrated in their search for a home when South Deerfield "embraced them," as they put it. And that support has remained strong through several expansions of the brewery.

The brewery first included a seven-barrel system and a handful of employees brewing and bottling by hand around the clock. BBC now uses a 20-barrel semi-automated system and employs 24 people, all of whom are dwarfed by the brewery’s massive fermenters, grain silos, conditioning tanks, and other contraptions.

"It used to be brutal, back-breaking work," Lalli said. "Now the new system takes a lot of that grunt work out; we’ve been able to create a comfortable workflow. Without the expansions that we have been allowed to take on, I don’t think our growth would have been nearly as good as it has been."

And over the past decade, the company has yet to see a year that hasn’t produced a healthy increase in sales over the previous year, usually between 8% and 12%. Last year, BBC’s production topped 10,000 barrels for the first time, and that was in the midst of a somewhat disruptive expansion project, Lalli explained.

He and Bogoff expect to sell at least another 1,000 barrels above and beyond that figure this year. That strong history of growth has brought BBC to where it stands today: firmly rooted in Franklin County, but able to enjoy notoriety as one of the most well-known, profitable, and more importantly oft-enjoyed microbrews in New England.

Ale’s Well that Ends Well

The question is, with so many people regularly enjoying a pint or more of BBC brew in their own backyard, how many more people do Lalli and Bogoff want to add to their fan base?

"We’re going to keep doing what we’ve done," Bogoff offered. "We’re going to keep putting products out there that we’re proud of, meeting the demand, and providing the best service we can. We’re customer driven, and the demand is there, so we’ll definitely keep an eye on what is coming down the road. But we’re happy just to be on someone’s ’top five’ list of beers when they sit down at the bar. It’s all about the beer."

Jaclyn Stevenson can be reached at[email protected]

Features
It’s called the Regional Entrepreneurship Index.

That’s the name given to a relatively new measure, for lack of a better word, of entrepreneurial activity in a community. The index was created by the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy and the Edward Lowe Foundation, and it takes into account several different statistics with regard to business creation and subsequent growth.

The recently conducted study using the index involved 394 communities, and Springfield was one of them. The City of Homes placed 76th overall, just ahead of Providence, R.I., and behind a diverse group of cities and towns ranging from Las Vegas (2nd overall) and Boston (29th) to Bend, Ore. (7th), and top-finisher, Glenwood Springs, Colo. Springfield even finished first in one category — something called "average annual change in new-firm births," at 11.73% between 1990 and 2001.

That’s what we know. What we don’t know is what all this means. As one analyst said — and we agree with him — being highly ranked in this study cannot be a bad thing. But just how good a thing is it, and what does it say — and mean — for Springfield?

Indeed, while the study has good intentions, its results are certainly open to interpretation. For example, it does not differentiate between a new business with one employee and one with 100 or 1000, and Springfield obviously has far more of the former than the latter.

Through the efforts of several area agencies, including the Springfield Chamber of Commerce and it’s TAP (Technical Assistance Program), Springfield Technical Community College and its small business incubators, the Mass. Small Business Development Center (SBDC), and the Western Mass. Enterprise Fund (WMEF), many small businesses have been created and nurtured. But the vast majority of these ventures are very small, with 10 employees or fewer.

Contrast this with Las Vegas, where a new business might be a billion-dollar hotel and casino, or Boston, where the venture might be a pharmaceutical company. What’s more, Springfield finished 317th in terms of the percentage of firms growing "rapidly." Considering these factors, it’s easy to see why the value of the Regional Entrepreneurial Index, and a ranking of 76th, could be called into question.

But while there are some problems with this new measure and its findings are certainly subjective, if one looks past the numbers there are some positive qualitative indications that can be seen.

First and foremost, we believe, Springfield’s fairly strong ranking shows that there is a solid infrastructure in place to support startups and existing small businesses and help them survive the rugged first few years of existence.

The TAP, for example, offers technical assistance to existing small businesses, specifically minority-owned ventures, as well grants of up to $2,500, to be used for everything from equipment to marketing. The Andrew M. Scibelli Enterprise Center at the Technology Park at STCC houses two incubators, one for students and the other for more-established ventures. The former currently boasts fledging businesses in everything from energy bars to designer umbrellas, while the latter hosts several successful businesses, from Banana Publishing, which puts out a cross-border phone book, to a local franchise for ValPak.

The WMEF, meanwhile, has provided loans to businesses that don’t qualify, for one reason or another, for traditional bank financing, and the MSBDC offers a host of services to start-ups and existing businesses, from help with a business plan to assistance with adjusting to changes in the marketplace.

Most of the businesses helped along by these agencies and others in the Valley are quite small — a good number are sole proprietorships — and many will remain small. But all have the potential to someday become major employers. And in the meantime, each small business puts more Valley residents to work and contributes, in many ways, to the overall health of the region’s economy.

While the full meaning of the Regional Entrepreneurship Index is a subject for debate, this area’s commitment to promoting new-business development is not. The infrastructure now in place should continue to swell the ranks of new ventures in Springfield and the surrounding region, and this certainly bodes well for the future.

Sections Supplements
Bay Path’s New MBA to Introduce ’Entrevation’ To the Business Community
Bay Path College has been gradually adding entrepreneurial programming with the goals of broadening both the educational experience of its students and the school’s reach within the region’s business community for several years. Now with a new MBA serving as the crown jewel of those initiatives, the college is no longer building momentum, but capitalizing on the unique niche it has already developed.

Bay Path College began its Innovative Thinking and Entrepreneurship Lecture Series three years ago, calling further attention to the school’s burgeoning entrepreneurial focus within its undergraduate business program.

The college also created an Innovators’ Roundtable, consisting of area business leaders from Western Mass. and Connecticut, to serve as both advisors and mentors to business students. And somewhere in between entering students into the regional business concept program (and seeing those students take top honors) and coining a new term to describe a core class within the business program ‚ entrevation ‚ a light bulb went on collectively above the heads of Bay Path administrators and professors. Soon, plans went into motion to create a new master’s degree program in business administration that would build on the college’s existing entrepreneurial momentum.

That light bulb is now part of all informational materials regarding the college’s newest graduate degree program, an MBA in Entrepreneurial Thinking and Innovative Practices. It is often accompanied by the story of Thomas Edison, who didn’t actually invent the light bulb ‚ British inventor Warren De la Rue did ‚ but instead took an existing product, improved it, and effectively marketed it.

Classes within the new master’s program, the college’s fourth, will begin in October. And just as it stems from a greater push for entrepreneurial programming campus-wide, Janette Ruder, director of the program, expects that its addition to the college’s academic repertoire will also enhance existing programs as well as the overall economic health of the region, as it prepares students for business ownership, career advances, and to make a greater impact within their chosen industries.

"There has really been a campus-wide effort to strengthen our entrepreneurial programming and make it a more distinctive part of the education we offer," said Ruder. "Over the past three years we have added courses and secured a grant from the Coleman Foundation to begin the lecture series and other programs. There has been an overall focus on the development of cooperative education, and it’s within that context that we created the MBA."

Brenda Wishart, director of the undergraduate entrepreneurial program and the creator and professor of the entrevation course, agreed with Ruder that the MBA represents the latest step in a wider effort to bring a new way of thinking to today’s business students, and added that it is expected to bring greater notoriety to existing programs and events at Bay Path.

"We are definitely building on existing things," she said, "and there are also programs that are still developing. Everything that is happening or being planned will include a lot of theory, but will also include the application of skills in real-world environments, and to see how positive and effective that synergy is can be exciting."

The Business of Books and Brainstorming

Wishart said students the new graduate are expected to bring a new layer of experience and insight to the entrepreneurial programming, noting that existing programs at Bay Path will be a large part of the MBA coursework, including the annual lecture series, which last year featured Bob Kraft, owner of the New England Patriots, and this year will welcome Craig Rydin, president and CEO of Yankee Candle. The students will also interact closely with the Innovators’ Roundtable and participate in entrepreneurship challenges.

The new program is tailored toward working professionals, however. It can be completed in a year or spaced out over two years, and includes components, Ruder explained, that were designed to preserve the traditional core elements associated with an MBA, and also incorporate coursework geared toward teaching more fluid skills. These include developing and executing new ideas, services, and products in the workplace, and strengthening and enhancing creative thinking and problem-solving skills.

Those skill sets, Ruder said, are of increasing importance in today’s workplace, be it a large corporation or a small business venture, due to changing consumer preferences and technology, an expanding global marketplace, and unique financial pressures that require forward-thinking interventions.

"We completed a year of market research before presenting the idea for this specific MBA program," she said. "To offer a degree that would address specific challenges, we knew it had to be one that was both innovative and traditional ‚ a traditional MBA, but with an emphasis on a new way of thinking."

Most MBA programs, Ruder explained, are similar in their coursework and structure, and have been for some time. That’s because the traditional MBA model follows a specific pattern of theory, application of skills, and study of several areas of business including management, finance, and marketing, which has proven to be largely beneficial for students.

For that reason, Ruder said the MBA in Entrepreneurial Thinking and Innovative Practices will not surrender those more traditional components in favor of more modern, or ’cutting-edge’ teaching methods. Instead, it will incorporate new components and teaching practices into that model in order to introduce the ideas of growth and creation in today’s business climate.

"It’s a balancing act," she said. "An effective MBA program should be knowledge-based, and we cannot drift too far into the creativity side of things and risk losing the necessary meat and potatoes that students need. There will be a constant back-and-forth in this program, to ensure that students are getting a rich educational experience."

To that end, the structure of the program has been tailored to include three specific layers of business lessons ‚ both practical and theory-based in nature.

"There will be courses in those core skills ‚ finance, management, and qualitative decision-making, for instance," said Ruder. "There will also be business courses that introduce the ideas surrounding growth strategies and entrepreneurial management ‚ essentially, looking at the ’big plan.’

And finally, courses will be incorporated that address the overall awareness of the environment in which we operate," she continued. "These will examine ethics and legal issues, for instance, and will all be pulled together will constant application, discussion, workshops, and the incorporation of current themes in business and across the nation."

William Sipple, provost and vice president for Academic Affairs at Bay Path, said several local business leaders and entrepreneurs contributed to the development of the degree program, in part through the Innovators’ Roundtable.

"What we found was an increasing need for people in business to be able to think in creative ways," he said, "and also that there was room for a niche such as this in the region. Just as those leaders have assisted us in developing the program, we think this MBA is going to be good for the overall development of the region. This area fosters a lot of new or reinvented businesses, and we are trying, with this degree, to offer core business skills that are extremely relevant to local business as a whole."

That relevance to the business world is a key factor that is emphasized often by the program’s directors and faculty, and in the program’s literature, in part to better explain the very nature of the program. Sipple said one danger related to the title of ’entrepreneurial thinking’ is that often, people associate it with opening a new business, and fail to see the program’s relevance to other career paths.

"We hope to teach courses geared toward a new way of thinking," he said, "but this is not necessarily a degree just for people who want to start their own business. It’s an MBA program very much rooted in core disciplines, with the flavor of being able to think beyond the norm, see new uses for existing skills, or react to issues to best address the needs of a given organization. We believe that, following our research of several industries, that this is the edge that people need to manage their companies and themselves."

Lighting the Way

The added thrust of innovation within Bay Path’s new MBA program has made organizing the program and translating its unique aspects to prospective students a challenge. But Ruder said the college has relied heavily on its existing infrastructure within the entrepreneurial arts to best explain the strengths of the new program.

"I’ve never seen such synergy between the development of a new program and the existing rhythm of a college," she said, repeating a word that Wishart had already used to describe Bay Path’s entrepreneurial efforts. "I think the whole environment here is entrepreneurial, and as we meet with prospective students, we are explaining to them that they will embody one of the region’s most recent answers to the needs of the business community ‚ college prepared professionals with a solid core of business experience and knowledge, with the added ability to think differently, and more effectively."

In short, Ruder hopes the college’s first class of MBA students will leave Bay Path prepared to create a more innovative business world and a thriving local economy; or even invent ‚ and market ‚ a better light bulb.

Jaclyn Stevenson can be reached at[email protected]

Sections Supplements
A New Plan of Action for The Bosch
American Bosch manufacturing complex

American Bosch manufacturing complex

Months ago, an ownership team was conducting a series of formal and informal studies designed to gauge whether all or some of the sprawling former American Bosch manufacturing complex could be salvaged for future development. All debate was ended by a Dec. 16 blaze that effectively gutted the landmark. Now, as demolition commences, talk is of what might develop at the nine-acre parcel at the Springfield-Chicopee line.

TJim Sullivan was heading back to Holyoke from a meeting in Boston last Dec. 16 when his cell phone rang.

Usually, Sullivan, treasurer of the O’Connell Development Group, can talk and drive at the same time. But after only a few seconds of conversation he decided he’d better pull over.

The Bosch, he was told, was on fire.

That’s the name people have used for decades when referring to the former American Bosch manufacturing complex on Main Street at the Springfield-Chicopee line. O’Connell was, and is, part of an investment group known as MSBB, LLC that owned the sprawling, vacant — and uninsured — buildings, and had been exploring a wide variety of development options for the property.

It was an admittedly long-term project that was about to become exponentially more complicated and expensive.

"It was a quick trip back from Boston," Sullivan told BusinessWest, adding that, when he arrived at the scene around 6 p.m., the buildings were fully engulfed.

"I stayed until around midnight — I didn’t really know what else to do," he said, adding that he found himself joined on that frigid night by several former employees of the German-based company, which manufactured radios and other products at the Western Mass. facility. "People had tears in their eyes Ö many of them were very emotional; they had many fond memories of the years they spent there."

Sullivan didn’t cry that night, but no could have blamed him if he did. The fire, which raged throughout the night, effectively gutted the imposing structure, rendering it unfit for any type of development. And, contrary to popular opinion, the blaze, while it has in some ways accelerated the process of developing that nine acres of real estate, has not facilitated it.

"People have come up to me and said, ’I guess this makes your job much easier,’" said Francesca Maltese, development manager at O’Connell who is also involved in the Bosch project. "In fact, the fire makes everything harder, starting with demolition, and it means we’re spending money, and lots of it, when we’re not taking any in."

Started earlier this summer, the complex demolition process is expected to take at least the next six months. When the parcel is cleaned, the task of developing it will be easier than it is now, said Maltese, noting that it is difficult for many would-be investors to adequately evaluate the site when it is still dominated by a burned out hulk.

Still, ’easier’ is a relative term. While both Sullivan and Maltese say a number of potential uses are being explored, from health care to housing, manufacturing to retail, it is difficult to gauge how much interest there will be in the property.

Sullivan said the so-called Wason section of Springfield has repositioned itself in recent years, from a manufacturing center to a home for health care facilities ranging from physicians’ offices to Baystate Health System’s D’Amour Cancer Center. Whether that trend will continue at the Bosch site isn’t known, he said, adding that, for now, the focus is on preparing the property for development.

BusinessWest looks this issue at how the December fire has changed the equation for The Bosch and what the strategy will be for developing what must be considered a prime piece of real estate.

History Lessons

Maltese told BusinessWest that during one tour of the main four-story manufacturing/administration building at the Bosch complex, she came across some old plans for the structure.

"I decided I better take them before the mice ate them," she said, displaying one drawing, still in good condition, dated 1910. It shows three ornamental medallions, featuring the corporate symbol for the Bosch company, that would grace the exterior of the building.

Those medallions will be carefully extracted during the demolition process and shipped to Bosch headquarters in Stuttgart, she said, leaving this region with only memories of the plant — and there are many of those.

Bob Forrant, a former machinist and business agent for the union at American Bosch in the ’70s and ’80s, and now an unofficial historian of the plant, told BusinessWest that, at its height during World War II, the company employed perhaps as many as 20,000 people. "They ran 24 hours a day, seven days a week."

One of many machining and manufacturing facilities that helped give Springfield its reputation — and its nickname (the City of Homes) — the Bosch was a coveted workplace. "That was the best place to work in the Connecticut River Valley," said Forrant. "They took good care of their people Ö everyone wanted a job there."

Opened just before World War I, the plant was taken over and essentially operated by the U.S. government during that conflict, said Forrant, noting that American leaders considered any German-controlled plant a security risk. After the war, the government gave the plant back to the Germans, who operated it until the second world war, when the government again took it over. After that conflict ended, officials put the plant out to bid, and it was purchased by a group of U.S. investors and became American Bosch.

The Springfield plant was expanded in the early 1940s with the addition of a one-story manufacturing facility. Eventually, the complex grew to more than 500,000 square feet. Over the years, workers produced a wide range of products, including motors for car seats and windshield wipers, and, in its later years, fuel-injection systems for trucks and the M 1 Abrams tank.

American Bosch was purchased by United Technologies Corp. in the mid ’70s. UTC closed the facility in 1986 after years of gradual downsizing, part of a larger movement of manufacturing operations from New England to warmer, less costly areas of the country. The property had several owners and a few uses (most of them warehouse-oriented) over the next several years, said Forrant.

The complex was eventually acquired by a small development group, headed by John Bonavita, creator of Springfield’s Tavern Restaurant, among other projects, that was known as Crossbow, LLC. The O’Connell Group, which has developed a number of buildings and parcels in the region, including the Crossroads business park in Holyoke’s Ingleside area, became partners in the Bosch venture in the spring of 2003.

"We looked at it as a long-term development play," said Sullivan. "Actually, a very long-term development play."

In the months after becoming part of the ownership team, O’Connell explored a number of options for the Bosch property, said Sullivan, adding that the talks included consideration of both rehabbing the buildings on the site and demolition of those facilities and subsequent redevelopment.

"We looked at everything, from soup to nuts," he told BusinessWest. "We explored medical uses, retail, residential development, every option we could think of."

And while no official determination was actually made on whether to rehab or demolish the buildings, he said, the general feeling was that the one-story manufacturing building could not be reused, and that the four-story structure could, with great imagination and determination, be retrofitted.

But the fire last December brought a swift end to any and all debate.

Out of the Ashes

Suspected to be a case of arson, the intense fire leveled the one-story section of the complex, and caused irreparable damage to the main building. In the days following the blaze, many former employees of the Bosch, Forrant among them, drove by the site to survey the damage and reflect. Local historians said the city had lost an important piece of its industrial heritage.

For MSBB, LLC, the fire dramatically altered the course, timeline, and financial dynamics of the already-challenging development venture.

For starters, the blaze and the damage caused by it will greatly increase the cost of demolition, said Sullivan, who declined to give a specific figure but said it will easily exceed seven figures. Razing the structures will be a more risky proposition, he said, because the buildings are less stable than they were before the fire, making the work more time-consuming, and thus raising the price tag.

The high cost of demolition is one of the many factors that make the fire much more of a hindrance than a help when it comes to developing the property, said Maltese, adding that the fire has ultimately robbed the ownership team of flexibility with regard to the cost and timetable of the project, something that many not in this business do not understand.

"The common perception is that the fire solved a problem for us," she said. "It didn’t. In fact, it created more problems for us."

When asked if MSBB can ultimately recover the costs of razing the Bosch property and make this venture profitable, Sullivan offered a conditional ’yes.’ He said much depends on the market, the level of interest in the site, and the intended future use of the property.

Over the past several years, the Wason section has been the site of a wide range of health care and biotech developments. Only a few blocks from Baystate Medical Center, the area is now home to the Biomedical Research Institute, which Baystate has created in conjunction with UMass Amherst. That stretch of Main Street is the site of many health care-related ventures. Baystate has several facilities in that neighborhood, including its cancer center, Pioneer Valley Life Sciences Center, Baystate Rehabilitation Center, and others.

Meanwhile, Atlantic Capital Investors has rehabbed several old manufacturing buildings in the area for health care and related uses. Partners Ben Surner and Mark Benoit have converted a former factory at 3500 Main St. into the new home for the Pioneer Valley Chapter of American Cross and other tenants, while also combining rehab of the former Wason Trolley building with new construction to create a complex that hosts Baystate Reference Laboratories, Novacare Rehabilitation and Physical Therapy, The Hand Center of Western Mass., and other health care businesses.

Surner and Benoit are also moving forward with plans to create the Brightwood Medical Arts & Conference Center in a large manufacturing building that actually abuts the Bosch complex.

"So health care is certainly one possibility for the Bosch property," said Sullivan, adding quickly that there are many options, including retail, residential development, and others.

MSBB is not actively marketing the property at this time, said Maltese, adding quickly there are discussions going on at a number of levels. She told BusinessWest that talk, and marketing efforts, will escalate as the demolition process continues and developers can properly evaluate the real estate.

Forward Thinking

As they talked about the Bosch property and its potential for development, both Sullivan and Maltese struggled with which tense to use with regard to the buildings on the site.

Both the present and past work, said Sullivan, noting that while the landmarks are still there, from a literal standpoint, from a development perspective they are gone, and have been since the night of the fire.

For the most part, though, those at MSBB are focused on the future. What will transpire at that the Bosch site remains to be seen, but there is cautious optimism that a productive new use can be found, one that might ease some of the many loses incurred on that night last December.

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

Uncategorized

The MassMutual Center is nearing the end of a prolonged construction period and preparing to open its doors for business. The next five years will be focused on polishing and cultivating the center’s business model, and only time will tell how successful Springfield’s newest – and largest – attraction will be.

Jim Rooney, executive director of the Mass. Convention Center Authority (MCCA), says that convention centers are much like restaurants ‚ people often let someone else try out the menu first, and wait to hear the review.

"Does that mean disaster could occur? Yes," he confirmed. "It happens. Just like in a restaurant, one bad review could spread like wildfire."

So as the MassMutual Center readies to begin its first year in business, the MCCA, which oversees its operations, the city of Springfield, and other local entities are focused on doing everything possible to make sure the center’s opening is a raging success.

Sept. 30 will mark the official end of the center’s construction phase, as the faÁade of the Springfield Civic Center gradually gives way to a brand-new, expanded convention center. The changes have created a buzz in the city, anticipation has only grown, and hopes that the building will lead Springfield into a period of growth and prosperity have been firmly pinned on its new white walls.

However, the convention center’s long-term contributions to Springfield remain a matter of speculation. As Rooney’s restaurant comparison suggests, the end of construction merely ushers in the start of another set of important building years, during which the overall health of the region will be as important as the level of traffic flowing in and out of the center’s spacious new entryway.

Rooney said it will be at least five years before the center reaches a level of stability necessary to accurately gauge its success.

"First and foremost, we need to create a balance of strong bookings, strong management, and great publicity. If we don’t start in balance, we won’t finish in balance," he said. "So the next five years are our growth years, focused on letting people know we’re on the map."

That process, Rooney explained, will include creating a buzz about the center both regionally and nationally, achieving an exemplary level of quality service, and ensuring that the performance of the center’s management team and staff remains nationally competitive.

"That’s the first year," he said, noting that several firms have bid for the right to manage operations at the center, and one should be chosen by August. After that work is done, the center will move into an aggressive market-penetration phase with a specific business goal in mind: booking events for 65% of the year: 237 out of 365 days.

Bookings have been brisk for the center, which features several meeting and function rooms, banquet halls, a 40,000-square- foot exhibition hall, and the civic center’s original arena, refurbished with new seats, concession stands, and other amenities. The early reservations suggest that the convention center is indeed moving in a positive direction.

But Rooney cautioned against placing too much emphasis on the center’s ability to kick-start a turn-around in Springfield. He said that, for a city in a fiscal crisis, especially one steeped in controversy and with issues ranging from public corruption to the safety of its streets, there is no silver bullet.

"In and of itself, this convention center is not an economic revitalization plan," he said. "It’s a major contribution, no doubt about it, but there are other things involved in terms of righting this ship. The destination is sold as much as the building is sold."

And there are other concerns, among them the state of the convention industry itself (a recent report indicates that the sector is declining) and the impact of escalating competition from facilities in other area cities, including Hartford’s new Connecticut Convention Center.

There are also questions about the MassMutual Center’s impact on existing banquet and meeting facilities in the area, and whether the center will bring new business to the region or merely take a large share of the existing market.

But Rooney and others closely involved with the project are optimistic that the new convention center will be able to compete on a national level and bring new convention dollars to the area. They’ve taken the risks and the realities into account, and the MCCA, along with the Greater Springfield Convention and Visitors Bureau (GSCVB) and other local organizations have developed a plan that starts with promoting the region and new center as a package, and capitalizes on the building’s size, design, location, accessibility, and the innate desire of many to see the facility ‚ and the city ‚ succeed.

"It takes a lot more than one building to bring a city back to life," Rooney said. "It takes a strong cooperative, strategic effort, and that’s what we have in mind here."

Making Concessions

The MassMutual center project was spawned, like many other projects across the country, by the boom enjoyed by the convention industry in the late ’90s. The health of the industry nationwide initially spurred Massachusetts and other states to evaluate their current convention facilities and make financial commitments for improvement.

Rooney said those commitments represent an economic strategy to cultivate convention business in the state, treating it as a primary economic driver.

"All over the country, people were trying to get into this game and get a piece of the pie," he said. "That included deciding what should happen in Boston, Worcester, and Springfield. Funding was made available in all three cases, and a substantial statewide strategic commitment was made to the convention industry."

But Springfield’s convention center project represents more than merely one part of the Commonwealth’s convention industry initiative; the city’s civic center, built in the early ’70s, was in dire need of a facelift even before the state took control of it. Rooney explained that at the same time state leaders made the decision to build new convention facilities, the Springfield Civic Center was falling on its hardest times.

"The civic center was in a serious state of disrepair," he said. "It was controlled by the city at that time, and the city was unable to keep up with what needed to be done."

So, in what Rooney termed a "friendly transaction," management of the property was transferred to the state.

He explained that $52 million was originally earmarked for the Springfield leg of the statewide convention facilities project, but that initially, the MCCA had envisioned a building that required about $80 to $90 million. The Legislature did appropriate more money, bringing the amount up to $66 million, but the convention center still needed to be re-evaluated to fit the budget.

"We set about managing our appetite for improvements and making some engineering tradeoffs ‚ essentially, we down-sized," said Rooney, adding that soon after those adjustments were made, a partnership was formed with MassMutual, which bought the naming rights for the center for $5 million.

"Ultimately, everything came together in 2002," he said. "MassMutual’s purchase of the naming rights brought the project’s budget up to $71 million, and we could work within that number, so the program was in balance."

He added that the downsizing of the MCCA’s initial plans for the center actually helped to underscore how its size could be an asset.

"Architecturally and functionally we are at the right scale for this marketplace," said Rooney. "For the kinds of regional and local events we should be competing for, it’s the right size ‚ we have the advantage of 40,000 square feet of exhibit space without the disadvantage buildings sometimes have when they’re too big. People know what size facility they want when they’re booking events, and they know what types of events fit well."

Meeting Expectations

Mary Kay Wydra, president of the GSCVB, which is working under the auspices of the MCCA to market and sell the convention center, agreed that capitalizing on the center’s existing strengths is a key component of its business plan. But perhaps more important is promoting the entire region as a destination, not merely the location of a brand-new convention center.

"Different groups look for different types of locations," she said. "We’re perfect for a lot of different organizations, and we market directly to them. We’ve bumped up against Hartford a couple of times, but in general they’re looking for larger groups."

She added that an ideal booking is one that necessitates what she called "city-wides" ‚ the need for 500 to 800 hotel rooms or more per night, which requires that multiple hotels are involved and means in theory that a greater impact on area restaurants, stores, and attractions, would be created.

About a dozen events, including five of those citywides, have been booked for the center to date, beginning shortly after opening day, in November, and extending into 2008. These early bookings will account for 23,050 anticipated attendees, 14,000 new overnight hotel stays, and a projected direct spending impact of $3.8 million over the next three years. Wydra said several other bookings are currently pending, adding that the she’s confident the early interest is indicative of the level of success the building will have in years to come.

But that confidence hasn’t negated the need for creative marketing and promotion of the center in the increasingly competitive convention industry. Half of the events currently booked, for instance, were the result of a burgeoning program within the GSCVB called Pioneer Valley Pride, which asks local residents, businesses, and organizations to use their connections with regional and national groups to draw business to the MassMutual Center ‚ essentially, bringing new business home.

"As members of regional or national organizations, local residents can have a positive impact on the economic well-being of the region," said Wydra, adding that Pioneer Valley Pride is just one way that the GSCVB is working to promote the region and its new facility as a package. "A lot of bureaus have similar programs, and they are a great asset if you can make it happen. Since people have been watching this building as it goes up downtown, it’s definitely in the forefront of their minds. I think that’s going to help our program succeed."

Wydra agreed with Rooney that packaging the building along with the region is essential to the process of marketing and selling both, noting that the GSCVB sales staff members actually focus more on the region than the convention center itself when soliciting new convention business. A new logo and marketing plan have recently been put in place for the Pioneer Valley, for instance, and have become some of the primary selling tools for the convention center.

"The pitch is 80% the region and 20% the building at this point," she said. "We highlight easy access to the building, but also other attractions, first class accommodations, and plenty to do."

Russell Denver, president of the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield, said the chamber is also working to increase the visibility of the convention center by collaborating with other area chambers to get the word out and to create a cohesive ring of support around the center.

"We’ve coordinated with other chambers to make sure the building and the events within are well publicized," said Denver, adding that, in addition to the chambers’ involvement, every mayor in Hampden, Hampshire, and Franklin counties recently signed a letter promising cooperation and collaboration with the convention center, the MCCA, and the GSCVB. He said the action calls attention to the importance of the facility to the Western Mass. community.

"The impact of the building during construction is something that a lot of people overlook," he said. "It has been very positive ‚ a lot of people have been employed by this project, and the local confidence is already there.

"What the long-term impact will be, time will tell," he continued. "But there is a definite spin-off phenomenon expected. What it comes down to is that $71 million has been pumped into Springfield, and that’s outstanding."

Still, Denver, like Rooney, tempered his positive outlook with the knowledge that only after several years will the region know whether the convention center has become a player in the industry, and a boon for Western Mass.

"I have no lofty expectations," he said. "If you create goals and they’re not met, expectations get dampened pretty quickly. The center is just one more tool in the tool box for us."

A Study in Black and White

Rooney said the propensity toward guarded optimism is actually an appropriate response to the approaching start of the MassMutual Center era.

While he and others are hopeful that the center will bring much-needed dollars into Springfield and surrounding communities, the worst-case scenario has been considered: that tough competition will prove to be too high a hurdle, and the center will languish in a tepid sea of bookings, fighting for business not with other convention centers in the country, but instead with other local venues.

"This industry is very competitive," he said. "Any business we get will come at the expense of somebody else, somewhere."

But Rooney was quick to note that stiff competition, though real, is no reason to bow out of the game entirely. He acknowledged that the convention industry of the ’90s, which remained a strong growth sector well into 1999, has slowed in recent years. But he explained the change as proof of an industry that is maturing, not declining.

"Conventions were driven largely by the technology industry," he said. "It has slowed recently, and I’ll admit that demand leveled off. But that’s just American Economics 101; industries mature. This is an $80 billion industry ‚ a big industry. A lot of money is still being spent."

Rooney’s characterization of the convention industry came in response to a controversial study released in January by the Brookings Institution, a research and analysis organization in Washington, D.C. that focuses on economics and metropolitan policy, which questioned the validity of convention centers as economic drivers.

The report, Space Available: The Realities of Convention Centers as Economic Development Strategy, authored by Heywood Sanders, proposed that while convention business has long been an attractive option for struggling cities hoping to rejuvenate their streets with a steady stream of visitors spending money in hotels, restaurants, and stores, some trends in the industry suggest that the strategy is one that could backfire.

"The overall marketplace is declining in a manner that suggests that a recovery or turnaround is unlikely to yield much increased business for any given community, contrary to repeated ind
stry projections," Sanders wrote, citing advances in communications technology as one reason for decline. "Nonetheless, localities, sometimes with state assistance, have continued a type of arms race with competing cities to host these events, investing massive amounts of capital in new convention center construction and expansion of existing facilities."

Indeed, the MassMutual Center project fits such a description; it is one of 44 new or expanded convention centers currently in construction across the country. Meanwhile, it functions under the direction of the state, and will open for business shortly after nearby Hartford opens the doors of its new convention center, which dwarfs Springfield’s facility.

But Rooney was skeptical of some of the study’s findings.

"Sanders has taken some statistics and tried to create an impression of an industry that is dying," he said. "But there is one way to measure his success as devil’s advocate: there isn’t one convention center in America he’s been able to close yet.

"It’s foolish to suggest that because competition is fierce that we all take our bat and ball and go home," he continued. "Springfield can compete as much as anyone. It will be the execution of well-laid plans that will create new demand."

But in an increasingly competitive field, how real is the potential for in-fighting among the convention center and existing facilities in the area?

It’s a very real fear, said Rooney, and one that has been addressed.

"Our desire is for Greater Springfield to compete and to compete aggressively," Rooney explained. "Jockeying for position locally is a real possibility, but the convention center can’t do that and be competitive ‚ none of the venues in the area can, and it’s not our objective. What we do want is to add value to the region, and in five years, watch all of our boats rise. It comes back to managing Springfield as a destination ‚ it’s going to take a great deal of cooperative effort."

He added that as various meeting facilities compete for business, they also continuously hone their strengths and focus on the niches they best cater to, and that should stave off any major struggles for clients between the center and surrounding facilities such as the Basketball Hall of Fame, Eastern States Exposition Grounds, the Mullins Center in Amherst, and banquet facilities such as the Log Cabin in Holyoke.

Wayne McGarry, president of the Eastern States Exposition, shared Rooney’s positive outlook.

"We lost the Affiliated Chamber’s Market Show to the convention center already, but I certainly understand why," he said, citing the Chamber’s support of Springfield’s newest venture. "The long-term impact of the center remains to be seen, but as far as we are concerned, I’m sure we’ll remain competitive."

McGarry added that overall competition may be minimal because the two venues have different roles and serve different audiences.

"Their focus is conventions, ours is really trade shows because we have wide-open spaces and staging areas," he said. "That’s not to say that there may not be an event some day that we both want. But overall I don’t see us being too competitive with each other. One would have to be optimistic that the new facility will spark interest in the region overall ‚ anything that proves to be good for the overall economy is good for everybody."

And while no specific partnerships have been formalized between the convention center and other facilities in the area, McGarry didn’t rule that out.

"Who’s to say that at some point there might not be an opportunity we could enter into jointly?" he mused. "It’s not out of the realm of possibility."

Wydra agreed that partnerships are an area that could be examined in the future.

"A lot of people like to have their conventions and meetings all in the same place, but hold a dinner or a cocktail party off-site," she said. "Already, the Hall of Fame is generating a lot of interest for things like that. Dual interest is another way that promoting the entire region to add to the strength of the convention center comes into play."

Fear vs. Fortune

Wydra concluded that the GSCVB, MCCA, and others will continue to address and often allay others’ fears regarding the center’s future role in the region. But she said they don’t toss that sentiment around in their own circles.

"Fear doesn’t enter our vocabulary," she said. "Excitement does. This is a first-class property that we have to offer here."

One that they hope will receive a five-star review very soon.

Jaclyn Stevenson can be reached at[email protected]

Departments

Abramov, Margarita V
Abramov, Sergey
472 Meadow St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Alpiarca, Daniel R.
28 Decatur St.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Amaker, Shirley A.
582 Pleasant St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/09/05

Anderson-Williams, Tonya
30 Arbutus St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/25/05

Arkoette, Nathaniel E
Arkoette, Victoria
37 Roosevelt Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Ashton, Mary Ellen
19 Hooker Road
Westhampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Athas, Paul M.
93 Forest Glen
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/17/05

Barre, Paul Isadore
Barre, Ella Mae
36 George St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/11/05

Bascom, Barbara A.
112 Elizabeth Ave.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Batista, Peggy S.
229 Miller St.; Lot A6
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Belanger, Gerald Robert
25 Bairdcrest Road
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/29/05

Belliveau, Roger R.
75 Strong St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Belz, Krzyszyof A.
72 Taylor St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Bennett, Mark
109 Denver St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Bermudez, Joel
54 Cleveland St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Bethel, William D.
Bethel, Arlela F.
51 Telbar St.
Springfield, MA 01128
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Bienvenue, Marc A.
34 Spring St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Blakesley, Beatrice D.
157 Holyoke St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/31/05

Bonafini, Michael C.
273 Ware Road
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Bostwick, Andrew L.
819 Gratten St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/18/05

Botfield, Kristina E.
45 Briar Hill Road
Williamsburg, MA 01096
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Bozyk, Francisca
154 Maple St., Apt. D
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Brady, Thomas J.
142 Franklin St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Brawders, Robert F.
50 Woolworth St.
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/28/05

Brawsay, Jean E.
53 Clayton Dr.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Briere, Maureen L
149 Park Edge Dr.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Brown, Frederick O.
16 Cresent Hill
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Brown, James Waldron
29 Terry Lane
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Brown, Mindy Lee
115 Ashley Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Brzys, Kathleen M.
146 West Silver St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/15/05

Burdick, Theresa A.
44 Fernwood Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Burgos, Maria
105 Lyman St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Burns, Sarah
14 Converse St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Byrd, Veronica
15 Southern Road
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Caban, Sara Lee
41 Governor St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Caloon, Amanda L.
31 Watling St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Cannavino, Jill
31 Williams Court
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Cappella, Suzanne M.
197 Brown Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Carney, Joan Rita
12 Lincoln St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/26/05

Cattallinic, Debra M.
27 Horsham Place
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Cefaratti, Thomas Michael
20 Hanover St., Apt 4
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Champigny, Andre G.
208 Edendale St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Charland, David Michael
Charland, Lori Ann
188 Drexel St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/11/05

Cheeks, Future M.
234 Mallow Hill Road
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Christy, Maria Y.
21 Lachine St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Church, Todd J.
2302 Main St.
West Warren, MA 01092
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/19/05

Clark, Roberta L.
44 Montgomery St., # 1
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/28/05

Collins, Michael A.
283 Wildermere St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Conner, Kathleen E.
26 Willow St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Corley, Laura A.
P.O. Box 18
Williamsburg, MA 01096
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/21/05

Courtney, Shannon L.
128 Main Street L
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Crabtree, Laura L.
26 Beacon Terrace
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Craig, Diane A.
172 Buckingham St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Croak, Arthur W.
P.O. Box 668
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Cruz, Carmen R.
46 Knollwood St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Cruz, Marisol
654 Britton St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Cruzado, Joanne
6A Leary Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/19/05

CS Industries, LLC
P.O. Box 435
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 11
Filing Date: 06/09/05

Daubitz, Richard C.
232 Colemor St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Davila, Edwin
173 Buckingham St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Davis, Darrell L.
59 Ionia St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Davis, Gladystean
2094 Page Blvd.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Davis, Mia A.
59 Ionia St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Day, Lisa M.
46 Cross St.
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/15/05

DeCaro, Adele M.
831 South Branch Parkway
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/15/05

DeFilippi, Kathryn I.
85 Penncastle St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/09/05

DeFilippi, William J.
342 Southwick Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/09/05

DeGiso, Mark Steven
DeGiso, Mary Kelly
170 Shadybrook Lane
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Delgado, Virgen M.
124 Park Road
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Delphia, Mary L.
48 Farnum Dr.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Dempsey, Maureen M.
47 Cass Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Devine, Gladys A.
45 Lawler St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Dietrich, Timothy W.
Dietrich, Casandra Kristina
82 Phoenix Terrace
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Digloria, Daniel J.
242 Fort Pleasant Ave.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Doiron, Charlotte E.
97 Shawinigan Dr.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Donahue, Beverly Jane
143 Prospect Ave.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/28/05

Dubuque, Linda L.
2060 Northampton St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/13/05

Durley, Sherryl V.
400 Hancock St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Emond, Theresa R.
72 Midway St.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Fecteau, Anthony J.
49 Hatch St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Felberbaum, Jeffrey M.
177 North Pleasant St.
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Feyrer, Edwin Charles
Feyrer, Dorothy June
59 Hampden St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/12/05

Filos, Elvira M.
131 Berkshire Ave.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Flores, Roberto
170 Eddy St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Fontaine, Richard R.
Fontaine, Barbara A.
21A Notre Dame St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Fontaine, Gary L.
1463 East Mountain Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Fredette, Catherine E.
23 North Main St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Fredette, Therese A.
141 Lincoln St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Frigon, Roger M.
P.O. 383
Williamsburg, MA 01096
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Frykenberg, Kenneth R.
P.O. Box 385
Gilbertville, MA 01031
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Fueston, James T.
Fueston, Lisa J.
19 Voltage Ave.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/15/05

Fullam, Donna M.
104 Franklin St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Garcia, Carlos R.
80 Walnut St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Garcia-Chevrestt, Rafael
40 High St., Apt. 2
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Gaston, Francisco J.
1086 Allen St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Gavin, Judy
88 Lewis Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/26/05

Gelinas, Roger A.
33 Fairfield Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Gibeau, David J.
26 Haumont Ter.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Gray, Emmaly J.
32 Pomeroy Meadow Road
Southampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Grenier, Randall D.
6 Rita Circle
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/30/05

Griffith, Shirley M
8 Roosevelt Ter.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Grimaldi, William
Grimaldi, Lisa
42 Rose St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Grohs, Robbie D.
119 Eddywood St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Hadley, Karen M.
49 Bristol St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/12/05

Hancock, Justin P.
P.O. Box 32
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Hanks, Kenneth J.
24-26 Foch Ave.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/26/05

Hatzipetro, Donald J.
7 Upper Church St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/30/05

Hayes, John Jacob
Hayes, Wanda Dunaway
18 Butler Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Heath, Barbara A.
28 First Ave.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Helems, Kristine M.
59 College Highway
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Hendee, Jeffrey Lynn
73 Meadow Road
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/11/05

Hernandez, Belen
570 Appleton St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Hindle, Melissa A.
17 Taylor St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Hines, Carla Y.
66 Lawton St., Apt. 3
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Hines-Johnson, Lydia F.
77 Westminster St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/09/05

Hoetzl, Eric K.
1512 Dwight St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Insero, Domenick A.
Insero, Karen A.
20 Easthampton Rd.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Jacques, Bernard Andre
21 Daniel St.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Jeremiah, Kelvin A.
88 Gresham St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Johnson, Charles E.
77 Westminster St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/09/05

Johnson, Mitchell L.
Johnson, Phannee N.
15 Crittenden St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Keeney, Susanne M.
33 Norman Ter., Apt 55
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/26/05

Kent, Margaret
85 Deep Woods Dr.
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Kibbie, Michael Angel
50 Charles St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Koehler, David W.
185 Feeding Hills Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/19/05

Kusyk, Richard S.
16 Upton St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Kwiecien, Mark Allan
Kwiecien, Valerie
41 Ruskin St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/29/05

LaCrosse, Norman D.
56 Flint St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Lamica, Erica A.
81 Mathieu Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Lammers, Bruce E.
1177 Main St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/26/05

LaPorte, Michael J.
84 Allen Road
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/04/05

Largay, Michael P.
65 Upper Church St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/29/05

LeBlanc, Debra Ann
262 County Road
Southampton, MA 01073
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/13/05

Lesieur, Joyce M
688 Roosevelt Ave.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Levreault, Alan J.
Levreault, Catherine E.
37 South St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Long, Darek T.
171 Higher Brook Dr.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Lopez, Jose R.
247 Central St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Luciano, Otaniel T.
44 Byers St
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Luxton, Melissa VanDiver
9 Linden Ave.
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/12/05

Malo, Jennifer M.
133 1/2 South St.
Granby, MA 01033
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Manzi, Anthony J.
Manzi, Cynthia J.
54 Governor St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Marcano, Jesus M.
31 Lyndale St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Marsh, Craig M.
22 Elmwood St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Martin, Tammy A.
84 Dorothy Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Martinez, Maria E.
6 Woodland St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chap
er: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Martins, Nelson
4 Fordham St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Matarazzo, Robert Philip
55 Stedman St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/09/05

Mazuch, Brenda B
18 Briggs St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/26/05

McCarthy, Carolyn A.
193 Miller St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

McCarthy, Elizabeth A.
124 Grandview Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/25/05

McKay, Kevin F.
46 Applewood Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01022
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

McLain, Jeanne M.
21 Salem St., Apt. 2B
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/17/05

McNeill, George W
805 Chicopee St., 1L
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Mead, Edward T.
Mead, Joyce A.
94 Heggie Dr.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Medeiros, Louise
14 Itendale St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Menard, Jeremy I.
4 Kowal Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Menard, Michael J.
40 Layfayette St.
Second Floor
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Mendez, Rolando
403 Carew St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Messier, Neal S.
558 Barry St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/17/05

Messier, Phillip John
Messier, Rosalie G.
116 Regal St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Michaels, Dana M.
55 Penrose St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Milledge, Larry
Milledge, Herlinda
64 Berkshire St.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Miner, Cynthia M.
PO Box 1731
Westfield, MA 01086
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/30/05

Minie, Albert George
130 Celebration Circle
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Miranda, Maria M.
23 Hamlet St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Montanez, Anita M.
6 Taylor St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/31/05

Montcalm, James M
116 Garland St.
Chicopee, MA 01022
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Moorehead, Monsita J.
86 Moreland St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/18/05

Moran, Mark J.
Moran, Dora A.
251 Mallowhill Road
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/29/05

Moreau, Angela Katherine
Moreau, Sandra Ann
12 Irwin St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/13/05

Morin, Tina M.
491 Bridge Road, Apt. 613
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/31/05

Morris, Laura Nicole
474 Bridge Road
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Murphy, Karen M.
323 River Road
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/21/05

Myers, Daniel Clayton
101 Mulberry St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/28/05

Myette, Carrie L.
19 Sefton Dr.
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/30/05

Nason, Anita M.
28 Eloise
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/17/05

Nason, Steven P.
101 Allen Park Rd.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Newman, Brenda Lee
24 North East St.
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Nichols, Bryan G.
Nichols, Billie-Jo E.
15 New Ludlow Road
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Nicoli, David Donald
76 Alhambra Circle
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Nieves, Luz M.
Nieves, Miguel A.
1040 Parker St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Nihill, Robert J.
346 Boston Road
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

O’Connor, John L.
O’Connor, Donna M.
31 Watling St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

O’Donnell, Cynthia A
4 Cordes Court
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/26/05

Ogilvie-Jeremiah, Alice N.
88 Gresham St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Olavarria, Francisco
132 Leary Dr.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Padua, Aurea E.
19 John St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Pafford, Jane C
277 Walnut St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Paige, Donald F.
Paige, Gail M.
77 Jamaica St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Paquin, Edward Armand
Paquin, Jane F.
197 Gilbert Ave.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/17/05

Parker, Matthew J.
7 Boulevard Place
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Pellegrino, Matthew A.
90 Eleanor Road
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/17/05

Perham, Bonnie A.
48 Meadow St.
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/31/05

Perkins, Mary Anne
PO Box 53
Hadley, MA 01035
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Perry, Jean A.
9 Victorian Dr.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Person, William L.
27 Saab Court, Apt. 907
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Pham, Tin M.
PO Box 80868
Springfield, MA 01138
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Pietrzykowski, Antoni
44 Park Street, Apt. B
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/05/05

Pirro, Steven M.
Pirro, Laura Lorraine
55 Wrentham Road
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/28/05

Popp, David C.
Popp, Kellie L.
25 Prospect St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Poulin, Laurie A.
Poulin, Michael R.
275 Stony Hill Road
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Pouliot, Gary L.
34 Whitin Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Pray, Luz M.
47 Middle St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Quijano, Betzaida
37 River St. #1
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Quinones, Gloria E.
44 Luden St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Raffa, Mark R.
Raffa, Marie F.
15 Kingsley Ave.
Haydenville, MA 01039
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Rainaud, Gary A.
10-12 North Main St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Ramos, Carmen M
82 Garfield St., 1st Fl.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/26/05

Reed, Therese F.
288 Russell Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/26/05

Remaily, Krista A.
Remaily, Santee W.
5 Westminster St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Retynsky, Victor
101 Mulberry St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Rivera, Edwin F.
16 Springdale Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Rivera, Marlenne J.
70 Harrison Ave.
Apt. 1502
Springfield, MA 01103
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Robillard, Jr., Guy J.
199 Meadow St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Robinson, Darlene T.
38 Bamforth Road
Springfield, MA 01128
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/15/05

Rodriguez, Elvis I.
385 Newbury St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Rodriguez, Evelyn
70 Harrison Ave.
Springfield, MA 01103
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Rodriguez, Margarita
48 Walnut St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Rosario, Maria D.C.
40 Talcott Ave.
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Rosario, Veronica
2791 Main St.
2nd Floor
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Rose, Caleb E.
67 Superior Ave.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Roth, Jaroslav
PO Box 3151
Amherst, MA 01004
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/28/05

Sanabria, Sammy
394 Morgan Road
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/25/05

Sanchez, Victor J.
70 Walnut St., Apt. 20
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/18/05

Sandoval, Monique M.
2063 Memorial Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Santiago, Crizaida L.
774 State St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Santiago, Rafael
60 Chapin St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/26/05

Santiago, Virgen D.
243 Wilbraham Road
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/17/05

Santinello, Sharon E.
132 Holyoke Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Santini, Reinaldo
101 Lowell St.
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/23/05

Sargent, Crystal L.
693 Main St. #3
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Scanlon, Robert M.
Scanlon, Kathryn T.
4C Maple Crest Circle
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Seder, Joan A.
72 Midway St.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Small-Worthy, Elishia
PO Box 80430
Springfield, MA 01138
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Smith, James S.
Smith, Katherine E.
146 Bay Road
Hadley, MA 01035
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Sorcinelli, Robert R.
Sorcinelli, Debra A.
71 Beverly Lane
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/16/05

Sousa, William B.
Sousa, Deborah J.
21 Grape St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/01/05

Spear, David E
85 Sumner Ave.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/14/05

Squire, Dineen G.
183 Applewood Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01022
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/08/05

Szumski, Deborah J.
1198 Montgomery St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Tallman, Daniel J
33 Norman Ter., Apt. 9
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Taylor, William C.
Taylor, Eileen M.
301 Elm St. – Apt 2
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Thomas, Beverley N.
42 Daytona St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Torres, Carmen Lydia
31 Armory St., Apt. 1R
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/09/05

Torres, Hector J.
PO Box 80148
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/17/05

Troung, Lam V.
48 North Alhambra Circle
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/15/05

Trudeau, Charles A.
Trudeau, Erika W.
55 Quarry Hill
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/06/05

Uhlig, Timothy D.
Uhlig, Paula A.
46 Davis St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/13/05

Valentino, Santino U.
106 Norman St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Van Der Woude, Robert D.
110 Woodcrest Circle
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/11/05

Van Slyke, Amanda C.
32 Blodgett St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/18/05

Vasseur, Carla
23 Shoemaker Lane
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/02/05

Venturini, Charlotte Cecile
231 Adams St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/07/05

Washington, John H.
633 Cooley St.
Springfield,, MA 01128
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/26/05

West, Gerald B.
P.O. Box 625
Southampton, MA 01073
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/15/05

White, Darnelle
70 Broadway St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Whych, Brenton K.
Whych, Millicent J.
238 Denver St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/10/05

Widmer, Debbi A.
444B Corey St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Williams, Jesse
30 Arbutus St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/25/05

Williams, Patricia C.
965 Roosevelt Ave.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/27/05

Winn, Kristin A.
108 Arthur St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Withee, Mark
Withee, Linda
218 Rowley St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Wood, Michael A
163 Northampton St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/09/05

Woods, Patricia J.
2 Maplecrest Circle
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/18/05

Wruck, Jennifer M.
60 Montgomery St., 3RD
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/03/05

Young, Robert O.
Young, Bethany G.
23 Barlett Ave.
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/20/05

Ziter, Michael F.
17 Lowell Lane
Huntington, MA 01050
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/24/05

Zograph Corporation, Inc.
182 Main St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 06/15/05

Departments

The following building permits were issued during the month of June 2005.

AGAWAM

Oak Ridge Golf Club
850 South Westfield Road
$35,000 — Install antennas

AMHERST

Amherst Realty Co.
36 Main St.
$10,000 — Remodel restaurant

CHICOPEE

Phillips Insurance
97 Center St.
$65,000 — Addition

HOLYOKE

Holyoke River Inc.
920 Main St.
$20,700 — Renovate kitchen

Petco
45 Holyoke St.
$50,000 — Renovate interior

Pyramid Co. of Holyoke
50 Holyoke St.
$111,207 — Renovate Ben & Jerry’s

NORTHAMPTON

The College Church Inc.
58 Pomeroy Ter.
$13,900 — Strip and shingle roof

Cooley Dickinson Hospital Inc.
30 Locust St.
$2,000,000 – Construct 34,000-square-foot foundation and site utilities

Diane Welter & Alex Ghiselin
70 Masonic St., Unit G2
$20,500 — Convert residential garage to shop space

Laurel Ridge Realty Assoc.
312 Hatfield St.
$80,150 — New roof

Northampton Housing Auth.
155 West St.
$2,171,374 — Construct two-story building

Northampton Housing Auth.
155 West St.
$2,171,374 — Construct two-story building

Raps Real Estate
72 Masonic St.
$32,250 — Interior renovations

Roberts & Dallin Inc.
89 Main St.
$610,000 — Renovations

Smith College
164 Green St. (Tyler House)
$110,000 — Remodel kitchen
196 Elm St.
$18,000 — Renovations

WEST SPRINGFIELD

David Piangerelli
120 Bosworth St.
$30,000 — Renovate commercial building

JS Lane & Sons
1583 Prospect Lane
$50,000 — Add panel antenna

United Bank
44 Van Deene Ave.
$483,755 — Construct bank

WESTFIELD

Wilcox Insurance
75 Bread St.
$550,000 — Second floor

Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of June 2005.

AGAWAM

All American Irrigation Systems
302 Meadow St.
John DeCaro

AV Tech
205 Barry St.
Richard Weld

Beaver Camper Service
721 Springfield St.
G & T Beaver Inc.

Hair Spectrum
303A Springfield St.
Eloise Anderson

Mass USSSA
52 Cricket Road
Paul Lapointe

S.G. Exterior Image
20 Garden St.
Stepan Grushatskiy

The Style Cottage
674 Springfield St.
Donna Patterson

Valenti Properties
1138 Main St.
Joseph Valenti

Zippity Co.
40 Simpson Circle
Gerald Duda

AMHERST

Express Travel Multi-Services
1177 North Pleasant St.
Gustavo Vilanova

Orchard Press
9 McIntosh Dr.
Duncan Fraser

SJM Accounting
7 Swallow Farms Road
Shahrzad Mashirt

Wagner Farms
305 North East St.
Carol Wagner

CHICOPEE

Alias Solutions
45 Felix St.
Paul Stallman II

Bourdeau & Sons Flooring
20 Patrick St.
Chris Bourdeau

Citizens Investment Services
672 Memorial Dr.
CCB Investment Group

Gawron Provision
576 Fuller Road
William Gawron

K & K Jewelers
425 East St.
Adam Hernandez

Kim-D’s Nails & Tanning
505 Grattan St.
Khahn Dao

Patriot
177 Artisian St.
Mary Louise Robitelle

RDC Enterprises
29 Grove St.
Raymond Choiniere

Stellar Grounds Care
15 Langevin St.
Douglas Michen

EAST LONGMEADOW

Colorful Creations
27 Harkness Ave.
Pat and Stanley Pawlowicz

Luigi Landscaping
219 Chestnut St.
Luigi Liquori

HOLYOKE

Alvarado Restaurant
392 High St.
Leshia Malave

Bernie’s
250 Whiting Farms Road
Milton Rosenburg

Jay’s Auto Repair
170 Main St.
Jesus Vargas

Luciano Construction
35 Waldo St.
Lucjar Wagrzyn

MD Beauty Salon & Supply
396 High St.
Maria Ferrer

Premier Salons Inc.
50 Holyoke St.
Premier Salons Inc.

Shell Food Mart
225 Whiting Farms Road
Neil Tierney

Sportstuff
354 High St.
Rick Gileau

Varaday & Assoc.
15 Main St.
Robert Varaday

HADLEY

River Valley Electric
11 Kosior Dr.
Anatoliy Kupin

Stuff-It Storage
222 Russell St.
Jeffrey Campbell

LONGMEADOW

Citizen’s Investment Services
398 Longmeadow St.
Lawrence Carter

JC Realty Consultants Inc.
415 Porter Lake Dr.
Jerry Carr III

Knowing Cats
207 Hazardville Road
Melissa Deceder

Shakespeare’s Garden
645 Laurel St.
Raun Lubenstein

NORTHAMPTON

Birds Store
94-96 Maple St.
Hasmukh Patel

Hair Designers
2 Conz St.
Margaret Mientka

Leeds Mart
24 Haydenville Road
Brijesh Patel

Quality Care Nursing
212 Acrebrook Dr.
Fola Fagade

Skyline Design
209 Locust St.
Douglas Fervante

Valley Properties
391 Danon Road
Shelley Szawlowski

SOUTH HADLEY

Ancientroots
20 New Ludlow Road
Sheila Petighy

JWC Home Improvement
20 Susan Ave.
John Croteau

RJC Renovations
24 Lyman St.
Richard Frank

SPRINGFIELD

B. Bliss Novelties
64 Florida St.
Steven Foster, Jr.

Clean Sweep
131 Larkspur St.
Xavier Cody. Teresa Harris

Express Funding
62 Washburn St.
Kevin Taing

JD Publicity Studio
50 East Bay St.
Javier Negron

Reydi Market
494 Central St.
Pedro Almonte

WEST SPRINGFIELD

A.S.H. Enterprises
34 City View Ave.
Arlynn Henderson

Adam’s Home Improvement
465 Prospect Ave.
Adam Crosby

Applied Software Technologies
59 Interstate Dr.
Sarkis Garibian

B.M.V. (Books, Music, Video Store)
754 Main St.
Roman Zhirnov

Class A Graphics Inc.
380 Union St.
Kenneth DaSilva

Crystal Packaging
533 Union St.
Joseph Sarkis

Enterprise 2019
2019 Westfield St.
Christopher Olko

John Bliss Painting
2355 Westfield St.
John Bliss

Khan Distribution Inc.
608 Westfield St.
Muhammad Owais

Law Office of Caroline M. Murray
93 Nelson Circle
Caroline Murray

Northern Granite
380 Union St.
Vyacheslav Katko

Parish Cupboard Inc.
1023 Main St.
Candy Boucher

RD.LDN
283 Elm St.
Karen Kulakowski

R & R Tax Services
2223 Westfield St.
Robert Romansky, Jr.

Reliable Heating and Air Conditioning
36 Russell St.
Alexander Belyshev

Salsa Con Clase Dance Studio
436 Main St.
Jorge Colon

Sutton Place
131 Ashley Ave.
Sutton Corporation LLC

Winger Construction
373 Brush Hill Ave.
Charles Granger

Yulian Barber Shop
770 Main St.
Yulian Arytian

WESTFIELD

The Hamptons Salon
1029 North Road
Pamela Zalet

Lori K’s Kitchen
28 Court St.
Lorena Kononitz

Northend Barber Shop
708 Montgomery St.
Brant Roldan

Westfield Yoga Center
94 North Elm St.
Thomas Swochak

Departments

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

AGAWAM

P & P Construction Inc., 468 Springfield St., Agawam 01030. Paul Campagna, same. Veteran owned and operated construction corporation.

AMHERST

USCHA Inc., 6 University Dr., Suite 206-148, Amherst 01002. Mark Dennehy, 15 College View Heights, South Hadley 01075. College hockey development camp and tournament.

CHICOPEE

Jenne Group Inc., 16 Yale St., Chicopee 01020. Daniel R. Myers, same. To provide real estate services.

EAST LONGMEADOW

E T Simones Inc., 18 Lombard Ave., East Longmeadow 01028. Eric T. Smith, same. To own and operate restaurants.

GRANBY

Granby Golf Center Inc., 172 West State St., Granby 01033. Patrick T. Wright, 14 East St., Easthampton 01013. Golf range, miniature golf, etc.

Northeast General Contractors Inc., 40 Batchelor St., Granby. Patricia O’Flaherty, same. To deal in real estate.

Pleasant Brook Farm & Feed Inc., 84 Pleasant St., Granby. Roger D. Ilnicky, same. Sale of feed grain and related products.

HAMPDEN

KAC Sales of New England Inc., 62 Pondview Dr., Hampden 01036. Kathleen A. Charest, same. To sell police equipment.

HATFIELD

New England Watershed Publications Inc., 8 Elm St., Hatfield 01038. Russell Powell, same. To deal in books, magazines, newspapers, etc.

HOLYOKE

Friends of the Massachusetts Memorial Cemetery at Agawam, Inc., 18 Center St., Holyoke 02040. Delfo Barabani, 98 Irene St., Chicopee 01013. (Nonprofit) To raise funds to build the memorial pathwalk, etc., for said cemetery.

LONGMEADOW

Maritime Smarts Inc., 141 Lawnwood Ave., Longmeadow 01106. Stephen Larivee, same. Maritime education.

LUDLOW

Cady Street Meat Market Inc., 2 Cady St., Ludlow 01056. Jose M. Matias, 38 Dinis Ave., Ludlow 01056. Butcher shop/grocery store.

KLR Transportation Inc., 53 Evergreen Circle, Ludlow 01056. Lisa A. Kalesnik, same. Trucking and transportation.

SOUTHAMPTON

All About Flowers Inc., 10 Susan Dr., Southampton 01073. Jill M. Malo, same. Retail and wholesale sale of flowers.

Aquarius Plumbing & Heating Inc., 14 David St., Southampton 01073. Daniel J. Bishop, Sr., 18 Hathaway Road, Westhampton 01027. Plumbing and heating.

SOUTHWICK

Con-Ash Development Corp., 141 Feeding Hills Road, Southwick 01077. Gerald A. Mongeau, same. To deal in real estate.

SPRINGFIELD

Murnell Inc., 237 Memorial Dr., Springfield 01101. Thomas Englert, 409 Montcalm St., Chicopee 01020. To manufacture and deal in cleaning products.

New Hope Community Health Clinic Inc., 915 Plumtree Road, Springfield 01119. Bev Premo, 555 Parker St., East Longmeadow 01095. (Nonprofit) To provide charitable, medical and educational services to those in need in Springfield, etc.

Northern Rail Services Inc., 25 Knollwood St., Springfield 01104. Jessica R. Mastromatteo, same. To repair railroad tracks.

Ohuhu Development Union Inc., 17 Lancaster St., Springfield 01118. Emmanuel Okonkwo, same. (Nonprofit) Classes for Igpo language, mathematics and sciences; economic development, health services, etc.

Springfield Fuel Inc., 100 Congress St., Springfield 01104. Mohamad H. Jabak, 6 Oak Meadow Lane, Methuen 01844. Gas station.

Springfield Tax Corp., 725 Sumner Ave., Springfield 01108. Jonathan Fein, same. Tax services.

WESTHAMPTON

Bright Spot Therapy Dogs Inc., 282 North Road, Westhampton 01027. Cynthia J. Hinckley, same. (Foreign corp; CT) To design and implement Therapy Dog Programs for needy persons including those in nursing homes, hospitals, etc.

WILBRAHAM

RSM Services Inc., 8 East Colonial Road, Wilbraham 01095. John William Collins, III, same. Sales agency.

Uncategorized

A mill town once driven by the steady hum of factory work is now creating a different kind of buzz in Western Mass.; Easthampton is being seen as the region’s most promising community for artists of all types, and it’s the artists themselves, and the support of the city, that are making that happen.

Eric Snyder, president of the Greater Easthampton Chamber of Com-merce, said the best thing about the city’s recent turnaround is that it is tangible.

"Anyone who drives through can see what’s happening here," said Snyder, adding that the proof can be as large as a former mill now bustling with activity — everything from diners eating lunch at the Apollo Grill to people renewing their driver’s licenses at the local RMV office — or as small as an artful clay pot, a set of hand-crafted wind chimes, or a child practicing her violin on the front lawn.

The arts, in all forms, have become the primary economic driver pushing the city of Easthampton forward in recent years, transforming the former mill town into a haven for arts, entertainment, and culture, and revitalizing the city’s overall economic picture in the process.

"There has been a lot of talk about a renaissance in Easthampton," Snyder said. "The arts and crafts community definitely plays a big part in that. There are more people coming into the town because of the arts, and the artists are really marketing themselves, and that’s good for them and for the town."

Although many artists have resided in Easthampton for years, only recently have formal partnerships been forged between groups of artists, and, perhaps more notably, between those artists and city government, the Chamber, and other businesses.

Most artists work out of studio space located in one of three former mill buildings Eastworks, the Paragon building, and One Cottage Street once the hub of Easthampton’s economy and now becoming so again, though in a much different way.

Now, the buildings house potters, painters, jewelers, sculptors, and many other artists working in all types of media. They arrived to take advantage of large studio space, a convenient location, and attractive lease rates, and have since created a creative community unto themselves.

In addition, other businesses are also capitalizing on those low rents as well as the climate created by those artists, especially in the past year. Among them are restaurants like the Apollo Grill in the Eastworks building and Tucson and Savannah’s at One Cottage Street, niche businesses like Valley Women’s Martial Arts Inc. and In Touch Massage Therapy, and a Registry of Motor Vehicles branch office. Those businesses are not only benefiting from the location, but adding to the artists’ visibility, too; that has in turn provided for greater recognition of Easthampton in Western Mass., which is beginning to regard the city as the region’s next great cultural mecca.

"The word is getting out," said Lynn Latimer, an artist who works in fused glass out of the Cottage Street building. "We have a very large community of people who are enormously talented, but it’s recently that we feel a more solid sense of our arts community and the ways it benefits the whole city."

Canvassing the Area

One way the word is getting out is through the marketing efforts of Arts Easthampton, a collaborative organization of artists. The group began informally with a handful of artists in the One Cottage Street mill building, but has since expanded, especially in the last four years following the addition of the ’Arts Easthampton’ name and logo. The collective now includes artists working in the Eastworks and Paragon buildings, individual artists, businesses, and galleries and schools, such as the Guild Studio School, and the Pioneer Arts Center of Easthampton. The city’s own arts council is also very involved.

"It has only been in the last four years that we have all really started getting together," said Evelyn Snyder, owner of Kaleidoscope Pottery in the One Cottage Street building. Snyder explained that Arts Easthampton has gradually grown over the years. Two annual sales are still held now accommodating thousands of visitors to all three mill buildings and a smattering of individual studios, businesses, restaurants, and other venues but Arts Easthampton is becoming much more of a brand than a catchy name for an art show.

"We adhere to a mission statement and to strong rules of governance," said Justin Brown, an artist in the Eastworks building. "We make a real effort to meet and get groundwork laid down about five months before any event, and then we meet as needed until the date of the show. It’s only getting busier for us now."

Brown added that Arts Easthampton also created a common ground for a varied group of artists some production artists, completing large orders of their craft for customers, and others creating smaller quantities or single originals of work for sale. Brown is just such an artist, filling his studio with elaborate, personalized wall-hangings and sculptures. Snyder, although her work is no less unique, produces thousands of handmade plates, bowls, platters, and other items in her pottery studio. She agreed with Brown that Arts Easthampton created a bridge between all types of artists with different work, but common goals for success.

"It only made sense to pull all of the pieces together," Snyder said. "There was already some momentum that we could capitalize on; we had thousands of names on our mailing list, but now that has doubled, and we notice that there are definitely more people aware of and coming to our shows."

The visual arts aren’t the only artistic component of the city, however. Elizabeth Caine, president of the board for Pioneer Valley Summer Theater, located in Easthampton, said she too has noticed audiences increasing steadily over the theater’s three years in existence.

"What’s nice about Easthampton is that it is a city that’s actively looking for economic growth," said Caine. "We get great support, and in turn, our companies support the local economy by shopping, dining, and so on. In the long run, the relationship will make a huge difference in the community because of that mutual support."

And in response to that mounting success, the city has taken a broad interest in cultivating Easthampton’s arts community as an economic tool. It has secured grants for artistic programming and the improvement thereof, and fostering communication and further development of citywide initiatives either spotlighting or merely including the arts community, which includes a wide range of visual artists, musicians, writers, actors, and others working in cultural fields, often in conjunction with Arts Easthampton.

Ellen Koteen, grants coordinator for the city, explained that the first such grant was the John and Abigail Adams Grant, awarded to Easthampton by the Mass. Cultural Council in the amount of $12,500, which, as a condition of the grant, required the city to produce matching funds.

"We wanted to establish a formal arts and economic agenda, and the John and Abigail Adams grant was the first activity with that in mind," Koteen said, noting that the funds will be used to establish a new Web site for Arts Easthampton and to create a brochure and directory of the arts scene in the city.

She added that the matching component of the grant did more than add to the amount of funds available to the cultivation of arts programming — it also underscored the increasing faith the community has in its arts sector.

"The funds came through in February, requiring us to immediately search for funds for that one-to-one match," said Koteen. "We asked businesses to commit money and, in a short period of time, local companies kicked in almost $12,000. It demonstrated to the artists that the city recognizes their contribution, and there is a commitment to work with them."

Eric Snyder added that the arts also create a unique economic driver for the city, which he thinks Easthampton is ready to embrace. As most arts-based businesses are small, even consisting of just one or two people, there are dozens of independent businesses peppered across Easthampton, and that creates a different economic climate than a manufacturing plant or large retailer that could set up shop in the city and offer jobs to 100 or 200 people at once.

He noted that the city, once dominated by manufacturing, still has a few mainstays in the manufacturing sector among them Tubed Products, National Nonwovens, The October Company, and Stevens Urethane, which together employ about 1,200 people. The Williston Northampton School and Easthampton Public Schools round out the city’s major employers, adding another 500 employees to the tally. Viably, expansion of the manufacturing sector could benefit the town economically, and the city could have easily chosen to focus on that aspect if its financial picture, given its rich history.

But Snyder said the arts community has already proven in the last three to four years that its impact is just as important to Easthampton’s revitalization as any one employer could be.

"The chamber is open to this type of economic development," he said. "It is slower than the economic impact that could be generated by a large company, but the arts community has made our city much more rounded.

"It’s all about quality of life," he added. "Now, we still have our small town flavor, but we are also developing a metropolitan feel that is encouraging."

Artistic Integrity

The city has also planned ’visioning sessions,’ one in September of last year and the second just this month, designed to provide a platform for the city’s artists, government, business leaders, and other concerned citizens, specifically on the topic of cultivating and expanding artistic endeavors in Easthampton.

"It also studies the specific impact of the arts on the town," said Koteen, adding that part of that commitment the city has made includes hearing and addressing the concerns of the city’s artists.

"We have signed on to address the needs they have identified and how to best capitalize on and enhance their role in the city’s development," she said.

The need that is of the greatest concern to Easthampton’s artists is that of retaining affordable studio space. It’s a trait of many artists of all kinds that they will move to a community where affordable space can accommodate their work, contribute to diverse, healthy commerce in the area, and eventually be priced out of the studios for which they helped create a demand.

"The artists talk all the time of moving into affordable space, revitalizing the community, and getting priced out and moving on to a new, developing community," said Koteen, theorizing that Easthampton’s rapid improvement due to the art-based businesses is calling added attention to the nomadic nature of many full-time artisans, musicians, actors, and others working in cultural fields. "We have three old mills filled with artists. So far, the space is still affordable, and yet it takes years for a community to address such an issue, and then to implement whatever changes they see fit, so it’s definitely a concern."

Evelyn Snyder agreed. "It is a worry," she said. "But there is still more opportunity here for artists than in Northampton, which doesn’t have very many big, empty buildings, and that’s what brought us here, in addition to the low rent."

What is driving the Easthampton arts scene forward now is not just affordable workspace, though, she said; it’s the partnerships that have evolved between the artists in the community and local businesses, city government, and residents at large that are creating a sort of staying power, which is also unique within the world of art and artisans.

"All of us are excited about educating the public on the fact that you can make money as an artist," said Snyder, "and it’s nice to be in a strong group situation. It helps us to see the trends within the art world and to capitalize on good times and get through bad times."

Latimer added that getting a lot of different artists together on a project of this magnitude is no easy feat.

"It’s a bit like herding cats," she joked. "But this revitalization has come out of a lot of people pulling together in a grassroots sort of movement, and we’re seeing positive results that keep us going. The added notoriety of Easthampton as a thriving arts community is ultimately helping our businesses, and the added attention is making the city happy overall."

Brown said as the arts scene grows in the city, another challenge is how to best capitalize on the increased traffic, and the partnerships with the city’s government are helping to guide that process as well.

"The city has some great ideas and they’re getting more involved," he said. "They know why Easthampton is getting busier; now to keep it that way they’re helping us with the how."

Creating a Masterpiece

The annual Open Studio Sale held earlier this month by Arts Easthampton marked the city’s busiest weekend of the year, rivaled only by the Holiday Sale held in December. Throughout Saturday and Sunday, artists were busy wrapping pieces, businesses held sidewalk sales to capitalize on the traffic, and there was a bit of a wait for a table at the Apollo Grill. But Latimer said the signs of a community rising from the ashes are not best gauged on a busy weekend, but rather on the quieter days, when even then there is a marked change in the city.

"There’s definitely more life out there on the streets," she said.

Jaclyn Stevenson can be reached at[email protected]

Uncategorized

The Sisters of Providence Health System is in the second year of a five-year strategic plan for philanthropy called "Catch the Spirit." While fund-raising is one of the ultimate goals of the campaign, its initial focus is on building awareness — and what organizers call "lifelong friendships."

They’re calling it a ‘friend-raising’ effort. That’s the term organizers are using to describe the Catch the Spirit campaign being conducted by the Sisters of Providence Health System (SPHS). Now in its second year, the program, orchestrated by the system’s fund development department, isn’t raising money — at least not at this stage.

Instead, the initial goal is to raise awareness, said Brenda McCormick, MSW, LICSW, who is vice president of fund development for the system, although she prefers the word philanthropy to describe what she does. McCormick told BusinessWest that the Catch the Spirit campaign was launched to educate the public about the SPHS and thereby also generate support — which can come in a number of ways, from people signing on as volunteers, and perhaps even trustees, to monetary donations down the line.

"At this stage, we’re building relationships," she explained, adding that the Spirit program included one large gathering last fall, called ’Continue the Legacy,’ that was attended by more than 300 people. But the campaign features mostly small (15-20 people) and intimate gatherings designed to inform and inspire attendees — some of whom are already familiar with the system, its history, and its current and future challenges, but many are not — while creating what organizers call a ’dialogue.’

"We want to build life-long friends," said McCormick, noting that the Sisters of Providence who founded and, in many cases, administered the health care facilities in the system, are passing on, and thus the SPHS wants to tell their story now, while also recruiting individuals to carry on their work.

Vincent J. McCorkle, president and CEO of the SPHS, said the Catch the Spirit initiative, part of a five-year strategic plan for philanthropy, was launched primarily as an awareness campaign. It is needed, he said, because there are many things that the public may not know and should know, starting with the Sisters of Providence and their mission.

Many in the community are not aware, for example, that some of the better-known health care facilities in the region, including Mercy Hospital, Brightside, the Providence Behavioral Health Hospital, formerly Providence Hospital, are all part of the broader SPHS system, he explained. Also unknown to many is the fact that many of the programs provided in those facilities — such as behavioral health services and care for the elderly — are essentially losing propositions, from a financial standpoint, and have been discontinued by other health care systems for that reason.

"We’re more than just a business, we’re a ministry," McCorkle told attendees of the May 24 forum. "This is a system that makes decisions not just on sound business models, but against a defined set of values."

McCorkle told BusinessWest that, while the Catch the Spirit campaign was created to allow the system to "tell its story," it has done more than merely inform forum attendees. It has also helped inspire employees, who hear and tell stories about how the sisters’ mission manifests itself today.

"It’s like a shot of adrenaline," he said of the sessions and the human interest stories relayed during them. "It reminds me of why I got into health care to begin with."

BusinessWest looks this month at the Catch the Spirit initiative and its many different goals.

Mission: In Progress

This year’s Catch the Spirit sessions start with an informational video (created earlier this spring) about the system and the sisters who created it. At one point, the narrator states that there are a mere 80 sisters still living.

As he addressed the May 24 gathering, McCorkle updated that figure to 77, and said it falls at the rate of one per month.

The passing on of the sisters, who once were the backbone of the health care system they created, and the desire to tell their story is one of the primary motivations behind the Spirit campaign, said McCormick. But there are many goals behind this strategic initiative she created for the system to take philanthropy into the future and to a higher plane.

"I was here only a short time when I realized that relationship-building wasn’t something that we put much focus on," she said. "In order to have people understand who you are and what you stand for — and to someday have them give support — you have to build relationships with these individuals. That’s what this campaign is all about."

The Catch the Spirit program is modeled, in many respects, after a fund-development strategy championed by Terry Axelrod, a noted expert and author on the subject of philanthropy — her latest title is called, simply, Raising More Money. At the heart of that strategy, said McCormick, is the premise that before individuals will back a cause or organization, they must know about it and become inspired to support it.

The Axelrod model has been used primarily with single entities, she explained, adding that the SPHS is different in that it has a number of interconnected facilities in several area communities. "We’re more complicated; we have a lot of moving parts," said McCormick. "Time and again, people would tell me they didn’t know these various facilities were part of our system — or that there was a system."

To explain all those moving parts, campaign organizers scheduled a series of sessions that would be attended by elected officials, business and civic leaders, and others involved in the community. The inivitation would be shaped by referrals from forum attendees. The individual events — there have been 16 to date, with 12 in 2004 — were designed to be informational, while driving home the point about the compassionate nature of individual programs and the people working within them.

In the campaign’s first year, the dozen conducted sessions featured detailed looks at Brightside for Families and Children in West Springfield and the Sr. Mary Caritas Cancer Treatment Center at the Mercy Medical Center campus in Springfield. This year, the sessions have focused on behavioral health care and services provided to the elderly.

One of the speakers at the May 24 session was Anne Nusbaum, nurse manager at the Farren Care Center, or ’The Farren’ as it’s called. This is a facility she described as the only one of its kind, a last resort for people (usually abandoned by their families) with psychiatric or medical conditions that essentially make them dangerous. To be considered for admission, individuals must first have been rejected by five different nursing homes due to their behavioral patterns.

"Society has essentially rejected these people; this is the end of the line for them," said Nusbaum. "We take them because no one else will accept them."

But the facility does not warehouse these individuals; instead it works to improve their quality of life by helping them interact with others, she explained.

Other speakers included Lisa Golembiewski, manager of outpatient services with Providence Behavioral Health Hospital, who told attendees about the growing problem of substance abuse in the region, and also about the facility’s adolescent behavioral health services, the only program in the state west of Worcester.

Also taking the podium was George Kennedy, director of admissions at St. Luke’s Home in Springfield. As he talked about the facility, which has had a number of functions in its 150-year history, including stints as a birthing center and later a residence for the elderly, Kennedy displayed a painting of the home. A magnified image of the work revealed several Sisters of Providence taking a break, as he put it, on the home’s roof.

Those invited to the informational sessions are asked for input on what they’ve seen and heard, said McCormick, and also for the names of other area individuals to be invited to future programs. When the first phase of the campaign, the informational component, is completed, the system will move on to what she termed a "call to action."

This will come in the form of invitations to participate on a number of levels, she said, noting that the system will need everything from volunteers to serve within the system’s various facilities to trustees for the boards that administer them.

"There are endless roles for individuals who would like to spend some time with us in a volunteer capacity," she said, adding that, as more people become aware of the system’s programs and then become involved with them, philanthropic giving is a natural next step.

When asked how the system will measure the success of the program. McCormick said there will be several different yardsticks, starting with the number of individuals who agree to take an active role in continuing the legacy of the Sisters of Providence. Monetary support will obviously be another measure, she said, adding that the ultimate indicator will be the number of lasting relationships that are created — something that won’t be known for some time.

McCorkle agreed, but said that, in his mind, the campaign has already been successful, because of its dialogue-generating capabilities and the energy it is creating both within the system and outside it.

"This has re-energized me and many other people here," he said. "When you see the way people react to the stories being told, and when you see the pride displayed by our staff, you know that this is having a very positive impact."

When the Spirit Moves You

As she talked about the Catch the Spirit program and the individual informational sessions, McCormick compared them to inviting a guest to your home for the first time.

"That’s how relationships get started and how friends are made — you start with introductions and getting to know each other," she explained.

The SPHS wants to build some life-long friendships, and is starting by building awareness of the system, its mission, and its many challenges moving forward.

Only time will tell if the campaign and its various components are successful, but McCormick believes that by first focusing on friend-raising, the system will succeed in prompting many within the community to catch the spirit.

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

Uncategorized

They say silence is golden. Not in this case.

Since the abrupt firing of MassMutual chairman, president, and CEO Robert O ’Connell earlier this month, and the subsequent termination of two high-ranking women executives, the company has provided virtually no information on what led to this stunning turn of events.

It has provided only minor hints, through use of the words ’conduct ’ when referring officially to O ’Connell ’s termination. The only reference to the other terminated officials, executive vice president Susan Alfano and senior vice president and co-general counsel Ann Lomelli, was the rather weak comment that the new president and CEO, Stuart Reese, has the right to pick his own people. Right!

Other clues as to the cause of the O ’Connell ’s firing could be garnished from E-mails sent to employees (and published by the local newspaper) that talked about the need for "transparency," "accountability," and a "meritocracy" at the company, and that these traits start at the top. We can assume, then, that these corporate qualities were missing during O ’Connell ’s tenure.

But we shouldn ’t have to make assumptions, and we should have more than vague hints. Why? Because when people don ’t have the answers they tend to come up with their own. Indeed, the information vacuum that has resulted from the company ’s tight-lipped approach has served only to feed an already hungry rumor mill. And this isn ’t good for the community, the company, its employees, and especially its customers who have entrusted their investments to the firm. They deserve better.

But there ’s another reason why MassMutual should be forthcoming: Because it is, after all, MassMutual. It is a Fortune 100 company and now the largest business in the Commonwealth and one of the 10 largest insurance companies in the country. But in the Pioneer Valley, MassMutual is the company that everyone looks to for stability, community involvement, and employment opportunities. We shudder to think of what Springfield and its inventory of office space would be like without the company.

The region deserves to know what ’s happening with this corporate pillar, and it certainly needs to now why three top-level executives were abruptly terminated, with one of them escorted from the premises by security.

To be fair, MassMutual doesn ’t legally have to tell us anything. It is a mutual insurance company, which means it is not publicly held. The business is accountable, strictly speaking, only to its owners — the millions of policy holders around the world. We believe there is a higher accountability, however — to the company ’s employees and to the community at large.

We are told that the company and its various subsidiaries are fiscally healthy and that these terminations will not impact its overall financial health. This is somewhat assuring, although lacking. Also comforting is the fact that the company ’s board looked beyond MassMutual ’s strong bottom-line performance and decreed that ethical conduct unbecoming a CEO would not be tolerated.

Indeed, by firing a popular and, by all accounts, effective CEO in the manner it did, MassMutual sent a strong message to its 4,000 employees about what it expects from everyone and what it won ’t accept from anyone ‚ although it won ’t explain what that is — at any rung of the ladder or salary level.

The importance of MassMutual to this region and the stunning nature of these terminations are reflected in the fact that, for days after the announcement, these events were all anyone could talk about.

Unfortunately, the talk was all about rumors and innuendo. In time (how much time, we don ’t know) the talk will stop and MassMutual — and this region in general — will get on with business. That might have happened sooner, and with more conviction, had the company been forthcoming about its actions and the conduct that led to them.

For now, though, people are left to merely say, ’what ’s going on at MassMutual? ’ Sadly, we don ’t know and the company isn ’t telling.

Departments

Acevedo, Ana M.
154 Orange St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Ali, Ahmed H.
Ali, Sophoas N.
122 Creswell Dr.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Atmaca, Eyup
Atmaca, Seda
63 Entrybrook Dr.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Balise, Brian A.
Balise, Christine A.
49 Chapin St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Barron, Melissa A.
61 Moreau Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Basile, Francesco
Basile, Agnes
261 West Allen Ridge Road
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/01/05

Beauchane, George J.
Beauchane, Cheryl L.
31 Ottawa St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/05

Bell, Michael L.
23 Pembroke Lane
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Benjamin, Paul M.
4 Matthews Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Benson, Tina Marie
114 Cooley St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Bermudez, Wanda E.
115 Elmer Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Berry, Joy L.
Berry, Dorothy
34 Pomeroy Lane
Amherst, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Binette, Alan B
84 Fuller St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Bourgault, Rachelle
51 State St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Brosseau, Cynthia H.
39 Valley View Dr.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/05

Canuel-Cole, Pamela A.
250 B Hamilton St.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Castro, Yolanda
291 Beacon Circle
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Centerbar, Amy J.
250 Schoolhouse Road
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Chenier, Christopher Mikal
151 Moody St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Church, Karen L.
20 Easthampton Road
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Churchill, Elijah W.
369 Dale St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/01/05

Cipriani, Anthony R.
250 State St.
Palmer, MA 01057
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Colon, Aurelio
178 Florence Road 12C
Northampton, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Condike, James N.
Condike, Kelly R.
85 Westwood Dr.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Condon, Kelly A.
220 Basil Road
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Contonio, Thomas R.
Contonio, Tina M.
958 Petersham Road
Hardwick, MA 01037
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Coolidge, Linda M.
137 Rhinebeck Ave.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 05/02/05

Corey, Joseph G.
Corey, Christine
41 Cora St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Cosme, Karen J.
54 Alvord Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Cotto, Miriam L.
29 Gerard Way
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Crutchfield, Lynn A.
91 Cedar St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/01/05

Cruz, Luz M.
577 Pleasant St., Apt.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Cruz, Willliam A.
12 Sargeant St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/01/05

Cunningham, Daniel A.
21 Rivest Court
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Curtis, Jody C.
154 Eddywood St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Czeremcha, Gloria E.
48 Pinewood Lane
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Dal Molin, Mary Ann
8 Inward Commons
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Dane, Nadine G.
172 Grattan St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Davis, John Wesley
288 St. James Ave.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Davis, Olga
65 Stony Hill Road
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Davis, Robert Eugene
112 Franklin St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Dazelle, Richard H.
Dazelle, Wendy
42 Franklin St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Deceder, Melissa A.
207 Hazardville Road
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Dejesus, Herminihildo
57 Leslie St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Delgado, David
291 Beacon Circle
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

DeMars, Robert A
126 Union St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Diamond, Glenn T.
205 Little River Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

DiMaio, Leonilde R.
141 Arvilla St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Dreisch, Joseph F.
Dreisch, Sheri-Lynn
39 Isaac Bradway Road
Hampden, MA 01036
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Duby, Shirley
534 Chapin St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Dyer, Michelle J
40 Woodbridge Lane
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Emet, Candice Ann
124 Nassau Dr.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

English, Patricia A.
40 Coolidge Road
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Enko, Linda J.
64 Mill St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Ferraro, James Alfred
1295 Elm St., B-2
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Figueroa, Rogelio
115 Dwight St.
Springfield, MA 01103
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Foley, Erin B.
31 Willow St.
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/05

Foley, John T.
P.O. Box 1153
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Fontaine, Timothy J.
Fontaine, Laurie A.
670 Chapin St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/05

Ford, Leigh Durland
465 North St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Galarza, Margarita
42 Mayfair Ave.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Garcia, Luz M.
14 Emerald St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Gaudrault, Gary P.
Gaudrault, Rose M.
19 Grove St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Geraghty, Stephen E.
424 Pleasant St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Gerndt, Lorraine Y.
350 Meadow St. #20
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Gibbs, Anthony E.
116 Regency Park Dr.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Giberson, Angela
668 Main St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Gilberti, Susan S.
59D Pheasant Hill Dr.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Girard, Martin
97 Bellevue Ave.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/05

Giroux, Melissa Ann
591 Plumtree Road
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Goncalves, Miguel F.
P.O. Box 170
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Gonzalez, Nancy
119 Riverside Dr.
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/02/05

Goodman, Charlene S.
207 Bay St., Apt 3L
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Goodwin, Nancy J.
42 Franklin St., Apt.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Gruska, Jane Oliver
31 Circle Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/05

Hall, Sheila G.
62 Edwards St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Harper, Margaret L.
115 Main St., # 5
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Heisler-Kaczenski, Heidi Marie
20 Farnum Dr.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Henry, Adelaide D.
66 Western Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Hernandez, Jeanette
140 Union St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Hersh, Albert W.
47 Stone Ridge Dr.
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Hills, Elizabeth Abigail
47 Birch Bluff Dr.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/29/05

Hosford, Theodore R.
322 Main St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Hughes, Raymond G.
30 Mobile Home Way
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Ilano-Davis, Olivia S.
112 Franklin St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Irizarry, Antonio J.
491 Bridge St.
Florence, MA 01062
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Jacques, Dennis D.
1343 Riverdale St.
W. Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Janicki, Konstanty
1246 Main St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/01/05

Johnson, Susan S
PO Box 51511
Springfield, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Jones, Niki M.
63 Fairview Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Joyce, Elizabeth C.
25 Saab Court
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Judge, John J.
Judge, Ethel A.
35 Florence Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Kane, Randy R.
71-73 Tulsa St.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Kegler-Ford, Mary
121 Massachusetts Ave.
2nd Floor
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Knott, Terry L.
17 South Liberty St.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Kobylanski, Walter
Kobylanski, Kelly
5 Beech St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/05

Kokaram, Edmund L.
11 Bristol St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Kolodziey, Cortney A.
320 Miller St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Landes, Noreen M
41 Paul Revere Dr. #C
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Laprade, Michael E.
Laprade, Cheryl R.
44 South Road
Westhampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

LeDuc, Timothy
25 Shady Knoll Dr.
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Lee, Hyoung S
174 Wimbleton Dr.
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Lessard, Scott Emile
Lessard, Kim Marie
138 Warren St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Lopes, Manuel A.
Lopes, Candice E.
183 Darthmouth Ter.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Luntta, Paul A.
Luntta, Susan R.
P.O. Box 101
Granville, MA 01034
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Lyons, Mary E.
79 Hawks Circle
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Mannix, John J.
54 Amherst Road
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/26/05

McCarty, Robert H.
49 Colony Dr.
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/02/05

McCollum, Stephen
22 Walsh St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

McLean, James M.
63 Prince Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Mendoza, Benjamin
37 Spring St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Michael, Andri V.
129 Steiger Dr.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Moe, Jana L.
67 Water St.
Leeds, MA 01053
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Montalvo, Lydia
36 Southern Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Moore, Kathleen E.
100A Congamond Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Moore, Megan
514 Amherst Road
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Muniz, Luz C.
32 Columbia Terrace
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Nardacci, John J.
56 Malden St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Newkirk, Marc Stevens
Newkirk, Karen Hichens
15 Abbott Hill Road
Chester, MA 01011
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Nichols, John Anthony
1102 Park St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Nieves, Melvin
124 Florence St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Norman, Elizabeth
17 Empress Court
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/05

Oakley, Deborah S.
359 Stapleton Road
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Ocasio, Miguel E.
54 Thyme Lane
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/05

O’Connor, John J.
O’Connor, Julia M.
2129 Northampton St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 05/01/05

Orlandi, Charles M.
Orlandi, Teresa M.
156 Meadow St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Pacheco, Daisy
177 West St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Pagan, Julia C.
381 Tokeneke Road
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Palacio, Edilberto
16 High St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Panlilio, Sylvia D.
192 Lake Dr.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Patruski, Karen A.
414 Chestnut St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Pena, Johanna
112 Federal St., Apt.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Perez, Luis A.
185 Brown Ave.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Perez, Persidian B.
50 Meetinghouse Road
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Perla, Tracy Ann
1 West Parker Ave.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Picard, Lisa M.
21 Carpenter Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Pike, Edward E.
Pike, Linda L.
17 Bayberry Dr.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/05

Poole, Robert A.
Poole, Angelique R.
11 Oakwood Ter.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Potito, Carla Jean
399 Union St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Prado, Pedro J.
270 Granby Road
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Ricci, Richard J.
Ricci, Gina M.
49 Athol St.
Springfield, MA 01128
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Rios, Pablo J.
P.O. Box 90396
Springfield, MA 01101
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Ritter, Charles A.
154 Packard Ave.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/05

Rivera, Eladio
11 Strong St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/21/05

Rivera, Magaly
147 Verge St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Robillard,
sther Alice
735 Mimorial Dr., Lot 1
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Roche, Diane M.
50 Southampton Road
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Rodriguez, Carmen M.
Rodriguez, Angel L.
69 Lowell St.
Springfield, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Rodriguez, Faith A.
93 Meadow St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Rodriguez, Iris I.
Apt. 320
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Rodriguez, Sharon A.
91 Meadow St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Rogers, William I.
PO Box 80261
Springfield, MA 01138
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Roig, Damaris
221 Bay St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Rolley, Kristine E.
617 Beacon Circle
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Rosario, Damaris
419 Montcalm St. #322M
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Santiago, Rosa N.
2 Crescent Dr., Apt. 2
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Savard, Donna M.
19 Ashley St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Seltsam, Jean Elaine
36B Fox St.
Palmer, MA 01069
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/29/05

Silcox, David J.
55 Bartlett Ave.
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Skowron, Michael A.
Skowron, Evelyn B.
109 Morton St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Smith, Richard R.
Smith, Jackie S.
51 Monticello Ave.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Soffen, James R
245 Arthur St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/21/05

Soule, Jean A.
1228 Main St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Stone, Rebecca L.
21 River Ct.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Strange, David C.
73 Rochester St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/27/05

Stuck, Edward Levi
Stuck, Joy Ellen
66 Fox St.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Sutter, Jeffrey
Sutter, Ceu M.
158 Bosworth St.
W. Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Svadeba, Joseph D.
268 Granville Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Sweet, Adam R.
708 Federal St.
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 04/29/05

Thomas, Kona
24 Myron St, Apt 20
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/25/05

Thompson, Michael
23 John St.
East Longmeadow, MA 01026
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/28/05

Torres, Juan
2426 High St.
Springfield, MA 01105
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/18/05

Truckey, Jacqueline R.
181 Glendale Road
Southampton, MA 01073
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Vargas, Damaris
81 Walnut St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Velez, Gilberto J.
Velez, Yessica
69 Franklin St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Venancio, Michael G.
Venancio, Keri A.
76 Kirkland Ave.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Vigo, Quintin
Vigo, Myriam R.
53 St. Kolbe Dr.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/20/05

Walker, Karen
191 Parker St.
East Longmeadow, MA 01028
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

White, Cathy A.
P.O. Box 171
Granby, MA 01033
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/22/05

Wight, Thomas M.
Wight, Evelyn L.
75 Kanawha Ave.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/19/05

Winter, Annette M.
470 Memorial Dr.
Apt. 311
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/26/05

Zimmek, Christopher Johnlee
91 Rivers Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 04/16/05

Departments

The following building permits were issued during the month of May 2005.

AMHERST

Amherst College Trustees
58 Woodside Ave.
$50,000 — Convert single family dwelling into two-family

Amherst Shopping Center Assoc.
175 University Dr. Big Y
$347,060 — Interior alterations

Jones Properties LTD Partnership
995 North Pleasant St., Bldg. 1
$80,000 — Repair fire damage

CHICOPEE

Falls Machine Screwing Co.
680 Meadow St.
$20,000 — Interior renovations

Rent A Center
185 Exchange St.
$15,000 — Interior renovations

EAST LONGMEADOW

Healthtrax
45 Crane Ave.
$50,000 — Interior remodeling

HOLYOKE

Aquadro & Cerrati Inc.
Texas Road
$5,399,900 — Renovate school

Homestead Grocery
625 Homestead Ave.
$138,000 — Addition

Pyramid Co. of Holyoke
50 Holyoke St.
$13,600 — Remodel store/Clinton Exchange

Pyramid Co. of Holyoke
50 Holyoke St.
$112,000 — Remodel store/Abercrombe & Fitch

NORTHAMPTON

City of Northampton
125 Locust St.
$120,000 — Construct storage shed

Cooley Dickinson Hospital Inc.
30 Locust St.
$434,000 — Renovate interior basement/ground floor

Kollmorgen Corporation
347 King St.
$54,675 — Relocate women’s room, renovate men’s room

Northampton Housing Authority
155 West St.
$2,171,374 — Construct two story, four-unit building

Northampton Nursing Home Inc.
737 Bridge Road
$220,000 — Install new roof

Pine Street Enterprises
221 Pine St.
$19,300 — New roof

Robert Gougeon
32 Main St.
$111,000 — Renovations to building

Seven Bravo Two LLC
152 Cross Path Road
$70,000 — Upgrade sign structures

Smith College
College Lane
$2,270,000 — Renovate McConnell Hall

Smith College
79 Elm St.
$378,000 — Renovate kitchen area

Smith College
115 Elm St.
$11,770 — Combine two units

WEST SPRINGFIELD

C’Jack Realty Assoc.
1073 Riverdale St.
$300,000 — Erect office building

Green Bear Properties
31-33 Sylvan St.
$175,000 — Renovate space

WESTFIELD

Mercer Island Realty
300 North Elm St.
$285,000 — Addition.

Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of June 2005.

AGAWAM

AJK Landscaping
343 North West St.
Anthony Krzykowski

Eddie’s Nitro R/C and Hobbies
53 Ramah Circle South #53
Wendy Szela

Proden Ent. of America
630 Silver St. #4
Bruce Lawson

Poggi Transport
27 Howard St.
Lee Poggi

St-art Construction
51 Pineview Circle
Arthur Lawson

Twisty’s
1508-1510 Main St.
Anthony Cirillo

Victorian Builders
19 Norman Ter. Ext.
William Philip

AMHERST

Celebrity Beauty
321 Main St.
Stephen Phillips

Human Rights Action International
4 Chadwick St.
Joseph Wronka

Simply Sweet
28 Henry St.
Deborah Carroll

Taste of India
17B Montague Road
Jaswart Single

CHICOPEE

Affordable Cleaning
54 Warwick Road
Yegveniy Saybin

Apex Contracting
27 Richliev St.
Piotr Orzol

Chicopee Scooters
63 Nanatuck St.
Brian and Michelle Heroux

Citizens Investment Services
1283 Memorial Dr.
CCB Investment Group

Helen’s Salon
153 Broadway St.
Hyosook Park

Kim Nails
1523 Memorial Dr.
Chau Al Quach

Kiss My Glass Designs
43 Eldridge St.
Melisa Kjellander, Kim Carroll

Ray Ma Towing
48 Center St.
Ti Ti Wang

Rubber Tree Mulch
45 Felix St.
Paul Stallman II

Xtreme Beauty
38 Hawthorne St.
Theresa Lemay

EAST LONGMEADOW

Body Tomes Spa
430 North Main St.
Linda Marquis

4 C’s Auto Body
353 Shaker Road
Susan and Paul Cunningham

Statewide Siding & Roofing Inc.
11 Lull St.
Stanford Anderson

HADLEY

Magnetic Media
8 Russell St.
Steven Alban

Ronkese Financial
100 Venture Way
Christopher Ronkese

Valley Vintage Cars
81 River Dr.
Michael DiCola, Peter Zajeecek

HOLYOKE

Abercrombe
50 Holyoke St.
Abercrombe & Fitch Stores Inc.

Avenue
50 Holyoke St.
United Retail

Clowntique
256 Maple St.
Christine Burma

Jim’s Auto
1635 Northampton St.
Robert Orsucci

MacKenzie & Co.
50 Holyoke St.
Barbara Spear

O’Brien’s Auto
40 Anderson Hill Road
Edward O’Brien Jr.

Ron’s Auto
150 Suffolk St.
Ronald Porrier

South St. Station
580 South St.
G & D Properties Inc.

Underground Station
50 Holyoke St.
Genesco Inc.

W. W. Moving Co.
21 Hadley Mills Road
Michael Windolowski

LONGMEADOW

A.C.I.
1104 Longmeadow St.
Peter Alberici

Connecticut Valley Weathersby Guild
362 Converse St.
Michael Batchelor

Jimmy’s Remodeling
120 Wimbleton Dr.
James Nellis

NORTHAMPTON

Beyond Builders
51A Clark Ave.
Gene Borowski Jr.

Guild Art Supply
102 Main St.
William Muller

Hair, Etc.
2 Conz St.
Rebecca Brooks, Rabin LaFluer

Petal of Metal
11 Conz St.
Zinnia Wu

Skinsations
56 Main St.
Leslie Gross

That’s The Place
3 Hampden Ave.
Gretchen Siechrist

SOUTH HADLEY

Admark Spanish Advertising
84 Alvord St.
Rene Romero, Silvia Romero

Avalon Industries
12 Fairview St.
N. Scott Nicoli

Maximum Nutrition
83 Hadley Village Road
Janell Erskine

SPRINGFIELD

Atlas Mini Mart
417 St. James Ave.
Adil Haouam

Black & White Cleaning
34-36 Beechwood Ave.
Matthew Whitney

Da Hip Hop Spot
59 New Hall St.
Rodney Smith

H & M Construction
40 Tacoma St.
Loyal Moore, Robert Hinkleydi

MarDam Signs
419 Franklin St.
Marco and Damaris Rosario

WEST SPRINGFIELD

A G Assembly Services Co.
20 Gaskill Ave.
Andrew Leete

ATC Associates
73 William Franks Dr.
ATC Group Service Inc.

American Home Improvement
1139 Westfield St.
American Painting Inc.

Ben’s & Viktor’s Tile Work
44 Riverdale St.
Veniamin Shokov

Brazile Gal
703 Union St.
Alton Jose Correia

Cool Runnings Tanning Salon
311 Elm St.
Becky Sue Price

Dynamic Dock & Door Inc.
64 Lowell St.
Bret Leveillee

Goffer Construction
16 Healy St.
Aleksandra Salagornik

Kaz’s
1769 Riverdale St.
Erica Kazalski

Kia of West Springfield
989 Memorial Ave.
Fathers & Sons Inc.

Northeast Laser Center P.C.
1132 Westfield St.
John Frangie, M.D.

Omega PC
43 Day St.
Sergey Petlyakov

Pompeii Pizza
9 Norman St.
Lauren McIntyre

R & O Construction
299 Main St.
William Racicot

R & S Package Store
529 Union St.
R & S Package Store Corp.

Russian Radio Show Dialog
1506 Westfield St.
Oksana Parchinskaya

Shamrock Associates
129 Valley View Circle
Paul Flynn Jr.

Trade Mark Construction
43 Robinson Road
Travis McIntire

Yelena Sergeychik MBA Coverall
1230 Morgan Road
Yelena Sergeychik

WESTFIELD

Eclipse Hair Salon
24 Elm St.
Stephanie Haskins

Jenamy Inc.
44 Highland View St.
Amy Shuman

N.E. Landscapes
81 Main St.
Brian Rohan

Westfield Equipment Service
54 Llewellyn Dr.
Josh Toomey

Departments

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

AGAWAM

Mechanical Plastics Corp., 65 Moylan Lane, Agawam 01001. John M. Murphy, same. Plastics parts manufacturer.

MFK Enterprises Inc., 6 Sycamore Terrace, Agawam 01001. Max F. Kozynoski, same. Embalming and related services to funeral homes.

AMHERST

Amherst Rotary Good Works Fund Inc., 90 Gatehouse Road, Amherst 01002. Leslie Smith, 538 Market Hill Road, Amherst 01002. (Nonprofit) To solicit charitable donations to distribute to worthwhile community causes.

Education Without Borders Inc., Pratt Dormitory, Amherst College, Amherst 01002. Paige Fern, 202 South Dormitory, Amherst College, Amherst 01002. (Nonprofit). To advance education and literacy, improve the lives of children in developing countries.

One Northampton Street Enterprises Inc., 7 Pomeroy Lane, Amherst 01002. Valerie Hood, 28 Farmington Road, Amherst 01002. Purchase and management of a business.

BELCHERTOWN

Shelton Brothers Inc., 205 Ware Road, Belchertown 01007. Daniel Wesley Shelton, 5 Pointview Road, Ware 01082. Marketing.

BRIMFIELD

RAD Insurance Holdings Inc.,73 Dunhamtown Palmer Road, Brimfield 01010. Maria N. Thomson, same. (Foreign corp; DE) Insurance agency holding company.

CHICOPEE

Chester Village Market Inc., 29 Albert St., Chicopee 01020. David H. Befford, same. To operate a convenience store.

Dmitriy’s New England Construction Inc., 108 Meadow St., Chicopee 01013. Dmitriy Salagornik, 15 New Ludlow Road, Apt. 27, Chicopee 01013. New construction and remodeling.

J.P. Precision Machine Co. Inc., 165 Front St., Chicopee 01028. Zbigniew Szwedo, 69 Crestwood St., Chicopee 01020. Machine manufacturing and design.

Sturbridge Inn Inc., 357 Burnett Road, Chicopee 01020. Kamlesh Patel, 738 Main St., South Portland, ME 04106. Dinesh Patel, 357 Burnett Road, Chicopee 01020, treasurer. To operate and manage real estate.

Swamishri Corp., 1782 Westover Road, Chicopee 01020. Kamlesh C. Patel, 11 Trotters Walk., West Springfield 01089. Convenience store.

W1KK Wireless Association Inc., One Broadcast Center, Chicopee 01013. Robert P. McCormick, 116 Swan Ave., Ludlow 01056. (Nonprofit) To maintain amateur radio facilities for emergency communications and public service, etc.

EAST LONGMEADOW

Criterium Events Inc., 64 Brynmawr Dr., East Longmeadow 01028. Peppino Maruca, 44 Harkness Ave., East Longmeadow 01028. To engage in the management and services of marketing events.

Powday Management Inc., 444A North Main St., East Longmeadow 01028. Gregory Z. Szyluk, II, 117 Oakwood Dr., Longmeadow 01106. To deal in real estate.

Quilts & Treasures Inc., 325 Elm St., East Longmeadow 01028. Mrs. Valerie V. Morton, same. Retail sales of sewing and craft materials.

FLORENCE

45 Pine Street Associates Inc., 45 Pine St., Florence 01062. Virginia H. Hoener, same. To own and manage real estate, etc.

Kids Rule Playhouse Inc., 320 Riverside Dr., Florence 01602. Miadelia M. Marcus, same. Themed parties and supplies.

Tibetan Association of Western Massachusetts Inc.,
10 Matthew Dr., Florence 01062. Tashi Dolma, same. (Nonprofit) To preserve the rich cultural heritage of Tibet, practice the guidelines from the Tibetan government in exile headed by His Holiness The Dala Lama, etc.

GRANVILLE

Moore Money Inc., 191 Reagan Road, Granville 01034. Maryadele G. Moore, same. Lease of real estate.

River Hollow Golf Inc., 191 Reagan Road, Granville 01034. Scott A. Moore, same. To operate a golf driving range and miniature golf course.


HADLEY

Steel Structures Detailing Inc., 245 Russell St., Hadley 01035. Henry Lederman, 190 West Pomeroy Lane, Amherst 01002. Steel detailing.

HOLYOKE

J.T.’s Bakery and Caf» Inc., 514 Westfield Road, Holyoke 01040. John C. Taylor, 333 Nottingham St., Springfield 01104. Retail bakery and related sales.

Little Mountain Animal Hospital Inc.,
435 Northampton St., Holyoke 01040. Mark S. Restey, same. To operate a veterinary business.


HOLYOKE

Massachusetts Oncology Services, P.C., 5 Hospital Dr., Holyoke 01040. Daniel E. Dosoretz, M.D., 13221 Ponderosa Way, Fort Myers, FL. 33907; Corporate Service Co., 84 State St., Boston, registered agent. To provide professional radiation therapy services.

Bradford Builders Inc., 9 Harlo Clark Road, Huntington 01050. Bradford J. Moreau, same. Construction of buildings, etc.


INDIAN ORCHARD

DMG Promotions Inc., 250 Verge St., Suite 6 & 7, Indian Orchard 011151. Carmine Costantino, same. Distribution of gifts and novelties.

LUDLOW

Environmental Technologies Inc., 545 West St., Suite C, Ludlow 01056. Ewa Lupa, 2 Blossom Lane, Belchertown 01007. General construction including lead abatement and mold remediation and treatment.

MONSON

Norcross Restaurant Inc., The, 125 Main St., Monson 01057. Rita C. Belanger, 11 Advance St., Bondsville 01009. Restaurant, cafe and catering.

Prospect Lawncare Inc., 55 Reimers Road, Monson 01057. Christopher N. Russell, same. Lawncare and carpentry.

NORTHAMPTON

Extremes Inc., 73 Barrett St., #3103, Northampton 01060. Gulshan K. Arora, same. Software development and consulting, retail business.

McLain Fitness Inc.,141 Damon Road, Unit E, Northampton 01060. Laura McLain, 5 Lyman St., Easthampton 01027. Fitness center.

Pinecrest Acres Realty Corp., 35 Holyoke St., Northampton 01060. John Edwards, same. To develop and sell residential property at North Main St., Petersham, MA.

The Sandinista Barista Inc., 400 South St., Northampton 01060. Timothy J. Carey, same. To construct and operate one or more restaurants and food service establishments.

PALMER

S.M.G. Camp Inc.,
140 Breckenridge St., Palmer 01069. Edward P.
Gadarowski, R.D. #1, Box 232, 106 Kenyon Hill Road, Cambridge, NY 12816. William Mullen, 140 Breckenridge St., Palmer 01069, secretary. (Nonprofit) To maintain a free camping facilities for Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts — in memory of Stephen M. Gadaroswki and his love of scouting and camping.

SOUTH HADLEY

Dry Brook Development Inc., 14 Alvord St., South Hadley 01075. L. Philip Lizotte Jr., 390 Hadley St., South Hadley 01075. Real estate development.

KES Realty Corp., 33 Fairview St., South Hadley 01075. Patrick J. Spring, same. To deal in real estate.

SPRINGFIELD

Cobalt Financial Inc., 155 Maple St., Suite 402, Springfield 01105.
William B. Foster, same. (Foreign corp; DE) To deal in real estate
transactions.

Evinshir Inc., 827 State St., Springfield 01109. Evins C. Brantley, 91 Dunmoreland St., Springfield 01109. To deal in restaurants, inns, taverns, cafes, etc.

Filco Vending Inc.,1111 Sumner Ave., Springfield 01118. Philip A.
Frogameni Jr., same. Sale and lease of vending machines.

Jerry’s Lawn Sprinklers Inc., 307 Gillette Ave., Springfield 01118.
Gerald E. Dansereau, same. To install and maintain lawn sprinklers, etc.

JP&B Concepts Inc., 1334 Liberty St., Springfield 01104. John P. Gent, 26 Ivan St., Springfield 01104. To operate restaurants.

Mass Bottle & Can Redemption Inc., 23 Morgan St., Springfield 01107. Dany Nguyen, 230 Senator St., Springfield 01129. Bottle and can redemption center.

Upper Hill Resident Council Inc., The, 215 Norfolk St., Springfield 01109. Adrienne C. Osborn, same. (Nonprofit) To enhance the quality of life in the Upper Hill community of Springfield.

WESTFIELD

A & G Transport Co., 241 E. Main St., Suite 253, Westfield 01085. Andrey Krasun, 126 Union St., A 8-15, Westfield 01085. Transportation.

All In One Shop Inc., 1144 Southampton Road, Westfield 01085. George Mathew Changathara, same. Convenience store sales.

Mass Consulting Services Inc., 6 Clinton Ave., Westfield 01085. John Turner, same. Geotechnical testing, consulting and construction monitoring.

WILBRAHAM

Neighborhood Deli Inc., 2341 Boston Road, Wilbraham 01095. Ilyas Yanbul, 59 Cedar St., Ludlow 01056. Restaurant business.

Quinn’s Fine Jewelry Inc., 2040 Boston Road, Wilbraham 01095. Brian Alexander Quinn, 12 Kelly Lane, Hampden 01036. Retail jewelry store.

Departments

The following building permits were issued during the month of May 2005.

AMHERST

Amherst Cinema Center Inc.
28 Amity St.
$5,000 — Remove partitions for structural investigation

I.A.T., LLP
51 North Pleasant St.
$2,900 — Repair roof at Judie’s Restaurant

NORTHAMPTON

Danrich Realty Trust Company
225 King St.
$6,000 — Replace non-bearing walls

Hampshire Educational
97 Hawley St.
$10,850 — Construct partitions to create viewing room

Northampton Terminal Associates
Old South Street
$4,685 — Enlarge break room

SPRINGFIELD

Chapin Corner
136-140 Plainfield St.
$22,030 — Upgrade interior

N.E. Surgical Group
101 Chestnut St.
$34,000 — Interior renovations

New Leadership Charter School
Ashland Avenue
$174,729.70 — Install modular classrooms

Verizon Wireless
215 Bicentennial Highway
125 Paridon St.
$2,500 — Replace antennas on tower

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Dr. Robert Matthews
232 Park St.
$200,000 — Renovate existing building

Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of May 2005.

AGAWAM

Bill Spear’s Tree Service
335 South West St.
Bill Spear

Cormier Landscaping
69 Peros Dr.
Kurt Cormier

Neofit Holistic Studio Day Spa
525 Springfield St.
Tatyana Gitsman, Natalya Poltavets

The Pool Guy
57 Riverview Ave.
Michael Malinoski

Rodier Irrigation
19 Maple St.
Jon-Paul Rodier

AMHERST

Mura Gifts
29 Memorial Dr.
Malou Hafner

Studio 112 She’s My Handyman
26 Cosby Ave.
Ethel Poindexter

CHICOPEE

Don’s Landscaping & Construction
223 Sheridan St.
Sidne Kaafi

Hess Express
1423 Memorial Dr.
Richard Lawlor

Wyman Petroleum
451 Grattan St.
Robert Johnson Jr.

EAST LONGMEADOW

N.E. Consignment Resale
32 Shaker Road
Cindy Sulewski

Theaterxtreme of Springfield
170 Denslow Road
Jason Carrington

HOLYOKE

Holyoke Mini Mart
657 High St.
Kevin Cruz

N.E. Color Business Cards
212 Alan St.
Bridget Walczek

Springfield Lunfat Inc.
455 South St.
Nam Chung

NORTHAMPTON

Center for Healthy Bones
766 North King St.
Mary Pay Roy, M.D.

Drunk Stuntmen
49 Market St.
Steven Sanderson

On The Level
33 Garfield St.
Chris Fournier

Staples Bros. Plumbing
68 Bradford St.
George Staples Jr.

Vegancia
238 State St.
Derek Goodwin

SPRINGFIELD

Custom Tile & Design
26 Phillips Ave.
Garry Gallagher

Ennis Bell & Assoc.
166 Tamarack St.
Corwell Lewis

Grass Roots Landscaping
101 Pinecrest Dr.
Thomas Gentile

J & L Embroidery
1655 Boston Road
Aafum Altusnaga

La Casa del Reggaenton
72 Locust St.
Wanda Cedrez

Mod Enterprises
121 Glenmore St.
Reagan Ali

North End Bottle & Can Return
92 Morgan St.
Dany Nguyen

Pristine Roofing, Siding & Remdlng.
151 Eddywood St.
Jody Curtis

Roy’s Equipment Co.
1130 Bay St.
George Roy

Roy’s Towing Recovery
876 Bay St.
George Roy

Sales Now!
37 Gary Road
Patrick Hassett

Sroka Home Improvement
36 Switzer Ave.
James Sroka, Sr., James Sroka, Jr.

Wipeout-Painting & Drywall
37 Terrence St.
Philip Jones

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Balise Lexus
1385 Riverdale St.
BLS Inc.

The Book Market #223
935 Riverdale St.
Brian Nelson

Century Buffet
247 Memorial Ave.
Xue Ling Ye

Griffin Tire & Battery Service
12 South Boulevard
Geraldine Cross

Karen Charisma Roberts Sizzling Salsa
17 Highland Ave.
Karen Roberts

National Amusements Inc. Showcase
864 Riverdale St.
National Amusements Inc.

Straight Stitches
71 Wolcott Ave.
Cheryl Rosati

West Side Courier
697 Elm St.
Belinda Pavlak

WESTFIELD

Bethel & Sons Logistics
241 East Main St.
Omar Bethel

Disaster Relief Entertainment
159 Bates Road
Dimetrios Kanavaros

John’s Appliances
264 Elm St.
John Thomas

M.J. Griff
88 City View Road
Maria Boccasile

Steve’s Land Clean-Up Service
69 Court St.
Steve Pemberton

Departments

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

AMHERST

New Paradise Inc., 87 Main St., Amherst 01002. Tarlochan Singh, 279 Amherst Road, 37B, Sunderland 01373. To operate a restaurant.

BELCHERTOWN

Fabbo Enterprises Inc., 11 Martin Circle, Belchertown 01007. Frederick P. Fabbo, same. Retail/wholesale garden center and landscaping.

CHICOPEE

KOA Inc., 574 Chicopee St., Chicopee 01013. Richard S. Buffum, 48 Holy Family Road, No. 220, Holyoke 01040. Food service.

LBI Trucking Inc., 1081 Montgomery St., Chicopee 01013. Peter Burkovsky, same. Trucking.

Susan A. Birkner, CPA, P.C., 21 Old Chicopee St., Chicopee 01013. Susan A. Birkner, 1181 Amostown Road, West Springfield 01089. Professional accounting services.

EASTHAMPTON

Optical Communication Interconnect Inc., 193 Northampton St., Easthampton 01027. Ray Desanti, 29 Valley Forge Circle, West Boylston 01583. To manufacture and deal in fiber optic components and systems, etc.

HOLYOKE

Auction N Sold Inc., 395 Maple St., Holyoke 01040. Jonathan G. Giannone, 734 Franklin Ave., Garden City, NY 11530; Jonathan Giannone, 395 Maple St., Holyoke 01040, registered agent. Auction sales via E-bay

Cold River Realty Corp., 330 Whitney Ave., Suite 400, Holyoke 01040. Yves Demers, 9455 108th Ave., Vero Beach, FL 32967. Edward Mrozinski, 138 Slate Road, Chicopee 01020, treasurer. To deal in real estate.

New England Radiation Therapy Management Services Inc., 5 Hospital Dr., Hoyloke 01040. Dr. Michael Karin, same. To provide management services in connection with the provision of radiation therapy services.

LUDLOW

Castle Homes Inc., 202 Woodland Circle, Ludlow 01056. Alan J. Coulombe, same. To remodel and build homes.

NORTHAMPTON

BGHP Inc., 150 Main St., Northampton 01060. Philip Hueber, same. Retail sales.

Pioneer Heating and Cooling Inc., 23 Hooker Ave., P.O. Box 531, Northampton 01061. Timothy F. Gochinski, same. To install and repair heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and refrigeration, etc.

Sabin Starlock Security Inc., 16 Crafts Ave., Northampton 01060. Scott Phaneuf, same. To install and repair locks, security devices, safes, etc.

The Taxi Inc., 1 Roundhouse Plaza, Suite 5, Northampton 01060. Chester L. Krusiewski, same. Taxi service.

PALMER

Andcole Inc., 1037 Thorndike St., Palmer 01069. William P. Michaud, 10 Pheasant Lane, Charlton 01507. To own and operate a restaurant.

SPRINGFIELD

1060 Wilbraham Road Corp., 1060 Wilbraham Road, Springfield 01109. Thomas Dineen, 2 Buckley Road, Wilbraham 01095. To operate a pub/tavern/cafe.

51-59 Taylor Street Inc., 57 Taylor St., Springfield 01103. James
Santinelli, 582 Pinewood Dr., Longmeadow 01106. To deal in real estate.

ACARI Inc., 1795 Main St., Springfield 01103. Kevin Coughlin, same. To manage ACAEI Cranial & Facial imaging LLC.

H.P.G. Enterprises, Ltd., 1 Monarch, Springfield 01144. Ed Borowsky, same. (Foreign corp; DE) To conduct theme and promotional sales in the retail industry.

M G Mortgage Inc., 135 State St., Springfield 01103. Michael S. Amaral, same. Mortgage origination.

Mama’s Retirement Inc., 234 Chestnut St., Springfield 01103. Lynn Marie Merkel, 1115 Page Blvd., Springfield 01104. To own and operate one or more bars, traverns, cabarets, restaurants, etc

Scorpion Enterprises Inc., 91 Fresno St., Springfield 01104. Gregory S. Moran, same. Delivery of packages service.

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Kuras Gardens Inc., 961 Morgan Road, West Springfield 01089. Richard M. Kuras, Jr., same. Producer and manufacturer of agricultural products.

WESTFIELD

Country Club Grille Inc., 129 Glenwood Dr., Westfield 01085. Thomas J. Dirico, same. Restaurant.

Hope For Limpopo Inc., 351 West Road, Westfield 01085. Vaughn Churchill, 116 Pleasant St., Easthampton 01027. (Nonprofit) To support educational opportunities, training, services, etc., for the Limpopo Province of South Africa, etc.

North East Sand and Stone Inc., 162 Union St., Westfield 01085. John W. Johnson, same. To deal in sand, stone, and gravel.

SFCC Inc., 866 Shaker Road, Westfield 01085. Daniel P. Kotowitz, 66 Zephyr Dr., Westfield 01085. To own and operate a golf course, golf shop, etc.

WILBRAHAM

Cantalini Holdings Inc., 3 Belli Dr., Wilbraham 01095. Christopher
Cantalini, same. To deal in real estate.

WHG Inc., 3 Seneca St., Wilbraham 01095. William H. Goodnow Jr., same. To own and operate a tavern or salon.

Departments

The following building permits were issued during the month of May 2005.

AMHERST

Amherst College Trustees
395 South Pleasant St.
$13,000 — Re-roof

Slobody Development Corp.
479 West St
$8,300 — Renovate hair salon space for re-opening

AGAWAM

Six Flags New England
1623 Main St.
$25,000 — Pour concrete for game unit

EAST LONGMEADOW

Mark Czupryra
135 Denslow St.
$123,500 — Self-storage facility

HOLYOKE

Holyoke Mall LP
50 Holyoke St.
$172,000 — Remodel existing store

NORTHAMPTON

Cooley Dickinson Hospital Inc.
30 Locust St.
$57,108 — New offices and storage areas

Hampshire County
222 River Road
$6,238 — Renovations

Seven Bravo Two LLC
152 Cross Path Road
$432,000 — Construct two hangers

SPRINGFIELD

C & W Real Estate Co.
101 State St.
$13,000 — Renovate offices

Mass Mutual
1500 Main St..
$124,674 — Office renovations

WEST SPRINGFIELD

CSK Intermodel
151 Day St.
$25,000 — Erect modular structure

Departments

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

AGAWAM

Trimboard Inc., 25 Century St., Agawam 01001. David W. Townsend, 227 Farmington Road, Longmeadow 01106. Manufacturing.

AMHERST

Art and Music Games Inc., 70 Columbia Dr., Amherst 01002. Roman Yakub, same. Publisher of art and music software.

Umoja Too Performing Arts Company Inc., 560B Riverglade Dr., Amherst 01002. Tashina Bowman, same. (Nonprofit) To expose children to the performing arts, West African Dance and Drum, Japanese Song, South African Dance and Song, etc.

CHESTERFIELD

Golden Sunset Farm Inc., 103 Bryant St., Chesterfield 01012. Gary W. Wickland, 191 South St., Chesterfield 01012. Dairy farm operation.

CHICOPEE

Economy Transmission Repair Inc., 959 Meadow St., Chicopee 01013. A. Timothy Tetrault, same. Automotive repair services.

Ginka Construction Company Inc., 71 Lambert Ter., Chicopee 01020. Jeanne E. Fleming-Armata, same. General construction.

Iglesia Cristiana Casa De Bios Inc., 454 Grattan St., Chicopee 01020. Miguel A. Jusino, 28 Simard Dr., Chicopee 01013. (Nonprofit) To function as a church, etc.

Min Royal Inc., 1503 Memorial Dr., Chicopee 01020. Shan Min Li, 63 Voss Ave., Chicopee, president, treasurer and secretary. Restaurant (Chinese buffet).

EASTHAMPTON

DiGrigoli Easthampton Inc., 66 Northampton St., Easthampton 01027. Paul DiGrigoli, 6 Westernview Road, Holyoke 01027. Beauty salon and spa services.

EAST LONGMEADOW

G & A Import Auto Repair Inc., 41 Fisher Ave., East Longmeadow 01028. Giovanni Gioiella, 40 Highland Ave., E. Longmeadow 01028. To repair imported automobiles.

GRANBY

Granby Educators’ Association Inc., 393 East State St., Granby 01033. Nancy Karmelek, 17 Sherwood Dr., Belchertown 01007. (Nonprofit) To improve the quality of education for all, advance the socioeconomic well-being of educators, etc.

HAMPDEN

Pamerica Inc., 487 Glendale Road, Hampden 01036. Erica Dwyer, same. The practice of law.

HOLLAND

Holland Elementary Parent Teacher Organization Inc., 28 Sturbridge Rd., Holland 01521. Scarlett Ferrar, same. (Nonprofit) To raise funds to help meet the financial and educational needs of our small school.

HOLYOKE

Healing Waters Family Church Inc., 98 Suffolk St., Holyoke 01010. Mark Thomas, 100 Beacon Ave., Holyoke 01040. (Nonprofit) To operate as a church for the propagation of the Christian faith, etc.

Soxology Inc., 10 Hospital Dr., Suite 306, Holyoke 01040. John J.
Swierzewski, D.P.M., same. To deal in items relative to baseball, history of baseball, online and in print, video and other media.

Worlds Famous Hot Dogs Inc., 1597 Northampton St., Holyoke 01040. Kevin J. Chateauneuf, same. To carry on a restaurant business.

LONGMEADOW

East Longmeadow Grille Inc., 153 Elm St., Longmeadow 01028. Laura L. Lacrosse, same. Diner/restaurant.

LUDLOW

Keloo Inc., 245 East St., Apt. A, Ludlow 01056. Sezgin Turan, same. Food service/restaurant.

NORTH HATFIELD

Dermal Direction Inc., 166 Depot Road, North Hatfield 01066. Marian Ruth Curran, same. Wound care consulting and education.

NORTHAMPTON

J&S Trading Inc., 776 North King St., Northampton 01060. Tariq Javaid, 380D Hatfield St., Northampton 01060. Gasoline and all convenience store items.

PALMER

A Clear Vue Auto Glass Inc., 1219 Thorndike St., Palmer 01069. Kevin C. Samble, 66 Hillside Manor Ave., Vernon, CT 06066. Charles T. Samble, 2 Blacksmith Road, Wilbraham 01095, treasurer. To deal in automobile glass.

SPRINGFIELD

Atlantic Cascade Corp., 1272 Morgan Road, Springfield 01089. Claudia H. Mick, 234 Timpany Blvd., Gardner 01440. Business consulting services.

Blue Planet Enterprises Inc., 904 State St., Springfield 01109. Minerva Willis, 18 Stanhope Rd., Springfield 01109. To deal in clothes, telephones/cell phones, lottery sales and retail management.

Torres Insurance Agency Inc., 2652 Main St., Springfield 01107. Daniel Torres, 20 Lafayette St., Springfield 01109. An insurance brokerage business.

THREE RIVERS

New Future Development Corporation II, 2 Springfield St., Three Rivers 01080. John W. Morrison, 166 Peterson Road, Palmer 01069. General contracting, build homes, sell real estate.

WEST SPRINGFIELD

bdfhklt Inc., 233 Western Ave., West Springfield 01089. Eric J. Wapner, same. Commercial printing.

Center for the Traditional Family Inc., 183 Ashley St., W. Springfield 01089. Dean C. Vogel, Sr., same. (Nonprofit) To provide information regarding the value of the traditional family and marriage for raising children, etc.

MacKenzies Furniture Inc., 1680 Riverdale St., West Springfield 01089. Barbara Spear, 285 Christopher Ter., West Springfield 01089. Retail.

WILBRAHAM

Worldwide Freight Service, Inc., 4 Highridge Road, Wilbraham 01095. Richard Francis Faille, same. Transportation brokerage of freight.

Opinion
"We have to save the place or change it." That was the message UMass-Amherst Chancellor John Lombar-di left with state legislators at a hearing last month held by the recently created Committee on Higher Education. Lombardi told the panel, which includes state Sen. Rosenberg, D-Amherst, that the campus is at a critical crossroads and, "under enormous stress."

He talked about neglected buildings that were falling apart, laboratories that needed new equipment, faculty that needed to be added, and fees that have been consistently increased — about 40% over the past four years alone.

The basic message he was sending? That unless something is done — unless a major commitment is made to the university — the campus will have a very hard time merely maintaining its current levels of quality, let alone becoming the major research center that everyone hopes it can some day become.

We hope the message resonates not only with the higher education committee, but with the full Legislature.

Before we elaborate, we must say that there are plenty of budget priorities in this state and, as Michael Widmar, president of the Mass. Taxpayers Foundation, points out in the opinion piece below, the state is far from being out of the woods when it comes to sound fiscal health.

Indeed, the list of new and existing programs that need a boost in the next few budgets is long and getting longer. It includes new health care initiatives, school building programs, infrastructure projects, capital spending, and a widely supported proposal to fund early childhood education for all children in the Commonwealth.

UMass, and especially its Amherst campus, have a place on this list — although the House Ways and Means version of the fiscal ’06 budget, released late last month, does not appear to make the university a priority. That budget plan includes only a $5 million increase for the entire five-campus system, which has an overall budget of $392 million (down from $529 million in 2000). You can do the math, but we’ll do it for you. That’s a mere 1.2%.

The state university needs, and deserves ,much more.

We’ve said many times — and as recently as last month, when we came out in support of a recommendation from a task force on higher education to boost spending on state and community colleges and UMass by one-third over the next several years — that the Legislature must look upon spending in this area as an investment, not an expense.

Why? There are several reasons, starting with the fact that state schools wind up educating many of those who will eventually live and work in the Commonwealth. But also because these schools, especially UMass and its Amherst campus, are more than seats of higher learning — they are drivers of economic development.

If the Pioneer Valley wants to some day move out from under the enormous shadow of Boston and the Route 128 corridor and be a center of job creation, the Amherst campus will be the driving force that makes that happen.

But it can’t handle that assignment when it is fighting to keep its head above ground.

During his testimony before the higher education committee, Lombardi referenced the Old Chapel, the university’s oldest and most photographed building. It’s been closed to the public for six years because it is such deteriorated condition it has been deemed unsafe.

This sad state of affairs is tragic and clearly symbolic of a university in neglect, but the chapel is not the reason why the Legislature needs to ante up and give the Amherst campus a meaningful budget increase.

A boost is needed because if current patterns continue, the university will not only fail to move forward, it will slide back — in terms of reputation, research, and the number of quality programs. And if that happens, the state will pay a price.

It’s like Lombardi said; ’the university is at a critical crossroads.’

Sections Supplements
Recent Tourism Initiatives Beckon
Amherst

Amherst

In the summer months, the streets of Amherst are bustling. And in the fall, spring, and winter, the foot traffic isn’t too shabby, either.

In recent years, this college town has stepped-up its tourism efforts in order to attract a broader range of people from all over the world. Those initiatives have been capitalizing on the town’s strong hospitality infrastructure, which includes several restaurants, unique businesses, and historical and cultural attractions, not to mention the constant draw of the Five Colleges, three of which are located in Amherst ‚ UMass, Amherst College, and Hampshire College ‚ for prospective students, current students, and their families.

And according to some of the people who keep their fingers on the pulse of Amherst’s tourism industry, the town’s new lease on leisure is working.

John Coull, president of the Amherst Area Chamber of Commerce, said many smaller communities struggle with how, when, and to what extent to market their tourist attractions in order to create the best outcomes and address the appropriate audiences.

Larger or more well known communities can use one major attraction ‚ Cooperstown, N.Y., and the Baseball Hall of Fame are an apt example ‚ as the base for more expansive tourism initiatives. And Amherst’s reputation as a college town could be viewed as a similar advantage over regions without such a draw.

But as the chamber moved to increase its focus on tourism within Amherst, the search for one main selling point soon ended. Rather, the idea of selling a collection of attractions that would act in collaboration with one another came up again and again ‚ between local businesses, other towns, museums, and of course, the local colleges and universities.

"Amherst has a number of small but important attractions," said Coull. "Right now, we are learning how to best group them to create a certain magnetism and attract more visitors. Collaboration is the key to it all."

Strength in Numbers

Coull explained that Amherst’s issues regarding tourism are somewhat unique. For many years, the town has had little trouble attracting visitors; the college community alone beckons thousands of people each year to tour the three institutions, visit current students, or attend commencement ceremonies.

The problem was, he said, that after people arrived in Western Mass., Amherst didn’t do enough to show them everything it, and the entirety of the region, had to offer.

"Parents were coming here for visits and had no idea what else was here to see," he said. "As a town, we really don’t have to find people and say ’hey, why don’t you come here?’ What we do have to do is say ’hey, while you’re here, why don’t you take a look around? Here’s what there is to see.’"

Over the past three years, Coull said the Amherst chamber has worked toward cultivating stronger relationships with area businesses and organizations, as well as Five Colleges Inc., in order to best market Amherst as a destination for many different types of individuals, from students to professionals to retirees. Those relationships, he said, are beginning to yield coveted results: catering to an already strong faction of college-related visitors, but also reminding travelers and day-trippers alike that ’college town’ often equates to ’cultural mecca.’

Several groups have contributed to the development of collaborations in tourism efforts, Coull added, among them PDA (Promoting Amherst Downtown), an affiliate of the chamber comprised of several downtown business owners, that has created a Web site and brochure, while also developing a sample walking tour of downtown Amherst. UMass has also stepped forward; it invited the chamber to become a partner in its ’First Week’ activities, developed to acclimate new students to the area.

Further, the town’s fledgling series of juried art shows has played a key role. ArtShow Amherst, entering its second year this month, has been expanded to include five dates in Amherst and six in Pittsfield, allowing for cross-promotion within the two towns.

There is also Museums 10. This is a recently formed partnership consisting of seven college museums, all located on Five College campuses in Amherst and at nearby Smith College in Northampton and Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, as well as two independent Amherst museums ‚ the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art and the National Yiddish Book Center ‚ and Historic Deerfield. The group has completed a suite of materials promoting the museums as one cohesive group of attractions.

Carol Angus, director of information and publications for Five Colleges Inc., said Museums 10 was created out of a mutual understanding among the directors and staff of the various museums, as well as Five Colleges at large, that marketing the museums as a whole rather than separately would effectively increase their visibility.

"We’re learning a lot of lessons about the value of collaboration," she said, noting that one such effort has been ongoing with the Amherst chamber. "These college museums have really come of age over the past 10 to 20 years, and while they continue to serve the overall missions of their respective institutions, they are also very valuable collections, and worthy of public view. And the Eric Carle Museum and the Yiddish Book Center are attracting international visitors ‚ joining with them shows us how much potential we have."

Angus said often, the very nature of a museum located on a college campus discourages public visitation, and joining forces with independent museums ‚ has helped to define Amherst as a prime destination for cultural tourism.

"We realized that this collaboration was an opportunity to do something for our museums, but also to bring tourists into the area," she said, noting that similar partnerships between area museums and organizations have had success in the neighboring Berkshires. "It becomes a benefit for us as well as the community to market the fact that we have something here for everyone ‚ art, history, books Ö we are able to appeal to a wide range of audiences."

Efforts to marketing Amherst’s attractions as one package have also included some of the most successful projects the chamber has taken on recently, Coull said.

Just last year, the chamber produced its first professionally designed and printed brochure, listing the many sights to see within the Amherst area. The brochure details all of the area’s historic sites, art museums and galleries, family attractions, entertainment options, educational resources, shopping destinations, parks, nature trails, restaurants, accommodations, and maps, but bundles them all as smaller parts of one destination, not unlike more notable towns and cities that lean heavily on tourism dollars, like Orlando, Fla., and Hershey, Penn.

"The numbers of those brochures significantly diminished very quickly around town," said Coull. "People were happy to see them."

Crowding the Streets

In coming years, Coull and Angus agreed, plans to continue forging relationships with businesses and organizations across Western Mass., and to continue to promote Amherst as a diverse destination for cultural and historical tourism, as well as an eclectic vacation destination for international travelers, will intensify.

"I see Amherst as a mini-city that offers a great combination," said Angus. "We have wonderful places to eat and to stay, we offer an amazing cultural and aesthetic experience, and we have the safety and variety that attracts people to visit and to stay a while. It’s something for everyone."

Jaclyn Stevenson can be reached at[email protected]

Departments

The following building permits were issued during the month of April 2005.

AMHERST

Florence Savings Bank
383 College St.
$26,501 — Fit-out existing space for business use

Wardens/Vestry of Grace Church
14 Boltwood Ave.
$10,800 — Install roof

AGAWAM

Six Flags New England
1623 Main St.
$40,000 — Erect pumphouse

CHICOPEE

Larry Katz
307 Grattan St.
$8,500 — Add lean-to roof

HOLYOKE

Holyoke Mall LP
50 Holyoke St.
$590,000 — Remodel store

NORTHAMPTON

City of Northampton
20 West St.
$189,000 — Cut out and repoint mortar joints

Firehouse Realty Corp.
340 Riverside Dr.
$95,000 — Construct two-story addition

Kollmorgen Corporation
347 King St.
$27,500 — Install emergency generator on roof

Pine Street Enterprises
221 Pine St.
$65,000 — Construct antennas and cables, 12 x 20 shelter

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Big Y
503 Memorial Ave.
$42,000 — Remodel

Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of April 2005.

AGAWAM

Affordable Makovers
491 South West St.
Gary Hatzipetro

Celebration Entertainment
10 Southwick St.
Celebrations Entertainment LLC

Main St. Deli
791 Main St.
Joanne Looke

Olivera Landscaping
1 South End Bridge Circle
Antonio Olivera

S & R Builders
81 Granger Dr.
Steven Pinette

AMHERST

Equip for less
417 Belchertown Road
Anthony Witman

Mystery Train Records
12 North Pleasant St.
John Burkett, Cynthia Meadows

CHICOPEE

C & C Ventures
33 Haynes Circle
Craig Lampani

Ground Zero Recordings
730 Chicopee St.
Joel Vasquez

McCarthy & Sons
53 Cross St.
Robert Nichols

EAST LONGMEADOW

Chestnut Hill Farm
12 Chestnut St.
Victoria Clark

Quilts & Treasures Inc.
56 Shaker Road
Valerie Morton

Unique Choices
20-22 Granby St.
Gregory Gour

HOLYOKE

Accent Woodworking
161 Main St.
Gary Hutchins

Hunter Logging & Tree Service
980 Main St.
Steven Hunter

Reliable Computer
867 Main St.
Daniel Deschaine

WaWah Kitchen
213 South St.
Hup Leng Lou

NORTHAMPTON

Anything Goes
454 Ryan Road
Michael Bascemi Jr.

Craig the Psychic.com
81 Conz St.
Phillip Browning

KNB Computers
58 Glendale Road
Brian Baxa

3G Images
4 West St.
Steven Harris

Wood & Dye Works
70 Masonic St.
Diane Welter

SPRINGFIELD

Angel Grocery
346 Orange St.
Mohammad Amran

Da-V Music
39 Montrose St.
Andre Davey

G.R. & R.R. Rentals
104 Clifton St.
Giraliz Rivera, Ricardo Rosa

Hong Kong Combo
852 Main St.
Cheng Kwak

King Limo Transportation
8 Gilman St.
Vadim Adamyan

Lucy’s Gifts & More
95 St. James Ave.
Luz Melendez

N.E. Floor & Janitorial Inc.
75B LaBelle Dr.
David Douglas

Outdoor Party Rentals
41 Margaret St.
Brent Bertelli

Reiki for Animals
15 Michigan St.
Karen Kulakowski

Roy’s Shearing & Recycling
1130 Bay St.
George H. Roy

Roy’s Towing Recycling Services
246 Tapley St.
George H. Roy

Scott’s Pup Tent
1330 Carew St.
Scott Taylor

Steel Pan Networks
22 Trillium St.
Ian Brathwaite

WEST SPRINGFIELD

All Star Towing
414 Park St.
Sarat Ford Sales Inc.

Balise Toyota
1399 Riverdale St.
BTLS Inc.

Fathers & Sons Inc.
434 Memorial Ave.
Damon Cartelli

It’s a Good Life Massage
1201 Westfield St.
Joan Luchini

Machine Control Engineering
23 Lina Lane
William Huggins

O’Connell’s Convenience Plus #38
2044 Riverdale St.
Michael Sobon

Verizon Wireless
1123 Riverdale St.
Cellco Partnership

WESTFIELD

Al’s Custom Flooring
112 Pontoosic Road
Joseph Alouise

Bill’s Repair Service
530 Pochassic St.
William Sorel

Genesis Unizex Salon
37 Elm St.
Christian Nieves, Rosa Gomes

L & M Construction
241 East Main St.
Laurent Gignac

Maxxtone
76 Broad St.
Johnathan Adams

Vivid Hair Salon
88 Main St.
Barbara Beiz

Opinion
When the topic of discussion is economic development, most people think about jobs.

Specifically, they think about bringing jobs to a region from elsewhere. They think about large manufacturing plants that employ hundreds, if not thousands. They think about new and emerging fields, like bioscience, and the jobs they could create.

All of the above certainly fit the definition of economic development, but there is another component that is often overlooked, but shouldn’t be — workforce development.

Why? Because before you can attract new manufacturers (or keep existing ones) or develop clusters of businesses in new sectors like biotechnology, there must be a workforce in place that can handle those demands.

And at the moment, there are serious questions about whether the Pioneer Valley, and the state as a whole, has the kind of workforce that will be needed to carry out that broad assignment. Many, in fact, see a number of warning signs on the horizon concerning the Baystate’s labor force.

The Workforce Solutions Group, comprised of a number of state business, labor, and higher education agencies, has identified what it calls a "perfect storm" of economic conditions that may imperil the state’s capacity to compete — and prosper. The three crises facing the state, according to the group, are:

– A profound mismatch in labor supply and demand. Two in five employers say there are too few qualified applicants to fill openings, and that training resources are insufficient to prepare workers to meet employer needs;

– A recognized short supply of new, well-paying jobs. The state has a net loss of more than 200,000 jobs since 2001, and only 6,200 jobs have been added since December 2003; and

– The alarming fact that many available workers cannot obtain training and education opportunities. Almost one-third of the state’s workers, 1.1 million, lack the basic skills needed for employability in the new economy. Fully 746,000 workers lack a high school diploma and another 152,000 lack the strong English language skills needed to make them employable.

To address those concerns, the Workforce Solutions Act of 2005 has been filed. It contains a number of budget

and legislative proposals designed to ex-pand lifelong learning opportunities for Massachusetts workers, students, the unemployed, and underemployed. It’s not being referred to as an economic development measure, but it should be.

The bill, as filed, would help fill critical vacancies across the Common-wealth, provide flexible training funds so that businesses can respond better to market dynamics, target health care and other growth industries — where a skilled, ready workforce will allow job growth and curb job loss — and extend the life of the highly successful Workforce Training Fund (due to sunset this year), which has helped train more than 136,000 workers in 1,714 companies since 1998.

As area manufacturers told BusinessWest (see story, page 35) Workforce Training grants have helped offset the huge cost of the training needed to enable companies to remain competitive. And they stressed that the need for such training is ongoing, especially as global competition escalates.

Another highlight of the proposed legislation is a new program that would enable more than 4,000 low-income, under-educated working adults to attend community or state colleges and obtain an associate’s degree or industry recognized credential. Still another proposal would more than triple the current appropriation earmarked to build collaborative training, education, and skills development programs among employers in a given region or industry sector.

None of these initiatives would warrant banner headlines, nor would they would likely come up in discussions about regional economic development efforts. But they are very important components of a broader strategy to help Massachusetts remain competitive on the global stage.

And we hope they become reality.

Features
Chamber, Western New England College Program Focuses on the Community
Michele Campbell-Langford

Michele Campbell-Langford says the Leadership Institute has helped her identify strengths, weaknesses — and areas in need of “tweaking.”

Keith McKittrick remembers one of the exercises in teamwork. His group, like the others in this particular session of the 2005 Leadership Institute, was hiking the Appalachian Trail (figuratively) when its most experienced hiker was attacked by a bear and seriously injured.

"We were presented with a number of options," said McKittrick, associate dean for Development and Law Alumni Relations at Western New England College (WNEC), "and essentially told to devise the best game plan.

"As it worked out, we all made better decisions in groups than we did individually," he continued, noting that he originally wanted to send some people ahead to get help, while the team decided it was best to carry the wounded member out together. "What we learned is that is it’s important to get input from people and make decisions together."

This was one of the many lessons imparted during the seven sessions of the Institute, a program created by the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce and conducted in partnership with WNEC. The Institute’s course of study was designed to groom the region’s next generation of business leaders andcommunity activists. The Class of 2005 graduated on April 5 and thus joineda list of about 900 area business and civic leaders who have taken part in the program since it was initiated in 1976.

Back then, the program’s primary focus was stressing the importance of community service, said Anthony Chelte, a professor of Management at WNEC, and Leadership Institute session facilitator.

And while that remains a key consideration, the program has expanded its mission to provide participants with lessons in leadership that will benefit their company or non-profit group.

"We want people to leave the program with skills and insight that they can bring back to their organization," he said. "At the same time, we’re emphasizing the value of giving back to the community in which they live and work."

By doing so, the Institute is helping a wide range of area businesses and non-profit agencies cultivate leaders who will follow those currently managing those organizations, said Russell Denver, president of the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield (ACCGS), who graduated from the Institute in 1989, when he was working as a staffer for what was then the Springfield chamber. He told BusinessWest that, 16 years later, he still recalls the tone and the direction of the program.

"I remember that they made it abundantly clear that it is important for people in business to become involved in the community," he said. "That’s something that’s stayed with me."

Many different kinds of lessons have stayed with program participants over the years — a list that includes several judges, school principals, and elected officials including U.S. Congressman Richard Neal. BusinessWest looks this month at how the Institute has met its mission, and why that work is important to the Pioneer Valley.

Follow the Leader

Michele Campbell-Langford also remembers the hiking-the-Appalachian-Trail exercise. Like McKittrick, she said it gave her a new perspective on the art of decision-making and the dynamics of working within a team.

"The Institute helped me realize what kind of leader I am," said Campbell-Langford, an assistant principal at the Rebecca Johnson School in Springfield’s Mason Square area. "I realized that I’m fairly compassionate, but firm when I need to be firm. I learned that, in a group dynamic, it’s not always good to have people that are the same; when you have different leadership styles, you bring different interpretations to whatever situation you’re looking at."

Campbell-Langford told BusinessWest that the Institute helped her identify her strengths and weaknesses and the need to exploit the former and work on the latter. "I found out what I needed to tweak," she said.

Such learning experiences are what the creators of the Institute had in mind, said Chelte, noting that the program has historically had three main goals: leadership development, cultivating volunteers to serve on boards for area non-profit organizations, and enhancing the visibility of both the Chamber and the college. Each of those has been met, he said, adding that the Institute has helped forge a strong partnership between the college and the business community, while imparting lessons in effective leadership on two generations of Springfield area business people.

WNEC became involved in 1981, after Stanley Kowalski, dean of the School of Business, participated in the program and saw its many benefits for students and the community as well.

About 30 individuals attend the Institute each year, said Chelte, noting that participants are nominated by representatives of their companies or non-profits. Students range in age from their early 20s to their late 50s, but most would be considered younger professionals. Many area companies have sent a number of individuals through the program. That list includes MassMutual, Baystate Health System, Western Mass Electric Co., and several banks, colleges, law firms, and accounting firms. Non-profit groups represented this year include the New North Citizens Council, which had three participants, SAGE, and the Springfield School System.

The broad goal of the Institute is to leave people with practical lessons they can apply to their everyday work and life situations, said Nancy Creed, member of the Class of 2000, who told BusinessWest that there have been many opportunities to apply what she absorbed.

"I use a lot of what I learned," she said, adding that she participated while serving as communications director for the ACCGS "It taught me a lot about team building and my personal learning style and how that interacts with other people and the way they communicate and work together.

"As for my learning style, I learned that I need to do it; if I’m putting a bike together, I won’t read the instructions — I’ll just put it together and when I’m done I’ll see if it came out right," she continued. "But if I know that someone I’m on a team with has a different style, where they need to read those directions, I’m very cognizant of that and won’t impose my style on them; I’d say, ’you read the instructions and I’ll put it together.’"

Creed served on the planning committee for the next session of the Institute after her graduation, and in that role she helped usher in a slight change in overall focus.

"When I went though the program, it was more focused on volunteerism, and there was a whole section on being on boards and what boards are looking for in members," she said, adding that the Institute has moved away from that strategy because most participants are already involved in the community. "So the Institute has really gone on to the next level, which is preparing the next business leaders of Greater Springfield."

School of Thought

Tony Chelte will be leaving WNEC after the current semester ends.

He’s taking on a new challenge, as dean of the College of Business Administration at Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls, Texas. He says he’ll miss many things about the Pioneer Valley, including the Leadership Institute, which he considers one of his career high points.

"I’ve taken a lot from the program," he said, "and I think it has made the local community stronger. Overall, it’s been an incredibly rewarding experience."

If asked, the Institute’s 900 graduates would say the same thing.

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

Departments

Adams, Debra A.
51 Park Dr.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/03/05

Aldrich, Jamie W.
82 Olea St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Anderson, Kimberly Marie
58 Colony Road, Apt. 2B
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/14/05

Bailey, Michael J.
80 Hudson Ave.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/08/05

Barthelette, David J.
48 Old Family Road, Apt. 5
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/04/05

Bednaz, John
Bednaz, Aida L.
154 Bacon Road
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/03/05

Berard, Karen H.
188 Flint St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/07/05

Bernashe, Philip A.
27 Walter St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Bracey, David R.
139 Rosemary Dr.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Brin-Martin, Gabriele T.
272 Sargeant St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/07/05

Bryskiewicz, Edward A.
Bryskiewicz, Mary A.
10 Rosedell Dr. Ext.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/03/05

Bugli, Brian J.
76 Cote Ave., Apt. 2R
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Burns, Veronice H.
27 Saab Court, #1006
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/15/05

Buxton, Charles A.
33 Norman Ter., Apt 44
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Carr, Linda C.
85 Sumner Ave., Apt. 6
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/07/05

Coffey, Timothy Maurice
Coffey, Cynthia Susan
83 Sheridan St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/08/05

Cormier, Peter R.
Cormier, Pamela M.
74 Spear Road
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Daignault, Robert M.
30 Kay St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/07/05

DeLeon, Juan Alberto
33 Lincoln St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Demars, Ann
41 Miller Road
Southwick, MA 01077
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Devine, Theresa L.
226 Sewall St.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/15/05

Dombeck, Howard P
131 Vincent St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/07/05

Eddy, Joseph J.
25 High St.
Agawam, MA 01001
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/08/05

Fiddler, Andrew E.
38 Elizabeth St.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Gagne, Joseph J.
89 Berkshire Ave.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Glassanos, Paul C.
126 Old Brook Road
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/08/05

Goggin, Paula Ann
15 Rachel St.
Springfield, MA 01129
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/13/05

Gonzalez, Lynn
26 Olivine St.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/07/05

Hall, Glen
39 Courtland St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/08/05

Hall, Kenneth John
31 Pheland Ave.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/05/05

Howard, George A.
Howard, Karin T.
77 Chauncy Walker
Belchertown, MA 01107
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/10/05

Hutchins, Clayton Lee
82-B Edbert St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/13/05

Joaquim, Damon
Joaquim, Nichole J.
64 Connecticut Ave.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/04/05

Kelly, Jean L.
274 Corcoran Boulevard
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Kelly, William A.
274 Corcoran Blvd.
Springfield, MA 01103
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Knight, Diane S.
333 Tiffany St.
Springfield, MA 01022
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/12/05

Kosel, Todd G.
913 Stony Hill Road
Wilbraham, MA 01095
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/03/05

LaMontagne, Philip R.
103 Doverbrook Road
Chicopee, MA 01022
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

LaRock, Sally
148 Hanson Dr.
Springfield, MA 01128
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Lemanis, Diane
24 Price St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

MacDonald, Jeremy Robert
6 Chestnut Plain Road
Whately, MA 01093
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/13/05

Machos, Christine L.
102 Glendale Road
Agawam, MA 01002
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/03/05

Malcolm, Andrea
88 Stonina Dr.
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/10/05

Mancini, Francis A.
51 Bonair Ave.
West Springfield, MA 01089
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/14/05

McGoldrick, Robert S.
127 Rugby Road
Longmeadow, MA 01106
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Melendez, Julio A.
35 Carlton St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/10/05

Mendel, Linda A
33 Elwood Dr.
Springfield, MA 01103
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/10/05

Mendoza, Hector J.
19 Humbert St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/15/05

Mesa-Melendez, Emma G.
35 Carlton St.
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/10/05

Norris, Carol Ann
85 Better Way
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/04/05

Patrickson, George K.
98 Massachusetts Ave.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Pauly, Avis E.
603 James St.
Chicopee, MA 01020
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Peoples, Willie Wayman
157 Bowdoin St.
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Pereira, Maria C.
73 Ludlow Ave.
Ludlow, MA 01056
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/14/05

Piette, Robert J.
16 Madison St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Popielarz, JoAnn M.
138 Willimansett St.
South Hadley, MA 01075
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Purcell, Richard Paul
99 Martin St.
Holyoke, MA 01040
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/07/05

Remillard, Raymond
922 Berkshire Ave.
Indian Orchard, MA 01151
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/10/05

Roy, Angela N.
91 Allen Park Road
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/13/05

Sheehan, Brian N.
71 Treetop Ave.
Springfield, MA 01118
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Simard, Charles F.
207 Northwest St.
Feeding Hills, MA 01030
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/09/05

Simpson, Jean A
307 Chestnut St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/07/05

Smith, Denise A.
157 Navajo Road
Springfield, MA 01109
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/08/05

Tanhauser, Steven A.
28 Tyrone St.
Springfield, MA 01104
Chapter: 13
Filing Date: 03/07/05

Townley, Margo D.
248 Amherst Road
Belchertown, MA 01007
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Turner, Matthew J.
35 Grenada Terrace
Springfield, MA 01108
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/08/05

Twining, Earl W.
343 Chicopee St., Apt. 24
Chicopee, MA 01013
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/03/05

Vennell, Athan
19 Michelman Ave.
Northampton, MA 01060
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/13/05

Voisine, Jane
18 Brickett St.
Springfield, MA 01119
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Widtfeldt, Priscilla B
60 Parsons St.
Easthampton, MA 01027
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/11/05

Wilgus, Brian E.
78 George St.
Westfield, MA 01085
Chapter: 7
Filing Date: 03/03/05

Departments

The following building permits were issued during the month of April 2005.

AGAWAM

The Oaks
1676 Suffield St.
$39,290 — Staircase to new banquet hall

Six Flags New England
1623 Main St.
$542,000 — Pour foundations in waterpark

AMHERST

Boyden & Perron Garage
41 South Whitney St.
$12,000 — Construct connector between buildings

Trustees of Hampshire College
893 West St.
$64,000 — Install fume hoods

CHICOPEE

Top Flite
425 Meadow St.
$75,000 — Interior renovations

HOLYOKE

Pyramid Co. of Holyoke
50 Holyoke St.
$15,000 — Renovate Today’s Nails

Robert Varady
66 Beacon Ave.
$23,550 — Physician’s office build-out

NORTHAMPTON

Baldev Singh
207 Main St.
$10,000 — Replace store-front window

Harley Sacks
31 Trumbull Road
$41,184 — Interior refinishing and improvements to office areas

Paul D’Amour
138 North King St.
$40,000 — Relocate prepared food counter and prep area

Philip and James Greco
324 King St.
$35,000 — Remodel lounge

Smith College
91 South St.
$11,000 — New roof

WEST SPRINGFIELD

United Bank
95 Elm St.
$11,600 — Build storage room