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

NORTHAMPTON DISTRICT COURT

Walker Industries LLC v. West Track Corp. Allegation: Breach of contract — Failure to pay for goods sold and delivered: $5,000 Date Filed: Aug. 9

HAMPSHIRE SUPERIOR COURT

Shelton Brothers v. Noble Union Trading LTD Allegation: Breach of contract — Failure to pay for goods sold and delivered: $35,504.52 Date Filed: July 28

HOLYOKE DISTRICT COURT

Holyoke Mall Co. LP v. Rufus Inc. d/b/a Family Pet Center Allegation: Breach of contract — Failure to pay store lease: $518,674.38 Date Filed: Aug. 8

SPRINGFIELD DISTRICT COURT

Intracom USA Inc. d/b/a Intracom v. Michael Filamonte f/d/b/a ITA Computers & Katherine Filamonte f/d/b/a ITA Computers Allegation: Breach of contract — Failure to pay for goods sold and delivered: $7,139.33 Date Filed:Aug. 1

Luxottica Group d/b/a Garde Optics Inc. v. Aspen Enterprises Inc. d/b/a The Eyeglass Co. Allegation: Breach of contract — Failure to pay for goods sold and delivered: $1,686.66 Date Filed: Aug. 4

C o n s t r u c t i o n Service, a Division of Dauphinais & Son Inc. v Robert A. Parket d/b/a P & P Concrete Allegation: Breach of contract — Failure to pay for goods sold and delivered: $2,842.52 Date Filed:Aug. 5

Daniel J. Hanson d/b/a Bailey-Hanson Mechanical v. Timothy Thompson, Robert
Weiss, Round Hill Realty LLC and Eric Appleton Allegation: Breach of contract — Failure to pay for labor and materials: $6,207.95 Date Filed: Aug. 7

WESTFIELD DISTRICT COURT

Connecticare Inc. v. William R. George d/b/a Machine Tool Repair Allegation: Breach of contract — Failure to pay medical insurance premiums: $2,246.76 Date Filed: July 26

Opinion
Learning a Lesson from China
China has shed its fabled economic isolation and is now a world-class trader that uses its advantages of size, scale and cost to compete in the international marketplace. The consensus is that within a generation or two, China’s economy will equal America’s.

How did China advance so dramatically?

Historically, China has always had vast resources and formidable power — but has only intermittently sought engagement with the wider community of nations. After many years of walling itself from the outside world, China is again welcoming foreign investment and engaging in international trade. While others debate globalization, China has mastered it.

Some are alarmed at the pace of China’s economic expansion and seek to constrain it. We have seen the elements of this strategy in various proposals to erect barriers to U.S. imports of Chinese goods.

Not only are these attempts to inhibit China’s international trading unrealistic, they are potentially damaging to the U.S. economy and job growth. A prosperous China with a rapidly expanding middle class represents one of the most significant opportunities for the United States.

U.S. producers across nearly every industrial sector — from commercial aircraft to medical devices to integrated circuits — recognize China as one of the world’s most promising export markets. Boeing, for example, will soon begin filling an order for 60 new commercial airplanes for China. Limiting U.S.-China trade might actually do more to inhibit job growth in Seattle than in Shanghai.

U.S. agriculture also has a growing stake in China trade policy: Since it joined the WTO in 2001, China has become one of the fastest growing markets for U.S. farm products, with exports tripling from $1.7 billion to $6.1 billion in 2004.

And that’s just the export story. Last year, affiliates of U.S. companies doing business in China sold more than $75 billion worth of products to Chinese consumers and businesses.

Clearly, the U.S. has nothing to gain by adopting a protectionist posture. Rather than attempting to constrain the competition, we should adopt a strategy that will amplify our own strengths. Such a strategy has five elements:

  • First, we must take advantage of the economic opportunities in our own hemisphere. Congressional approval of CAFTA was an important step toward creating more outlets for products made in the U.S. This should be followed by a revitalized effort to complete the Free Trade Area of the Americas, covering 34 nations.
  • Second, we should deepen the Transatlantic Business Dialogue and work towards the creation of a Free Trade Agreement with the European Union. This would stimulate growth and provide an incentive for Western Europe to undertake reforms needed to keep their economies internationally competitive;
  • Third, we must intensify our trade program in Asia in order to benefit from the increasing economic interdependence among the region’s nations. Most importantly, we should build on the success of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s recent trip to the U.S. to deepen our trade relationship with India. And the U.S. should accelerate trade negotiations with Southeast Asia, including Vietnam, and open talks with Japan and Korea. China is already moving aggressively to tie neighboring economies to its own.
  • Fourth, we must ensure a successful conclusion to the global negotiations in the World Trade Organization. This will further encourage China and virtually every important trading nation to live up to their WTO commitments and play by the rules of foreign trade;
  • Finally, if we are going to meet this new competitive challenge, we must get our own house in order. The biggest concern of American industry, according to a recent Commerce Department survey, is not foreign imports but domestic policies and problems. Manufacturers cite rising healthcare costs, burdensome taxation, excessive regulation, and inadequate investment in research and education as the prime constraints to long-term competitiveness.

China’s successful economic expansion is creating new wealth, for Chinese citizens and for Americans. As a society founded upon free enterprise, let’s not complain that today’s Chinese businesspeople are becoming too enterprising. We can learn a lesson from China: Isolation is not the answer. Instead, we must do what our nation does best: foster innovation, encourage entrepreneurship and boost productivity. That is how America will prosper.

Sy Sternberg is chairman and chief executive officer of New York Life Insurance Company. This opinion was first published in The Wall Street Journal on August 9, 2005.

Sections Supplements
Rick Black Sets an Aggressive Course for TD Banknorth Insurance
As Rick Black commenced a job search last spring, near the end of his 17-year stint with Marsh Inc., the insurance brokerage unit of financial services giant Marsh & McLennan Cos., TD Banknorth Insurance wasn’t on his radar screen — not even a blip.

“I asked a friend in the business what he would do if he was going to start all over again but stay in insurance,” Black recalled for BusinessWest. “He said, ‘you’re going to laugh harder than you’ve laughed before … but I’d take a long, hard look at Banknorth.’

“He was right — I laughed,” Black continued, noting quickly that while he hadn’tconsidered TD Banknorth Insurance Group, the 44th largest insurance broker in the country — with $55 million in annual revenue, compared to Marsh’s $6 billion — he did eventually take a look, and really liked what he saw.

“This was a company clearly moving in the right direction,” said Black, who became president of anknorth’s Massachusetts Region, headquartered in Springfield, in late May. In that capacity, he will direct a multifaceted effort to grow the division and gain market share in a business that is seeing profound change.

His general strategy is to help expand TD Banknorth’s footprint across Massachusetts — and the Northeast — and to grow each aspect of his division — personal lines, small commercial, and the mid-market segment. He will do so through implementation of a shift in business philosophy — from being an insurance agent to acting, as he put it, as a business consultant.’

“By doing so, we can forge much better relationships with our clients,” he said. “This is a somewhat different approach that will help us create more value for our many types of customers.”

BusinessWest looks this issue at the course Black is setting for Banknorth’s Massachusetts division, and how he hopes to take full advantage of the parent company’s aggressive, entrepreneurial way of doing business.

Background Check

When Black was working as second vice president of The Travelers in the mid ’80s, he served as part of something called the Business Diversification Group. This was a team that developed a diversified offering of insurance and banking products that were to be bundled and distributed through the company’s large-employer market.

“It was a little ahead of its time,” he told BusinessWest, adding that it would be several years before this type of product would be commonplace within the financial services industry. Today, he explained, diversification and specialization are the watchwords in an industry where companies can really no longer be all things to all people.

Black has observed a great deal of change in his 30-year career in insurance and financial services, including the demise of Travelers and many other former stalwarts of the industry.

He comes to TD Banknorth from his post as product and development leader for Marsh & McLennan’s Hartford office. He took that position in 2004, just as an investigation of the company by New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer was unfolding. Spitzer was probing allegations that Marsh brokers were rigging a supposedly unbiased bidding process in favor of insurers that provided the firm with what are known as ‘contingent commissions,’ or what the attorney general considered kickbacks.

Spitzer eventually filed suit against Marsh & McLennan, a development that sent its stock plummeting and eventually led to a $750 million fourth-quarter loss for the company and dramatic changes and cutbacks across the board.

“I knew it was time to move on,” said Black, who, like many Marsh executives, left to seek higher ground.

He found it within the TD Banknorth Insurance Group, the Portland, Me.-based insurance arm of Toronto-based TD Banknorth. As director of the Massachusetts division, he succeeds Joseph Fico, who became CEO of the insurance group earlier this year.

Black said that, upon heeding his friend’s advice to look into the company, he learned that, while Banknorth is small by Marsh’s standards, it has strong growth potential.

“It has a breadth and a depth that would rival some of the giants in this industry,” he explained. “This is the 44th-largest insurance agency in the country, and yet its capabilities would rival some of those in the top 5.”

Black said there are many things about the company that attracted him, including conditions that would enable him to “make a difference,” as he put it. And then, there’s the matter of the company’s entrepreneurial nature.

“It’s about as entrepreneurial as you can get with an entity that is part of a larger corporate organization,” he explained. “We’re in the infancy stages of building a culture, building a value proposition, and building a capability that will truly bring value to a customer beyond what they can garner from a local agent.”

When asked to elaborate on the company’s entrepreneurial nature, Black said this trait applies to everything from acquisition of other agencies to new-product development, to cultivation of the ‘business consultant’ mindset that he described. And, moving forward, he intends to move aggressively in all three areas.

Indeed, as the Banknorth Insurance Group works toward maintaining and improving its 12% growth rate from last year and expanding its territorial footprint — the New York/New Jersey area is the latest target in a move that coincides with TD Banknorth’s acquisition of Hudson United Bank — Black will focus specifically on growing market share in the Bay State.

The Massachusetts division has several offices, said Black, listing facilities in Springfield (the former Palmer Goodell agency), Methuen, Topsfield, a small office in Boston, and three locations on Cape Cod, a main office in Orleans and two satellites in Brewster and Dennis. Throughout that network, which he intends to expand through organic growth and acquisition, Black wants to leverage the many competitive advantages afforded by being part of the Banknorth group.

As one example, he mentioned a broad paradigm shift with regard to how the company approaches business.

“To go after individual clients on a policyby- policy basis may not necessarily be the best way for us to proceed,” he explained.

“If we can aggregate groups, whether they’re employer groups, such as a case where we can sell personal lines to a large-employer group, we can drive a better deal. “If we can aggregate small commercial businesses into groups, such as a self-insurance group, we can create better value for those customers,” he continued. “That will be a clear focus of ours as we move forward; we want to look at alternative ways to solve problems for businesses by aggregating.”

As it looks to grow market share in Massachusetts, Banknorth will make acquisition a key part of that strategy, said Black, adding that as the company adds agencies, it will also bring to bear a different model, a different support mechanism, and new technology needed to achieve established goals.

As an example, he pointed to the Cape,where Banknorth acquired an agency with a long history in the community. In addition to changing the name — a move that drew some criticism in a tradition-laden area, the company also changed the approach to doing business.

“To be successful, we knew we were going to have to do things differently,” he said, eferring to a strategy to aggregate the small businesses that dominate the Cape economy. We became an old-time agency doing business in a very different way.¡± In a broad sense, this is what Banknor this doing across the state and the Northeast, he said, adding that agencies cannot survive if they try to do business as usual.

The Bottom Line

In general, Banknorth wants to continually reshape its focus ¡ª and its business strategy ¡ª to one that is more concerned with solving problems than selling insurance and other products.

This is the way the financial services industry is evolving, said Black, and it is a pattern that will continue in the years to come, as individual companies and industry groups look for value and, as he mentioned, a business consultant.

In this environment, companies that can blend deep resources with an innovative, entrepreneurial mindset have a clear advantage over competitors, especially the smaller agencies that are disappearing from the landscape, said Black.

" We can do many things that those smaller agencies can he explained. Wehave the resources and the imagination to bring real value to our customers and be a leader in this industry.

This is what Black saw in the Banknorth Insurance Group when the company did eventually work its way onto his radar screen.

George OBrien can be reached at[email protected]

Cover Story
’InterActors’ Blend Stage Savvy With Business Sense
DramaWorks

DramaWorks

DramaWorks, a Northampton-based consulting company that uses theater to address the many challenges of the business world, has created a national presence for itself in under a decade. While its business model is hard to define, managing partners Tim Holcomb and Erik Mutén explain that because theatrical flair blends so well with the lessons of life, drama in the corporate world does, in fact, work.

In the theater world, acting jobs like those provided by DramaWorks InterActive are called ’corporate gigs.’

That phrase is just one way to describe what the company does, however, as it fails to fit into any one category. Some might call DramaWorks a theater troupe, others a consulting firm, and still others, an educational resource.

Hard as it may be to define the business, though, DramaWorks has created a successful niche by combining the disciplines of theater, psychology, and business management to create a surprisingly cohesive set of services.

DramaWorks InterActive was launched in 1997, under the direction of Erik Mutén, a psychologist and organizational consultant with an MFA in Stage Direction, and Tim Holcomb, founding director of the Hampshire Shakespeare Company in Amherst and a seasoned member of the theater, film, and television industries. The partners wanted to create a company that would take the organizational issues that exist in all types of companies and put them center stage, quite literally, in order to allow managers and employees alike to consider them, examine them, and ultimately, change them for the better.

What they have created is a nationally-known consulting business that provides a unique set of tools for its clients — beginning with the story-telling power of theatrical productions and continuing with facilitated discussion and problem-solving exercises needed to help move an organization forward.

"The core concept of DramaWorks is to help organizations move toward specific goals through action-learning," said Mutén. "A big problem with a lot of trainings is that they often lead to big discussions that eventually fall flat and go nowhere. Our model is much more effective at highlighting what the issues are, and allowing groups of people to gather ideas and work through them."

Setting the Stage

The company addresses a wide range of internal corporate issues, from gender and power dynamics, multi-culturalism, teambuilding, and leadership styles, to more specific issues, such as patient safety and privacy for clients in health care, or succession planning for family businesses. By staging largely improvisational skits, DramaWorks’ ’InterActors,’ as they’re dubbed, call attention to the complex interactions within a given company that can make it work, or detract from productivity, communication, or even the organization’s overall mission.

DramaWorks has collaborated with all types of businesses, and provides a tailored suite of programs for family businesses, health care facilities, and corporations hoping to evaluate their internal culture, sometimes during a time of change. In addition to live performances and workshops, the company also publishes videos for training purposes and soon hopes to add an interactive, online component to its services.

Its current client list includes several prominent names in business, education, and health care, among them IBM, Lucent Technologies, Harvard University, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and State Farm Insurance. But the concept for a business that would couple theater with theories of psychology and management, and eventually appear at major corporations across the country, grew out of one small production staged locally.

A short play was drafted and performed for the UMass Amherst Family Business Center, dealing with the stresses of family-owned and operated business.

"We improvised a play and held two performances, and we thought that would be it," said Mutén. "But other family business centers across the country began calling and the idea started to take off."

Gradually, he said, DramaWorks expanded to offer improvisational theater pieces for a more- diverse set of businesses. One constant is the examination of what he calls "the human factor" that can often derail an existing or developing business plan or goal — the feelings, emotions, opinions, work habits, or simply the different types of people that must work together in various positions for a business to succeed.

The company typically performs assessments, surveys, and interviews within an organization in order to become more familiar with its structure and background, and stages a production that directly addresses the needs of the client. Sometimes, the skits performed are already part of the DramaWorks repertoire; other times, entirely new scenes are drafted.

In either case, Holcomb explained, the lack of conventional scripts, replaced by ’spines’ — improvisational tools that provide a framework of a story, but no actual lines to memorize — allows InterActors to remain fluid in their words and actions, and ultimately reach their clients on a deeper level while not hitting too close to home.

"We customize everything we do," said Holcomb, "to show the dysfunctional patterns that are holding a given organization back. Typically, a company will approach us with a specific problem, but often discover problems they hadn’t anticipated. We always stay one degree left of center from the company we’re dealing with, in order to remain hypothetical."

That could mean addressing issues at a health care facility through the guise of ’St. Everywhere Hospital,’ for instance. The effect is often one that gets people talking, both within an event and about it.

"Seeing something like a play being staged in the workplace tells people that management is trying something creative and different to address that company’s problems," said Holcomb. "That alone is important right there. It creates a buzz and shows people that their management team is doing Ö something."

Audience Participation

Holcomb was quick to point out, though, that while the dramatic portion of DramaWorks’ services provides its backbone, the additional components of the experience that involve the audience — an organization’s employees — are integral to its purpose.

He explained that each DramaWorks appearance, dubbed a ’learning event,’ attempts to meet the needs and reflect the corporate structure of each client, and thusly the event could last a few hours or a full day.

"We’ve really tried to integrate the consultancy part of the business as much as possible," he said. "We are called DramaWorks InterActive precisely because that interaction with our clients is such a large part of our goal, which is to facilitate and help create the work environments that we would like to see evolve."

Employees are always engaged in the experience following a performance, discussing the scenes they’ve been shown, the various characters, and how they contribute to the overall culture of the ’company’ in which they work.

"Generally, we show them a scenario that attempts to illustrate the things that aren’t working well," Mutén explained. "Then, we have people gather into groups to come up with a different vision of the same scene; a new way it could be played out that would lead to a better result. That scene is actually played out, and people have a chance to comment, again, on what worked and what did not."

The model allows people within an organization to see things from a new perspective, while remaining in a safe, private, and entertaining environment, Mutén said, noting that the ability to see mistakes being made, and later the more effective practices put into place, is another strength of the DramaWorks method.

"Only through action learning can we arrive at better solutions," he said. "Through simulation, people are able to try things out and make mistakes in an environment where it’s OK and even fun to make mistakes. They will play out a number of revisions to the original scenario, and begin to see very quickly what is working and what is not."

Christine Stevens, an InterActor with DramaWorks who has also collaborated on storylines for productions in the past, said gauging a group’s reaction to a performance is another way to begin dialogue among coworkers and move toward the eventual implementation of better work strategies and relationships.

"People are given a chance to share and talk about what they saw," she said, "And we’ll sometimes use sociometrics to reflect how people feel."

A sociometric exercise, Stevens explained, could be asking participants to stand at different points within the room based on how well a production reflects their day-to-day experiences, creating a tangible spectrum.

A health care-based performance, for instance, titled Who Cares? brings to light the many issues surrounding safe, comprehensive health care and the challenges hospitals face daily in order to provide it. As a nurse struggles to care for her patient as well as direct her aide, collaborate with doctors, fill staffing shortages, and learn new equipment (she’s also asked to chair the Nurse Appreciation Banquet Committee in the middle of it all), several characters come and go out of a patient’s room. These include an orderly, a dietary, a doctor, maybe a billing agent — and their interactions are seen by the audience through the eyes of a sick patient. A phlebotomist taking blood, for instance, uses a plunger rather than a needle, exactly how it might feel to a frightened patient.

Following the performance, the audience — typically health care workers themselves — are asked to create that visible spectrum. Stevens said she often stands at the spot where clients who feel they relate most to the scene are asked to move, and nurses usually crowd around her quickly.

"It’s very visceral for the people in the room to see, literally, where people stand," she said.

The 25-minute Who Cares? Performance and the accompanying 2 to 2 1/2-hour interactive session will be staged later this month at the National Patient Safety Seminar held by the Risk Management and Patient Safety Institute in Gaylord, Mich. It’s one of the largest groups DramaWorks will assist with facilitating change this year.

"Hopefully, the CEOs and managers that attend will come out of this seminar ready to promote a new level of communication among their staffs," Holcomb said. "It’s all about changing old paradigms into new ones."

Curtain Call

And although some seasoned theater-folk might smirk and call the performance a ’corporate gig,’ Mutén knows his company rises beyond any label. Further, he suspects his fellow InterActors, as well as their audience, will leave the event with a greater understanding of the wisdom that can be gleaned from groups, rather than individuals working alone.

"Live events like this are so important because working as a group, people can better create resilient, sustainable solutions," he said. "Together, people are smarter."

Jaclyn Stevenson can be reached at[email protected]

Features
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

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.

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

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.

Departments

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

AGAWAM

Goodwill Accounting
25 Agawam Shopping Ct.
Patricia Goodwill

RRD Technologies Inc.
80 Ramah Circle South
Kevin Matys

Vernon Poolman
41 Denise St.
Affordable Furniture Inc.

AMHERST

Amherst Communications
33 Bridge St.
Lucas Krupinski

Edith Howe
18 Bayberry Lane
Edith Howe

Joella Realty
967 South East St.
Joella McDermott

CHICOPEE

Augusti Brothers Pizzeria
159 Grove St.
Michael Augusti

EZ Mart
345A Chicopee St.
Mohammad Raja

Jay’s Welding & Steel Fabricator
241 East Main St.
Jeramiah Clarkson

The Rumbleseat Bar & Grill
482 Springfield St.
Toby Inc.

EAST LONGMEADOW

Becken Hosting
12 Orchard Road
Brian Bredenbeck

Case Handyman Service
94 Shaker Road
William Miller

Dutko Electric
50 Heatherstone Dr.
Andrew Dutko

Girly Girl Designs
88 Pine Grove Circle
Terri Jo Chapdelaine

Maureen Slayton Therapeutic Massage
200 North Main St.
Maureen Slayton

Specialty Shoes
161 Kibbe Road
Richard Mertz

United Insurance Agencies Group
75 North Main St.
Barry Stephens

HADLEY

Asia & America Food Market
8 Russell St.
Johnny Binh

Dave’s Soda & Pet Food City
335 Russell St.
David Ratner

HOLYOKE

Bogey & Sons Renovation and Woodworking Service
19 Sheppard Dr.
Boguslaw Wolanczyk

CE Enterprises
1966 Northampton St.
Shirley Eger

Dairy Market
1552 Dwight St.
Sagheer Nawez

Elmwood Seech & Language Therapy Services
51 Elwood Ave.
Sonia Gonzalez

Exotic Custom Interiors
65 Commercial St.
Kenneth Gonzalez

Green Cleaner
222 South St.
Hyoungtae Lee, Soon Duck Lee

R & R Variety
207 Sargeant St.
Rosalie Pratt

The Wherehouse
109 Lyman St.
James Curran

LONGMEADOW

A.C.I.
1104 Longmeadow St.
Peter Alberiel

Connecticut Valley Weathersby Guild
362 Converse St.
Michael Batchelor

NORTHAMPTON

Candle of Hope
180 Round Hill Road
Edward Barber

Commercial News USA
3 Olive St.
Gregory Sandler

Flying Flea
1368 Westhampton Road
Alison Plummer

 

M.A. Roth Painting
215 State St.
Margie Rothermich

Quickie’s Dating
16 Center St.
Thomas Herman

Simply the Salon
19A Hawley St.
Emma Bushey

Watkin’s Gallery
142 Main St.
Nancy Denig

SPRINGFIELD

A.W. Security
950A Mill St.
Robert Wilson

Al’s Painting
801 Worthington St.
Alex Kerritt

Arthur J. Bealand
89 Pine Grove St.
Arthur J. Bealand

Best Towing
13 Morgan St.
Mariana Dross

Brother’s Distribution
181 Sherman St.
Andrew and Nevroy Maxwell

Express Gas & Foodmart
1105-1107 State St.
Ainjad Hussain

Flynn’s Auto Sales
813 Berkshire Ave.
Gregory Skinner

Imperio Musical
2460 Main St.
Maria Rito

Joyce Financial & Insurance Services
1351 Main St.
John Joyce

Kolari’s
111 Donmoreland St.
Khocatim Hodge

Mambo’s
246 Worthington St.
James Santaniello

Merchant Services
73 Palmer Ave.
Gerardo Scala Jr.

New England Wholesalers
724 Page St.
Carlos Dias

Respect for Life Childcare Center
727 State St.
Michelle Vernon

Small Smiles Dental Clinic
376 Cooley St.
Small Smiles of Springfield

Springfield A-1
731 Liberty St.
Boris Altman

Two Guys Pizzeria
477 Page Blvd.
Carmine Picardi

WEST SPRINGFIELD

A & K Construction
55 Bliss St.
Andrey Katykhin

Alex Towing
58 Hanover St.
Alex Nikitcuk

Beauty Nail
200 Elm St.
Thao Hai Ly

Elms Cleaners
248 Elm St.
Urzula Matysiak

Nick’s Transportation
28 Labelle St.
Nikolay Uychin

Red Carpet Inn
563 Riverdale St.
Shrijee Corp.

Variedades Scarlet
1164 Memorial Ave.
Douglas Hernandez

WESTFIELD

Anatolii Kulyak
8 Parker Ave.
Anatolii Kulyak

The Baby Boutique
79 Main St.
Jerelyn Jaikissoon

Dionne Electric
311 Holyoke Road
Scott Dionne

Gabi’s Flea Market
1029 North Road
Gabriele Brin-Martin

J & L Delivery’s
241 East Main St.
Linda and James Ingledue

MiMi’s Fashion
1029 North Road
Gabriele Brin-Martin

Variety Store
94 Meadow St.
Mohammad Azam

Departments

The following incorporations were recorded in Hampden and Hampshire counties between late January and mid-February, the latest available. They are listed by community.

AGAWAM

MiG Xpress Inc., 661 River Road, Agawam 01001. Sergey Agibalov, same. Trucking service.

AMHERST

Katherine J. Atkinson, M.D., P.C., 29D Cottage St., Amherst. Katherine J. Atkinson, M.D., 24 Trillium Way, Amherst 01002. To render professional medical services including family practice services.

CHICOPEE

MVL Co. Inc., 44 Old James St., Chicopee 01020. Thomas P. Mauer, 243 Pearl St., South Hadley 01075. Lawn, tree and shrub care, etc.

Pachi Paradice Inc., 42 Buckley Blvd., Chicopee 01020. Guy J. Robillard, 77 Meadow St., Chicopee 01013. Internet sale of casino supplies.

EAST LONGMEADOW

HNM Corp., 668 North Main St., East Longmeadow 01028. Mustafa Ali, 28 Memery Lane, Longmeadow 01106. Retail sale of grocery and convenience items.

Pepper Belle Tourette Syndrome Awareness Program Inc., 26 Forbes Hill Road, East Longmeadow 01028. William J. Perrero, same. (Nonprofit) To promote awareness of Tourette Syndrome among the general public, etc.

FLORENCE

Sunrise Amanecer Inc., 21 Summer Ave., Florence 01062. Veronica Navarrete-Vivero, 21 Sumner Ave., Florence 01062. (Nonprofit) To provide education and health services to underserved racial and cultural minorities in the Hampden and Hampshire county area.

HUNTINGTON

Lansing Spatech Inc., 10 Pond Brook Road, Huntington 01050. David L. Lansing, same. To repair, replace and service hot tubs and spas.

LUDLOW

Airsports Paintball Inc., 6 White St., Ludlow 01056. Gregory DeMone, 39 Sawmill Road, Ludlow 01056. Recreational activities, mountain board, and paintball supplies and sales.

NORTHAMPTON

Fringe Studio for Hair Inc., 56 Main St., Suite 202, Northampton 01060. Bruce Klein, 575 Bridge Road, Unit 11-1, Florence 01062. Hair salon.

PALMER

Palmer Softball Inc., 1701 Park St., Palmer 01069. Charles Smith, same. (Nonprofit) To play adult sports, including softball, volleyball, and horseshoes.

SOUTHAMPTON

Sheldon Construction Inc., 60 Crooked Ledge Road, Southampton, 01073. William A. Sheldon Jr., same. General contracting.

SOUTHWICK

Molt’s Liquors Inc., 345 North Loomis St., Southwick 01077. Joseph F. Molta, same. To own and operate a package store.

SPRINGFIELD

Avid Ironworks Inc., 2 Mattoon St., Springfield 01105. Joseph A. Visconti Jr., 33 Day St. South, W. Granby, CT 06090. Kenneth J. Gogel Esq., 2 Mattoon St., Springfield 01105, registered agent. Steel fabrication and welding.

Dandia Inc., 127 Mulberry St., Springfield 01105. Daniel Sullivan, 200 Birch Road, Longmeadow 01106. To deal in real estate.

Forest Remodeling Inc., 20 Greenleaf St., Springfield 01108. Edward J. Forest, 122 Hampden Road, Somers, CT, 06071. James Eklanian, 20 Greenleaf St., Springfield 01108, registered agent. Remodeling of residential structures.

JSMR Inc., 19 Arcadia Blvd., Springfield 01118. Michael A. Remillard, same. Restaurant.

RAL Inc., 42B Bancroft St., Springfield 01107. Robert A. Lopez, same. To own and operate a package store.

Veterans in Packaging Inc., 48 Zephyr Lane, Springfield 01128. Edward J. Peplinski, same. To deal in packaging and packaging supplies.

WESTFIELD

ACI Investigative Group West Inc., 7 Sally St., Westfield 01085. Shawn Carey, same. Investigative services for fraudulent insurance claims, etc.

J & P Landscaping Inc., 4 Rachel Terrace, Westfield 01085. Peter R. Plourde, same. A landscaping and property maintenance service business.

Maharaj Inc., 21 Hillcrest Circle, Westfield 01085. Bintula Patel, same, president, treasurer and secretary. Retail liquor store.

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Professional Property Services, Inc., 31 Russell St., West Springfield 01089. Patricia Jean Harrison, same. Trade contracting and home improvement.

WILBRAHAM

Julien J. Drapeau Home Improvement Inc., 6 Surrey Lane, Wilbraham 01095. Julien J. Drapeau, same. Every type of home improvement.

New England Playaz Inc., Law Office of Frank W. Bloom, 85 Post Office Pk., Wilbraham 01095. Francis Bloom, same. (Nonprofit) To expose and promote high school basketball players seeking college or prep school academic and/or athletic scholarships, etc.

Sections Supplements
Companies Help Employees Crunch Thier Numbers
A more holistic approach to health and wellness within area companies is becoming the norm, due
to the benefits wellness programs can have on a workforce. And while employees shed pounds, many companies are also shaving expenses.

InClaire D’Amour-Daley, Big Y’s vice president for Corporate Affairs, was reminded of how much her company’s employee wellness program has evolved recently at a corporate meeting.

Reaching for a Big Y donut, she instead found a plate of apples. It was an interesting discovery; those apples had never been there before.

"Those donuts are so good," she said. "But it’s nice to have other options. Otherwise, we’d eat the donuts."

That dozen apples on the boardroom table next to a dozen glazed was proof that health, nutrition, fitness, and overall employee wellness is becoming more of a focus in the corporate arena.

Many area businesses already have established wellness programs for employees, however a growing trend within companies of all sizes is added attention on those programs, and the expansion of wellness services for staff, with the goal of better integrating healthy habits into their lives at work or otherwise.

Some of those changes are small, such as encouraging employees to take the stairs whenever possible during their workday.

Others may seem subtle, but are poignant in that they reflect changing attitudes. At Big Y, for example, former fitness director, Pam Ouellette, recently received a new title — wellness director — and an expanded set of responsibilities in order to better address employee health within the Big Y corporation.

The reclassification of her position is indicative of the overall shift in focus within many corporate fitness programs — from simply offering an in-house gym for employees to creating a broad spectrum of wellness initiatives and activities designed to improve employees’ overall health and happiness.

More and more businesses are taking the health of their employees seriously, and realizing that good employee health isn’t just an altruistic endeavor, but a smart business move as well.

BusinessWest looks this month at some of the health and fitness programs in place within area businesses, and how they are growing and changing to keep the Western Mass. workforce on the road to wellness.

Here’s the Skinny

Wellness programs are not relegated to more-corporate settings like MassMutual and Big Y; a wide spectrum of businesses offer comprehensive fitness programs to employees, including colleges, medical centers, and nonprofits. Western New England College, for instance, kick-started its employee wellness program 10 years ago, and, like Big Y, it recently made some staffing and programming changes to emphasize its growing importance to the staff pool.

The college’s core wellness initiative, WorkWell, has grown in and of itself over the past decade, said Cyndi Constanzo, wellness and recreation director for WNEC.

"There has historically been a lot of institutional support," she said. "We really bought into the notion of employee wellness, and we have had great opportunities to bring programs to employees and their families because of that support."

Costanzo said that for every dollar the college invests in employee wellness and fitness, $2 is returned. But that statistic is based on qualitative, not quantitative results and research, so she said the real value of wellness programs is often hard to prove. This is one of the reasons why more-comprehensive programs are only now being seen in organizations of all sizes.

"In the past I think it has been a hard sell," she said. "But now there is a move to jump-start employee wellness initiatives because the benefits — the cost savings, especially in health insurance — are being brought into the limelight.

"Now, most people see at least some value in the area of employee wellness."

Dr. David Artzerounian, MassMutual’s medical director, agreed that wellness initiatives are at or near the top of many boardroom agendas.

"For us, good health is good business," he said. "Employees feel better, and they accomplish more; managers see it as a win, because they are more likely to meet their corporate objectives. And in the long run, the company saves money."

In fact, the Healthy Workforce 2010 initiative, a federal program that operates under the auspices of the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, serves as the framework for many corporate fitness programs. The national initiative’s sourcebook for employers states that the leading causes of death in America are, in some way, linked to personal behaviors, such as tobacco use and diet and activity patterns. Further, guidelines for employers instituting wellness programs in their facilities include the major reasons why healthy practices in the workplace are beneficial to employees as well as employers. These include increased productivity, reduced absenteeism, lower health care costs, and an improved corporate image.

Anne-Marie Szmyt, director of WorkLife Strategies for Baystate Health Systems, said the statistics that measure the success of wellness programs can take some time to develop, as the outcomes of prevention efforts are usually harder to gauge than initiatives put in place to address existing problems, health-related or otherwise.

"You don’t see a change in health care costs immediately," she said, "but the anecdotal evidence is strong. A sense of loyalty begins to develop within the workforce very quickly, and later you see less turnover of employees.

"Companies need to decide which wellness programs they will invest in, and remain invested for the long term," Szmyt continued. "There are a lot of studies out there that show that any increase in a better sense of well-being among employees leads to better productivity."

And wellness programs can be facilitated at either a high or low cost, she added, depending on an individual organization’s budget or size.

"There are a number of resources out there, many free, that can assist in setting up workplace programs," she said. "The important thing is that you don’t put it off, in part because it takes a while to see those positive results."

Wellness programs are also generally ongoing and constantly developing initiatives. An organization might start with an on-site fitness center or program, for instance, and later move on to adjusting food choices, educational programs, and the promotion of behaviors that can be easily incorporated into daily life.

Szmyt said corporate wellness programs as a whole seem to be moving in a more holistic direction, moving away from solely fitness interventions and focusing on the overall health of all employees and their families. Costanzo agreed; while the facilities many companies have, like Baystate’s central fitness center or WNEC’s ëHealthful Living Center,’ are excellent capstones to fitness programs, they are only one piece of a much larger puzzle.

WNEC, for instance, has instituted classes in smoking cessation, ëbrown bag’ lunch talks on a variety of health issues, and courses specifically tailored to those employees with particularly physical jobs, said Costanzo, including maintenance and grounds staff, to help them avoid injury at work.

"You have to tailor wellness programs to the employees who need them most, and that’s often the employees in jobs with large physical components," she said. "Employees need to be healthy to work, but also need to be well in order to care for their families and complete other tasks."

"Many wellness efforts extend far beyond the fitness centers," added Artzerounian. "We are focused on educating our employees on the health risks they may have, such as weight problems, high cholesterol, and high blood pressure, as well as lowering those risk factors."

Like many local companies, MassMutual has long had a comprehensive wellness department that has garnered added attention in recent years. To underscore the importance of wellness and fitness initiatives within MassMutual, the company’s fitness center was moved into the main State Street building in 2003 (it had once been across the street), and all fitness programs were given an added boost in the form of increased budgets for new exercise equipment, educational programs, and other initiatives, at all MassMutual locations.

In addition to increased corporate support of wellness programs, employees in several organizations are also beginning to see added incentives to healthy living at their workplaces, designed to make fitness programs more attractive and more widely used as they become more expansive.

Costanzo said employees are now offered ërelief time,’ that is awarded after a certain number of hours of exercise, allowing staff to come in late or leave early from work. That incentive in particular has attracted several employees to the planned wellness activities at WNEC — about 350 employees are regularly working out in order to earn time out.

D’Amour-Daley said her company has a program similar to WNEC’s, offering employees that take advantage of corporate fitness programs extra time off from work. But, conversely, she said charging employees to work out in the Big Y fitness center has also proven effective.

"Memberships are available to all employees, but they’re not free," she said. "We’ve found that people are more apt to go to the gym if they have to pay for it; they don’t take for granted that it’s there for them to use, and the payroll deductions are a constant reminder to get up and go."

Big Y also holds weight-loss challenges intermittently, offering a cash prize to the employees that shed the most pounds. D’Amour-Daley said the recent expansion of programming company-wide has been in response to a nationwide trend as well as the need to address fitness and wellness within a growing company — and among the group of employees that work too far away from Big Y’s Springfield-based corporate offices to take advantage of gym-centered programs.

"We started our fitness programs with an in-house fitness center," she said, "But the change in our fitness director’s title and responsibilities is a direct reflection of the greater challenge we have taken on to address wellness in all of our locations. We want our wellness programs to get to the whole person."

Varied programs help the company bring wellness initiatives to each of its stores in Massachusetts and Connecticut, such as the dissemination of health and nutrition information, contests like the ë10,000 steps a day’ program that issues pedometers to all employees and challenges them to take 10,000 steps daily, and Weight Watchers groups. Employees also recently attended a screening of last-year’s smash documentary Super Size Me to glean information about smart food choices.

"We’re in the food biz," said D’Amour-Daley, "So health, fitness, and nutrition initiatives are a natural fit."

Paying attention to the everyday challenges that all people face, like a tray of donuts at a board meeting, is intrinsic to creating a fitness and wellness program that will be both effective and sustainable, said Tina Manos, manager of the Wellness Activities Center at MassMutual. Manos said each department of any given company has the potential to better the health of its direct staff, and addressing wellness in all corporate areas rather than just through a specific wellness department is the best way to incorporate a culture shift.

Everyone is different; those prone to grabbing fast food in the cafeteria can be helped with more healthy food options, for instance, and Manos said people new to exercise programs that may need some extra guidance could benefit from a daily walking group or nutrition class. Others still may need strategies to blend physical activity into their already hectic lives.

"Programs that address the hesitancy some people may have toward exercise are very important," she said, adding that one of the new initiatives MassMutual has incorporated into its wellness repertoire is a series of exercise options designed to fit into a compressed time period — ideal for people who have little time in their busy schedules to add a fitness regimen. "The program is designed to help employees see that there are things they can do in a half-hour to exercise."

Donut Disturb

"There has been a huge commitment lately to wellness and a big part of that commitment is making fitness more accessible and convenient," said Manos.

Convenient, yes, but also all-inclusive, available to help employees through each part of their workday and beyond — from that morning trip to the gym to that last, late afternoon pastry temptation.

Jaclyn Stevenson can be reached at[email protected]

Sections Supplements
Web Site Offers a New Alternative for Intrepid Travelers
GoNomad.com

GoNomad.com

On Sugarloaf Street in South Deerfield, there is a small, red-shingled building, in keeping with the area’s quaint, New England architecture.

Inside, though, is a gateway to the rest of the world.

The building is the new home of GoNomad.com, an online travel resource for ëalternative travelers’ — those in search of a thrill, an education, or a one-of-a-kind experience while traveling.

GoNomad.com’s owner, Max Hartshorne, calls the site "a comprehensive resource center," designed to provide alternative travelers with both inspiration and information to plan virtually any trip.

The most prevalent aspect of the site is its editorial content — essentially a Web-based magazine, GoNomad features hundreds of articles describing unique trips that stray from the more common Disneyland, Vegas, or cruise ship vacations.

"Our readers don’t want to read about lounging on the beach," he said. "They want to learn how to hand roll couscous in Morocco. They want to take a cooking class in Croatia, or go on an archeological dig in Jordan. It’s a very interesting niche of people."

And it was a niche that Hartshorne wanted very much to call attention to. He bought GoNomad.com from its founder, Lauryn Axelrod of Vermont, a travel writer and documentary filmmaker, in February, 2002. He already had some editorial and travel industry experience, having served as managing editor for Transitions Abroad Magazine, based in Amherst, for some time, but wanted to take the idea of alternative travel to a new level.

He also wanted to capitalize on the Internet market, and provide an extensive travel ëWeb-zine’ that would do more than just entertain readers.

"Working in the editorial world is my real love," said Hartshorne, who has also worked in sales for Bolduc’s Clothing in Agawam, among other ventures. "I love working with writers and photographers and I’m also an extensive traveler. I knew I wanted to continue the work I had been doing at Transitions Abroad, but I knew utilizing the Internet was the way to go.

"If you look at all media as a triangle, at the end of the day the Internet is at the top," he said, creating a point with his hands and extending his forefinger for emphasis. "I think the best way to create a travel resource like this is to do it on the Web. Everything is right there — the inspiration and also all the links you need to plan a trip from start to finish."

Charting a Course

But early 2002 was a risky time to take over an Internet-based business that centered on alternative travel.

Less than five months after the terrorist attacks of 9/11, travel and tourism was at an all-time low, and niche markets like ecotourism, work and study abroad programs, and cultural immersion tours — all examples of alternative travel — were suffering even more so.

"It was a big risk," Hartshorne said. "But the site was already up and running, and had a following. I decided it was a risk I wanted to take."

The venture has paid off for Hartshorne; since assuming control of the site, he has added several features meant to increase both traffic to the site and the convenience with which visitors can plan their own adventures.

GoNomad includes travel guides, links to travel-based companies such as travel agents, airlines, tour companies, and volunteer organizations, and key information for alternative travelers, ranging from unique places to stay to the latest recommended immunizations, and how to find a bathroom — quick — in any country.

Hartshorne said the travel stories are meant to serve as both motivation and guidance for would-be travelers, and the added links are the tools GoNomad visitors can use to plan any trip they can envision — be it a weekend jaunt to Brooklyn, or a trek through Iran, taking daily meals with — what else? — nomads.

He updates the site regularly to reflect the most often viewed articles and resources, and said those updates are proof of the diversity of the site as well as of its core users. Alternative travelers don’t always equal ëextreme travelers,’ he noted, but the common thread that links GoNomad’s typical visitor is they travel to enrich their lives, rather than take a break from it.

On any given day, GoNomad could feature a motorcycle tour of Bulgaria or the top 10 ëbare beaches’ worldwide. It could also extol the benefits of teaching English in Paris, Tokyo, Spain, or Ghana, or of volunteering in the Himalayas.

But the site also offers details on an historical weekend in Richmond, Va., and of an English garden tour.

"All of the articles and resources aren’t meant to be about one person’s trip," Hartshorne explained. "They are meant to be about the reader’s potential trip. It should give people an idea of where to visit, where to stay, or where to eat, and also provide a general feel of the flavor of a place."

Hartshorne has also developed partnerships with a number of businesses, online and otherwise, to augment the services GoNomad offers and to capitalize on the ever-changing virtual marketplace. For one, Hartshorne has joined forces with airportparkingreservations.com, based in Suffield, Conn., allowing GoNomad visitors to secure a parking spot at one of several airports globally at a fixed rate.

"We are getting thousands of inquiries on that," he said. "In urban areas, it’s not easy to find a parking spot. Travelers are really latching on to this and taking advantage of great deals."

Hartshorne also offers free listings for hotels, bed and breakfasts, travel agents, work/study programs, and other businesses, as well as ëpremium’ listings for a fee, and, like thousands of other content-heavy websites, has joined Google’s Ad Sense program, which places contextually relevant ads next to the stories on the Web site.

"This provides a pay-per-click revenue stream," Hartshorne explained. "The ads are extremely targeted, so a feature story on say, Brazil, will have ads for Rio hotels, airfare to Brazil and tours in the Amazon."

Hartshorne also benefits from the sale of travel insurance and travel books and other items in the ëGoNomad Marketplace,’ and this year, he will continue to add to the site, delving into the business of selling airline tickets — his own private-label line of low priced European and Asian flights — in addition to the railpasses, vacations, cruises, domestic and international ticket and hotel sales already offered.

To further increase revenues while remaining true to GoNomad’s original flavor, Hartshorne is creating a ëpod cast’ service — audio versions of travel articles in MP3 format, which visitors can download and listen to in their homes or, he hopes, on the airplane that will deliver them to their chosen destination.

"Our revenue stream is varied," he said of the many business ventures in the works. "But we don’t stray from our mission. We’re not about cruise ships, we’re not about Vegas, and we’re not New York, Paris, and London. We’re about participatory, learning travel. We will continue to grow and offer different services in order to keep that aspect of the site strong."

Plane Speaking

And as the business grows, so does its notoriety. GoNomad has been featured in a number of publications, including the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, and Hartshorne has served as a guest expert on travel and the state of the tourism industry for several media outlets including CNN, on which he appeared twice recently in the wake of the Asian tsunami that hit Indonesia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, and the once-booming vacation spot of Phu Ket, Thailand.

Having kick-started his business after the tourism industry, and in many ways the U.S. as a whole, suffered its most devastating blow in September, 2001, Hartshorne is indeed an expert on the fragility of the travel and tourism industry.

"The most important thing people needed to know after 9/11 was that America was still open for business," he said. "The same holds true for South Asia following the tsunami. People are donating millions of dollars to relief efforts, and I gladly donated as well. But the best way we, as Americans, as travelers, can help the countries that were hit by the tsunami is to go there.

"Many people equate those entire countries with the damage caused by the tsunami, but that’s not accurate," he continued. "There are some great, inland areas that are just fine, and accepting tourists. Spending our dollars there will help the entire economy."

He added that GoNomad travelers are the ideal group to lead the way.

"These people want to see the whole world, not select parts," he said. "They want to go to South Asia, or to the Middle East. They want to learn about new cultures. That act of people connecting with people is what is needed most."

Hartshorne is hard at work monitoring those connections from his South Deerfield office each day… constantly welcoming new visitors to the rest of the world.

Fast Facts
Company: GoNomad.com
Address: 14A Sugarloaf St.,
South Deerfield, MA 01373
Phone: (413) 665-5005
Web site:www.GoNomad.com
E-mail:[email protected]

Departments

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

AGAWAM

Chemex New England
54 Ramah Circle North
Anita Hoyle

Country Boutique
150 Country Road
Florence Pelletier

Crystal Ice and Fuel
343 Main St.
Albert Grimaldi

D & G Suffriti Construction Co.
228 Adams St.
Gary Suffriti

Gemini Therapeutic Massage
664 Main St.
Donna Chartier

Gorgo’s Kitchen
858 Suffield St.
Alex Attman

Greenright Design
9 Alfred Court
John Hollywood

The Hair Salon at Quail Run
50 Cardinal Dr.
Karen Mitchell

Lido Graphics
46 Sequoia Dr.
John Rioni

M & M l Inks
541 Springfield St.
Maureen Abdullah

Mark’s Auto Detail Service
9 Alfred Circle
Mark Kuralt

McCarthy’s Liquors
430 Main St.
John McCarthy

Michael’s
324A Springfield St.
Vananh Huynh

Quality Life Systems
20 Logan Place
Brian Knowles

Red Coach Transportation of Western MA
449R Silver St.
Linda Polep

Sapphire Art & Photo
107 Franklin St.
Peter Karanysh

Sasha Speaks Seminars
210 Beekman Dr.
John Zebryk

Segway of Western MA
396 Main St.
Walter Meissner Jr.

Steve’s Home Improvement
77 Walnut St.
Stephen Kiforishin

Vannah Hair & Nail Techniques
324A Springfield St.
Vananh Huynh

AMHERST

After Five Silver Jewelry & Accessories
6 University Dr.
Teeom Williams

Amherst Computersmith
19 Justice Dr.
Andrew Berg

Casimir Kocot
79 South Pleasant St.
Terri Kocot

Gladius
134 East Hadley Road
Justin Viens, Jeffrey Costigan

Jane Taylor Jewelry
382 Middle St.
Jane Taylor, Jeffrey Fischer

Jones Properties LP
15A Pray St.
Gerald Jones

Love Myself Toys
15 Jeffrey Lane
Tiffany Johnson

Painting Unlimited Co.
18 Hunters Hill Circle
Alvaro Ramos-Jaco

Red Barn Music
409 Main St.
Kevin Collins

Whirlwind Fine Garden Design
29 Hartman Road
Christopher Baxter

CHICOPEE

AJ Chimney Services
161 Grattan St.
Adelph Andormenis

DeMatos Enterprise
9 Boisvert St.
Lee DeMatos

8 Wire Mall
17 Goodhue St.
Richard Sliski

Hair of the Dog
279 Montgomery St.
Paula Dane

HRS Trading
25 Highland Ave.
John Bellenoit

No Bones About It
62 White St.
Mary Apicella

No Heat Call Tommy
213 Bemis Ave.
Thomas Fregean

Robert Bernash Electrician
38 Ducharme St.
Robert Bernash

Royal Cigars
115 Front St.
Shahzao Ahmad

EAST LONGMEADOW

Crystal Nails Salon
613 North Main St.
Linh Ai Lam

Hampden Capital Funding
240 Parkerview St.
Ronald Fuller

Holistic Health Center
280 North Main St.
Alice Shabunon

James Scanlon Insurance
280 North Main St.
James Scanlon

Salon Karma
511 North Main St.
Jennifer Picard

HOLYOKE

Aurylius the Salon
74 Cabot St.
Margot Lugo

Desert Moon
50 Holyoke St.
Koang Yam

Downtown Delight
285 High St.
Carolann Stewart

Elegant Affairs
233 Easthampton Road
Margaret Boxold

Holyoke Sporting Goods
1584 Dwight St.
Elizabeth Frey

Jackson Hewitt Tax Service
515 High St.
Yogesh Patel

Phantom Security Service
15 Main St.
Samuel LaFleche

Project Works
64 Bemis St.
Deborah Long

Silvana Net
324 Homestead Ave.
Silvana Gravini

Specialized Security Service
15 Main St.
Samuel LaFleche

3B’s Variety
2014 Northampton St.
Randy Goldberg

Tuty Mini Mart & Restaurant
368 High St.
Margaro Crespo

LONGMEADOW

Bri McCarroll
136 Dwight Road
Bri McCarroll

Creative Edge
7 Edgewood Ave.
Cynthia Bixby

Edward Joseph Bauchiero
80 East Greenwich Road
Edward Bauchiero

Firehouse Entertainment
156 Barrington Road
Dean Godfrey

Mortgage Giver
1650 Longmeadow St.
Daniel Edwards

Today’s Window Fashion
468 Frank Smith Road
Edward Comini

NORTHAMPTON

Bacon & Wilson P.C./Morse & Sacks
31 Trumbell Road
Bacon & Wilson P.C.

Claytopia
157 Main St.
Jennifer Wiseman

Curran & Berger
53 Gothic St.
Joseph Curran

KC Consulting
130 Cardinal St.
Kimberly Cook

Mindful Touch Bodyworks
13 Old South St.
Tammy Pease

Seeds of Transformation
25 Main St.
Susan Lellamo

Snook & Mohan Insurance Agency
149 Jackson St.
Owen and Lisa Snook Mohan

Youth Development Consultant: Guidance/College Counselor
241 King St.
Michelle Letendre

 

Zuzzy’s
186 Main St.
Joseph Jeresaty

SOUTH HADLEY

Home Facelifters
249 Brainard St.
Philip Stefanelli

SPRINGFIELD

A Cut Above the Rest
186 State St.
Nelson Davila

A Cut Above the Rest II
2662A Main St.
Nelson Davila

All Service
25 Groton St.
Michael Allegrezze

Al’s Used Cars
17 Newhouse St.
Alfred Hicks

Austin Auto Sales
15 Austin St.
George’s Auto Body Inc.

Beautiful Nails
1130 State St.
Ut Van Vo

Cleaning Galore
75 Narragansett St.
Brian Kenney

DA-V Delivery
39 Montrose St.
Andrae Davey

Double Door
60R Congress St.
John Smith

El Behio Rest 809 Liberty St.
Miguel Martinsen

El Mayimbe Barber Shop
28 Fort Pleasant St.
Milagros Guerra

Fabricated Computers
20 Marquette St.
Jesse Rushlow

Family Floor Sanding
73 Appleton St.
Shawn Schipper

Fancy Nails
1655 Boston Road
Mai Du

Harry Van Wart Painting
160 Cambridge St.
Harry Van Wart III

Home Image
57 Leyfred Ter.
Nathen Bloors

Jeh Pro & Co.
92 Ramblewood Dr.
Olusela Urhiafe

Kimmy’s Quality Cleaning
29 Bowden St.
Kimmy Brown

The Lions Den
312 Locust St.
Genaro Sarno

New York Pizza
161 Boston Road
Nazar LLC

Official Lifestylez Clothing 68 Federal St.
Keola Perry

Office Enterprise
23 Castlegate Dr.
Anna Jordan

Phones-n-Such
121 Hartford Ter.
William Clow

Quality Disc
1127 Main St.
One Sound Place Inc.

Seafood Market
260 Hancock St.
Jorge Severino

Springfield Nails
682 Belmont Ave.
Omari Doctor

Sunny Day Communications
68 Merideth St.
Kenneth Smith

Torres Insurance Agency
2652 Main St.
David Torres

Total Property Maintenance
88 Butternut St.
Daniel O’Brien

Ultimate Anime
26 Mounton St.
Amber Frazier

Vintage International
91 Ramblewood Dr.
Olusela Urhiafe

W.T.C. Williams Training Center
29 Howard St.
J.S. Williams

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Ace Beauty Systems
1053 Westfield St.
Beauty Systems Group Inc.

Advantage Staffing Associates Inc.
131 Elm St.
Patricia Connors

Affordable Decks-Beautiful Decks
29 Clara St.
Jerome McCarthy Jr.

Alkhabi Custom Installations
954 Westfield St.
Mohammed Alkhabi

Angelo Bertelli’s Liquor Mart Inc.
726A Main St.
Harold Passerini

Army Barracks
1053D Riverdale St.
Stephen Lopilato

Convenient Cards LLC
8 Sean Louis Circle
Jack Clemente

Dean Auto Sales
6 River St.
CEDT Corporation Inc.

Duquette Electric Co.
395 Morgan Road
James Dusquette

E-Zee Mart
662 Kings Hwy.
Fawad Khawaja

E-Zee Mart
83 River St.
Arshad Iman

First Choice Brokerage Corp.
117 Park Ave.
Michael Martin

Greenough Paper Co. Inc.
54 Heywood Ave.
Greenough Packaging and Maintenance Supplies Inc.

Gokul LLC
2260 Westfield St.
Sunil Patel

K & M Auto Sales
697 Union St.
Kyle Shoemaker

The Kid’s Place Inc.
915 Memorial Ave.
Scott Petersen
Martin Insurance & Financial Service
117 Park Ave.
Michael Martin

Mike’s Heavy Hauling
770 Prospect Ave.
Michael Vazquez

Pak Grocery
470 Main St.
Muhammad Sultan

PAKD
23 Longfellow Dr.
Ashlee Picard

Professional Acoustics
2119 Riverdale St.
Professional Drywall Corp.

SSK Construction
43 Day St.
Sergey Petlyakov, Sergey Karnaukh

S.S.R. Construction
84 Maple Ter.
Peter Slivka

Summerwood Construction
34 Cass Ave.
Scott Harvey

Totally Floored
36 Second St.
Justin David

Trane
132 Myron St.
Jack Borgschult

United Sureties Fugitive Task Force
44 Exposition Ter.
Angus Rushlow

US Construction
26 Irving St.
Maksym Shalypin

WESTFIELD

A.G.E. Electric
77 Mill St.
Alexander Bielunis

Accounting Associates
92 Little River Road
Antonio Castro

Construction Unlimited
241 Main St.
Andrew Clough Sr.

The Hairport
148 Elm St.
Susan Austin

Hartley Brothers Landscaping
542 Montgomery Road
Daniel Hartley

LABA Dry Cleaners
51 Southwick Road
Aleksandr and Tammy Bolchunas

Magic Tan Western MA & Vermont
280 Russellville Road
Barbara and Stacie Phetteplace

Mohan Home Improvement
45 Parker Ave.
Aleksandr Monan, Ivan Mohan

Opportunity Knocks
74 King St.
Julianne Krutka

Republic Iron Work Inc.
84 Christopher Road
Gary Visconti

Western Parish Orchards
1780 Granville Road
Paul Tarnauskas

Departments

INCORPORATIONS The following business incorporations were recorded in Hampden and Hampshire counties between mid-November and mid-December, the latest available. They are listed by community.

AMHERST

Craftsbury Kids Inc., 310 Montague Road, Amherst 01002. Cecilia Leibovitz, same. Online retail of handmade products

Sharevision Inc., 800 Main St., Amherst 01002. Richard Baldwin, same. Therapy, counseling, coaching, training, and consulting services, etc.

Ultimate Hall of Fame & Center for Cultural Change through Sport Inc., 352 East Hadley Road, Amherst 01002. James D. Pitts, same. (Nonprofit) To celebrate the living history of ultimate, to promote the continuing growth of the ultimate sport (frisbee), etc.

CHICOPEE

Electronic Distribution Corp., 698 Chicopee St., Chicopee 01013. Michael Roth, 477 Main St., Hackensack, NJ 07601. C T Corporation System, 101 Federal St., Boston 02110, registered agent. (Foreign corp; DE) Data base typesetting.

Northeast Construction Roofing Services Inc., 140 Joy St., Chicopee 01013. Elliott Beals Jr., same. To deal in real estate, perform roofing services, etc.

EASTHAMPTON

Blue Moon Grocery Inc., 3 Chapman Ave., Easthampton 01027. Deborah Robinson, 41 Edwards Road, Westhampton 01027. To operate a natural food store.

Easthampton Tire Inc., 141 Northampton St., Easthampton 01027. George R. Dion, 205 Elm St., Northampton 01060. To sell and service all types of motor vehicles — trucks, autos, and vans.

HOLYOKE

ElderCare Initiatives Inc., 4 Mill Valley Road, Holyoke 01040. Constance A. Clancy, 73 School St., South Hadley 01075. (Nonprofit) To provide elderly and handicapped persons with appropriate housing and services, etc.

Iglesia de Cristo LA.vidverdadera, 326 Appleton St., Holyoke 01040. Noemi Torres, 137 Cobb St., Springfield 01119. (Nonprofit) To engage in all community services, improve the social status, etc.

Massachusetts Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Inc., 225 High St., Suite 410, Holyoke 01040. Hector Bauza, 101 Cabot St., Suite 601, Holyoke 01040. (Nonprofit) To promote the industrial, commercial, civic, and cultural welfare of the four counties of Western Mass., etc.

United Trading Corp., 110 Lyman St., Holyoke 01040. Shahzad Ahmad, 380 Hatfield St., Northampton 01060. Import, export (wholesale).

INDIAN ORCHARD

SKCS Inc., 537-539 Main St., Indian Orchard 01151. Karen Scott, 11 Maximillian Dr., Granby 01033. To own and operate one or more bars, taverns, restaurants, grilles, etc.

Smith & Son Jewelers II Inc., 568 Main St., Indian Orchard 01151. Andrew W. Smith, 11 Woodside Dr., Wilbraham 01095. To deal in watches, timepieces, jewelry, giftware, etc.

LUDLOW

Baystate Bookkeeping Services Inc., 18 Keith Circle, Ludlow 01056. Lisa L. Roger, same. Bookkeeping and income tax preparation.

Poppi’s Pizzeria Inc., 351 West Ave., Ludlow 01056. Jorge Martins, 35 Mass. Ave., Ludlow 01056. To operate a restaurant.

NORTHAMPTON

Bailey Tebaldi Enterprises Inc., 348 King St., Northampton 01060. Adam A. Tebaldi, same. (Foreign corp; DE) (Foreign corp; GA) Auto parts sale.

Edible Atoms Inc., 38 Gleason Road, Northampton 01060. Paul Hathaway, same. To operate a restaurant.

Pioneer Valley Food Factory Inc., The, 320 Riverside Dr., Suite 10, Northampton 01060. Van Sullivan, 323 Prospect St., Northampton 01060. To conduct a catering service for on- and off-premises consumption.

R B & G Inc., 223 Pleasant St., Northampton 01060. Peter St. Martin, 7 Lyman St., Easthampton 01027. To operate a restaurant.

Urban Design Group Inc., The, 20 Strong Ave., Northampton 01060. Lynne Elizabeth Lande, 537 West Road, Ashfield 01330. Land development and construction.

PALMER

Katie-Sue Inc., 166 Peterson Road, Palmer 01069. John W. Morrison, same. Real estate development.

SOUTH HADLEY

Wall Tax & Financial Group Inc., 34 Bridge St., South Hadley 01075. Edward Wall, same. Tax preparation and financial services.

SPRINGFIELD

B Big Boys Social Club Inc., 827 1/2 State St., Springfield 01109. Tennison S. Clark, 255 College St., Springfield 01109. (Nonprofit) A fraternal organization to promote the development of its members, etc.

Better Homes Liberty Hill Inc., 5 Northampton Ave., Springfield 01109. Jeffrey Sullivan, 300 Florentine Gardens, Springfield 01108. To deal in real and personal property.

Iglesia Pentecostal Maranata Inc., 22 Ringgold St., Springfield 01107. Osvaldo Colon, same. (Nonprofit) To promote the teaching of the Gospel of God among members and non-members.

Liberty Grill Inc., 67 Liberty St., Springfield 01103. Frank L. Newman, 89 Hill St., West Springfield 01103. Restaurant.

Northstar Recycling of New Jersey Inc., 89 Guion St., Springfield 01104. Seth Goodman, same. Paper recycling.

O’Shea, Getz & Kosakowski, P.C., 1500 Main St., Suite 912, Springfield 01115. Patrick J. O’Shea, 61 Wilkin Dr., Longmeadow 01106. Professional legal services.

Pioneer Valley Diagnostic Center Inc., 7 Sorrento St., Springfield 01108. Dmitriy Shlemanov, same. To operate an ultrasound medical facility.

Potters House of Refuge Inc., 802 Alden St., Springfield 01109. Cynthia L. Curtis, same. (Nonprofit) To provide housing, personal, and educational services to needy veterans in Massachusetts, etc.

Springdale Education Center Inc., One Carando Dr., Springfield 01104. John A. Foley, Jr., 1308 Northampton St., Holyoke 01040. To provide highly structured programs for people with severe emotional disturbances, etc.

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Foley Insurance Group Inc., 37 Elm St., West Springfield 01089. Brian T. Foley, 100 Jonquil Lane, Longmeadow 01106. Insurance agency.

Rental Remarketing Inc., 74-80 Baldwin St., West Springfield 01089. Michael M. Gentile, 8 Devonshire Dr., Wilbraham 01005. To deal in automobiles, trucks, motorcycles, etc., of all kinds.

WESTFIELD

CMS Transportation Inc., 46 Sheppard St., Westfield 01085. Joseph S. Cressotti, 33 Harold Ave., Westfield 01085. General freight — refrigerated and non-refrigerated, trucking and hauling.

SS and CJ Corp., 524 Pochassic Road, Westfield 01085. Guy E. Waldo, same. To operate a package store.

The Light House Fellowship Inc., 110 Union St., Westfield 01085. Pari Lirim Hoxha, 50 1/2 Jefferson St., Westfield 01085. To spread the Gospel through ministries, via media, evangelical services, etc.

WILBRAHAM

Harrington Trace Corp., The, 198 Main St., Wilbraham 01095. John D.L. McBride, 196 Main St., Wilbraham 01095. (Foreign corp; DE) The importation of specialty foods and beverages.

Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of November 2004.

AGAWAM

Adversitees Plus/Logo’s In Motion
71 Duclos Dr.
Paul MacDonald Jr.

Children’s Therapy
Center of the
PioneerValley Inc.
1285 Springfield St.
Laurie Cecchi

Christina’s Country Store
Suffield Street
Keith Cgerwiac

DMS Construction
242 Maple St.
Dean Sharpy

Jubco Landscaping
189 South Westfield St.
Diane Juzba

Julie’s Fashion
1325 Springfield St.
Thuy Pham

Not Just Brown Bags
14 Wrenwood Lane
John W. Brown, Jr.

Power Hose
85 Peros Dr.
Christopher Bellerosa

Tips and Tangles
525G Springfield St.
Jill Fraska

Vinnie’s Auto
11 Hall St.
Joseph Beltrandi

AMHERST

Amherst Market Inc.
Amherst Market
Naresh Patel

B & B Appliance
86 Gray St.
Robert DiCarlo

Bumdiddies
52 Stanley St.
Cynthia Sullivan

Ingenious Interiors
31 Valley View Circle
Susan Robertson

Little Black Dress
98 North Pleasant St.
Tara Hughes

Revealbusiness.com
1876 Brittany Manor Dr.
Elliott Moya

Tora Nova Counseling Center
10 Gatehouse Road
Carol Soules

Your Promotional Consultant
22 Puffer Circle
Youssef Fadel

CHICOPEE

ABM Clothing
80 Buskin St.
Beverly Thorington

Ed’s Fashion-Plus
685 James St.
Edward Hernandez

Equity Painting
63 Olea St.
Gary Dinas

Harmony Rental Property
90 Sheridan St.
Dorenda Taft

Healing Hands
72 Nash St.
Andrea McJeffrey

Impressive Home Improvement
19 Beaumont St.
Gerald Raymond, Jr.

Innovative Microplate
1998 Westover Road
Stephen Yound, Jay Teich

Matured Nails by Jolene
115 Saratoga Ave.
Jolene Martunas

T & L Web Makers
137 Hendrick St.
Thomas Hayes

EAST LONGMEADOW

Bank of America
431 North Main St.
Fleet National Bank

Electronics Boutique of America
406 North Main St.
Jeffrey Korey

Learning Styles
34 Shaker Road
Susan Fino

HADLEY

Isman Consultants
225 Middle St.
Georgia Isman

Ronkese Financial Services
100 Ventura Way
Christopher Ronkese

HOLYOKE

Akinson Enterprises
486 Hillside Ave.
Elaine Akinson

El Supreme Supermarket
399 Main St.
Felix Trinidad

Emanuel Christian Book & Retail Store
353 High St.
Santiago Torres

4 D’s Corp.
69 Davis St.
Richard Dewey

Izzy’s Repair
65 Commercial St.
Juian Rios-Colon

Old School Customs
6 Adams St.
Alberto Rodriguez Jr.

Real Dry Waterproofing
137 Dupuis Road
Stephan Wail

Sean’s Food Mart
484 Westfield Ave.
Banaras Khan

Torrid: Plus Sizes
50 Holyoke St.
Hot Topic Inc.

NORTHAMPTON

A Second Opinion!
60 Platinum Circle
Patricia Nnaji

ALT Healthcare Consultants
187 North Maple St.
Susan Towles

Amy Diamond Consulting
29 Fairview Ave.
Amy Diamond

B & G Associates
43 Fox Road
Bernyce Grant

Bank of America
79 King St.
Fleet National Bank

Bank of America
144 Main St.
Fleet National Bank

Colly Construction
72 North Main St.
Christopher Colly

Copper Beech Millwork
30 Industrial Dr.
Amherst Woodworking & Supply Inc.

Eminent Energy Promotions
46 Main St.
Bruce Wilson

Errands Etc.
33 Maple St.
Nen Strano

Grace Bodywork
16 Center St.
Mary Grace Farley

Jeanne Schubmehl, MS,OTR/L
92 Main St.
Jeanne Schubmehl

Jupiter Girl
21 Vernon St.
Caitlin Bosco

Pioneer Valley Balloons
Old Ferry Road
Northampton Aeronautics Inc.

SPRINGFIELD

Abandon Inhibition
36 Montrose St.
Kethayne Trader

Affordable Computer Storage
51 Kimberly Ave.
Eugenia Bondarenro

B & B Trucking
88 Brunswick St.
Phuong Lee

Beautiful Nails II
1293 Boston Road
Tony Vo

C & D Variety
14 Orange St.
Diane Negron

Cali Nail Care
2460 Main St.
Kelly Huong

Certified Auto Glass
1142 State St.
Miguel Perez

Cobalt Club & Restaurant
150 Bridge St.
P.O.P. Inc.

Emerald City Cafe
270-272 Bridge St.
Kinale Village LLC

Express Repair
18 Berkshire Ave.
Betsy Leal

Family Gifts
266 Canon Circle
Evan Sims

JC Grocery
902 Worthington St.
Carmon Garcia

J.G. Home Improvements
258 Jasper St.
Vincent Clark

Joe’s Deli Mart
677 Allen St.
Tracy Carbanel

Joyce Insurance & Financial Service
1351 Main St.
John Joyce

K & R Sports
44 Derryfield Ave.
Russell Westbrooks

Karen’s Gifts
12 Mattoon St.
Karen Phillips

Karmil Grocery Store
154 Catherine Road
Milthon Perez

Nova Care Rehab
3550 Main St., Suite 203
S.T.A.R.T Inc.

Nova Care Rehab
1160 Dickinson St.
S.T.A.R.T Inc.

O’s Auto Detailing & Towing
230 Verge St.
Orlando Martinez

Olympic Cleaning
96 Athol St.
William Sevene Jr.

Painters Plus
31 Middle St.
Juan Serrano

Paramount Hippodrome
1700 Main St.
Creative Theatre Concepts Inc.

Parkin Design
56 Harvard St.
Karane Parkin

Roma’s Auto Sales
201 Berkshire Ave.
Michael Balise

Spring Food Mart
345 Main St.
Abdul Qadus

WEST SPRINGFIELD

ACP Management
42 Sibley Ave.
Deborah St. Peter

DSG
1284 Elm St., Unit 4
Leo Hood, Richard Leaderman, Gary Arsham, Anthony Lepko

Drywall Company
15 Burford St.
Robert Howard

Fastsigns Inc.
1102 Riverdale St.
Multi Signs Inc.

G & B Construction
31 Worthen St.
Gerradiy Brutskiy

Health South Sports Medicine & Rehabilitation Center
71 Park Ave.
Health South

JMJ Easy Vac
745 Memorial Ave.
Cyclone Home Systems Inc.

K & M Electronics Inc.
11 Interstate Dr.
Scott Bettigole

Lisa M Beauvais, Attorney at Law
698 Westfield St.
Lisa Beauvais

Marhaba Restaurant
913 Main St.
Raja Khan

Package Machinery Company Inc.
380 Union St.
Paul Striebel

Poorboys
43 Sylvan St.
Thomas Sullivan

R.D. & Asociates
87 Orchardview St.
Ronald Doucet

Tanto Mane Inc.
232 Ashley Ave.
Joseph Deedy

’Xplicit Customz’ Performance Car Parts
65 Duke St.
Kyle Douglas, Benjamin Lendella

WESTFIELD

B & S Realty Trust
3 Depot Sq.
Stacey and Barbara Phetteplace

Bank of America
10 Main St.
Fleet National Bank

Coggin Creek Stables
1008 Granville Road
Brenda and Denis Coggin

Jean Demers Real Estate
453 Russellville Road
Jean Demers

Madison Construction
264 Buck Pond Road
James OÌSullivan

Mariano Mavarro Towing
34 Franklin St.
Mariano Mavarro

Prestige Carpentry & Remodeling
71 Christopher St.
David MacIver

Shahid Enterprise
1400 Russell St.
Mohammad Shahid

Swayger Plumbing & Heating
18 Llewellyn Dr.
Robert Swayger

Theberge Consulting
410 Southampton Road
Normand Theberge

W.R.B. Auto Detailing
200 Southwick Road
Brian Santinello

Whip City Candle Co.
3 Depot Sq.
Stacie & Barbara Phetteplace

With Heart & Hand
61 Southwick Road
Pamela White

Departments

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

AGAWAM

1813 Main Street Corp., 1813 Main St., Agawam 01001. Carlo P. Bonavita, 68 Old Feeding Hills Road, Westfield 01085. To own and operate a restaurant/bar.

AMHERST

Matthieu J. Massengill, P.C., South East St., Amherst 01002. Matthieu J. Massengill, same. The practice of law.

Valley Arts Project Inc., 129 Glendale Road, Amherst 01002. Michael Brooks, 192 Belchertown Road, Amherst 01002. (Nonprofit) To create performance opportunities to showcase the talents of young artists in the Pioneer Valley, etc.

ZX Inc., 135 Belchertown Road, Amherst 01002. Xiaoda Xiao, same. To sell newly invented Vector Blind Spot Mirrors to completely eliminate blind spots.

BELCHERTOWN

CBA Marketing USA II Inc., One Main St., Belchertown 01007. Irene A. Kane, 684 Ridge Road, Wilbraham 01095. Freight forwarding and freight management.

Uncommon Photography Inc., 145 River St., Belchertown 01007. Robert Wallace, same. Photography.

CHICOPEE

DJDF Real Estate Inc., 40 Nichols Road, Chicopee 01013. David Deslauriers, 82 Lord Terrace, Chicopee 01020. Real estate.

J.M.B.B. Company Inc., 45 Doverbrook Road, Chicopee 01022. Joyce Chapin, same. Consulting for mortgage brokers.

New Tour Corp., 9 Stanley Dr., Chicopee 01020. Si Yuan Tseng, same. Chartered bus.

Two-Putt Inc., 1469 Granby Road, Chicopee 01020. Joseph L. Larrivee, 27 Windpath E., West Springfield 01089. Real estate holding.

EASTHAMPTON

Uncommon Clarity Inc., 3 Payson Ave., Easthampton 01027. Ann Latham, same. Business operations consulting.

FEEDING HILLS

CMBW Inc., 22 Kathy Terrace, Feeding Hills 01030. Robert J. Wierdo, same. Ladies physical fitness.

FLORENCE

NCP and Associates Inc., 60 Platinum Circle (Rear), Florence 01062. Patricia Haynes Nnaji, same. To provide practical advice for individuals undergoing occupational change, financial stress, etc.

HOLYOKE

Appleton Pre-School, Early Learning Center and Childcare Inc., 397 Apppleton St., Holyoke 01040. Sharon Zayas, 18 White Birch Dr., Springfield 01119. To provide pre-school, early learning and childcare services to the public.

T.W.C. Towing Inc., 56 Jackson St., Holyoke 01040. Juan Figueroa, same. Towing, selling automobiles and automobile parts, detailing automobiles.

LONGMEADOW

M.W.C. Construction Inc., 1661 Longmeadow St., Longmeadow 01106. Michael C. DeMarche, 46 Mohawk Dr., Longmeadow 01106. Construction.

R.F.L. Electric Inc., 195 Redfern Dr., Longmeadow 01108. Robert Lipp, same. Electrical contracting.

LUDLOW

Sekoswki Family Inc., 67 Bluebird Circle, Ludlow 01056. Gabriela Sekowski, same. To own and operate a package store.

Your Choice Insurance Agency Inc., 120 East St., Ludlow 01056. Samuel R. Hanmer, 123 Englewood Road, Longmeadow 01106. An insurance agency.

NORTHAMPTON

Healing Across the Divides Inc., 72 Laurel Park., Northampton 01060. Lawrence Lowenthal, American Jewish Committee, 126 High St., Boston, 02110. (Nonprofit) To promote cooperation between Israeli and Palestinian health organizations/individuals, etc.

Pioneer Valley Travel Medicine, P.C., 69 State St., Northampton 01060. Ann K. Markes, 124 Maple Ridge Road, Florence 01062. To engage in the practice of travel medicine.

PALMER

New Millenium Appraisal Inc., 11 Diane St., Palmer 01069. Barry J. Cook, same. To offer real estate appraisal services, develop methods and materials to appraisers of real estate.

SPRINGFIELD

Antique and Specialty Flooring Company Inc., 169 Paridon St., Springfield 01118. Anthony Frogameni, 76 Pembroke Lane, Agawam 01001. Purchase of antique wood and manufacturing and sale of flooring products made therefrom.

Compass Car Rental Inc., 155 Allen Park Road, Springfield 01118. Olga Arnst, 107 Chestnut St., West Springfield 01089. Car rental agency.

Gordies Gourmet Inc., 1209 Sumner Ave., Springfield 01118. Gordon Richard Weissman, 174 Abbott St., Springfield 01118. The manufacturing, packaging and sale of snack food.

J.T. Home Improvements Inc., 38 Jenness St., Springfield 01004. Jeff Lariviere, same, president, treasurer, and secretary. Home improvements and repairs.

Latin Flava Cafe Inc., 1677 Main St., Springfield 01103. Isabel Pellot, same. To provide Spanish food and beverages in a cafe atmosphere.

Law Offices of Brian Shea, P.C., 127 Mulberry St., Springfield 01105. Brian Shea, same. To operate a legal practice.

Law Offices of Frank A. Caruso, P.C., 127 Mulberry St., Springfield 01105. Frank A. Caruso, same. To operate a legal practice.

Orr Chevrolet Inc., 10 Mill St., Springfield 01104. Sterling A. Orr, II, 12 Winterberry Dr., Wilbraham 01095. Automobile dealership.

RGoodridge Inc., 206 Marsden St., Springfield 01109. Winifred Renee Haskins, same. E-commerce retail.

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Canterbury Development Inc., 84 Cedar Woods Glen, West Springfield 01089. Kathleen H. Sweeney, same. To own real property, remodeling, construction, etc.

Carl Yam Inc., 1051 Elm St., Unit 9, West Springfield 01089. Koang Cheu Yam, same. The sale of food.

Rural Lane Inc., 1771 Riverdale Road, West Springfield 01089. Mark S. Lyon, 53 Rural Lane, East Longmeadow 01028. Purchasing for resale or the consignment of household/business furnishings and household-related items.

Sullivan Private Label Inc., 42 Progress Ave., West Springfield 01089. Paul Fortini, 120 Greystone Ave., West Springfield 01089. To design and distribute retail packaging products to major department stores and specialty stores.

Valley Convenience Plus Inc., 242 Cayenne St., West Springfield 01089. Olga Alkattan, same. Convenience store and mini market.

WESTFIELD

Codru Transport Inc., 14 Sycamore St., #22, Westfield 01085. Stepan Foksha, same. A local, interstate and coast-to-coast trucking business.

Crane Marketing Associates Inc., 362 Granville Road, #105, Westfield 01085. Donald F. Hogan, same. The marketing of specialty chemicals and related products.

New England Pizza Restaurant of Westfield Inc., 280 Southampton Road, Westfield 01085. Jose M. Davila, 10 So. Maple St., Enfield, CT 06082. Jose M. Davila, 280 Southampton Road, Westfield 01085, resident agent. Restaurant.

WILBRAHAM

Halon Estates Homeowners Association Inc., 2148 Boston Road, Wilbraham 01095. Jason Sares, 168 Fuller St., Ludlow 01056. (Nonprofit) To maintain the common open space areas and subdivisions of “Halon Estates”.

JLS Architects Inc., 7 Rice Dr., Wilbraham 01095. John L. Strandberg, same. Architectural services.

Taste of Greece, Springfield Inc., 6 Evergreen Circle, Wilbraham 01095. Christine Dourountoudakis, same. To operate a deli and variety store, distribute food supplies to individuals, stores and restaurants.

Departments

The following building permits were issued during the months of September 2004.

AGAWAM

Silver Street Associates
104 Silver St.
$205,000 — Interior construction of warehouse and offices

United Methodist Church
454 Mill St.
$25,000 — Vinyl siding

AMHERST

Amherst College Trustees
Kirby Theater
$13,000 — Install steel to support scenery-rigging equipment

Amherst College Trustees
Kirby Theater
$21,300 — Install acoustical material on walls

Cooley Dickinson Hospital Inc.
170 University Dr.
$9,000 — Repair retaining wall, add guardrail

Hampshire College
Greenwich House
$19,998 — Extend roof overhang

Paul C. Shumway
330 College St.
$6,000 — Interior renovations

Trustees of Hampshire College
Music and Dance Building
$7,483 — Renovate recital hall

CHICOPEE

Mcork Realty Trust
510 Front St.
$521,925 — Erect First American Insurance building

EAST LONGMEADOW

East Longmeadow Center Village for Walgreens
31 Maple St.
$1,160,000 — New building

Maybury Association
90 Denslow Road
$1,898,891 — New building

HOLYOKE

Benderson Development Co.
375 Whitney Ave.
$6,148,410 — Erect five-story hotel

Homestead Grocery
625 Homestead Ave.
$125,000 — Interior renovations and addition

Joseph Miller
56 Jackson St.
$4,000 — Interior renovations — prefab spray booth

Nicholas Sierros
1735 Northampton St.
$7,200 — Modify to operate Domino’s Pizza

Sisters of St. Joseph
34 Lower Westfield Road
$246,903 — Modify offices and bedrooms

NORTHAMPTON

Birch Hill LLC
4 Lawn Ave.
$10,000 — Interior renovations

City of Northampton
274 Main St.
$95,000 — Construct handicap ramp

Hampshire Property Management
51 Clark Ave.
$40,000 — Strip and shingle roof

Levee LLC
163 Conz St.
$67,000 — Reconfigure two rooms, repair sidewalk

Locust Professional Condo
51 Locust St.
$23,500 — New roof

Matthew Pitoniak and B. Feeney
21 Main St.
$99,800 — Interior renovations for bar/tavern

Rockwell Management Corp.
17 New South St.
$22,000 — Interior renovations

Trustees of Smith College
15 Arnold Ave.
$30,000 — Demolish fire-damaged structure

Ten Main Street Florence LLC
10 Main St.
$112,865 — First-floor interior renovations

SPRINGFIELD

Charter One Bank
296 Cooley St.
$120,000 — Interior and exterior remodeling

First Park Memorial Baptist Church
4 Garfield St.
$90,750 — Remove and replace roof

WNEC D’Amour Library
1215 Wilbraham Road
$1,222,441 — Three-story addition

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Bank of America
225 Memorial Ave.
$27,145 — New roof

Discount Office Furniture
2131 Riverdale St.
$51,800 — New roof

WESTFIELD

Elm Development
40 Court St.
$6,000,000 – New building

Uncategorized
Program organizers say the Affiliated Chambers’ Super 60 list shows the strength and diversity of the local economy — and portrays the entrepreneurial spirit that prevails in the Valley. This year’s list is deep with health care businesses, financial services providers, retail operations, including several car dealerships, and even two area colleges.

Russ Denver says the Greater Springfield Chamber’s Super 60 program, which began life as the Fabulous 50, was never intended to be a scientific compilation of the region’s top-performing companies.

After all, there are thousands of businesses in the Pioneer Valley, and only a few hundred are nominated for the honor. "Some companies are shy," said Denver, president of the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield (ACCGS), explaining why some businesses don’t participate. "And some simply don’t want people to know how well they’re doing."

But the annual list is nonetheless a very accurate barometer of what’s happening with the region’s economy, said Denver, who said he examines each list closely for trends and signs. In recent interviews, Denver said that, despite a somewhat soft economy and the severe fiscal challenges facing Springfield, the local business community has produced a number of success stories. Bright spots of note include the health care sector, financial services, retail, and higher education.

These trends have been verified with this year’s list, said Denver, noting that there are more than 10 health care-related companies on the roster, as well as several financial services businesses — from benefits providers to a few insurance companies. Meanwhile, there is a wide variety of retail operations, including several car dealerships, a boat seller, a power equipment operation and a Harley Davidson dealership (see the full list of companies, page 26).

There are even two private schools on the list — Western New England College and American International College (AIC).

"Looking over this list, two things stand out in my mind," said Denver. "First, the fact that consumer product companies have done quite well, which would defy all the media coverage about a perceived lack of consumer confidence."

Denver also noted the proliferation of health care companies, a sign of that sector’s emergence as an economic engine.

"This the largest number of the health-care related companies that we’ve had on our list," he said. "This shows that we not only have a strong base of businesses in that sector, but that they’re doing very well."

While the Super 60 has become an economic barometer, said Denver, it has also become a brand. Indeed, a number of area businesses make use of their inclusion on either the total revenue or revenue growth list in their advertising, he said, and the phrase "Super 60 company’ has become part of the local lexicon.

"The program provides great recognition for employees — that they’ve contributed to the success of the company," he said, adding that Super 60 serves as a vehicle for communicating business success stories in the Valley. "We started this to highlight the importance of business to our region, to highlight the fast-growing companies, and to inform the public that a lot of really good things are going on in the business community."

The Super 60 companies will be feted at a luncheon on Oct. 29 at Chez Josef in Agawam. The keynote speaker for that event will be Arthur J. Rolnick, senior vice president and director of marketing for the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, who will speak on the economics of early childhood development.

In Good Company

Change was the order of the day with this year’s Super 60 list, especially in the revenue-growth category. Half the list, 15 companies, is new from last year, and the top five has only two repeats, the day care center Giggle Gardens, which was the runner-up for the second year in a row, and Thrifty Financial Services, which placed fifth.

At the top of the revenue-growth list for 2004 is Agawam-based U.S. Tank Alliance (USTA), an underground storage tank solutions company that has recorded average growth of 160.9944% over the past three years.

Company President Joel Hershey said there have been a number of state and federal regulations passed over the past 15-20 years regarding underground and above-ground tanks, and U.S. Tank Alliance was created four years ago to take advantage of opportunities presented by that legislation.

The company, which covers roughly the eastern half of the country, has regional facilities in Columbus, Ohio, Tampa, Fla., Baton Rouge, La., and Cinnaminson, N.J., in addition to the corporate headquarters in Agawam.

USTA provides a number of services for commercial clients, residential property owners, and municipalities, including tank cleaning, inspection, compliance programs, system training, project management, and consulting. That diversity, coupled with its geographic reach, has enabled the company to achieve strong growth each year since its inception, said Hershey.

"We put a number of services under one roof, and that makes us fairly unique," he explained, adding that USTA counts a number of global petroleum dealers, area cities and towns, and individual homeowners on its client list.

Rounding out the top five are two newcomers to the revenue growth, Focus Business Supplies Inc. and Northstar Recycling Group (Northstar previously qualified for the total-revenue list).

Other newcomers to the growth list are Baystate Dental, P.C., Baystate Ob-Gyn Group, Brookdale Associates, Diamond RV Center (a previous qualifier for total revenue), Elm Industries, Falcetti Music Inc., First American Insurance Agency, Firtion Adams Funeral Service Inc. (see related story, page 25), Healthcare Resource Solutions, Micro-test Laboratories, and Ten Novembre Group, Dba The Bordeaux Co., and United Personnel Services.

Alta Stark, communications director for the ACCGS said the threshhold for making the growth list was 26% over the past three years, with average growth of just over 65% for the 30 companies that qualified.

On the total revenue side of the ledger, there were four newcomers, AIC, The Center for Human Development and its subsidiary, Behavioral Health Network Inc., and Kittredge Equipment Corp. (see related story, page 23).

Topping the revenue list is Bertera Enterprises, which has been a frequent Super 60 qualifier and a family business that has grown steadily over the years.

Company President Aldo Bertera said it all started with a gas station on Route 20 in West Springfield that was operated by his father. Aldo and his brother, Robert, eventually opened a Subaru dealership on Riverdale Road in 1973. The Bertera family of auto sales and service businesses continues to grow, and now includes eight dealerships and two collision centers.

The corporation includes four dealerships on Riverdale Road — Subaru, Lincoln Mercury, Chrysler, and Suzuki — as well as Bertera Metro Jeep Chrysler Plymouth and Auto World by Bertera, both in Springfield, and Bertera Chevrolet Oldsmobile Pontiac in Palmer. The latest acquisition came this past summer, when the company acquired Balise Chrysler Jeep and melded it with Bertera Dodge in Westfield.

Rounding out the top five in total revenue were newcomer, Sarat Ford Enterprises — another of the four auto dealerships on the revenue list — and Peter Pan Bus Lines and Pride Convenience Inc., and Western New England College.

Stark said that the average annual revenue for the 30 companies on the list was more than $48 million. Total revenue for all companies on the list exceeded $1.4 billion.

Four companies on the revenue list also qualified for the revenue-growth chart — Camfour Inc., Louis & Clark Drug Inc., OK Pet Supply, Peter Pan, and Pride. Meanwhile, four revenue-growth winners also qualified for total revenue — Brookdale Associates, Diamond RV, Environmental Compliance Services Inc., and Northstar Recycling.

For more information on the Super 60 and awards lunchon, visitwww.myonlinechamber.com

Departments

The following Business Certificates and Trade Names were issued or renewed during the month of June and July 2004.

AGAWAM

A & J Drywall
583 Springfield St.
Andre and Jean Turgeon

AAA Signs & Rentals Div. of
Advertising Products
33 Tom St.
Inge Henderson

Aardvark Tent Rentals
96 Strawberry Road
Mark Thomas

Advance Telemessage Service Inc.
850 Springfield St.
Morando DeFronzo

Agawam Landscaping
396 Main St.
Walter Meisser III

American Classics Restaurant
740 Springfield St.
Carlos Silva

Annalees’s Sweet Creations
339 North Westfield St.
Laurie Fountain

Bambi Nursery School
22 Vernon St.
Sylvia Molta

Blackwells Beds & Borders
10 Stillbrook Lane
Robyn Kononitz

Bob Lareau Remodeling
115 South West St.
Bob Lareau

brivers.com
426 North Westfield St.
William Rivers

Business Promotional Ideas
390 North St.
William Gowdy

Chicago Hair Company Inc.
674 Springfield St.
David Strange

E. Wayne Smith Used Cars
1016 Springfield St.
Wayne Smith

Easterntronics
312 Springfield St.
Dang VanHuynk

Five Star Transportation Inc.
384 Shoemaker Lane
Theresa Lacrenski

Gail’s Cleaning Service
221 Regency Park Dr.
Gail Richard

The Homeowner’s Handyman
6 Hope Farms Dr.
Patrick Devine

J.R. Sweeping Service
28 Moylan Lane
James Rico

Jay Morin Liner Replacements
258 North West St.
Jason Morin

Joslad & Associates
15 Marlene Dr.
Joseph Aimua

Kit and Kaboddle Inc.
152 South Westfield St.
Lyle Pearsons

Leaflitter of New England Inc.
1325 Springfield St.
Robert Bushey Jr.

Low Temp Refrigeration
332 Regency Park Dr.
Michael Robertson

M & S Painting
23 Katherine Dr.
Jeff O’Keefe

Malkoon Motors
1039 Springfield St.
Paul Malkoon

Maria’s Pizza & Restaurant
605 Silver St.
Maria Cuccovia

Nemil’s Subway
840 Suffield St.
Navin Patel

Park Place Realty
545 School St.
Carl Breyer Jr.

Patriot Marketing Services
21 Patriot Lane
Suzanne Schutt

Poolman Pools
297 Springfield St.
Kelly Peucker

R C Construction
80 Howard St.
Ryan Kane

Royal Air/Rainbow Vacuum
46 Suffield St.
Peter Moskvitch

S.G.M. Quality Products
103 Valentine St.
Sherrie McKinnon

Shear Illusions
497 Springfield St.
Valerie Mulka

Silver Leasing Associates
325 Silver St.
Philip Chmura

Six Flags New England
1623 Main St.
Riverside Park Enterprises Inc.

Six Flags New England
1477 Main St.
Riverside Park Food Services Inc.

Southgate Liquors
842 Suffield St.
Agawam Liquors

Suff Telephone &
Communications
195 Clover Hill Dr.
James Safarik

Super Models Unlimited
1 South End Bridge Circle
Kim Lawrence

Top Shelf Entertainment
112 Monroe St.
Jeffrey Schumann

Yankee Mattress Factory
314 Springfield St.
Joseph Noblit

AMHERST

Amherst Nails
9 Pleasant St.
Hang Le Thi Nguyen

Amherst Nutrition Center
800 Main St.
Lorraine Chavinard

Amherst Office Park
463 West St.
Donald Verdiere

Atlas Computer
22 Harlow Dr.
Brian Sloffer

Atticus Glass
211 Grantwood Dr.
Atticus Robbins

Christine Enterprises
Village Park Road #109
Christine LaFountain

Direct Financial Aid Professional Services
19 Jason Court
Paul Baker

The Early Childhood Center for Teaching & Learning
867 North Pleasant St.
Dotty Meyer

Fat Lady Productions
38 Trillium Way
Loren Christiansen

Hair East
103 North Pleasant St.
Dawn Eichorn

Hawkins Meadow Apartments
370E Northampton Road
Amherst Association

Helping Hands
120 Pulpit Hill Road
John Porcino

Law Office of Patricia A. McChesney
22 Ussey St. #37D
Patricia McChesney

Market America
95F Southpoint Dr.
Chunlung Zhu

Mary Miller Baskets
84 Chestnut St.
Mary Miller

Massachusetts Space Exploration Systems
15 Blue Hills Road
Robert Hyers, Abhijit Deshmukh

Middle Ridge Design
902 North Pleasant St.
Diane Russell

Old Friends Farm
416 Bay Road
Melissa Bahret

Random Element Music
488 South East St.
Gregory Aldrich

Roy Young Interior/Garden
998 East Pleasant St.
Roy Young

Smart Cat Media
1040 North Pleasant St. #248
Gordon Morehouse

Twinkle Import & Export
153 Village Park Road
Xiauchuan Hu

ZX Inc.
135 Belchertown Road
Xiasda Xias, Xiasyang Tang

CHICOPEE

A-1 Pizza
486 Springfield St.
Ugur Kus

Bee Happy Homes
175 Beauregard Terrace
Kurt William Pressey

Berkshire County Enterprises
269D College St.
Colleen Coyte

C & C Lamination
34 Pajak St.
Carol Cataldo

Chicopee Food Saver
505 Front St.
Muhammad Sabir

Chicopee Wireless
245 Tolpe Circle
Scott Kerkhoff

Cruise Genies.com
52 Wheatland Ave.
Anne-Marie Williams

I.D. Gourmet Coffee House
137 Wheatland Ave.
Louise Ingram, Jodi Delude

Interstate Towing
1745 Donahue Road
Jeremy Procon

Jak-of-All-Trades
10 Atwater St.
Kieth Lussier, Jason Knightly

Lavender Nails Salon
196 East St.
Giang Thai

Lidiya’s Floral Creations
21 Grove St.
Lidiya Ionkin

Lukasik Construction
63 Goodhue St.
Timothy Lukasik

Marty’s Real Estate
23 White Birch Plaza
Martin Dietter

Multiline Warehousing & Transportation Inc.
181 Kendall St.
Agnes Ruszczyk

On Route Services
48 Rimmon Ave.
Kelly Conroy

PJT Productions
125 Chateaugay St.
Patrick Tobin

Penwise
71 Mary St.
Chanah Wizenberg

Print & Packaging Recruiting
295 Toplar Circle
Myron Sanford

Rivervalley Woodworking
253 Fairview Ave.
Karl Nawskon

Scissorsmith
974 Chicopee St.
Nicholas Diaz

TechDoneRight.com
98 Doverbrook Road
Scott Haselkorn

YourDentalTech.com
98 Doverbrook Road
Scott Haselkorn

EAST LONGMEADOW

A&L Holistic Health Spa
280 North Main St.
Alice Shabunin

Bosworth Landscaping
6 Maynard St.
Richard Bosworth

Civil Engineering Association
10 Crane Ave.
Robert Cafarilli

Ferrero Property Management
333 North Main St.
Joseph Ferrero

Lussier & Sons Construction
43 Breezyknoll Road
Steven Lussier

White Stone Marketing Group
246 Canterbury Circle
James White, Gary Stone

HADLEY

Dwight Home Improvements
27 Maple Ave.
Thomas Dwight

Fancy Nails
Hampshire Mall
Buu Van Trinh

Mojoe’s
48 Russell St.
David Faytell

Old American Antiques and Renovation
36 Lawrence Plain Road
Glenn Paquette

HOLYOKE

Al’s Daily Grind Cafe
415 Main St.
Nathaniel Davis

Commercial Auto Sale
52 Commercial St.
Antonio Espiritu Santo

Contemporary Auto Sales
63 Shawmut Ave.
Stephen Stathis

D & M Painting
42 St. James Ave.
Douglas Riel

Dean’s Mini Mart
848 Main St.
Majid Nizam Din

Fashion Nails
223 Maple St.
Kieu Dao

Greenfield Stamp & Coin
1 Martin St.
T. David Heffron

Ingleside Gift Baskets
1781 Northampton St.
Jane Lefebvre

JMC Auto Detailing
184 Suffolk St.
Claudio Perez, Joshua Acevedo

Kirkland’s
50 Holyoke St.
KirklandÌs Inc.

Lechonera Bavamon
107 High St.
Luis Perez

Lucky Footwear Inc.
354 High St.
Han Kang

Manny’s Auto Sales
736 High St.
Elisandro Cuevas

MA Career Development Institute Inc.
100 Front St.
Gaetano DeNardo

Mr. Bill’s Parts & Cycle Service
2 Cabot St.
William Wohlers

T & T Variety
362 High St.
Margarita Herrera

Tony’s Radiator Shop
84 North Bridge St.
Alan and Carol Barthelette

NORTHAMPTON

Accurate Dispersions
312 King St.
The Sherwin-Williams Co.

AkiAnn LLC
46 Columbus Ave.
Camille Nelson

Baboon Productions & Chaffee Weddings
96 Coles Meadow
Rufus Chaffee

Bobbie Turnbull
204 Fairway Village
Barbara Turnbull

Carla A Bernier, MA, CCC-SLP and Abigail B. Jaffee, MA, CCC-SLP
1 Roundhouse
Carla Bernier and Abigail Jaffee

Century Message
16 Center St.
Tora Swinchatt

Conco Paints
312 King St.
The Sherwin-Williams Co.

Cornerstone Builders
25 Phillips Place
Colin Hoffmeister

Correctional Billing Services
Hampshire Jail, 205 Rocky Hill Road
Evercon Systems Inc.

Delong Construction
76 Bancroft Road
Edmund Lennihan

Essentials
88 Main Street
Jin-Kyoo Inc.

Glidden Drywall
23 Plymouth Ave.
Mark Glidden, Sr.

Graphic Leesign
14 Strong Ave.
Sidney Lee

In Home Handyman Services
137A Damon Road
Ink Black Inc.

JB Auto
605 North King St.
Joseph Barker Jr.

Lia Honda
171 King St.
Lia Northampton Inc.

Luna Pizza
88 Pleasant St.
Luna Pizza Corp.

LV Style
1361 Westhampton Road
Lilian Valiunas

Nature’s Creations
176 Turkey Hill Road
David McCaflin

Northampton Home Improvement
61 Kensington Ave.
Henry Souza

Northampton Marketing
108 Main St.
Jonathan Podolsky

Northampton Oriental Rugs
92 King St.
Sweta Asghar

Northampton Veterinary Clinic LLC
227 South
Eleanor Shelburne, Lori Paporello

Nuva Medi Spa
163 Conz St.
Roger Allcroft

Quezno’s Sub
235 Main St.
Northampton Quez LLC

Pioneer Therapeutics
39 Main St.
Andrew Arneson

Roger Menard Insurance Agency
241 King St.
Rober Menard

Sew Good Tailoring
137D Damon Road
Sug and Soome Oh

Student Initiative Gallery of Hampshire College
114 Main St.
Lauren Van Haaeften-Schick, Christopher Madok, Cory Sahifi

T.W.C. Towing
52 Main St.
Juan Figueroa

The Townhomes at Hathaway Farms
73 Barrett St.
Hampton Associates Nominee Trust

Valley Fabrics
271 Pleasant St.
Francesca McClellan

VIA Development
87A Prospect St.
Joseph Brescia

Yankee Matress Factory
104A Damon Road
Thomas Parnell

Zoomshot
49 Williams St.
Cory Barnes

SOUTH HADLEY

NBP Roofing, Siding & Windows
77 Hildreth Ave.
Nick Peters

Superior Shed Works
4 Doane Terrace
John Mielnikowski

SPRINGFIELD

A & P Computer Design
30 Scott St.
Ernest Audet Jr.

Abrantes Remodeling Kitchens & Baths
82 Lyons St.
Antonio Abrantes

AC Siding
88 Biltmore St.
Alecsei Cherkashin

Accurate Despersions
67 Boston Road
The Sherwin-Williams Co.

Acres Dental Care
1954 Wilbraham Road
James Maslowski, D.M.D.

Adam’s New Age Construction &
Home Remodeling
101 Samuel St.
Adam Bousquet

Advanced Nutrition
451 Dickinson St.
Sean Mulka

Affordable Home Improvements
21 Eloise St.
Mike Wilson, Greg Flechsig

American Construction Co.
14 Mazarin St.
Jennifer Bradley

Arzola Cleaning Co.
52 Wait St.
Jose Arzola

Balance Massage Therapy
1739 Allen St.
LeeAnn Williams

Bass Pond Press
1305 South Branch Parkway
P. Ann Pieroway

Bella’s Massage
1039 Worcester St.
Anabela Canvalito

Bongos Studio
140 Chestnut St.
Ilan Amouyal

Branch Security Co.
48 Parallel St.
Calvin Branch, John Muise

CSR Wire LLC
250 Albany St.
Emilio Sibilia Jr.

Chestnut Park Dairy
135 Dwight St.
Farman Elahi

The Church of Jesus Christ Inc.
24 Eastern Ave.
Donovan and Marcia Hart

Cindy’s Modern Style
90 Parker St.
Cynthia Diaz

Conco Paints
670 Boston Road
The Sherwin-Williams Co.

Cost Less Electronics & Machinery
20 Florence St.
Marcel Smith

Crown Fried Chicken
1208 Main St.
Mohammed Asif

D. Melody Records
62 Bacon Road
Dulee Gumlow

Dad’s Variety Store
1081 State St.
Earl Watson

Dallas & Sons Automotive Center
118 Armory St.
Anthony Dallas

Devon Farrell Association
154 Westford Circle
Devon Farrell

Drive USA
510-520 Boston Road
Drive USA2 Inc.

El Campo Market
288 Locust St.
Aris Planco

First Time Hospitality
137 Albemarle St.
Kristie Hosey, Brenda Clark

Forest Park Mini Flea Market
451 Dickinson St.
Bridget Finn

Freedom Wireless
83C Mill St.
Scott Lubarsky

G & J Home Improvements
32 Palmyra St.
Jose Colon

Gold Coast Market
253 Bay St.
Nana Dark LLC

Have Not Entertainment
170 Buckingham St.
Kalord Lee, Lamont Stuckey,
Richard Henry, Chris LeValle

Hong Kong Garden Restaurant
475 Breckwood Blvd.
Zhou Hua Ni

Hummingbird Restaurant
347 Orange St.
Errol Campbell

Industrial Control Solutions
48 Olmstead Dr.
Daniel Mattoon

J & B Woodcrafters
15 West Laramee Green
James Brown

Jan Reynolds Design
1 Greenleaf St.
Jan Reynolds Ziter

Jantize of Springfield
69 Andrew St.
Michael Lambert

Joy’s Creations Lawncare
24 Moebeth St.
Miguel Franqui

Just B.
878 Sumner Ave.
Banca Jackson

K.C.’s Vac All
93 Grochmal Ave.
Kenneth Cross

Law Offices of Jonathan R. Goldsmith, Esq.
1350 Main St.
Jonathan Goldsmith

Lee Nails
8 Orange St.
Chuong Nguyen

Line Up Barbershop
72 Bankcroft St.
Hairol Tejada

Little Angels Child Enrichment
153 Savoy Ave.
Melissa Petreshock

Lopez Multiservice
247 Central St.
Jose Lopez

Los Monchys
906 Carew St.
Angelique and Bienvenido Lopez

Martinez Towing
279 Main St.
Agapito Martinez

Meadowbrook Lane Capital
250 Albany St.
Emilio Sebilia Jr.

Media Copiers
43 Flower St.
Scott Noyes

Media Group International
26 Hanson Dr.
Vadim Valnikov

Merit Security
155 Woodland Road
Robert Martin

Millennium Nails
1655 Boston Road
Rhung Cao

Monique Heavenly Braid Shop
344 Bay St.
Delia Brown

Mortgage Services
671 Dickinson St.
Reuben Hudson

Nancy’s Transportation
26 Huntington St.
Wanda Figueroa

One Shrimp
889 Carew St.
Thomas Bertz, Tom Grassetti

PD Auto Sales
26 Redden Road
Pierre Dovesius

Palm Tech
23 Cindy Circle
Jason Palmeira

Paradise Pizza
30 Ft. Pleasant St.
Ilyas Koc

Professional Handyman Service
25 Barnet St.
Robert Tyler Jr.

RYJ Enterprises
197 Florida St.
Rosemary Sandlin, Yasir Osman,
Jody Wright

Rapid Locksmith
433 White St.
Morris Reid

Reggae Vibes
8 Parker St.
Alfraido Wray

SK Stores
145 Manchester Terrace
Svetlana Korobkov

Smile Hair Plus Beauty Supplies
1232 Main St.
Young Man Kim

Smily’s Handy Variety Store
477 Boston Road
Darshak Convenience Inc.

TLC Vending
108 Carol Ann St.
Robert and Christine Cooley

Timmak Clothing Company
140 Chestnut St.
Timothy Thomas

Tom James of Springfield
191 Chestnut St.
Lewis and Thomas Saltz Inc.

Traveling Hands Massage
116 Westminster St.
Susan Cadwell

The Underground
172 Main St.
Tonya Claiborne, Deadrea Williams

Uniquely Gifted
439 White St.< R>Betel Arnold, Joy Quinn-Mavredakis

Victor Carpet Cleaning
537 Main St.
Victor Carmenatty

Waynerworks
357 Roosevelt Ave.
Suzanne Wayner

Zhen Bo House
762 Boston Road
Gao Fei Lin

WEST SPRINGFIELD

AJ Kendall
49 River St.
Andrea Ruest

Able Caning
15 Highland Park Dr.
Alice Zuvers

Abound Inc.
34 Fox St.
Joseph Werner

All About Va
1096 Memorial Ave.
Tania Neff

Andrey’s Home Painting
40 Windor St.
Andrey Gut

Beautiful Rooms
42 Myron St.
Gary Okun

Breast Care of Western
Massachusetts
371 Park St.
Nancy Weiss

The Car Place
47 Bradford Dr.
Anthony Ricco

Champ Computers
96 Garden St.
Tony Champagne

Countrywide Home Loans Inc.
138 Memorial Ave.
Countrywide Home Loans Inc.

The Cozy Cricket
148 River St.
Linda Vigliano

Dana’s Cleaning Service
1230 Morgan Road
Svetlana Zhuk

Di’s Daycare
39 Bonnie Brae Dr.
Diane Bonneville

East Coast Tooling
283 Elm St.
Michelle McCarthy

First Emmanuel Assembly of God Church
664 Union St.
Cicero DeSantiago, Albertina DaPenna

FishFrenzy.net
2001 Riverdale St.
Edward Pecord

Flower Design
100 New Bridge St.
Irina Lapik

Game Hunters II
683 Riverdale St.
Tuyet Diep

Hair East Inc.
8 Chestnut St.
Jennifer Gamelli

Hiland Group Inc. of
Massachusetts
23 New Bridge St.
Anthony Hill, David Saenz

Katrina’s Flowers and More
62 Union St.
Katrina Vasilchenko

The Loft
201 Westfield St.
Ann Marie Walts

Mama Mias Pizzeria
60 Park St.
Mama Mias Pizzeria Inc.

Mike Gentile Auto Sales
74-80 Baldwin St.
Michael Gentile

Murphy’s Carpentry
22 Worcester St.
Michael Murphy

Murphy Construction
22 Worcester St.
Michael Murphy

Northern Granite
380 Union St.
Vgachesav Katko

Patriot Towing and Recovery
77 Windsor St.
Rosalee Williams

Paul’s Auto Repair
17 Bosworth St.
Paul Traska

Quality Inn
1150 Riverdale St.
Shubham LLC

R. Hudson Painting
84 Day St.
Raymond Hudson Jr.

St. Jean’s Plumbing & Heating
28 Squassick Road
Arthur Jean

Town Line Flea Market
260 Westfield St.
Town Line Flea Market LLC

Venckai Consulting
43 Russell St.
Genevieve Saxton

Western Mass. Compounding Center & Palliative Care
138 Memorial Ave.
Janina Cirillo

Zykan Distribution
1596 Memorial Ave.
Kelly Doull, Arsen Dzhavadyn

WESTFIELD

Affordable Flooring
66 Montgomery St.
David Minchuk

Belleview Billing Services
55 Belleview St.
Deborah Beaudry

Brian S. Whitehall
42 Loomis Ave.
Brian Whitehall

Century 21 Home Town Associates
350 Elm St.
Victoria Minella

Colors Galore
416 North St.
Timothy Morin

Colors of the Future
93 South Maple St.
Daniel Dionne, Diana Cruz

Cummings & Cioch Home Inspection Inc.
559 Montgomery Road
Daniel Cioch

Electronics to the Max Corp.
30 Schumann Dr.
Brian Plante

European Headlines
190 East Main St.
Heli Withrow

G & E Seafood
241 East Main St.
Gregory Ramos

Hartwell Concrete & Masonry Systems
38 Ridgecrest Dr.
Bill Hartwell

Ken’s General Repair
1198 East Mountain Road
Kenneth Gamelli

King’s Cleaners
282 Southampton Road
Sook Kyung Kim

L & L Pools
26 East Glen Dr.
Terrence Lamb

L.J. Electric
1198 East Mountain Road
Louis Ganelli

Linda Nails
205 Elm St.
Nguyet Nguyen

MA Career Development Institutes Inc.
102 Elm St.
Gaetano Demardo

Musical Beginnings
16 High St.
Donna Omega Liese

Nu-Style Records
81 Main St.
Jose Bergollo

Professional Freight Carrier
43 Apple Orchard Height
Joseph McCarthy

Sara’s Organizing Solutions
41 Maple Terrace
Sara Hampton

Sneakel Jam
51 Union St.
German Flex

Specials Inc.
103 Mainline Dr.
Robert Silver

Useful Things
205 Elm St.
James Valentine, Armand Beaumier

White Services
404 Granville Road
Leslie White II

Zanto
190 East Main St.
Z3W Inc.

Uncategorized
Twenty years.

In the long course of human history, that’s not much time at all — not even the blink of an eye.

But when one looks at the advances in technology and medicine that have taken place in that time, it seems like an eternity.

Twenty years ago, hardly anyone had a cell phone, and if they did, it was the size and weight of a brick. Now, we simply can’t imagine getting through a day or even a round of golf without one. Two decades ago, the fax machine was revolutionizing the way people communicated in the workplace. Now, while not obsolete, it is considered slow and somewhat backward.

E-mail is the way to send and receive information now. At times, we wonder how in the world we ever conducted business without it. Then again, when we stare at several dozen pieces of spam each morning, we think that maybe we’d like to try.

Yes, some things have certainly changed in the past 20 years. BusinessWest, which made its debut in the spring of 1984, is devoting this issue to looking back at what has transpired — or not transpired — over that time. This issue is packed with stories (some of them reprinted from years ago) and photographs that tell a story of change, progress, and perseverance. We hope you like this retrospective, and offer this quick synopsis of the publication’s lifetime.

BusinessWest got its start in 1984, a year that is also the title of a book. George Orwell’s classic warned of the dangers of totalitarianism and institutions like the Thought Police and ëBig Brother.’ And while the world Orwell portrayed doesn’t exist even 20 years after the fact, we are, by some estimates, photographed a dozen times a day as we go to work, the bank, and the Turnpike toll booth.

Technology has been the biggest story of the past 20 years. It has changed how we work and how we live. It has given rise to new industry groups and hundreds of new businesses in the region. It has also played a large role in the fortunes of the economy.

Another sector that has seen significant change is health care. Advances in technology, procedures, and pharmaceuticals have made things that seemed impossible a generation ago very possible. However, other forces, especially managed care, falling state and federal reimbursements, and non-physician-friendly trends such as soaring malpractice insurance rates have made it difficult for hospitals and doctors to stay in business.

Looking at the region’s economy as a whole, we can say that, in many ways, the Valley is certainly better off than it was 20 years ago. While it’s true that the area has lost a number of large employers and its manufacturing base is much smaller, its economy is more diversified, and thus more resilient. Tourism is now a driving force in the economy, health care remains strong despite the many challenges facing the industry, and the technology sector is gaining a small foothold, especially in Hampshire County.

Some communities have flourished over the past 20 years. Northampton has experienced a true renaissance and has become a nationally recognized center for arts. Meanwhile, Easthampton, once a thriving mill town, has been reborn into a vibrant, eclectic community now home to a wide range of artists.

Some suburban areas have witnessed explosive residential growth, These include South Hadley, Westfield, East Longmeadow, Belchertown, and others. And in many of those communities, there has been a corresponding business boom.

But while surrounding areas have seen significant progress over the past two decades, Springfield, the largest city in the region and the seat of Western Mass., has not.

Indeed, with the notable exceptions of Monarch Place and the new Basketball Hall of Fame, the Springfield skyline looks much as it did in 1984, while in the 20 years prior to that, the city took on a completely new appearance with several new office towers, the building of I-91, and other developments.

Like other New England urban centers, Springfield has been largely stagnant in recent years, waiting for that proverbial ënext big thing,’ while trying to lure jobs. Twenty years ago, people were talking about Springfield’s vast potential and how it was an attractive, more affordable option to Boston. Today, they’re still talking about it.

There are some projects in various stages of development in greater Springfield — Union Station, a new federal courthouse, and the new convention center, already under construction. But these are mostly publicly funded initiatives, and Springfield desperately needs some private investment.

Maybe by the time BusinessWest celebrates its 25th, there will be some to write about.

Features
Since he arrived at Baystate Medical Center 12 years ago and assumed the title of president, Mark Tolosky has made it a habit to attend the facility’s twice-monthly new-employee-orientation sessions. He says he does so to "put a face" on the massive health care system, and share with the newcomers his thoughts on the values and goals he considers most important. It’s part of a personal approach to management that Tolosky, now CEO of Baystate Health System and the subject of this month’s CEO Profile, owes to a childhood spent in a tiny mining town in upstate New York, and the lessons he learned from the people who carved out a life there.

Baystate Medical Center is the second-largest health care facility in the state. More than 5,000 people work there, and 1,000 physicians administer care to the thousands of people who visit the complex every day.

This is a city unto itself, one that is a world — make that several worlds — away from the place where Mark Tolosky, CEO of the Baystate system, grew up and eventually developed a special interest in health care.

That place is Lyon Mountain, N.Y., an iron-ore-mining town in the Adirondacks near the Canadian border. Its claim to fame is that the cables in the Golden Gate Bridge were made with ore from the Republic Steel mine that gave the community its identity. When Tolosky grew up here in the ’50s, the town’s population was 900, and dominated by Poles, Lithuanians, and other Eastern Europeans who worked hard to support their families.

"Everybody knew everybody, and life was really simple," said Tolosky, who would become an Eagle Scout and an athletic star at the town’s tiny high school. "It was very close-knit, and everyone looked out for each other. I could walk down the street and tell you who lived in every house."

Tolosky, the subject of this month’s CEO Profile, takes the same approach to his responsibilities within the Baystate system, where he succeeded longtime CEO Mike Daly in January. He practices what he calls a very personal style of management, despite the size of the facility and the scope of his responsibilities.

For example, Tolosky often hand-delivers complimentary letters he receives about employees from patients and reads them to the individual in front of his or her co-workers. Meanwhile, he still attends many of the company’s bi-weekly new-employee- orientation meetings.

"I like to meet and greet the new employees and talk about values … I want to put a face on the organization," he said, noting that he started attending the sessions soon after he arrived at Baystate in 1992. "I also want to let them know that the leaders that are making decisions about this organization live and work in the community, and you can see them, touch them, and converse with them."

Tolosky assumes the helm of the Baystate system at a very challenging time for this industry. He told BusinessWest that providers are being stretched to the very limits of their capabilities and imaginations, and he doesn’t believe the health care system can maintain itself much longer without meaningful reform.

"I know people have been saying that for the past several years, but it’s clear to me that we can’t keep going in this direction," he said. "There is a fundamental belief among people who know this business well that the course we’re on is not sustainable.

"There are 600,000 uninsured people in this state now — that’s equivalent to the population of the city of Boston," he continued. "The data is looking continually troublesome, and when you factor in the aging population, the Baby Boomers who are reaching retirement age, and the unbelievable advances coming in technology and interventions in pharamaceuticals, and there’s a mismatch between what our capabilities are going to be and what society may want to commit to."

The problems facing health care are so acute and so numerous that, when asked what he would do if he had a proverbial magic wand, Tolosky said leaders in this industry have pondered that very question, and have come to the conclusion that there are no easy answers or quick fixes.

He said that, if possible, the process would begin with a national dialogue about what people expect from the nation’s health care system, and whether they’re willing to pay for that care.

"In the absence of the war on terror, health care will be, over the next five to seven years, the single biggest state and national political issue," he said, adding that while the presidential candidates have been relatively quiet on the subject to date, that will soon change. "I’m very frustrated with some elected officials who have a very short-term view and are simply not dealing with the very predictable long-term consequences of the track that we’re on."

In a wide-ranging interview, Tolosky talked about the challenges facing the health care sector, his short- and long-term goals for Baystate, and how his upbringing shaped his leadership style.

Lessons in Caring

Tolosky told BusinessWest that he was first drawn into health care, and first considered it as a profession, after listening to the stories told by a longtime friend of his father who managed a small hospital in Southern New York.

"Our families would see each other in the summertime … I would listen to him talk about health care and became intrigued," he said. "When I finally went to visit his hospital, I was absolutely fascinated by what was behind the walls.

"Until that time, when I thought of hospitals, I thought of doctors and nurses," he continued, "but this visit really opened my eyes; I was fascinated by all the different types of people, the different disciplines, how complex the processes were, and the overall business aspect of a hospital. It caught my attention."

Tolosky attended schools in Lyon Mountain (there was one building for all 12 grades) before his father was transferred to another community in New York after the mine closed in the late ’60s in the face of heavy foreign competition. He later went on to attend State University of New York in Binghampton, and then Xavier College in Cincinnati, where he earned a master’s degree in Hospital and Health Care Administration.

After serving as an administrative resident at Ingalls Memorial Hospital in Chicago, Tolosky took his first job at Franklin Square Hospital in Baltimore. He started as assistant director, moved up to associate director, and later to senior vice president.

During his stint at Franklin Square, Tolosky devoted three summers and countless nights to pursuit of a law degree at the University of Maryland School of Law, and at one time had a small private practice.

"I always enjoyed law, and I think it really helped me develop my analytical skills and my writing and speaking," he said, adding that while he considered joining a large law firm and specializing in health care, he ultimately decided that he would stay in hospital administration. "I enjoyed management, and I enjoyed being part of an organization and leading it, and in 1980 I made a very deliberate decision to stay the course."

From Franklin Square, Tolosky moved on to Faulkner Hospital in Boston, which he served first as chief operating officer and later as president and CEO. In 1987, he took a job as executive vice president of Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge.

Tolosky told BusinessWest that he greatly enjoyed his work at Mount Auburn, and had no intentions of leaving there. But Daly and others actively recruited him for the position of CEO of Baystate Medical Center and senior vice president of the Baystate system.

In the end, it was an opportunity to work at a bigger system and a chance to stay close to his family in New York, and thus it was an offer he didn’t want to refuse.

"I wasn’t going to go to Texas or Florida or California," he said. "My whole family is from Albany north, and my wife’s family is also in New York, and our families are very important to us."

And while Tolosky was soon on a track to succeed Daly, he wasn’t thinking that far ahead when he made the decision to come to Springfield. "You never go somewhere for the next job, because something can, and often does, go wrong," he said. "I came here for the job I was hired for."

Getting Personal

That job evolved considerably over the years, he said, noting that, while he was charged with administering Baystate Medical Center, he also had a system role. He was involved, for example, in the broad care delivery system that includes Franklin Medical Center, Mary Lane Hospital, and the Visiting Nurse Association. He was later assigned academic affairs, research, and information technology.

"The scope of my role kept getting more pervasive — bigger, broader, deeper — and that happened over a period of many years," he said, adding that the depth of his responsibilities left him well-positioned when, about three years ago, Daly initiated the process of selecting a successor.

That search process morphed into what became a lengthy transition period that Tolosky described as "remarkably smooth," in part because of the careful planning that went into it, but also because the two leaders share many of the same visions and management philosophies.

When asked for a job description for the CEO of a system of Baystate’s size, Tolosky said that individual obviously helps to shape a vision for the institution and is intricately involved with putting together the business plans for meeting goals and objectives. But the bigger assignment, perhaps, is setting a tone for how work will be carried out and how care will be delivered.

"I think that’s an important role — determining what this leadership team stands for, and what kind of organization we’re going to be," he said. "Are you going to be driven purely by the numbers, or are you going to be a compassionate organization?

"The CEO puts the stamp on the values of the organization and answers the question: what do you stand for?" he continued. "And how do you, as a CEO, project that in real life, on an hourly basis, in how you conduct your work?"

Tolosky answered his own question by saying that he takes a decidedly personal approach to what he does. Attending new-employee-orientation meetings is part of the equation, but the work continues after the individual is hired.

"I make a deliberate, concentrated effort, which I thoroughly enjoy, of making phone calls to thank people for things," he said. "I send notes, and I hand-deliver complimentary letters to staff members. Those are just some of the ways that I like to personalize my work and not be remote; I think it’s very important to be visible."

As for Baystate’s short- and long-term future, Tolosky said he will work in conjunction with the system’s board and other members of the management team to shape a strategic plan. Long-term planning is more difficult than ever given the current climate in health care, he said, but health care systems can project a few years out and plan accordingly.

"You can’t stop thinking mid- to long-term, but you can wait on your specific commitments as long as you can to make sure you have the best sense of the environment," he explained. "We’re always thinking out and looking at demographic trends; we have a five- to seven- to 10-year look, and we keep translating that back into three-year goals and then one-year objectives. We have a multi-layering of how we look at the world.

"Overall, we need to evolve," he continued. "That’s because there’s a natural migration of procedures and technology to community hospitals and physicians’ offices. We need to keep climbing up the sophistication scale, so that we’re differentiated. If we just sat back and we didn’t change over the next eight to 10 years, a lot of our business would go right out the front door."

Critical Condition

As he talked about the situation facing health care providers today, Tolosky spoke as both the CEO of Baystate and the immediate past president of the Mass. Hospital Assoc. In that role, he pressed the case for all the hospitals in the Commonwealth, and became keenly aware of the political, economic, and logistical challenges facing those now seeking reform of the current system.

"The bigger view of the industry is very troubling," he said, "and it doesn’t appear that the political ambition to take this on is there — at either the state or federal level. We learned with the Clinton administration that a wholesale change in the health care system is not something that is embraced by most Americans."

Summarizing the problem facing the health care industry today, Tolosky said medicine is advancing at a phenomenal pace. New technology and new pharmaceuticals are improving the quality of care that can be provided and, in most cases, the quality of life of individuals receiving that care.

The big problem, of course, is how to pay for it all. Americans want and expect the best, but they are also reluctant or, in many cases, unable to pay for it, said Tolosky, and neither the government nor private insurance companies are moving to pick up that cost.

Reimbursements from public and private payers continue to fall, said Tolosky, while, in the case of insurance companies, double-digit increases in premiums have been placed on individuals and businesses.

There are other problems, as well, starting with shortages of many health care professionals, especially nurses, and lack of any real solution to the problem. In fact, in many areas, including Western Mass., there are more people trying to get into nursing programs than there are seats in the classrooms.

Meanwhile, the environment for physicians has become increasingly uninviting, especially in Massachusetts, said Tolosky. They face reimbursement problems of their own, coupled with skyrocketing malpractice rates that are driving them out of the state or into retirement.

And for facilities like Baystate, there is another issue to contend with — capital, or lack thereof. "When we look at some of the great things that are coming to the marketplace, as well as our need to rebuild some of our facilities, our tremendous need for information technology, and capital equipment to take care of patients, it’s going to be a real challenge to afford all that — and we’re one of the three strongest organizations in the state," he said. "Some smaller institutions just have no access to capital."

Add it all up, and it’s not a pretty picture, he said, adding that many in the industry have trouble even deciding where and how to begin fixing the system.

"When you talk about waving a magic wand, or asking people what they would do to solve the problem, that’s the question that causes the best and the brightest people to glaze over," he said. "What should we do? That question is so big, so interdependent, so complex, no one can take three minutes and say, ’this will fix our health system.’"

Tolosky told BusinessWest that, while waiting for that larger solution, elected leaders should refrain from quick fixes, which is how he categorized the national drug legislation that was recently passed.

"I think there’s going to be a revolt in this country by seniors when they figure out what this national pharmacy benefit is and what it isn’t," he said. "The average American thinks it’s first dollar, every dollar that’s covered by this proposal, and that’s not what it is — that’s nowhere near what it is, and that’s why I think that issue will get revisited, and soon."

Healthy Approach

Tolosky admitted that he certainly doesn’t know everyone at the Baystate Medical Center, let alone the rest of the system, on a first-
ame basis. But he knows many of them, and can usually recognize people by face and the department they work in.

He’s delivered letters from patients to some of these employees, and he’s met hundreds of others at new-employee-orientation sessions. When asked how and why he takes such a personal approach, Tolosky replies simply, ’that’s me … that’s how I was brought up."

It’s a style of management that has put Tolosky at the helm of the largest Massachusetts health care facility west of Boston, and one of the Top 100 hospitals in the country. It’s also made him Lyon Mountain’s other claim to fame, besides the cables in the Golden Gate Bridge.

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

Features
As he goes about the task of righting the fiscal ship in Springfield, Mayor Charles Ryan will solicit the help of the city’s business community. Specifically, he wants to tap into the competitive nature of business leaders and their focus on customer service.

Charlie Ryan stressed that the city of Springfield is not Ford Motor Co. "We’re not making cars, or widgets, or anything else," he told BusinessWest. "We’re educating children, we’re providing public safety, and we’re offering basic services. That’s not the same as running a company; some of the rules that apply to business don’t apply to a municipality."

That said, Ryan, the city’s 76-year-old mayor who returned to City Hall in January 36 years after he left it following three terms as Springfield’s top executive, believes his administration can, indeed, borrow lessons from the corporate world.

At the very least, it can benefit from its expertise and competitive nature, said Ryan, who has embarked on an intriguing initiative to involve members of region’s business community in his multi-faceted effort to return the city to sound fiscal health and, in general, enable it to operate more efficiently.

"The business community consists of men and women who are, out of necessity, competitive," he said. "They wouldn’t survive if they weren’t successful in beating the competition. Whatever attributes make them competitive — persistence, tenacity, imagination, and others — are very rare indeed.

"To whatever extent these individuals turn their attention to our problems," he continued, "we’re going to benefit."

Specifics of the plan are still coming together, and ordinances for the program must be drafted and approved by the City Council. But what is known is that Ryan wants to tap the talents of area business leaders to address some of the city’s many ills — and he believes that free assistance is crucial to the city’s efforts to right its financial ship.

For starters, Ryan intends to make use of three individuals from MassMutual in what he calls a "loaned-executive program." These volunteers will be reviewing various city departments with an eye toward creating efficiencies.

Once the 90-day review process is completed, the next, still-evolving stage of the process will take place.

Russell Denver, president of the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield, told BusinessWest that Ryan approached the Chamber and the Springfield Business Development Council after last fall’s election and asked about the recruitment of business volunteers to work on projects within City Hall. Denver said that to date, he has enlisted more than 100 such individuals who are willing to offer some form of assistance in project-specific situations.

"This is a great opportunity for the city to take advantage of some free consulting," he said, noting that, while that word consulting is the one being tossed around by those involved with this initiative, he prefers to say that business leaders would be partnering with city department heads and other employees.

But will this work? Can the private sector and public sector come together and achieve progress? Some city councilors have questioned whether department heads will feel threatened by the intrusion of business leaders, while others have expressed concern about chain-of-command and collective-bargaining issues.

But both Ryan and Denver believe there will be collaboration, not intrusion, and that the business community’s help is needed to fix the city’s bottom line and enable departments to provide better service to residents.

"Fundamental things are not being done, or not done as well as they could be," said the mayor of day-to-day activities at City Hall. "And this is everywhere I look."

Executive Decisions

Ryan acknowledged that his plans to enlist the business community are unusual and rather extraordinary — but those are some of the same words he would use to describe the city’s current situation.

Springfield is getting plenty of ink these days, and most of it isn’t good. The headline on the cover of the winter issue of Commonwealth magazine, put out by the Mass. Institute for a New Commonwealth (MassInc.), screams, ’Springfield: Has It Hit Bottom?’

Without directly answering that question, Ryan said the city’s fiscal state is precarious to say the least. He told BusinessWest that the city can generate about $3 million in new tax revenues this year under the guidelines of Proposition 2 1/2, but he’s already looking at an additional $6 million in debt service and $6 million to $7 million in additional health insurance expenses. "We just continue to lose ground."

During last fall’s campaign, Ryan dared to utter the R-word — receivership — and was accused by rival Linda Melconian of trying to scare voters and greatly exaggerating the problem.

He insists that he was doing neither, and a month after taking office, he is using the same language.

"I don’t know if we can head this off," he said, referring to the prospect of receivership. "I’d like to say that we can, but I just don’t know — the news keeps getting worse."

Indeed, in the budget he outlined late last month, Gov. Mitt Romney calls for level funding of aid to cities and towns, this at a time when Ryan is begging for a real increase.

The mayor said some people understand and appreciate the bind Springfield finds itself in, but many don’t. "When we end a contract or don’t fund a certain position, there still seems to be a lack of understanding as to why those things are happening," he said. "The answer is simple; we can’t afford those things anymore."

Using a decidedly somber tone, Ryan described a collective bargaining session that occurred just prior to his meeting with BusinessWest. Most City Hall employees are overdue for raises, said the mayor, noting that the city simply doesn’t have the $4 million needed to pay for contracted pay hikes. "In a few months, we’re going to be starting a new fiscal year," he noted. "And unless a miracle happens, we’re not going to have the $3 million to $4 million to pay for the next round of increases. The IOUs keep piling up."

Ryan isn’t looking for miracles from the business community. He is, however, looking for some good advice, the kind of consulting that the city couldn’t afford if it had to pay for it.

Denver believes the business community can provide that brand of help, and wants to, because it understands that a healthy Springfield is vital to the prospects of further economic development in the Pioneer Valley.

"They know how important it is for Springfield to turn itself around," he said. "That’s why you’re seeing so many people come forward and volunteer their services."

In Good Company

Ryan told BusinessWest that he had several discussions last fall with MassMutual CEO Robert O’Connell about ways the financial services giant might assist the city. One byproduct of those discussions is the planned loaned-executive program, which could commence over the next several weeks.

Plans — subject to approval by the council — call for MassMutual’s involvement to be led by Theresa H. Forde, senior vice president of sales and marketing, and John F. Abbott, vice president of state government relations and policy holder relations. They will meet with department heads and other employees to review operations and identify areas where changes can be made and improvement realized.

Ryan, who stressed to the City Council that the project was not a witch hunt, said that the MassMutual executives will be working with him in what he called a "dynamic process that will identify better ways for us to carry out our business.

"It’s fundamental that people understand that this is not a study by the MassMutual people that will be presented to me at the end of 90 days," he explained. "They will work, day by day, in concert with me, as together we make this very necessary analysis and identify the strengths and weaknesses of our city operation."

The hope is that the department-by-department review will yield strategies that do not involve additional personnel or other expenditures.

"We want to focus on remedies that are practical and affordable," Ryan said. "I’m sure there will be some where they say, ’you could do a better job if you had 30 more police officers.’ Well, right now, that’s not an option — we don’t have the money to hire 30 more police officers.

"What we have to do is look at what our economic capacity is and, within those significant constraints, try and improve our effectiveness," he continued. "And I’m sure there will be a lot that we can do, even with our empty pocketbook."

Once individual remedies have been identified, the city could call on some of the companies the Chamber has enlisted to take on specific projects. For example, area banks could assist with cash-flow or debt-refinancing issues, said Denver, while property-management companies may be able to identify economies of scale or other means of reducing costs.

Law firms may offer pro-bono services in a number of areas, said Denver, including the collection of overdue property taxes or the taking of properties. Meanwhile, accounting firms, marketing agencies, staffing companies, and the area’s colleges have services they can offer.

Even retail outlets can be of assistance, he explained, noting that such businesses know a lot about inventory control and customer service.

Denver told BusinessWest that, in early discussions with the mayor on the subject of business volunteers, Ryan focused on the broad subject of productivity.

"In our local economy, the numbers are improving, but unemployment is not, because companies are increasing productivity — that’s why they’re calling this a jobless recovery," said Denver. "Companies are doing more with the same number of people, or fewer, and this is what intrigues the mayor."

While he acknowledged that there are vast differences in how a company and a municipality are managed, Denver said he thought area business leaders can make whatever adjustments are necessary and make some solid contributions to the kind of progress the mayor is seeking.

"You’ve already seen a number of companies lend practical assistance to the School Department and to individual schools," said Denver, listing MassMutual, American Saw & Mfg., and other businesses in the same category. "This is the same thing, but on a much larger scale.

"Besides," he continued, "a number of business people have served on boards or commissions in the communities they live in, and some have held elected office; they know how a municipality operates."

When asked to what extent he will utilize the business community, Ryan said, "in whatever legitimate and responsible ways I can."

He told BusinessWest that it is as important for business leaders to help as it is for the city to seek their assistance.

"They have a lot at stake," he said. "It is intolerable that the main city in Western Mass. continues to limp; we need a strong, vital central city."

View Toward Progress

Gesturing to the thick layer of crud on the outside of the windows of his second-floor office in City Wall, one that appeared to be years in the making, Ryan joked that he wouldn’t mind if the Chamber could get a window-cleaning company to do some "consulting" work.

If those business executives who do contribute some time and energy to the city’s management can help devise strategies to improve services and make progress in the quest for better fiscal health, then Ryan might enjoy the view out the windows in both a literal and figurative sense.

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

Departments

AMHERST

High Quality Teaching Institute Inc., 24 Tamarack Dr., Amherst 01002. Farideh Seihoun, Ed.D., same. (Nonprofit) To provide in-service education to pre K-12 teachers, etc.

John F. Edwards, Attorney at Law, P.C., 437 Main St., Amherst 01002. John F. Edwards, 20 Mt. Holyoke Dr., Amherst 01002. The general practice of law.

Professional Marketing Associates Inc., 37 South Pleasant St., Suite 3, Amherst 01002. Joseph R. Arak, 60 Maplewood Dr., Amherst 01002. To provide marketing services to businesses.

RC One Inc., 17 Kellogg Ave., Amherst 01002. Jeffrey Waskiewicz, same. Retail food and beverage sales.

BELCHERTOWN

Avery Renovations Inc., 40 Aldrich St., Belchertown 01007. Terry Avery, same. Home improvement, renovations, etc.

Perkins Stone Inc., 53 Oakridge Dr., Belchertown 01007. Timothy Paul Perkins, same. To quarry and deliver fieldstone and gravel.

Tilton Automotive Inc., 3 Amherst Road, Belchertown 01007. Frederick E. Tilton, 52 Daniel Shaw Hwy., Belchertown 01007. Automobile repair, etc.

EASTHAMPTON

Hogan Communications Inc., 81 East St., Easthampton 01027. Sean M. Hogan, 110 Devon Terrace, Westfield 01085. To deal in communication systems and networks.

Masscat Inc., 1 Cottage St., Suite 1-01, Easthampton 01027. William C. Murchison, same. (Nonprofit) To provide educational resources and training in computers, aerospace, and technology, etc.

EAST LONGMEADOW

Maniti Enterprises Inc., 448 North Main St., East Longmeadow 01028. Veena K. Kantesaria, 18 Apple Hill Road, Wilbraham 01095. To operate a retail nutrition, health, and/or fitness business.

Yummydough Inc., 53 North Main St., East Longmeadow 01028. Mike Chang, 30 McCusker Dr., #7, Braintree 02184. To operate one or more restaurants, etc.

FEEDING HILLS

James P. Shea, 525 Springfield St., Suite M-N, Feeding Hills 01030. James P. Shea, 52 Bridge St., Wilbraham 01095. Certified public accounting services.

FLORENCE

Medalco Metals Inc., One Corticelli St., Florence 01062. Dwight J. Klepacki, 30 Ashton Lane, South Hadley 01075. To design and provide products for use by building product stores.

Study Abroad Hawaii Inc., 448 Bridge St., Florence 01062. Jeffrey Palm, same. To develop educational courses for students going to Hawaii for further courses toward their graduation requirements.

GRANBY

Bill Herlihy Barrel Company Inc., 6 Carver St., Granby 01033. William Herlihy Jr., same. To deal in fiber, plastic, and steel drum barrels.

Drapeau & Patla Home Improvement Inc., 156 Kendall St., Granby 01033. Steven Drapeau, same. Installation of siding and windows, home remodeling, etc.

Sirius Center Dog Training Inc., 122 Amherst St., Granby 01033. Herbert A. Everett, same. To operate a dog training center.

V.C. More Investments Inc., 231 Amherst St., Granby 01003. Chad O’Rourke, same. Real estate investments.

HADLEY

Parmar and Sons Inc., 239 Russell St., Hadley 01035. Laxman S. Parmar, same. To own and operate a motel.

HATFIELD

Abacus Associates Inc., 52 School St., Hatfield 01038. Janet Grenzk, same. A strategic research firm.

HOLYOKE

BMT Development Corp., 26 Westfield Road, Holyoke 1040. Bryan J. Dec, same. To develop real estate.

Cellular World Inc., 50 Holyoke St., Holyoke 01049. Firuz Mammadov, same. Cellular phones sales.

HOLLAND

CYD Inc., 25 Williams Road, Holland 01521. Charles Houston Taylor, same. Distribution of food and grocery products.

INDIAN ORCHARD

A. Martins & Son Construction Inc., 28 Goodwin St., Indian Orchard 01151. Antonio M. Martins, 43 Lawrence St., Ludlow 01056. Construction.

LONGMEADOW

The Cup Inc., 70 Brooks Road, Longmeadow 01006. Michael Sullivan-Calvanese, same. To deal in restaurants, inns, etc.

LUDLOW

Apex Construction Inc., 14 Birch St., Ludlow 01056. Jeremy Duchesne, same. To operate a general construction company.

Flooring Services Unlimited Inc., 196 Irla Dr., Ludlow 01056. Ray St. Marie, same. To clean, repair, and install floors.

Matlasz Realty Inc., 318 Colonial Dr., Ludlow 01056. Matthew M. Matlasz, same. To deal in real estate.

Flooring Services Unlimited Inc., 196 Irla Dr., Ludlow 01056. Ray St. Marie, same. To clean, repair, and install floors.

Pioneer Valley Hotel Group Inc., 321 Center St., Ludlow 01056. Shardool S. Parmar, 239 Russell St., Hadley 01035. To provide management and consulting services in motel, hotel, and other hospitality operations.

River Shore Real Estate Inc., 165 Moore St., Ludlow 01056. David Coppolo, same. Real estate development.

Varandas & Sons Construction Inc., 69 Pine St., Ludlow 01056. Ricardo Varandas, same. Construction of roads, piping, concrete and asphalt work, etc.

NORTH AMHERST

Watroba’s Liquors Inc., 79 Sunderland Road, North Amherst 01059. Matthew W. Corcoran, 417 Long Plain Road, Leverett 01054. To deal in liquor and related products.

NORTHAMPTON

Haymarket Cafe Inc., 12 Crafts Ave., Northampton 01060. David Simpson, 20 Jennie Lane, Edgartown 02539. To own and operate Haymarket Cafe in Northampton.

Northampton Reach Out and Read Inc., 193 Locust St., Northampton 01060, Jonathan S. Schwab, 575 Coles Meadow Road, Northampton 01060. (Nonprofit) To assist and encourage children to begin reading at an early age, etc.

Northampton Rotary Foundation Inc., c/o Morse & Sacks, P.C., 31 Trumbull Road, Northampton 01060. Julee Clement, 152 Legate Hill, Charlemont 01339. (Non-profit) To serve the youth of Northampton through coaching, tutoring, mentoring, etc.

Thomas Douglas Architects Inc., 138 West St., Northampton 01060. Thomas Douglas, 204 Crescent St., Northampton 01060. Architectural and related services.

PALMER

J C K Marketing Inc., 1020 Central St., Palmer 01069. Joseph C. Knight, 35 Upper Palmer Road, Monson 01057. To conduct a store dealing in vacuum cleaners.

SOUTH HADLEY

Interstate Towing Inc., 180 Willimansett St., South Hadley 01075. Jeremy J. Procon, 97 Allison Lane, Ludlow 01056. To tow and deal in automobiles, motorcycles, etc.

Jorma Inc., 80 Granby Road, South Hadley 01075. Jason R. Houle, 89 Granby Road, South Hadley 01075. To own and operate a restaurant.

SOUTHAMPTON

Andre Senecal & Sons Inc., 138 D Fomer Road, Southampton 01073. Andre Senecal, same. General contractors and builders.

SPRINGFIELD

Commercial Insurance Associates Inc., 17 Fenimore St., Springfield 01108. Bonnie Smith, same, president, treasurer, and clerk. To act exclusively as an insurance producer.

Hartley Botanic Inc., 1380 Main St., Suite 202, Springfield 01103. Gordon Walker Carruthers, Hill Top, Goldford Lane, Bickerton, Cheshire, SY14 8LN, GBR. Arthur W. Price, Esq., 1380 Main St., Suite 202, Springfield 01103, resident agent. To deal in glasshouses and conservatories, etc.

Main Fashions Inc., 2469 Main St., Springfield 01107. Carmen N. Rosario, 50 Old Lane Road, Springfield 01129. To sell clothing, souvenirs, general merchandise, food, etc.

Steckley Studios Inc., 45 Willow St., Apt. 427, Springfield 01103. Edwin Steckley, same. Commercial artist, custom caricatures, etc.

Twenty First Association Properties Inc., 995 Worthington St., Springfield 01109. Kelly Rapp, 78 Starling Road, Springfield 01119. (Nonprofit) To provide elderly and handicapped persons with housing facilities and services, etc.

Urban League of Springfield Camp Atwater Foundation Inc., 765 State St., Springfield 01109. Cynthia A. Tucker, 35 Riverview Terrace, Springfield 01108. (Nonprofit) To be involved in the operation of the Urban League of Springfield Inc., etc.

Victor Apartments Inc., 2469 Main St., Springfield 01107. Victor M. Rosario Jr., 50 Old Lane Road, Springfield 01129. To deal in, improve, and rehabilitate real estate, etc.

Wolverines Baseball Inc., 244 Bridge St., Springfield 01003. James Blain, 102 Primrose Dr., Longmeadow 01106. (Nonprofit) To assist the interest of players who will participate in Wolverines Baseball Inc., help develop qualities of citizenship, etc.

THREE RIVERS

PAR Packaging Inc., 6 Springfield St., P.O. Box 82, Three Rivers 01080. David Jagodowski, 45 West St., Belchertown 01007. To deal in packaging and packaged paper products, metals, fabrics, etc.

WALES

Island Ink of Massachusetts Inc., 3 Shore Dr., Wales 01081. Serges LaRiviere, 421 State St., Belchertown 01007. To deal in products and services for refilling and replacing of inkjet cartridges, toners, etc.

Primo Enterprises Inc., 3 Shore Dr., Wales 01081. Serges LaRiviere, 421 State St., Belchertown 01007. To sell products and services in the refilling and replacement of ink-jet cartridges, etc.

WESTFIELD

Amelia Park Figure Skating Club Inc., 21 South Broad St., Westfield 01085. Stephen Blanchard, 40 Highland Ave., Easthampton 01027. (Nonprofit) To encourage the members in all the disciplines of figure skating, etc.

Baby Wink Inc., 501A Southampton Road, Westfield 01085. Joseph C. Dunlap, 31 Mathers Road, Westfield 01085. To deal in maternity products.

Daris Cutter Grinding Company Inc., 26 Airport Dr., Westfield 01085. Gerard J. Daris, 562 Birnie Ave., West Springfield 01089. To operate a machine shop to include Bridgeport grinding, millwork, etc.

I Will I Do …. Inc., 45 Cardinal Lane, Westfield 01085. Melissa M. Schechterle, 5 Mulberry Lane, Somers, CT 06071. Alice E. Zaft, 46 Cardinal Lane, Westfield, clerk. To consult and assist in the planning of wedding services.

Law Offices of Kathryn M. Parakilas, P.C., 10 School St., Westfield 01085. Kathryn M. Parakilas, 24 Plantation Circle, Westfield 01085. The practice of law.

Sign Shop Inc., 215 East Main St., Westfield 01085. Monica Sobczyk, 7 Belleview Dr., Westfield 01085. To deal in residential and commercial signs.

St Pierre & Sons Drywall Inc., 244 Montgomery Road, Westfield 01085. Chad E. St. Pierre, same. Drywall work and related services.

WILBRAHAM

Apothecary Center Inc., 16 Primrose Lane, Wilbraham 01095. Philip O. Goncalves, same. Retail druggists, pharmacists, and chemists, etc.

Just Building Inc., 106 Faculty St., Wilbraham 01095. Cameron M. Belcastro, same. General construction and remodeling contracting.

WEST SPRINGFIELD

Beauty Gate Salon & Day Spa Inc., 1646 Riverdale St., West Springfield 01089. Eizbieta Chmiel, 89 Lincoln St., Feeding Hills 01030. Hairstyling, coloring, etc., and spa.

Professional Evaluation Network Inc., 22 Boulevard Place, West Springfield 01089. Laura K. Cascella, same. To accept and review medical files from insurance carriers, legal groups, etc.

West Springfield Rotary Foundation Inc., 75 Pease Ave., West Springfield 01069. Theodore Hebert, same. (Nonprofit) To promote and carry out the efforts of the Rotary International to achieve world understanding and peace, etc.

Windpath Corp., 14 Windpath West, West Springfield 01089. Howard H. Hanson, same. To operate a liquor store.

Departments

AGAWAM

Athena’s By Ali
65 South Alhambra Circle
Allison Nitch

Bear Realty
491B Springfield St.
John Kudlic

Dr. Andrew E. Boraski
334 Walnut St. Ext.
Dr. Andrew E. Boraski

Dragon Conditioning
75 Christopher Lane
Phil McGeoghan

The Handy Helpers
887 Shoemaker Lane
Edward McCabe Jr.

Just Deserts
77 Parkview Dr.
Sandra Gingras

Motor City Car Co.
91 Ramah Circle
Richard Conlon

Prestige Carpentry & Remodeling
161 Adams St.
Dave Maciver, Joseph Bucalo

Robbie’s Only The Best Inc.
1226B Springfield St.
Roberta DeMarco

T.J. Vending Corp.
33 Norman Terrace, #116
Thomas Paglia

Xtreme Paintball
1775 Main St.
Krzysztof Matusik

AMHERST

The Holistic School
893 West St.
Johnathon Litant, Lionel
Claris, Len Peters

Justice for Woody
P.O. Box 802
Mary Rives, Keith Carlson

Karen’s Kitchen
460 West St.
Karen Weber

The Toy Box
201 North Pleasant St.
Elizabeth Rosenburg

Utopia Arts
54 Larkspur Dr.
Daniel Thibedeau

Utopia Technology Consulting
54 Larkspur Dr.
Daniel Thibedeau

CHICOPEE

Access-Ability
200 Lambert Terrace
Jennifer Fimbel

Bob’s Renovation Service
159 Casey Dr.
Robert Zygarowski

Chester Sierzutowski, Electrician
50 Chartier St.
Chester Sierzutowski

Classic Nail
212 Exchange St.
Tina Nguyen

Genesis Enterprises
583 LaFleur Dr.
Phelemon and Patricia Dansereau

Great Crowns
109 Church St.
Walter Gazda Jr.

John’s Asphalt Paving
900 Chicopee St.
John Kezer

Lemelin Electrical and Petroleum Services
26 Paderewski Ave.
Daniel Lemelin

MJ Nails
1893 Memorial Dr.
Trang Nguyen

New England Home
Improvement
32 Prospect St.
David Guidenko

RD Design Group
58 Columba St.
Kossivi Djagli

Rodriguez Party Planner
922 Chicopee St.
Ludia Rodriguez

Royal Real Estate Service
342 Britton St.
Gerald Roy

Stafford Courier Service
127 Austin St.
John Stafford

’Treasures-n-Pleasures’
477 Chicopee St.
Lisa Lemelin

Video Ambiance
649 Prospect St.
Uche Ogwudu

EAST LONGMEADOW

Classic Tile
22 Day Ave.
Nicholas Gamache

EFS Insurance Agency LLC
180 Denslow Road
John Ernst

Idia African Accents
355 Kibbe Road
Adeleke and Ehimwema Thomas

Mark Oil Inc.
135 Denslow Road
Chester and Mark Czupryna

Mark Service Center
135 Denslow Road
Mark Czupryna

The Meadows Insurance Agency
200 North Main St.
Jeffrey Smith

Spa Europa
60 Shaker Road
Kelly Laviolette

The Toy Box
135 Denslow Road
Mark and Lorraine Czupryna

Westwand Enterprises
145 Hamden Road
Wesley Turner

HADLEY

Leon’s Auto Sales
65 East St.
Leon Szymborn

T.R.B. Glass
36 Lawrence Plain Road
Timothy Landers

HOLYOKE

Arron Sturgeon Fine Arts
195 Mountain View Dr.
Arron Sturgeon

Cache Inc.
50 Holyoke St.
Thomas Reinckens

Easy Spirit
50 Holyoke St.
Joseph Donnalley

Paramount Pizza
2287 Northampton St.
Avdin Oflu

Street Dreams/Greek Spot
a/k/a The Spot
338 Main St.
James Mickens

NORTHAMPTON

Audiometric
404 Chesterfield Road
Steven Retchin

Bonnie G. Co.
111 Franklin St.
Bonnie Gintzler

Joan Bergas Computer Consultant
39 Ridgewood Terrace
Joan Bergas

Lhasa Cafe
159 Main St.
Thondnup and Dolma Tsering

Paradise Taxi
142 North Maple St.
John Benoit

Pioneer Vending
243 State St.
Catherine Rittenoure

Precision Audio/Wayside Auto Body
367 Easthampton Road
Jose Fernandez, Efrain Diaz

RSVP Designs
85 Market St.
Maegan Moynahan

SPRINGFIELD

All Radiator Sales
111 Farnham Ave.
Ann Orlando

Artistic Interior Paint Co.
3 Bonnyview St.
Alvin Page Jr.

Banknorth Insurance Agency
2077 Roosevelt Ave.
Banknorth Insurance Agency Inc.

Better Care Cleaning
178 Albemarle St.
Willie Jones Jr.

C & T Fashions
2 Orange St.
Timothy Knighton

Chestnut Park Dairy
135 Dwight St.
Mohammed Awan

CommuniCare Services Inc.
41 Florence St.
Steven Williams

Company Clean
26 Benton St.
Walter Cheeks

Computer Troubleshooters DP
35 Gresham St.
David Pickrell

DJ’s Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning
& Snow Removal
88 Fort Pleasant Ave.
DeJoun Johnson

Florence
48 Chase Ave.
Yefim Kachka

Gifts From the Heart
414 Boston Road
Susan Lecuyer

Gordon Contracting
55 Harkness Ave.
Inna Gordon

The House of Cakes
107 Northampton Ave.
Irma Zayas

Imanta #2 Hair Salon
2662 Main St.
Judith Cruzado, Shora Ziacarias

Imperial Real Estate Services
116 Berkshire St.
Oleg Abramchuk

John Gelanis Home
Improvement
115 Edgemere Road
John Gelanis

KJ Cleaning Service
96 Kensington Ave.
Kevin James

Karen Wathne
15 Bryant St.
Karen Wathne

New England Novelties
172 Main St.
Wilfredo Oyolo

P.M. Variety
62 Stebbins St.
Peter Mason

Red Flamingo Roti Shop
231 Hancock St.
Diane and Andre Botas

Romille Inc.
344 Allen St.
Daphne Ottani, Rosemary Romito

S.B.D. Enterprises
47 Appleton St.
Stuart Davis

Satisfaction Auto Detailing
160 Magazine St.
Garfield Weston, Evelyn Roman

Seven Tees Construction & Office Management Services
45E Alvord St.
Buliah Thomas

Solutions in Wood
34 Front St.
Donald Haynes

Street Corner Sips, Snax & Stuff
1655 Boston Road
Frank Falco

Sweet Grace Inc.
458 Bridge St.
Bernice Foster

Talk of the Town Restaurant
320 Wilbraham Road
Cornela Forbes

Taylor St. Auto Services
469 Taylor St.
Yefim Gurevich

www.wholesaledaily.com
15 Clayton St.
Antonio Acenedo

V.D.V. Repair Shop
1292 Dwight St.
Vitaliy and Vladimir Kostenko,
Dmitriy Salagornik

WEST SPRINGFIELD

A C Motor Express LLC
339C Bliss St.
John Nekitopoulos

Baskets By Ginette
90 Pine St.
Ginette LeClerc

Century Auto Service
1615 Riverdale St.
Peter Platanitis Jr.

Century Auto Wholesalers
1615 Riverdale St.
Peter Platanitis

Columbia National
11 Central St.
American Home Mortgage Corp.

The Crop Shop
338B Westfield St.
Nancy Jamrog

Denis Godbout Drywall
177 West Autumn Road
Denis Godbout

Eric Goodkowsky P.I.
51 Park Ave.
Eric Goodkowsky

Felix Contracting
61 Pheasants Crossing
Andrew Felix

Home Rites
2001 Riverdale St.
George Changalhara, Reenu George

In-N-Out Auto Rental and Leasing
1718 Memorial Ave.
Mark Walker

J & A Snowplowing
59 Kelso Ave.
James Kearing

Janet Ahearn
448 Elm St.
Janet Ahearn

John R. Sweeney Insurance Agency
56 Union St.
John Sweeney

Long Horn Steakhouse
1105 Riverdale St.
Rare Hospitality International Inc.

Molly’s Catering
174 Brush Hill Ave.
Brian Letendre

My Dad’s Landscape
201 Great Plains Road
John Suckau

Oishi Sushi (Japanese Restaurant)
1455 Riverdale St.
Yong Woo Lee

Phil’s Plowing and Transportation
121 Westwood Dr.
Philip Guazzaloca

WESTFIELD

The Bachaan Co.
34 Bayberry Lane
Michael Glenzel

Competitive Door
33 Noble St.
Shawn Kana

Computer Connections Solutions
98 Sargeant Tom Dion Way
Louis Dupuis

Connoisseur Conference & Lecture Services
79 Elm St.
Donald Normann, Daniel
Farrell

First U.S. Dollar
249 East Main St.
Malham Hamami

Gift Baskets Galore
79 Main St.
Jerelyn and Stephen Jaikissoon

The Health Well Services
118 Hampden St.
Joyce Waters

Little Black Dog Gallery
16 Union Ave.
Jackie Koller

M.D. Nadeau Insurance Co.
80 Susan Dr.
Mike Nadeau

Peppermill Catering
420 Union St.
Catherine Gendreau

Robert Burch Illusion
26 School St.
Robert Burch

Sammy’s Pizza
868 Southampton Road
Robert Lacus

Town Marketing
11 Shadow Lane
Adam Federer

Wild Angel Designs
50 Franklin St.
Ann Rex

Sections Supplements

In response to alarming statistics concerning the health and well-being of Springfield’s children, the Irene E. and George A. Davis Foundation has launched its Cherish Every Child Initiative. The multi-faceted effort is a proactive attempt on the part of the foundation to secure a better future for Springfield, and the business community is being urged to get involved because the effort is as much about economic development as it is quality of life.

John Davis likes to relay the story he heard about a traditional greeting among the people of one village in Africa that translates into ’how are the children?’

"It’s not ’hi,’ or ’how are you?,’ or ’what’s happening?’" said Davis. "But, ’how are the children?’ That’s poignant, because that’s how any culture should gauge how healthy it is — by how well the children are doing."

It is with this mindset that Davis, former president of American Saw & Mfg. In East Longmeadow, and the Irene E. & George A. Davis Foundation, the philanthropic organization he serves as a trustee, launched an ambitious campaign called the "Cherish Every Child Initiative." The program, as the name would indicate, turns the spotlight on Springfield’s children — who are not nearly as healthy (figuratively and literally) as anyone would like.

Launched in 2000, the Cherish Every Child Initiative was designed to pinpoint the needs of the children in the state’s third-largest city — most of which are obvious — and to identify ways to address these needs, which are anything but obvious.

Davis — who refers to the initiative as a Springfield endeavor, not a Davis Foundation endeavor — described it as a proactive effort to improve the quality of life for Springfield’s children, and as such it represents a departure from the role of this and most other foundations.

"A lot of our gifts over the years have gone to children’s agencies, and much of that gifting was in reaction to someone coming to us with a need or a problem," he said. "We decided to take a different approach and say, ’what are the needs? … what can we do about them in a proactive manner to stem some of the problems?’"

Through a series of meetings involving government leaders, educators, human services officials, health care providers, and members of the business community, the initiative has identified several targets in an overarching plan for the delivery of integrated, high-quality services to young children and their families. The recommendations include plans to:

• Strengthen and coordinate services to families;

• Ensure early education and care for all children age 5 and under;

• Strengthen the early childhood workforce;

• Promote and sustain programs to optimize the health and well-being of young children and their families;

• Raise incomes for the families of young children;

• Encourage recreational and cultural enrichment;

• Establish quality of life indicators for Springfield’s young children and collect and disseminate reliable data on their status; and

• Develop a community awareness campaign.

Working groups have been addressing each of these recommendations, said Mary Walachy, executive director of the Davis Foundation, who told BusinessWest that a status report is due later this month. When it comes out, the groups that have been working on the initiative will have a better road map for reaching their destination, she said, but the bumps in that road will be many.

"All of the recommendations we’ve identified come with challenges," she said. "There won’t be any quick fixes to these problems, but together we can do things to provide a better future for these children."

Walachy said that one of the initiative’s major thrusts has been early education, and support of an endeavor called Early Education for All, which would provide free pre-school programs for every child in the state. The legislation now working its way through Beacon Hill is exemplary of the type of public policy the initiative is backing to improve the quality of life for Springfield children — and provide a better-educated workforce for the future in the process, she said.

Margaret Blood, who is heading the Early Education of All initiative, is also a consultant to the Cherish Every Child Initiative, and conducted interviews that helped identify the eight target recommendations. She called the effort unique in many ways and also a possible model for communities and states across the country.

"What the initiative has done is convene the community to address the issue of Springfield’s children," she said. "That’s important because that’s how these problems can be solved — with everyone pulling in the same direction." Blood told BusinessWest that the region’s business community must lend its support to the initiative, in part because it has the resources and the clout to influence decision-makers on public policy affecting children and families. But it is also a matter of self-preservation; healthier, better-educated children will create a stronger, more versatile workforce down the road, she said.

Davis concurred. "The business community has to look at its contributions to this initiative, whatever they are — time, money, energy — as investments," he said. "They won’t see any return on those investments in a day or a year, but they will be there in the long run."

Not Child’s Play

Davis told BusinessWest that as he and others first started tossing around the idea of rallying a city around a program to improve the lives of Springfield’s children, the concept seemed like pie in the sky. But he said the sobering statistics kept driving home the necessity of such a campaign.

Those numbers paint a grim picture:

• 39% of the children under 18 (about 2,624 individuals) live in poverty, as defined by the federal government — a three-member household earning $14,630 or less;

• Approximately 18% of Springfield’s households with children are headed by a single parent;

• Almost 63% of children under age 5 who are living in a female-headed household are poor;

• Amost 20% of the 2,000 babies born to Springfield women each year are born to mothers under the age of 20;

• Approximately 38% of these babies are born to mothers who receive inadequate prenatal care;

• 10% of babies are born with low birth weights, and each year, approximately 20 of these babies die before their first birthday;

• Approximately 8% of Springfield’s young children are not covered by health insurance, and there is an extreme lack of routine dental care among thousands of children.

The Cherish Every Child Initiative is working to pull various constituencies — including the business community — together to do something about these statistics, said Walachy. She noted that the foundation, with its clout in the region, especially among non-profit groups vying for donations, has the ability to tear down many of the silos that segregate the groups working on various social issues, and get people in a room.

Once in that room, the goal is to get those groups together to identify needs and collect the hard data required to effect public policy and bring about change, said Walachy, placing emphasis on the need to qualify and quantify the challenges facing children and their families.

"We need to look at what the data is telling us about the children of Springfield," she said. "And then we need to look at what the research is telling us about we ought to be doing about the data we’ve collected, and then from there we have to look at what roles we and everyone else can play."

The enormity of the assignment has prompted many to question where and how to start, said Walachy, who told BusinessWest that all eight recommendations are being addressed at once, and the broad goal is to development a strategic plan of action.

"We start at ’A,’ and eventually we’ll get to ’Z,’" she said, adding that the process with each of the recommendations begins with an understanding of current conditions, and then moves on to setting realistic goals and devising specific methods for achieving them.

She and Davis both stressed that hard data is the key is to not only understanding the issues, but creating real change.

"You need data to make scientific decisions," said Davis. "Anyone can say, ’I think this,’ or ’I think that.’ But we don’t want to guess — we want to know what we’re up against."

One of the key elements of the initiative is public policy, said Walachy, noting that the problems facing Springfield’s children and their families cannot be solved by one foundation, despite its resources and its clout.

"The Davis Foundation isn’t going to end poverty for the children of Springfield, and it isn’t going to increase the pay scales, respect, and educational opportunities for our early childhood workforce," she said. "So a critical component of this work is in the public policy arena and the setting of an agenda that will address these areas we’ve identified."

School of Thought

To illustrate the initiative’s purpose — as well as the many layers of challenges awaiting those involved with this effort — Davis, Wallachy, and Blood focused on one of the recommendations, early childhood education, and a bill before the Legislature to spend $1.2 billion a year for voluntary half-day programs for all children ages 3 and 4 and for full-day kindergarten for 5-year-olds, regardless of their family’s income.

The plan is ambitious, said Blood, who told BusinessWest that the initiative has the backing of a number of business and labor groups — including AIM, the Mass High Tech Council, the AFL-CIO, and the United Auto Workers — that rarely come together on issues of this nature. The concept is also backed by statistics showing that, when children get a quality early education, they have fewer problems later on.

"The research is clear — a child who has a quality early childhood education does better in life," she said, citing data showing that the most critical learning period for humans is from birth to age 5. "They are more successful, they stay out of jail; quality early education cuts down on welfare, it cuts down on special education — there is a huge return on investment."

Those supporting the bill are stressing its long-term economic benefits, not its feel-good elements, and a $300,000 media campaign that began last month has been driving those points home.

But despite the statistical evidence, the "unusual constellation of supporters for the bill," as Blood called it, and the intense lobbying effort, the legislation is facing long odds for funding— at least for the immediate future.

With the state staring at an estimated $2 billion deficit and many popular programs facing cutbacks, both state Senate President Robert Travaglini and House Speaker Thomas Finneran say it will be difficult to fund the bill this year.

And if and when it is funded, there are other issues that will emerge, said Blood, noting that the Commonwealth currently has no statewide vision on how to attract and train the teachers necessary to provide all that early education.

Pay scales in Boston for such positions are about $8 to $10 per hour, she noted, and even worse elsewhere. Unless there is a profound change in how early education teachers are valued — and compensated — there will be problems finding adequate numbers of teachers.

But Blood views the early education campaign — one she has poured three years of her life into — as a marathon, and she says the Cherish Every Child Initiative looks upon its work in the same way.

"We’re looking at this for the long haul — Springfield has the third-highest child poverty rate in the state, and Cherish Every Child is not going to make a huge dent in that tomorrow," said Walachy, who told BusinessWest that the immediate goal is for the community to take ownership of children’s issues and not view them as someone else’s problems.

For the business community, this means coming to understand that investments in children today will generate a stronger workforce tomorrow. Beyond that, however, steps to curb poverty and make children healthier will leave the community with fewer financial burdens, said Davis.

"Most business owners are long-term thinkers — they don’t invest in a new machine and look for the payback the next day," he said. "We want them to understand that the same works when you invest in children; the payback isn’t immediate, but there is a return on investment."

Young Ideas

Summing up the Cherish Every Child Initiative, Davis said it is "a process, not a lightning bolt."

By that, he meant that this is an initiative with no quick fixes, a campaign that will have hard-earned results that may not be seen for many years.

And it’s a process that would move more quickly and more effectively if more people would ask the question, ’how are the children?’

Sections Supplements

C2C Systems, a Reading, England-based company with an American subsidiary based in Springfield, recently added NASA to its client list. The space administration was looking for help trying to track a flow of E-mails among engineers in the days before and after the Columbia disaster. C2C is making a name for itself in this emerging technology field, and that reputation is leading to dramatic growth.

Jon Brown follows the scandals closely.

Enron. Tyco. ImClone and Martha Stewart. Worldcom. Even the demise of the Space Shuttle Columbia. As those stories broke, he waited for his phone to ring. Usually, it did, because where there’s scandal, there’s usually a paper trail or, in this day and age, an electronic trail. And Brown’s company, C2C Systems, can help a client uncover that trail or, if the customer so chooses, make it disappear.

C2C Systems Inc., the American subsidiary of Reading, England-based C2C Systems, Ltd., is headquartered in the Springfield Enterprise Center (SEC) in the STCC Technology Park. The local company sells and services software programs that help companies, government agencies, and other entities manage their E-mail. And that word manage can take on a number of definitions, said Brown, director of the Springfield operation. Sometimes it means capacity management or archiving. It can also mean controlling E-mail, everything from identifying and eradicating inappropriate or unauthorized E-mailing to tracking down specific correspondences.

And it can also mean deleting E-mail — and when Brown says delete, he means DELETE.

"We provide people with the tools to discover the mail and, when appropriate, to destroy it," he told BusinessWest. "People want us to help them find mail and in some cases delete it. And when they say delete, they don’t mean mark it for deletion; they mean ’make it go away.’

"We make some proprietary technology that goes deep into the bowels of an exchange to get rid of the mail," he said, opting not to be more specific about exactly how the software works. "We can make it so it’s nearly impossible to find."

NASA called on C2C not long after the Columbia disaster because it wanted to track some of the E-mail correspondences between engineers after the shuttle went down, said Brown, adding only that the agency apparently found what it was looking for.

The space administration contract wasn’t large — maybe $10,000 — but having NASA as a client brings benefits beyond the check, said Brown, who told BusinessWest that there have been some discussions with the agency about using it in some promotional material.

If those endorsements do come to fruition, they will likely help the company as it enters what Brown believes will be a strong growth phase. C2C will soon expand within the SEC, effectively doubling its space and adding several new employees as it does so. And Brown believes the venture can move from its current $2 million in sales to $10 million and beyond with more aggressive sales and marketing and new product development.

Indeed, he said work with companies with scandal problems constitutes a very small percentage of sales. Real growth is expected to come in the wake of new regulations regarding when entities must keep and destroy documents, as well as a new global focus on IT security.

Meanwhile, virtually every company and government agency is struggling to keep its E-mail under control, said C2C President David Hunt.

"Capacity has become a huge issue … companies are struggling to find ways to reduce their volume of E-mail," he told BusinessWest from the company’s headquarters in England. "But E-mail is becoming the center of the knowledge flow, or information flow, of a company, so people can’t really be expected to reduce the amount of E-mail; what they have to do is develop a better form of management of it, and that’s where we come in."

Virtual Reality

Brown refers to this niche as the developing specialty of "E-mail life-cycle management." In short, the company helps clients keep their E-mail legal and affordable through a variety of tools and consulting help to implement those tools.

Its products fall into two main categories, said Brown: compliance and discovery — specifically, compliance with laws and corporate policies regarding retention and other issues, and discovery of items that are lost or deleted — and mailbox-size management. This latter series of products helps mid- and large-sized companies deal with the volume of E-mail.

Specific products include, on the capacity side of the ledger, Archive One Capacity, an E-mail archiving and capacity-management solution for Microsoft Exchange; and MaX Compression Enterprise, a family of products that transparently zips and unzips attachments sent and received with Microsoft Outlook, thus saving bandwidth and storage space.

On the E-mail risk-control side of the operation, the company’s main products include Active Folders Content Manager, which controls content and protects an organization from legal liability; and Exchange Security Risk Auditor, a tool that keeps unauthorized individuals from reading one’s E-mails.

The company has provided software to some 3 million users at more than 3,000 organizations worldwide, including national and multi-national corporations and government offices, and believes it is only scratching the surface of the industry’s vast potential.

"I think we’ve carved out a good niche for ourselves in the marketplace," said Brown. "Our goal is to expand that niche and grow the company."

How Brown came to run C2C’s American operation is an intriguing story. A biology and Spanish major at Amherst College, he joked that it wasn’t those courses of study that prepared him for a career in telecommunications. "Instead of a car, my parents bought me an IBM PC, and I locked myself in my room for a month trying to learn how to do something with it," he explained.

He was tending bar at an Amherst alumni party and wound up pouring scotch for an executive with a top-10 software company called Pansophic. "He offered me a job, and I went off to Chicago, without knowing anything about the company or what I was going to do with it."

Brown wound up becoming a product manager for the firm, but was squeezed out after the company was bought by Computer Associates. He then went into sales for System Software Associates (SSA) in Chicago, but left at 25 to pursue an MBA at UMass.

His first stop after earning his degree was a New Hampshire start-up called Tally Systems, where he was a "product manager with no products." But he helped develop one after witnessing a shouting fit by the company’s controller.

"She was screaming about the E-mail bill because, at that time, you had to pay 10 cents a message for MCI to deliver your E-mail over the Internet," he said. "And our E-mail had gone from $300 a month to $1,000 a month in no time.

"I sat outside her office and thought, ’if we’re this little 40- to 50-person company and we’re having this problem, then big companies must be having a huge problem with this,’" he continued. "I went out and talked to about 100 companies, big ones and small ones, and came up with some specs for a product that would help them manage their growing E-mail volume."

Brown put together a company, which became a subsidiary of Tally, and raised $3 million in venture capital to start an operation that essentially allowed companies to put in place an E-mail charge-back and reporting process, similar to what is done with long-distance phone calls.

The company did well, but it was never a core function for Tally, which saw its fortunes plummet when the Y2K craze ended, and eventually gave Brown’s company the axe in a cost-cutting move in early 2000.

That’s when Brown approached C2C, a maker of similar E-mail management software products that was then his largest distributor in Europe, and asked if that growing company would like to fund his venture. Instead, C2C asked Brown to direct its American subsidiary and become a partner in the parent company. "They said, ’you bring us to America.’"

Net Results

For the past three years, Brown has been doing just that.

He ran C2C Inc. out of his home for a while before being introduced in late 2000 to the Springfield Enterprise Center, the recently opened small-business incubator that was housing a number of startup ventures.

"It was a really nice fit for us," he said. "We were looking for a place in which to get settled and commence the growth process, and that’s just what we’ve done."

Brown said his obvious mission is to grow sales of C2C products in North and South America, and to do that he must raise awareness of E-mail capacity and risk issues, and then sell businesses and government agencies on the company’s various solutions to those problems.

And while the scandals that have dominated the business pages in recent years have led to some high-profile clients, Brown and Hunt both stressed that everyday capacity and security issues will drive most of the growth for the company.

When he first opened C2C’s American subsidiary, Brown identified 22,000 potential target customers, which he described as businesses or agencies that use Microsoft Exchange, have 500 or more employees, and have three or more locations.

That number probably hasn’t changed much in the past three years, he said, but there are now certainly more reasons why those potential customers should be interested in C2C products — starting with capacity.

"That’s becoming an issue for everyone," said Brown. "The volume keeps growing every month as more and more people make E-mail their preferred method of communicating information. Companies are going to need ways to keep that volume under control."

Meanwhile, on the risk-control side of the equation, there are a number of new laws regulating the dissemination, safe storage, and ultimate destruction of information, said Hunt. He cited HIPAA (the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act), which regulates information about patients and ensures that such data remains private, as one example of greater regulatory control of information — including E-mails. Similar measures are, or soon will be, in place for the financial services industry and other business groups.

"There are new laws requiring entities to retain E-mails for a certain period of time," he said. "This could be two years or seven years after an employee leaves, for example. And there are also more regulations about what is to be kept — or not kept, as the case may be — and companies are going to have to deal with them."

All this will add up to new opportunities for C2C Inc., which Brown believes can double or triple in size in each of the next several years. And in anticipation of a bulked-up sales and marketing initiative, the company will double its space in the SEC and remain there as a tenant for the foreseeable future.

Meanwhile, Hunt anticipates expanding C2C’s American operation and adding more offices over the next few years. The headquarters will remain in Springfield, however.

Tracking Growth

Brown told BusinessWest he was somewhat surprised C2C didn’t get a call when the ImClone scandal broke last year. "That’s one we missed," he said.

There haven’t been many such incidents in that category, thanks to a growing reputation for helping companies and agencies find what they are looking for.

What C2C is looking for is additional growth — on both sides of the Atlantic — and it would certainly seem to be on the right track — literally and figuratively.

Opinion

Mary Ellen Scott, president of United Personnel Services, has forged a successful career in the challenging staffing industry, a field she joined somewhat reluctantly nearly 20 years ago. She’s also made her mark in the community, taking a lead role with several business and economic development groups.
Like many women, Mary Ellen Scott said her early career path was defined largely by her husband’s professional travels. Manhattan; Teaneck, N.J.; Boston; and Springfield. Those were some of the places where her first husband, Jay Canavan, found management positions at non-profits ranging from the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston to the Quadrangle. As she followed her husband from city to city, Scott managed to find jobs, she told BusinessWest, but not a career.

But the last time she followed him, however, she did.

That was when Jay, then 51 and in search of work after a five-year stint at the Quadrangle, decided to start his own company, an employment agency, in Hartford. He asked her to join him in that venture, but she told him she already had a job — director of human services at Gemini Corp. in Springfield. She eventually acquiesced, however, and, after the company survived a rocky start, she took the lead role in making it one of the most successful staffing services in the region.

Jay Canavan passed away in 1999, several years after officially retiring from the business. Mary Ellen, who remarried in 2001, continues to grow the company now known as United Personnel Services. The company has three offices — Springfield, Hartford, and Easthampton — and recorded 20% growth last year, in the midst of sluggish economic times that usually pose stern challenges for this industry.

Meanwhile, Scott has taken an increasingly larger role in the community. She is currently president of the Springfield Chamber of Commerce, and board member

at the Economic Development Council (EDC), the Springfield Enterprise Center, and Springfield Symphony. She enjoys being active, and is upbeat about the region and its prospects for further development.

In a wide-ranging interview, Scott talked about the process of making the transition from employee to entrepreneur, and the risks and rewards that are part and parcel to that change. She also weighed in on the economy, and the prospects for the Pioneer Valley and the city of Springfield, which has been her home for 25 years.

"We’ve seen some good things happen in this city, but there are lot of challenges ahead," she said, referring to both the economy and the controversies that have damaged the city’s reputation. "There’s lots to do and no money for anything. But Springfield is resilient, and it has a lot going for it."

Work in Progress

Scott says she is asked often about the state of the local economy, especially during trying times like these.

She theorizes that her vocation might have something to do with that; those in the staffing business will often know what’s happening before those in other sectors. Also, her involvement with various business and civic groups helps keep her ear to the ground, and people want to know what she hears.

But she told BusinessWest that, despite all that, her crystal ball doesn’t work better than anyone else’s, and she admits to being puzzled by the current economic slump, which follows some, but not all, of the patterns of traditional downturns.

"Some sectors have really been hit hard, while others don’t seem to be impacted nearly as much," she said. "The economy is down — a look at the skinny help-wanted section in the paper will tell you that — but we’re having a very good year at this company; how do you explain that?"

Canavan has seen a number of economic cycles since she segued into the staffing industry two decades ago. She and her husband started in the booming mid-’80s and rode the wave that defined the end of that decade — expanding the operation into Springfield as they did so. They then toughed out the prolonged recession of the early ’90s, when many companies in that sector did not, and positioned itself to capitalize on a surge in the use of temporary and temp-to-hire workers in the mid- to late ’90s.

"It’s been a bit of a roller coaster," she acknowledged. "But that’s what this business is like. For the most part, I’ve really enjoyed the ride."

How she got on the roller coaster is an intriguing story. As she told BusinessWest, Scott initially rejected her husband’s requests to join his entrepreneurial venture. However, new management at Gemini — which saw things differently than Scott did on many personnel matters — and Jay Canavan’s difficulties with finding the right idividual to help him get the company off the ground eventually led them to team up.

"He couldn’t pay a ton of money, and joining a start-up operation was a risk that many people weren’t willing to take, so he really had a hard time finding the right person," she said. "Eventually, we decided that if we were going to do this, we should do it together, so I gave my notice."

The venture, known then as United Industrial Temporaries, struggled to get off the ground. "We didn’t have an order for three months," she said. "I got a paycheck, but Jay didn’t get one for nine months."

The economy was booming then, with unemployment at 2.3%, and companies were desperate for good help. The problem was establishing a reputation and breaking into the market. "Those were scary times," she recalled. "The phone didn’t ring."

Eventually, it did, however, as some of the larger insurance companies, like Aetna and Travelers, placed some orders. United opened a Springfield office soon thereafter, and that facility provided some cushion for the company when the Hartford financial services sector went through a period of downsizing in the early ’90s.

Scott said she quickly assumed many of the managerial responsibilities from her husband, who eventually retired in 1995. She presided over strong, steady growth and watched the company crack the Inc. 500 list of the country’s fastest-growing companies in 1993 and 1995. Current revenues are approaching $6 million.

Today, a staff of 18 works in the company’s Main Street offices in the former Springfield Five Cents Savings Bank building, where Scott says she acts largely as the company’s public relations person. "I’m the face in the community," she said. "I still do some sales, but mostly I try to promote the company and keep our name visible."

She described the staffing industry as one that is relatively easy to get into — despite her own personal experiences — but one that is much harder to stay in because of the heavy competition and the economy’s wild mood swings.

She said United has done well because of its diversity and also its ability to "go the extra mile," as she put it. "When one side of this business is down, the other seems to pick up."

Canavan described herself as a good delegator who doesn’t micromanage, but does like to challenge employees.

"I like to give people responsibilities — and then I expect them to handle those responsibilities," she said. "I try not to step on anyone’s toes, and I essentially just let people do what they were hired to do. We have a very collegial atmosphere here. I want people to say they enjoy working here; that’s important."

She said she has no real pearls of wisdom for women, other than advice to give their entrepreneurial talents a chance to flourish.

"It’s scary to go from getting a paycheck every week to the situation we faced when we started — when we didn’t know if we’d get a paycheck," she said. "But what makes it scary also makes it fun."

Getting Down to Business

As Scott’s status in the local business community has grown, she has become involved with a growing list of business and civic groups, including the EDC, the symphony, and the Enterprise Center at STCC. She told BusinessWest that she understands that some of the requests for her participation are made with the goal of achieving gender diversity on those boards, but she acknowledged that the pool of women business leaders is not particularly deep, and thus her phone rings often.

Two groups she has become very involved with is the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield, and, more recently, the Springfield Chamber — she’s the first woman to be named president of that group — which was created in 1996 and now boasts nearly 900 members.

Scott told BusinessWest she’s been involved for years with the thorny subject of tax classification — she’s one of the few business owners who also lives in the city and thus sees the issue from both sides — and the ongoing effort to bring the commercial rate down, thus making it more attractive to current and prospective businesses.

"That’s just a part of the larger issue of making the city more business-friendly," she said, adding that the Chamber and the Albano administration have made it a priority to not only attract new businesses, but work to retain those already here. "Retention is a very big part of that equation, and it often goes overlooked. Everyone’s focused on bringing new businesses here, but you also have to create an environment that makes companies want to stay."

Meanwhile, she says that perhaps a bigger challenge will be enticing people to live in the city.

"Young people are not opting to move to Springfield, and that’s a big problem," she said, noting that, while a long list of attractive suburbs certainly contributes to the dilemma, the city’s struggling schools and other quality-of-life issues don’t help, either. "Springfield is just not an attractive option for many people.

"I’m not sure how we go about changing that situation," she continued. "But it’s something we all have to work on."

She told BusinessWest that a confluence of recent issues — everything from the economy and the state budget to the controversy enveloping City Hall, to the pending departure of UNICARE and its 800 employees from 1350 Main St. — has created a number of challenges for Springfield that will certainly test its mettle.

"UNICARE’s leaving will have an effect on a lot of businesses downtown, especially the restaurants, bars, and clubs, and even the parking authority," she said. "It’s going to take some time to replace that many workers and fill that much office space, and that’s why we have to keep working to make the city business-friendly."

She said the controversy that continues to swirl around Albano and many current and former members of his administration, won’t help in the regard, but she’s not sure just how much damage the prolonged FBI investigation and the Feds’ almost weekly raids of downtown bars and city agencies will have on the city’s psyche and its economic development efforts.

"There’s a bit of a dark cloud over the city right now," she said, "and that’s too bad in a way, because Mayor Albano has done a lot to revitalize downtown and give it some life."

The Bottom Line

When pressed to comment on the prospects for the local economy, Scott said the region is in what she called a holding pattern.

"People are hesitant to make moves," she said, "because they don’t know what’s around the corner. They’re looking for some sign that things are better, and they’re just not seeing one they can believe in.

"Business owners are waiting for something positive to happen," she continued.

Plenty of positive things have happened to Scott since she arrived in Springfield. Some of her success can be attributed to the whims of the economy and some good fortune, but mostly, she’s made her own luck.

She believes Springfield and the Pioneer Valley can do the same.

"We have a lot to build on here," she said. "But we can’t wait for it to happen — we have to make it happen."