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Celebrating a Century of Caring

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It has been 100 years since the Baystate Visiting Nurse Assoc. & Hospice was founded in 1914 as a baby-feeding association to help immigrant mothers care for their newborns. Since that time, the BVNAH has adapted to the times and the needs of the community, including being one of the first in the nation to adopt hospice care in 1988. On Oct. 23, Baystate Visiting Nurse Assoc. & Hospice celebrated 100 years of caring for the community with a special celebration at the Lyman and Merrie Wood Museum of Springfield History. Wood, whose late wife Merrie received care from the BVNAH hospice service, served as chair of the 100th-anniversary celebration, and spoke at the program along with Maura McQueeney, president of the Baystate Visiting Nurse Assoc. & Hospice and post-acute executive for Baystate Health, and Dr. Mark Keroack, president and CEO of Baystate Health. Top, Keroack addresses the audience; middle, Keroack and his wife, Ann Errichetti, and Lyman Wood and his wife, Leslie; at Bottom, VNA staff members.

Cutting the Cable

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On Oct. 24, technology-solutions provider VertitechIT staged a ‘cable cutting,’ a slight twist on the traditional ribbon-cutting, to mark the grand opening of its new corporate headquarters in Holyoke’s Open Square complex. Pictured, from left: John Aubin, Open Square architect; Greg Pellerin, VertitechIT principal; Michael Feld, VertitechIT CEO; Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse; Kathleen Anderson, president of the Greater Holyoke Chamber of Commerce; and State Rep. Aaron Vega, D-Holyoke, holding his 11-month-old son Odin.

HRU Awards

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Human Resources Unlimited staged its annual recognition and fund-raising event on Oct. 23 at Springfield Country Club. From top to bottom: Carol Tourangeau and Edward Sokolowski, right, financial advisor with Pioneer Valley Financial Group, LLC, the event’s table sponsor, present Timm Marini of FieldEddy Insurance with HRU’s 2014 Armand Tourangeau Volunteer of the Year Award; from left, Sokolowski, guest speaker Danielle Goodwin, operations coordinator from Pioneer Valley Financial Group, LLC, and Donald Kozera, president of Human Resources Unlimited; HRU’s 2014 Rookie Employer of the Year Award winner Dave Zononi, left, managing director of Total Cleaning Plus, with Dan Flynn, senior vice president and market manager with People’s United Bank, the event’s silver sponsor; Marc Criscitelli, left, vice president of Employee Benefits for FieldEddy Insurance, the event’s gold sponsor, presents HRU’s 2014 Employer of the Year Award to Christopher Crean, vice president of Safety and Security, Peter Pan Bus Lines.

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Gearing Up
FiveSomeDave’s Truck Repair recently celebrated the grand opening of its second facility at 649 Cottage St. in Springfield. Seen here, from left, are Hank Downey, senior vice president of Chicopee Savings Bank; Carol Brennan, director of Business Development for CDC New England; Ron Proulx, general manager of Dave’s Truck Repair; Dave Proulx, president of Dave’s Truck Repair; and Bill Wagner, president of Chicopee Savings Bank.

Welcome Back
ThreesomeFamily, friends, members of judiciary, and city officials gathered on Sept. 17 to celebrate Mary Hurley’s retirement from her position as first justice of the Chicopee District Court, and her return to the Springfield-based law firm Cooley Shrair. Hurley is seen here with Peter Shrair, Esq., left, and David Shrair, Esq.

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Humanics in Action

Group1WOmanHammerApproximately 2,000 Springfield College students, faculty, staff, and alumni took part in the 17th annual Humanics in Action Day on Sept. 23, a day of community service throughout the city of Springfield. More than 100 projects were fulfilled by college work groups, who performed services for schools, churches, senior-citizen facilities, child-care centers, community organizations, city agencies, and neighborhoods. There were educational projects for school children, including students reading to youngsters at the Brookings School. The majority of the volunteers participated in many indoor and outdoor painting projects, clean-up/fix-up projects, landscaping, and a host of other indoor and outdoor services. The day started with Springfield College student trustee Moriah Billups leading the opening ceremonies at Blake Track, which included welcome addresses from both Springfield College President Mary-Beth Cooper and Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno. Old Hill Neighborhood Council President Barbara Gresham and Upper Hill Neighborhood Council Vice President Bobby Hartsfield also greeted students.
Humanics in Action Day highlights the commitment by Springfield College to year-round community-based service programs. Springfield College students contribute more than 150,000 hours of service annually to schools, neighborhood organizations, and city programs.

Cutting the Ribbon

RibbonCuttingDuvalMore than 200 area business leaders, UMass administrators, and elected officials gathered at the recently opened UMass Center at Springfield for the facility’s official ribbon cutting. Top, dignitaries led by Gov. Deval Patrick (center) UMass President Robert Caret (third from right), and Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno (second from right) handle the honors. At bottom, Patrick with William Davila, director of operations for the center.

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Taking Flight

WingCavagnaroBadgeWingtrusteewingbuildingLeaders from Baystate Health and Baystate Wing Hospital joined elected officials and members of the Palmer community recently to celebrate Wing’s official entry into the Baystate Health community. Top: Dr. Mark Keroack, president and CEO of Baystate Health, helps Dr. Charles Cavagnaro III, president of Baystate’s Eastern Region, put on his official Baystate Health badge. Middle: Katherine Coolidge, chair of the Baystate Wing board of trustees, left, talks with Dr. Grace Makari-Judson, chair of the Baystate Health Breast Network, during the ceremony. Baystate Wing Hospital is the third community hospital to join Baystate Health following Baystate Franklin Medical Center in Greenfield in 1986 and Baystate Mary Lane Hospital in Ware in 1991.

Taking Flight

Class-Photo-2015Leaders from Baystate Health and Baystate Wing Hospital joined elected officials and members of the Palmer community recently to celebrate Wing’s official entry into the Baystate Health community (see item, page 66). Above: Dr. Mark Keroack, president and CEO of Baystate Health, helps Dr. Charles Cavagnaro III, president of Baystate’s Eastern Region, put on his official Baystate Health badge. Top left: Katherine Coolidge, chair of the Baystate Wing board of trustees, left, talks with Dr. Grace Makari-Judson, chair of the Baystate Health Breast Network, during the ceremony. Baystate Wing Hospital is the third community hospital to join Baystate Health following Baystate Franklin Medical Center in Greenfield in 1986 and Baystate Mary Lane Hospital in Ware in 1991.

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Cold Cash

Cold2Cold1Cold3The leaders of Berkshire Bank and Hampden Bank recently challenged their employees to take part in the popular ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, which has raised well over $100 million in just a few weeks. Above, the Berkshire Bank Foundation donated $50 for each of the first 50 employees who took part in the challenge and shared their videos on Facebook. More than 50 bank employees completed the challenge within the first three days, and the foundation will make a $2,500 contribution to the ALS Assoc., which provides care services to assist people with ALS and their families through a network of chapters working in communities across the nation, while maintaining a global research program focused on the discovery of treatments and eventually a cure for the disease. Meanwhile, Hampden Bank President Glenn Welch challenged his employees (bottom) to take the challenge and matched the $1,000 donation made by the employee dress-down fund, for a total of $2,000. “I think it’s really great that we were able to do this and get other companies involved to support such a great cause. We at Hampden Bank are always looking for ways to give back,” Welch said.

Block Party

Block2Block1On Aug. 21, Springfield College partnered with the Old Hill and Upper Hill Neighborhood Councils, HAPHousing, and the Partnership for the Renewal of Old Hill in hosting the 11th annual Block Party on the Hill. The event featured live music and free barbeque, along with information about housing, health, education, and community services. Children also enjoyed a bounce house and face painting. Pictured at top, from left, are Block Party Planning Committee members Mattie Lacewell,  Kathy Smith, Springfield College President Mary-Beth Cooper, Sarah Page, Adrienne Osborne, Jill Russell, and Ethel Griffin.

Fore! … a Good Cause

PicThis3The 34th annual Brightside Golf Classic drew 180 golfers to Springfield Country Club in West Springfield and Twin Hills Country Club in Longmeadow. The event raised just over $108,500 to support Brightside for Families and Children in Holyoke, which provides in-home counseling and support to children and their families throughout Western Mass. Pictured, first row, from left: Brightside’s Maria Zygmont; Brightside Golf Classic co-chairs John Kendzierski, Steve Lowell, and William Wagner; and Brightside’s Mark Paglia. Second row, from left: Diane Dukette, vice president of Fund Development, SPHS; Martin Caine; Jeslyn Carr; Brightside Golf Classic co-chair Paul Fritz; Benjamin Coyle; Jay Babcock; and Daniel Moen, president and CEO of the Sisters of Providence Health System.

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All That Jazz

An estimated 5,500 people turned out for the inaugural Springfield Jazz & Roots Festival on Aug. 9, an event intended to promote an arts-driven, community-oriented, and sustainable revitalization of the city. The free, outdoor festival, held in Court Square in downtown Springfield, featured locally and internationally acclaimed musical artists and a variety of ethnic cuisines and local food producers. From top: Festival Producer Kristin Neville with Evan Plotkin, president of NAI Plotkin; from left, Charles Neville of the Neville Brothers, jazz saxophonist and Springfield native Phil Woods, and Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno, who presented Woods with the key to the city; Charles Neville plays with his daughter, Charmaine Neville (left), and singer/songwriter/saxophonist Grace Kelly; some of the crowd gathered at Court Square. (Photos by Ed Cohen)

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Departments Picture This

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

Primary Concerns

NobleRibbonCuttingNoble Hospital in Westfield recently held an open house to officially launch its new Noble Primary Care office at 57 Union St., a practice that hospital President Ronald Bryant says is a response to a shortage of primary-care services for residents of Westfield and the hill towns. Noble Primary Care is staffed by seven primary-care physicians known as Noble Medical Group. Taking part in the ribbon cutting were, back row, left to right, Dr. Stan Strzempko, vice president of Medical Affairs; Allison Gearing-Kalill, vice president of Community Development; state Sen. Don Humason; Judge John Greaney, trustee; Roger Butler, trustee; state Rep. John Velis; and front row, left to right, Kate Phelon, Greater Westfield Chamber of Commerce; Joe Mitchell, Westfield city advancement officer; Dr. Frederick Torio; Dr. Rulour Torio; Dr. Ann Cooper; Dr. Aleksandr Pugach; and Bryant.

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Woman of the Year
DSC_9870USEUnknown-1Unknown-2The Professional Women’s Chamber of Western Massachusetts honored Carol Fusia Campbell, president of Chicopee Industrial Contractors, with its Woman of the Year award in ceremonies on June 3 at the Castle of Knights in Chicopee. Left to right from top, Campbell is presented with a key to the city by Chicopee Mayor Richard Kos. Campbell is presented with a citation from Kathy Tobin, president of Friends of the Homless. Campbell poses with, from left, Michelle Depelteau of Sunshine Village, Nancy Mirkin of Florence Savings Bank, and Gina Golash Kos, executive director of Sunshine Village.
Photos by Denise Smith





Fruit of the Vine
PicThisVineyardBlack Birch Vineyard co-owner Ed Hamel (right) recently gave a tour to members of the Greater Northampton Chamber of Commerce. The visit to the vineyard in Southampton was part of an Arrive@5 event, where members come together and network at a place of business. Hamel and three other owners opened the vineyard in 2012, making and bottling wine there, as well as sponsoring wine tastings, concerts, and other events.

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Action Shots

humanics-action-news-2013HIAD-(3)20130926_sc_0021The 15th annual Humanics in Action Day, a Springfield College (SC) tradition, took place on Sept. 26. The event unites SC and its surrounding neighborhoods to work on community-service projects. Each year, about 2,000 students, faculty, staff, and alumni fan out across Springfield to read to children, clean up vacant lots, repair sidewalks, and generally make connections with the community. Top left: SC students work in the community garden. Top right: taking a break from yard work, left to right, are SC students Alissa Burian, Kim DiManna, Lynsey Majka, Lauren Peladeau, and Jessica Lajoie. Bottom right: from left, Adrienne Osborne, Upper Hill Neighborhood Council president; Ariel Zaleski, SC student trustee; Mary-Beth Cooper, SC president; Emmanuel Adero, Old Hill Neighborhood Council president; and Denise Cogman, director of Springfield School Volunteers.

Table Talking

OConnellGroupNE-ITThe 16th annual Table Top Showcase & Business Networking Event was recently held at the Castle of Knights in Chicopee. More than 100 exhibitors met with attendees from the business community. Left: Melinda Thomas, far right, development director for the Thomas J. O’Connor Animal Control & Adoption Center, speaks with Anita Bird (left), office manager, and Amanda Gagnon, community organizer, both from MGM Springfield. Right: Joel Mollison (left), president, and Brian Sullivan, vice president, of Northeast IT Systems Inc.

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Entrepreneurship Initiative

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DSC_3430The 9th annual Harold Grinspoon Charitable Foundation Entrepreneurship Initiative Awards Ceremony and Banquet was staged April 25 at the Log Cabin in Holyoke. More than 45 students from area colleges were recognized for their entrepreneurial contributions during the event, which featured an elevator-pitch competition sponsored by six area community banks, a tabletop competition, and the announcement of the Grinspoon, Garvey & Young Alumni Spirit Award. The participating schools are American International College, Amherst College, Bay Path College, Elms College, Greenfield Community College, Hampshire College, Holyoke Community College, Mount Holyoke College, Smith College, Springfield College, Springfield Technical Community College, UMass, Western New England University, and Westfield State University. From top: Kissa Owens of Bay Path College with her son, Da’Din Davis, was one of three tabletop winners at the event for her venture, the Platinum Kids Health Center, which specializes in helping obese and overweight children; Zongfang Lin, a student at the UMass Isenberg School of Management and a tabletop winner for her company, KinVi Products, talks with Joe Bohan of SciDose LLC; elevator-pitch winner Abby Duncan explains her Daddy Go-To Kit; Katelyn Nadeau of Holyoke Community College holds up a sign for her venture, Razzle Dazzle.








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DSC_3527More scenes from the the 9th annual Harold Grinspoon Charitable Foundation Entrepreneurship Initiative Awards Ceremony and Banquet. Left, Mark Chamberlain addresses the audience of more than 500 people during the elevator-pitch competition. Middle, Sam Tulimat, a student at Mount Holyoke College, won a tabletop award for a venture he created, an online campus market business called Bizarit. Bottom, Harold Grinspoon, shares a laugh with UMass student Zongfang Lin.

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Cutting the Ribbon

PicThis 1 0112cAfter an extensive renovation project, the Lord Jeffery Inn in downtown Amherst reopened to the public on Jan. 9. Doing the honors at a ribbon-cutting ceremony are, from left: Robert Reeves, general manager of the inn; John Musante, Amherst town manager; state Rep. Ellen Story; Charles R. Longsworth, chair emeritus of the Amherst College Board of Trustees; Biddy Martin, president of Amherst College; Rob Winchester, president of the Waterford Hotel Group; and Peter Shea, treasurer of Amherst College and president of the Amherst Inn Co.

Third Thursday

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YPS1The Young Professional Society of Greater Springfield recently staged its monthly Third Thursday event at Nadim’s Mediterranean Grill in East Longmeadow. Top, Nick Gelfand, owner of NRG Real Estate Inc., with Christopher Rinaldi of Excel Technologies Inc. Bottom, board Member Ron Laprise, owner of Laprise Chiropractic, with Laura Judd.









Groundbreaking Development

DevAssocGroundbreakingBW-0112cGroundbreaking ceremonies were recently staged at the site of what will become known as the Northampton I-91 Professional Center, which will consist of two three-story Class-A office buildings designed for professional and medical tenants. The project is being spearheaded by Agawam-based Development Associates. From left are: David Masiello, owner of R.P. Masiello, general contractor, the builder chosen for the project; Travis Ward, operations manager for Development Associates; Suzanne Beck, executive director of the Northampton Area Chamber of Commerce; Eileen O’Leary Sullivan, co-owner of Northampton I-91 Professional Center; Ken Vincunas, general manager of Development Associates; J. Curtis Shumway, co-owner of the Northampton I-91 Professional Center; Northampton Mayor David Narkewicz; Brian Huntley, project manager for Tighe & Bond, the engineering firm consulting on the project; and Pat Levelle, CFO of CSO, a future tenant.

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Future Returns

The Mass. Bankers Assoc. Charitable Foundation recently presented Cooley Dickinson Hospital with a check for $5,000 to support the hospital’s Building Our Future campaign. Pictured, from left, are Craig Melin, president and CEO of CDH; Ken Bordewieck, senior vice president of Easthampton Savings Bank; Joanne Finck, CDH Building Our Future campaign chairperson; William Stapleton, president of Northampton Cooperative Bank; and Dan Forte, president and CEO of the Mass. Bankers Assoc. Charitable Foundation.

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Old Masters to Monet

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Monet 4More than 150 guests attended the D’Amour Museum of Fine Arts’ preview reception for the exhibition “Old Masters to Monet: Three Centuries of French Painting” from the Wadsworth Atheneum. Guests included exhibition sponsors and major donors to the Springfield Museums. The exhibition of 50 masterpieces will be on view through April 29. “Old Masters to Monet” was organized by the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art in Hartford. Presentation of the exhibition in Springfield is funded in part by the Michele and Donald D’Amour Fund, established in 2008 to bring world-class art exhibitions to the D’Amour Museum of Fine Arts. From top: from left, Patricia Hambley, Mark Hambley, and Joanna Rosenthal: from left, Joanna Rosenthal, David Starr; Holly Smith-Bové, president of the Springfield Museums; and Peggy Starr; from left, Lyman Wood; Merrie Wood; Heather Haskell, director of the Springfield Art Museums; Julia Courtney, curator of art, Springfield Museums; Michele D’Amour; Dr. Eric Zafran, curator of European art at the Wadsworth Atheneum; and Donald D’Amour; Dr. Paul Friedmann looks over some of the paintings.

















Food Fest West

The West of the River Chamber of Commerce (WRC) staged its Fifth Annual Food Fest West on Dec. 8 at Crestview Country Club in Agawam. Sponsored by Western Massachusetts Electric Co., First Niagara Bank, and OMG Inc., the event featured the foods of area restaurants including Carrabba’s Italian Grill, Casa di Lisa, Chez Josef, Crestview Country Club, Lower Pioneer Valley Educational Collaborative, Magic Spoon, Mama Iguana’s, Nina’s Cookies, Nora’s, O’Connor’s Pub & Grille, Partners Restaurant, Tekoa Country Club, and Tokyo Asian Cuisine. Restaurants competed to win awards and prizes for best food and best presentation during the course of the evening. A chef auction was also be held, where attendees could bid on meals provided by their favorite chefs.  Proceeds raised by Food Fest West will go toward the Partnership for Education and the WRC Educational Fund, which provides grants to businesses for on-the-job training and continuing educational needs. Top, the team from the Magic Spoon. Bottom, some of the desserts that tempted attendees.






Award-winning Efforts


At Freedom Credit Union’s recent annual dinner, Ana Frasco, mortgage processor, top, received the President’s Award from Barry Crosby, Freedom president and CEO. The award recognizes her commitment to professional excellence. She was nominated by a colleague who recognized her exemplary attitude in her service to members and fellow employees, and her contributions to the success of the credit union. In addition, Julia Beaudoin, bottom, Freedom’s director of Human Resources, received a special Tribute Award from Crosby for her leadership actions taken during the tornado on June 1, 2011, ensuring the safety of employees and members at the Freedom branch on Main Street in Springfield.

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United Way Day of Caring

The United Way of Pioneer Valley recently conducted its annual Day of Caring, organizing volunteers from area businesses who performed needed projects around the region.
Below, from top: front to back, Diane Haggerty, Linda Vela, and Nicole Bryar of MassMutual volunteer at the West Springfield Council on Aging; from left, Rebecca Barlow, Tricia Parolo, Gail Couchon, and Sue Gendron of MassMutual work at Abner Gibbs Elementary School; from left, Narinder Kaur, Kathy Giordano, Jennifer Saltis, Cathy Lafortune, and David Woytowicz of MassMutual volunteer at Stanley Park; from left, Lauren Bouvier, Amy Martin, Andrew Conner, and Christine Landry of PeoplesBank pitch in at Chicopee Child Day Center.
Photos courtesy of Ed Cohen



















More Caring
More from the United Way of Pioneer Valley Day of Caring, below from top: Christine Warren of the Davis Foundation volunteers at Wistariahurst Museum; Angel Diaz-Mangiafic of MassMutual lends a hand at the Children’s Museum of Holyoke; Donna Bernard of Jubinville Insurance pitches in at Wistariahurst Museum; Michelle White of MassMutual works at the Children’s Museum of Holyoke; Corey Tomlinson of MassMutual volunteers at the YMCA of Greater Springfield.

Photos courtesy of Joe Aberdale





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Community Response

The American Red Cross Pioneer Valley Chapter has benefited from a recent outpouring of generosity from area individuals and businesses. At top left, the chapter’s executive director, Rick Lee (right), accepts a check for $20,000 from UBS Financial Services in Springfield to support local disaster-relief and recovery efforts. The check, representing a corporate donation, a company matching gift, and employee contributions, is presented by George Keady III, UBS senior vice president and branch manager (left), and James Calabrese, UBS account vice president. Bottom, the staff of Texas Roadhouse in Springfield presents a $13,000 donation to Mary Nathan, the chapter’s director of Disaster Services. The restaurant fed victims of the June 1 tornadoes and helped with cleanup, then coordinated a fund-raiser involving Texas Roadhouse restaurants all over New England to raise the $13,000 donation.

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Lucky 13th

Joe-and-Carm-ManziBrothers Joe (left) and Carmino Manzi, co-owners of Villa Napoletana restaurant in East Longmeadow, recently celebrated their 13th anniversary in business with a party at the restaurant on North Main Street. They’re standing in front of a Sunoco modified racecar they sponsor that is driven by John Catania at Thompson Speedway in Connecticut in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series.





Link to Libraries

Link to LibrariesGeorge Burtch, vice president for Global Integration at Hasbro, is seen with fourth-grade students at the Center for Excellence School in Holyoke, where he is participating in the Link to Libraries nonprofit celebrity read-aloud program. The Link to Libraries program offers youth in underserved communities reading programs, new books, and opportunities to meet area business executives who often mentor area youth. For more information on Link to Libraries, go to www.linktolibraries.org.


NCCJ Honorees

NCCJThe National Conference for Community and Justice staged its annual Human Relations Award Banquet on June 14 at the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield. The agency, founded in 1927 as the National Conference for Christians and Jews, is a human-relations organization dedicated to fighting bias, bigotry, and racism in America.  Honored with
NCCJ Human Relations Awards for 2001 are, from left, Dr. Saleem Bajwa, Thomas Burton, youth award recipient Rosaline Abraham, James O’S. Morton, and Hyman Darling.


Read-aloud Event

Read-aloud Event 1Read-aloud Event 2Read-aloud Event 3Read-aloud Event 4The United Way of Pioneer Valley and BusinessWest’s Difference Makers collaborated to present a special read-aloud session at the Holyoke Public Library that was part of the Connect to Reading Book Drive staged to collect books for the Hasbro Summer Learning Initiative. From top, BusinessWest Senior Writer Joe Bednar engages a pair of young people in a reading exercise; BusinessWest Advertising Consultant Gwen Burke has one of the young people read to her; dozens of young people and their parents take part in the reading initiative; BusinessWest Advertising Consultant Tina Kuselias reads to a group of young students.

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The Power of Choice

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Bay Path College staged its 16th annual Women’s Leadership Conference on April 29 at the MassMutual Center. More than 1,000 attendees took in the day-long event, which took the theme ‘The Power of Choice,’ and featured keynoters Wes Moore, a youth advocate, Army veteran, business leader, and author of The Other Wes Moore; Alison Levine, team captain of the first American women’s Everest expedition; and Victoria Kennedy, attorney and advocate for health care reform and women’s issues.
Women’s Leadership ConferenceAt above left, Levine (center) talks with Bay Path President Carol Leary and her husband, Noel. Bottom left, the large crowd mingles in the concourse area.











Coming Together

Elms College and Springfield Technical Community CollegeElms College and Springfield Technical Community College recently announced a new partnership through which classes in an Elms bachelor’s degree completion program in social work will be held at STCC. The program will benefit STCC students and alumni, as well as area residents with associate’s degrees, who are interested in a career in social work. Seen at the announcement are, left to right: Richard Parkin, assistant vice president for Academic Affairs, STCC; Walter Breau, vice president for Academic Affairs, Elms College; Ira Rubenzahl, President, STCC; and Sr. Mary Reap, Ph.D., President, Elms College.





Celebrating Entrepreneurship

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Harold Grinspoon4The Harold Grinspoon Charitable Foundation Entrepreneurship Initiative Awards Ceremony and Banquet was staged April 27 at the Log Cabin Banquet & Meeting House in Holyoke. The event featured an Elevator Pitch Competition featuring representatives of all the area colleges and universities. From top left: Lindsay Weaver, winner of the Elevator Pitch Competition, shares her idea for a business called Polar-EYES (a soft contact lens that provides outdoor UV protection, the power of polarization, and can transition from dark to light as traditional sunglasses do); Harold Grinspoon (light jacket) and keynote speaker Johnny (Earle) Cupcakes (center, front) are joined by the spirit winners from area colleges; Nate Lare, a student entrepreneur whose company, RDS Enterprise, provides a self-contained, semi-permanent disaster-relief housing kit, was the runner-up in the Elevator Pitch Competition; Adena Lavin (right), a student entrepreneur from Mt. Holyoke College, is seen at her exhibit of kale snacks. Her business is called ‘Pow! Chow,’ and she’s assisted by Lauren Palulis. Their exhibit was was one of 35 at the awards ceremony.
Photos by Shana Sureck

















Not Just Business as Usual

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Not Just Business as Usual3Al Verrecchia, retired CEO and chairman of the board of Hasbro, was the keynote speaker for a program titled Not Just Business as Usual, presented by the Springfield Technical Community College Foundation on April 26. Event organizers also honored two area companies, Balise Motor Sales and Smith & Wesson, for their continued success and contributions to the local community. From top, STCC President Ira Rubenzahl (right) with Smith & Wesson CEO Michael Golden, and Rubenzahl with Balise President Jeb Balise. Emcee Frank Quigley (left), president of F.D. Quigley & Associates, a member of the STCC Foundation Board, and vice president of the STCC Alumni Advisory Board, with Michael Oleksak, executive vice president of Berkshire Bank and president of the STCC Foundation Board.

















Royal LLP Open House

Royal LLPThe law firm Royal LLP staged an elaborate open house on April 14 at its new location at 270 Pleasant St. in Northampton. Here, Principal Amy Royal, left, with Anne Weiss, owner of Weiss Consulting.

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Foundation Awards

Foundation AwardsPeople’s United Community Foundation recently announced that it awarded $30,000 in grants to nonprofit agencies in Western Mass. Six organizations received funding in support of their programs. Here, Tim Crimmins Jr., (fourth from left), officer of People’s United Community Foundation and Massachusetts President of People’s United Bank, presents award checks to, from left: Donna Barbieri, vice president of Business Banking for People’s United Bank, representing Gray House; Lynn Cantell, growth manager and senior vice president of People’s United Bank, representing Top Floor Learning Inc.; Jane Lennox, chief development officer for the Clarke School for the Deaf; Michael Abbate, director of Finance and Administration for the Western Mass. Enterprise Fund; Monica Borgatti, Resource Development and Communications director for Pioneer Valley Habitat for Humanity; Sandy Belkin, president of the Pioneer Valley Habitat for Humanity Board of Directors; Ron Willoughby, Springfield Rescue Mission executive director; and Joe Manna, development director for the Springfield Rescue Mission.

Transactional Law Meet

Transactional Law MeetWestern New England College School of Law students Isaac Mass and Julie McKenna (left), topped a field of 30 teams in the national Transactional Law Meet held in Philadelphia. Mass and McKenna received their first place award from judges (from left), Joan  Schwartz, associate general counsel of Airgas Inc.; Kenneth Young, partner at Dechert LLP; Jason Koenig, principal at Hale Capital Partners; and Charles Middleton, senior vice president and tax counsel at Oxbow Corp.

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

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Send photos with a caption and contact information to: ‘Picture This’
c/o BusinessWest Magazine, 1441 Main Street, Springfield, MA 01103
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ICNE 1

ICNE 2

ICNE Open House

Insurance Center of New England staged an open house and ribbon-cutting on March 31 at its new headquarters building on Suffield Street in Agawam, the former home of the Oaks banquet facility. At left below, doing the honors are, from left: Bill Trudeau, COO of ICNE; state Rep. Nicholas Boldyga; David Florian, CFO of ICNE; Dean Florian, president of ICNE; and Agawam Mayor Richard Cohen. At left top, Dean Florian chats with Ted Hebert, owner of Teddy Bear Pools & Spas. 








Link to Libraries

Link to LibrariesThe Hampden Savings Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Hampden Bank, announced recently that it has awarded $1,500 to Link to Libraries Inc. Here, Gayle Rediker, CFO of Rediker Software and a Hampden Bank and Link to Libraries Advisory Board member, accepts a check from Hampden Bank Vice President/Retail Sales Director Hector Toledo. Celebrating its third anniversary this May, Link to Libraries has donated more than 26,000 to area schools and nonprofits in Western Mass. and Northern Conn.








NASA Downlink

NASA downlinkArea sixth-grade students had a chance to talk directly with an astronaut on March 29, as Dr. Cady Coleman ‘visited’ Springfield Technical Community College via a NASA downlink from the International Space Station. The event was made possible through a partnership with UMass Amherst. Students from three schools — Springfield’s STEM Middle Academy and the Lt. Elmer J. McMahon and Dr. Marcella R. Kelly schools in Holyoke — participated in STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) activities led by UMass graduate students prior to the downlink.

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Hometown Heroes

Hometown Hero Nate Lare

Hometown Hero Sirdeaner Walker

Stephen Bryant, president of Columbia Gas

The American Red Cross Pioneer Valley Chapter held its ninth annual Hometown Heroes breakfast at the MassMutual Center earlier this month, honoring nine local residents who acted selflessly to change (and sometimes save) the lives of others. At top, Hometown Hero Nate Lare, who alerted residents when a fire gutted their apartment complex, shares a moment with his mother, Roberta Garabedian, after receiving his award. Middle, Hometown Hero Sirdeaner Walker, an advocate for safe schools who has become an effective anti-bullying voice in the wake of her son’s suicide, is presented with her award by Earlon Seeley of Pellegrini, Seeley, Ryan & Blakesley, P.C., another event sponsor. At bottom, Stephen Bryant, president of Columbia Gas, the event’s presenting sponsor, addresses the audience at the MassMutual Center.

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Breaking New Ground

Breaking New GroundOfficials broke ground March 3 on Boltwood Place, a 12-unit market-rate housing project in downtown Amherst, behind Judie’s restaurant. The project, praised by officials as a way to bring more professionals, and even more vitality, into downtown Amherst, is slated to be ready for occupancy later this year. From left are: Jonathan Tucker, Amherst planning director; John Musante, Amherst town manager; Katie Day Eagan, Dave Williams, and Judie Terapulsky, owners of Boltwood Place; Stephanie O’Keefe, chair of the Amherst Select Board; and Kyle Wilson, principal, along with Williams, of Archipelago Investments, which is spearheading the project.

Link to Libraries

Link to LibrariesThe Monson Savings Bank Foundation recently announced that Link to Libraries of East Longmeadow is one of the recipients of the bank’s foundation awards for 2011. Seen here are, from left: Dodie Carpentier, Hampden branch manager; Susan Jaye-Kaplan, president, Link to Libraries; Monson Savings Bank President Roland Desrochers; Lynn Weiner, Link to Libraries Advisory Committee member; and Link to Libraries co-founder Janet Crimmins.

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Women Chamber Group
Womens Chamber Two

Business Expo

The Professional Women’s Chamber (PWC) staged its 13th Annual Business Expo on Jan. 19, 2011 at the MassMutual Room at the Basketball Hall of Fame. Nearly 50 exhibitors from a variety of business sectors participated in the tabletop event. Attendees found information on business and personal banking, finances, insurance, graduate schools, beauty products, and nonprofit organizations. Each year, the PWC conducts the expo to give its members an opportunity to showcase their business or organization and to give attendees a chance to network with other women executives. Proceeds from the expo go to support the PWC Scholarship Fund, which helps women in transition returning to the workforce. Top left, members of the PWC Board of Directors, from left, Ellen Albano, Ellen Desmarais, Lisa Lemon, Janet Casey, and Tony Scibaldi (president), with Jeannie Filomeno, a representative of Marcotte Ford. Left, representatives of Loomis Communities await visitors to their booth.

Top of the City

The Springfield Technical Community College Foundation recently staged its annual Top of the City event in Scibelli Hall. The networking event doubles as a fun-raiser, with proceeds from a giant raffle going to the foundation and its many endeavors. Below (from left): Ellen W. Freyman, Esq., of Shatz, Schwartz and Fentin, P.C., and a member of the STCC Foundation Board of Directors; Ron Ancrum, president of the Community Foundation of Western Mass.; and Jane Roulier. Bottom (from left): William Bennett; Debra A. Kaylor, CPA, of Meyers Brothers Kalicka, P.C., and an STCC trustee; Hector F. Toledo, chairman of the STCC Board of Trustees and vice president of Retail Sales at Hampden Bank; and Myra D. Smith, STCC vice president for Human Resources and Multicultural Affairs.

STCC event
STCC event 2

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Grainger

Tools for Tomorrow

Two students in the Energy Systems Technology program at Springfield Technical Community College were recently awarded $2,000 scholarships from W.W. Grainger. In addition to the Grainger Tools for Tomorrow scholarship, the students will each receive a customized professional Westward toolkit, valued at $1,000, upon graduation. From left, STCC Energy Systems Technology Department Chair Bob Bujak; scholarship winners Brian Patterson and Luke Hardy; John Duffy, branch manager of the W.W. Grainger Springfield office; and Energy Systems Professor Michael Siciliano.

LinkToLibraries

Future Writers

BusinessWest Editor George O’Brien reads to students at Springfield’s Dorman School as part of the Link to Libraries read-aloud program. The students were given a book to take home, as well as a Link to Libraries book bag.

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Cutting the Ribbon

WNEC Campus

WNEC Campus

Western New England College celebrated the latest addition to its campus last month, the new, $40 million Center for the Sciences and Pharmacy designed to support learning and research. College President Anthony Caprio joined with hundreds of faculty, staff, students, and community leaders to mark the grand opening of the 127,000-square-foot facility. Caprio hailed the new center an exceptional learning environment that reflects WNEC’s growth and a greater emphasis on research by both faculty and students. “It is because of our entire community of talented and committed faculty, staff, students, trustees, alums, and friends that our university will continue to transform itself and the thousands of students we have incorporated into our dynamic journey,” he said. Below, Caprio and Board of Trustees Chair Kevin Delbridge, surrounded by faculty and staff, trustees, and local business and political leaders, cut the ceremonial ribbon.
WNWC staff

Caprio and Board of Trustees Chair Kevin Delbridge, surrounded by faculty and staff

The Pajama Project

Pajama Project

Pajama Project

Collecting clean, new sleepwear to benefit homeless children and families for the Pajama Project are (from left) Anthony Cignoli, president of A.L. Cignoli; Fr. Brennan, co-director at St. Francis Chapel; Don Anderson, owner of the Cruise Store; Aida Claudio, volunteer at St. Francis Chapel; and Mary Fallon, media director at Garvey Communication Associates Inc. Donations can also be dropped off at any Pride Station and Store. The collection runs through Jan 7.

Features
Strong Diversity Makes Up for Town’s Small Size

Tom Bashista

Tom Bashista took over his family’s farm this past January, becoming the fourth generation to work the land.

If you drive into Southampton along Route 10 out of Easthampton, one of the first signs of commerce to greet you is a Big Y superstore.
But a stone’s throw across the road is the sign and entryway for Red Rock Shops, with 1960s-style letters heralding a strip of mom-and-pop stores. And this lets you know that you’re in Southampton. Primarily a residential community with a population of close to 5,800, the town has a business base that in many cases can be traced back for more than a generation.
Town Clerk Eileen Couture is no longer owner of Mahoney’s Package Store, but with her husband, she ran one of those mom-and-pops for more than 25 years. She said that, in addition to her former store, her husband’s family was owner of the popular Couture Gardens dance hall.
Speaking from personal experience, she said, “quite a few businesses in town have grown up with their families.”
While she sold her store to take up a position in Town Hall, she listed off the names of several Southamptonites who are still business owners: Pure Foods, owned by Don Pusa; the Tarka family’s auto-service station; and Lyman Sheet Metal, a machine shop that has been in that family since 1894.
With his wife, Cheryl, Tom Bashista took over his family’s farm this past January, becoming the fourth generation to work the land. At Bashista Orchards and Cider Mill on East Street, he joked that the only thing that’s different now as owner is the amount of paperwork for which he’s responsible.
But a drive through Southampton’s scenic byways offers a window into a business community that also reflects the cultural underpinnings of this colonial town.
Sage Books is a used bookstore that is housed in an elegant antique home along Route 10. Owner Pete Morin said that it was fate that brought him and his wife to this role, and that, despite the Internet, the written word on paper is still a draw for people. Similarly, Robert Floyd, owner of the eponymous photo gallery next door to Town Hall, said that, after a professional career as a photojournalist in New York City, he made the decision to take this property before he even knew what he wanted to do with it.
Since opening in 2001, the Robert Floyd Photo Gallery has been serving both local and world-renowned artists in the medium, while also providing monthly classes and seminars.
For this installment of its Doing Business In series, BusinessWest finds out how Southampton is very similar to Floyd’s description of his gallery: “It’s many things to many people.”

All in the Family
Couture said that her business flourished through the 1970s and ’80s. “But when the bigger stores started opening in West Springfield or Westfield in the ’90s, everyone would go there for their big purchases.”
Given the tightly knit town, though, she said that people are very much interested in supporting the shops owned by their neighbors.
“You want to give the local people a shot,” she said, adding, “Pure Foods has some very solid local business, even with Big Y right across the street. His parking lot is always full. They have a lot of meat specials, and people flock there for that.
“At the bowling alley,” she continued, “I learned how to bowl there; my kids did, too. It’s nice to have things like that for your kids. That place has been owned by the same family forever.”
It’s a long way, commercially speaking, from bowling lanes to apple orchards, but the sentiment is the same for Bashista.
Working the same farmland his great-grandfather Jacob first owned in 1926, Bashista said that he took over as the latest generation because “I didn’t want houses built on this land.
“It’s sweat equity just to keep the land the way it was when I grew up,” he continued, “so my kids can have that same opportunity. What they do with it is up to them, but it’s my choice to do this.”
But it wasn’t a difficult decision to make. Bashista Orchards has maintained a thriving retail component to the farming, from the days when Jacob had a container by the roadside so customers could make their own change, to the current building, housing the apple-sorting facility, cold storage, a bakery, and shelves lined with the best this farm and other local food purveyors have to offer.
Bashista credits his parents for turning the market into a year-round operation four years ago, and he noted that the 40 varieties of apples he grows are kept perfectly in the decades-old cold storage, to be enjoyed through the following summer.
“And none of this is high-tech,” he added. “This sorting machine here was bought in the 1950s, and it still works as well as the day it was bought.”
The stretch of road out front is in contention for repaving, and Bashista said he’ll wait for that outcome to determine how, if at all, he’ll change things in his time at the farm. A covered porch would be nice, he said, to offer some protection for idling with a cup of coffee and gazing at the view — something he’s not too familiar with, in his busy time on the farm.
“But it would be a great spot for folks,” he said, “like Yankee Candle’s great wraparound porch.
“I want to keep this the way it has always been,” he added, “like people could step back in time when they come here. Other than making things more efficient, I don’t want to change a thing.”

Read All About It
When Morin had been ‘downsized’ in the 1990s, he knew that the time had come to make a life change. And looking around at the number of books he and his wife, Susan Shea, had amassed the solution was right there all the time.
“After collecting for 35 years, we had probably 5,000 books,” he said. “We thought, ‘why not open a bookstore?’”
Having a good idea from their travels of what they wanted, the two decided upon the current location, an old house that had been vacant for 20 years. It wasn’t for sale, but they had bought a few properties already from the owner, a Realtor, and their patience paid off. After building out the inside from basement to second floor, all with his own millwork, Morin said that operations began in 1996.
At one time, the operation specialized in locating hard-to-find and out-of-print volumes, but has scaled back on that service out of necessity. “When we first opened, there were maybe 400 to 500 booksellers using Internet searches. Today I’d say there’s 40,000 to 50,000. There are those local customers who will come to us, though, just not in the numbers that once were.”
Reflecting on the future of the written word, Morin backtracked first and called it “as important an invention as fire and the wheel,” and said that his demographic is decidedly the older generations.
“Don’t get me wrong,” he added, “I love my iTouch, I listen to the radio on it, but it doesn’t ever replace my desire to read on paper. Younger people still are interested, but it’s less than it used to be. When my wife and I used to go to the beach, we’d bring a stack of paperbacks. James Michener, Tom Clancy, you know the type. I can’t for the life of me imagine doing that with a Kindle.”
While his market is in an ever-evolving state, like a true bibliophile he added, “after opening up here, I was offered a very lucrative job, and I just didn’t want to take it. This is a labor of love.”

Picture This
Similarly, when asked what brought him to Southampton originally, Floyd smiled and said, “two words: Linda Emerson.”
Indeed, after forging a career first as an engineer and then as a photojournalist, with clients ranging from the Special Olympics to Morgan Stanley, Floyd said that he moved to town to be with his partner, but kept the clients and an apartment in Manhattan for many years.
“Three years after I was in town, we were walking right along the street outside on New Year’s Day,” he remembered. “As we passed by this building I noticed a ‘for rent’ sign. I decided on the spot that I was going to take it. For nine months, I didn’t know exactly what I wanted to do with it.”
A gallery dedicated to his own work wasn’t the goal, he said, but to exhibit the work of others in that medium was. “My heart is in elevating photography for the general public,” he said, “to learn about photography, and to really view it.”
His studio isn’t the place for the “cute bear in the wildflowers” kind of imagery, he said, explaining that there is a potentially profitable market he’s turning away. But the work does draw people from both the region and far beyond, and Floyd has become known as a gallerist with as good an eye for his exhibitions as his photojournalism work.
Currently showcasing the photomontage work of Julius Lester and infrared landscapes by Betsy Feick, among examples of many others, Floyd said “my photographers tell me they sell better here than any of their other venues. I know we offer more than any photo gallery in Western Mass, what with seminars and classes. And there are great galleries out there, to be sure.”
His concluding remarks about his business are emblematic of the town itself. “People who know about us know how strong a collection we are. We make a lot of noise for a little gallery.”

Departments Picture This

One Book at a Time


Program participants

Program participants engaged in a number of learning activities with youngsters there

As part of a program called “Putting the Accent on Literacy, One Book at a Time,” BusinessWest and its Difference Makers from 2009 and 2010 coordinated a book drive in conjunction with the Hasbro Summer Learning Initiative, which links young people with books during the summer months, when they are away from. On August 13, more than 500 books were delivered to the Dunbar Community Center in Springfield, where program participants engaged in a number of learning activities with youngsters there, including book readings, games, and even a play (at left) involving Rosa Parks and her famous decision not to ride in the back of the bus.



Sally Fuller, project director for the Cherish Every Child

Sally Fuller, project director for the Cherish Every Child

Sally Fuller, project director for the Cherish Every Child initiative for the Davis Foundation, one of the Difference Makers for 2010, listens intently as one of the young students reads Where the Fern Grows.


Gwen Burke, left, and Nikia Davis

BusinessWest advertising consultant Gwen Burke, left, and Nikia Davis, the magazine’s senior designer

BusinessWest advertising consultant Gwen Burke, left, and Nikia Davis, the magazine’s senior designer, engage several students in a game of Scrabble Junior.


Maura Geary, project coordinator for the Regional Employment Board and one of the architects of the literacy program, gets to know several of the students involved with the summer reading initiative.


‘Nathanial’ proudly displays the book

‘Nathanial’ proudly displays the book

‘Nathanial’ proudly displays the book he chose to read to BusinessWest staff writer Joe Bednar. Each child was given a book to take home.

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Hanging with Wally


Joseph Bott, territory sales manager at the Hanover Insurance Group (left), Janet Steigmeyer, director of Human Resources for the Holyoke Chicopee Springfield (HCS) Head Start Inc., and Timm Marini, president of the FieldEddy Insurance Network, pose with Wally, the official mascot of the Boston Red Sox. The FieldEddy Insurance Network, in cooperation with the Hanover Insurance Group, sponsored Wally’s visit with the children enrolled in HCS Head Start. Head Start’s mission is to improve the lives of low-income children by providing quality, comprehensive child-development services focusing on education, health, nutrition, and mental health.


Getting a Lift

From left, Mary Meehan and Marian Poe-Heineman, both first vice president of commercial lending at PeoplesBank, join Mary Reardon Johnson, executive director of the Young Women’s Club of Western Mass., in celebrating the club’s new 2011 Kia Sedona. The van was purchased with a $21,813 donation from PeoplesBank, and will be assigned to the club’s Teen Transitional Living Program (TTLP). The TTLP serves at-risk teen mothers who cannot return to live with their families due to domestic violence, neglect, poor living conditions, or other extraordinary circumstances. The van will improve TTLP daily operations by providing residents and staff with safe and reliable transportation to and from doctor’s appointments and job training, as well as many other services critical to the success of the young mothers enrolled in the program.

Sections Supplements
‘The Carle’ Balances Exhibition, Education, and Celebration of Artwork

Rosemary Agoglia, left, and Alexandra Kennedy

Rosemary Agoglia, left, and Alexandra Kennedy say the museum is much more than the home of Eric Carle’s works.

Now a decade old, the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, or ‘the Carle,’ as it’s known to many, is drawing visitors from across the region and around the world. They are treated to much more than collections of picture-book art, say those who manage the facility. Instead, they find an experience that is both educational and inspiring.

Alexandra Kennedy says that the most-commonly heard exclamations from first-time patrons to the Eric Carle, Museum of Picture Book Art are ‘I can’t believe this’ and ‘I had no idea…’
“They didn’t imagine something as vast and with as serious a purpose as what we’re doing here,” she explained with a sweep of the hand at the expansive great hall behind her.
Kennedy is the second director of the Amherst-based attraction, and as children galloped around the surrounding apple orchard or strolled through the soaring spaces with parents in tow, she and her colleagues told BusinessWest that, while the museum sits squarely in the cultural landscape of other exhibition halls of the Pioneer Valley, ‘the Carle,’ as it’s called, has a purpose and a presence far beyond the foothills of the Holyoke Range.
Nick Clark is the curator of the museum collections and exhibitions, and was the initial director of the museum that he helped to create with Eric and Barbara Carle. As he stood in one of the three elegant gallery spaces, he told how the initial idea for the Carle was a storefront-style operation in downtown Northampton, “not much bigger than the space we’re in right now,” he said.
While the foundation of the collection is Carle’s archive, Clark said it has always been the dream to encompass much more than that. “So instead of the Eric Carle Museum, it would become ‘the Carle.’ As the collection grows, people will realize that we are much more than just his works.”
And, indeed, the museum is much more than just a repository of picture-book art.
As director of education at the museum, Rosemary Agoglia explained three key aspects of the Carle: the galleries, a reading library, and an art studio open to all visitors at all times. But, she said, even within that framework, an important concept arises that all facets of the museum support.
“The intent is to raise a generation of museum-goers who are interested in being in a museum because they are interested in engaging their heart and mind,” she said. “In many museums, the typical visitor is engaged intellectually, but are they connected to it? This museum underscores the personal connection at its foundation.”
From educational concepts that Eric Carle was exposed to in Italy, where early-learning goals and techniques are addressed differently from testing and a formulaic, results-oriented approach, the museum that bears his name also maintains a similar philosophy.
But at the Carle’s core is that great, colorful palette of his artwork that is known to children of all ages — the Very Hungry Caterpillar, the Brown Bear, and the Mixed-Up Chameleon. Many of these originals, composed of torn tissue paper, are incredibly fragile, but the museum always has their namesake artist’s work on exhibit. And though you might not recognize some additional friends and characters on display from other artists, chances are that your children will.
And chances are that, after a visit to this museum, you might very well exclaim once again, “I had no idea…”

Table of Contents
Traveling in Europe and Asia, the Carles saw a variety of illustration museums, celebrating the art form in a way that they had not seen stateside. Kennedy explained that the distinction was that these museums, particularly in Japan, were preserving, promoting, and sharing picture-book art specifically.
She said that Carle has long felt himself an incredibly fortunate individual. “His fans and publishers have been great to him, and he has made incredible friends throughout the art community,” she said. “This museum was his idea to help give back.”
That original idea of a small, downtown space was scratched, however, because in a visionary fashion his scope grew as he recognized a need and a demand. In order to treat the artwork with respect, Kennedy said, the building would need to reflect that. He needed a place that was worthy of fine art.
Working with the firm Juster Pope Frazier in Northampton, Carle found architects that met his grand plans for the space. Earl Pope was the principal on that job, and the artist and draftsperson created an edifice that sits within the landscape harmoniously, complementing Carle’s commitment to nature, but also containing first-rate exhibition space.
Norton Juster, another member of that firm, contributed to the design process in more ways than one: architect by day, now retired, he is also an award-winning children’s book author perhaps most famous for The Phantom Tollbooth.
The philosophy of artwork and education was a primary goal for the museum’s design. Kennedy said that a great amount of thought went into the three gallery spaces, but added, “of equal importance is that the art is at the center of what we do, and also is a catalyst for programming. It’s a museum where people can bring children and experience picture-book art in a number of ways.”
To achieve that, an auditorium, handsomely trimmed in pale woods, offers year-round events. From authors’ readings to children’s theater and performances — through a partnership with the Northampton Community Music Center — to programming for adults within the purview of the picture book, the space is big enough to draw in the brightest lights of the industry.
At a recent opening for the Austrian artist Lisbeth Zwerger, whose jewel-like illustrations are currently on display, the museum was packed. Kennedy said that visitors came from as far away as California and London specifically for the event, underscoring the wide appeal of both the medium and the museum itself.
In the reading library, a comfortable nook with books organized by artist, Agoglia said that the function of this space is to bring the art seen out on the walls back to its original intent — “to rejoin the words and images,” she added.
Boston’s Simmons College has a renowned Library Science program, and it has partnered with the Carle, most notably in the utilization of the museum’s library. Graduate students share the space with youngsters, each finding something different in the colorful volumes.
The library is envisioned as the ‘living room’ of the museum, a place where families can gather, with parents reading to children and vice versa. But it is also home to serious scholarship in the nature of the published text.
The ‘whole-book’ concept was pioneered at the Carle library, said Agoglia, explaining how the process looks at the layout, artwork, and story as individual elements. “This technique has opened the eyes of librarians around the globe,” she said. “The book has greater potential than just the sum of its parts. The more you look, the more you see.”

Learn by Doing
From the hushed reverence of the library, the art studio at the opposite end of the Carle offers a sun-filled hubbub of creativity. The well-stocked studio is a child’s — and adult’s — dream of a space to sit down and try out different techniques.
“It’s a very open-ended approach to making things,” said Kennedy. “There isn’t any ‘make-this’ style of interaction. This is instead very much an approach akin to the practices of Reggio Emelia.”
That technique, an educational philosophy that Eric Carle was exposed to in Italy, emphasizes the importance of many different forms of critical engagement for children’s education. At the museum studio, Kennedy said this method never instructs a ‘right way’ to creatively express oneself, instead focusing on the importance of the expression itself.
“Children have an incredibly strong sense of aesthetics,” she continued, “and they learn from using tools and materials. They love to document what they think. They understand things visually. This studio encourages children to use critical thinking in the creation and viewing of art.”
Art is an expressive language, Agoglia said, and this was an important concept Carle wished to employ in the museum.
“The art studio is a place where people can learn the expressive language. It’s more about exploring the possibilities of materials, having been inspired by what they see in the galleries, what they see out the windows,” she said, gesturing to the apple orchard and hillside just outside. “It’s not project-focused space. We present people with materials and say, ‘what can you do with these?’”
Both acknowledged the shortfalls of arts funding for public schools, and how the economic downturn has prompted schools to cut back on the number and frequency of field trips to the museum. Unswayed by such circumstances, Kennedy said that the Carle has been actively venturing out into communities for art-outreach programs, and the studio technique has been a successful export, not only for schools, but for local children’s foundations as well.
The Treehouse Foundation in Easthampton is one of those groups, she said, one that she and her colleagues find inspiring to work with. An organization started by Judy Cockerton in 2002, its mission is to help improve the lives of foster children. Kennedy said that, when the foster kids are given books, with a nameplate that they can inscribe, that’s just one example of the museum becoming an important part of the lives of children in this community.

Picture This
The Carle hopes to broaden that scope of partnerships with local institutions, said Kennedy, adding, “our point of view is that we are an international institution that wants to have very deep roots locally.
“I think that, because we are young, there are people out there who don’t understand how many people we’re bringing here,” she continued. “We have a devoted local audience, but there are so many others out there.”
The Carle draws upwards of 50,000 visitors per year, and many of those guests come from well outside the region.
“During this time of year, we are the kind of place that people will make a stop on their way elsewhere,” Kennedy said, but as a member of the constituent offerings of the region, she added, “we will tell them, ‘while you’re here, why not stop in Northampton? There are great restaurants, as well as a great collection of picture-book art at the Michelson Gallery,’ or ‘here are some hotels in the area.’ We benefit from other regional venues, but I feel that we are a wonderful magnet.”
And of course, before they are wowed by the first moment walking in the door, they have come to see the picture-book art. For the permanent collections that the Carle houses, that first impression helps secure its place as a future repository of the genre.
When artists and families of artists come here, Clark said, they see what the Carles have done for the industry, and they want their material to be housed at the museum.
Zora and Les Charles, she a former first-grade teacher and he the co-creator of the TV show Cheers, have a world-renowned collection of children’s books and original artworks. They loaned the body of work to the Carle for an exhibition, but when they first visited the museum, that all changed, and the arrangement became permanent.
“Les walked in the door here and said, ‘oh my God, I had no idea about this space,’” Clark remembered. “Zora said almost immediately, ‘this is where my collection will come.’”
Another couple, Allan and Kendra Daniels, also loaned their collection to the Carle for an exhibition, but have pledged to donate a collection of early works. Clark said such gifts are an important addition to a museum with a very limited acquisitions allotment.
Several artists have agreed to make the Carle the destination for their own archives. Since the museum’s inception, collections from Zwerger, Petra Mathers, Leo Lionni, Antonio Frasconi, and what Clark called “the big enchilada,” the picture-book art of William Steig, have been added. “In many instances,” he added, “we have some of the great titans of the 20th century.”

Back to the Books
At 10 years young, the Carle has accomplished or moved stridently toward meeting many of the goals set forth by the founding members, artists and administrators alike. But Kennedy said that much more is necessary to look ahead.
“From an abstract perspective,” she said, “literature for children is changing so rapidly. I think it’s going to be important for us to carry on a mission to underscore the importance, emotionally, of reading with your children, and the impact it has on them. As wonderful as it is for children to experience other forms of entertainment, that is by all accounts the most enriching experience a child can have.
“And that’s a message that we want to keep out there,” she added.
The Carle will always be dedicated to books on paper, she explained, but will be open to the possibilities beyond. “Because it’s not the medium,” she continued, “it’s the art and the story that will be what stays with you.
“There’s a paradigm shift in the very concept of the modern museum, and that applies to us,” she continued. “You don’t want to think of yourself as merely a destination — that you’re defined by what people see when they walk in your front door. You really want to be a center for representing your mission, which for us means the promotion, presentation, and celebration of picture-book art.”
But chances are that for many years to come, she will still hear guests exclaim upon seeing the Carle for the first time, “I had no idea!”

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Arts & Soles

A flatbed truck carrying 20 six-foot-high fiberglass sneakers rolled into Springfield on July 8. Later in the day, an elaborate press event was staged to announce Arts & Soles, the community project involving the sneakers and the artists who will paint them in ways to answer the question, “what makes Springfield Great?” The footwear will be ready in time for the Basketball Hall of Fame induction ceremonies in August, and will be displayed in various locations downtown. Above, Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno addresses those assembled for the media event. Behind him are, from left, Maryann Lombardi, director of creative economy for UMass Amherst, a partner in the project; Nancy Urbschat, president of TSM Design, one of the organizers; and John Judge, Springfield’s chief development officer. At left, Don Courtemanche, executive director of the Springfield Business Improvement District, one of the organizers, stands by one of the giant sneakers.


Comcast Digital Connectors

The Urban League of Springfield, Comcast, and One Economy held a special graduation ceremony at the Urban League of Springfield recently to honor a group of Springfield youths who have completed the Comcast Digital Connectors program. A total of 26 students completed the vigorous program, a year-long technology learning and service initiative that teaches teens and young adults from diverse, low-income backgrounds how to use broadband technologies and how to put that knowledge to work in their communities. At the event, several students shared the experiences they gained from the program. Each of the students was also presented with their own personal NetBook laptop, courtesy of Comcast, and the announcement was made that the Comcast Digital Connectors program will continue in Springfield next year. From left, Henry Thomas, president and CEO of the Urban League of Springfield, and Doug Guthrie, Comcast senior vice president for the Western New England Region, hand out NetBook laptops to the graduating Comcast Digital Connectors.


All That Jazz

More than 12,000 people turned out in downtown Springfield for the 4th Annual Hoop City Jazz and Art Festival, staged July 9-11. The event featured a number of regional and national entertainers, arts, crafts, a variety of food, and much more. Clockwise, from above, KASIF gets the audience hopping; Greg Caputo’s big band Velocity performs; members of Terrance Blanchard belt out another tune; trumpeter Cindy Bradley performs with Zoe; and employees and friends of event sponsor Hampden Bank, from left: Nancy Mirkin; Shana Hendrikse; Carolyn Ware; Bank President Tom Burton and his wife, Kathy; Nancy and Glenn McCarthy; John Osborn, president of the Hood City Jazz & Art Festival; Deb and Rick DeBonis; and Debbie Andrews.

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Mission: AMICCON

Organizers of an event called AMICCON — the Advanced Manufacturing and Innovation Competition & Conference — staged a press event recently at the New England Air Museum at Bradley Airport to help build awareness of the Sept. 23 conference that will highlight manufacturing in Western Mass. and Connecticut. AMICCON will focus on six key manufacturing niches — plastics and advanced materials, precision machining, paper and packaging, electronics, ‘green’/clean technology, and medical devices — and has been designed to help area manufacturers make connections with one another and become aware of all that is produced in Springfield-Hartford corridor. The conference will take place at the MassMutual Center. For more information or to register, visit www.amiccon.com. Seen here are, from left, Jeff Sattler, president of NUVO Bank, one of the event organizers; Daryl Ott, executive director of the Connecticut Tooling & Machining Assoc. and also membership director of the National Tooling & Machining Assoc.; organizers Eric Hagopian, president of Hoppe Tool in Chicopee, and Ellen Bemben; and Mike Speciale, executive director of the New England Air Museum. Those gathered are standing under a fully rehabbed WWII B-29 bomber.


IBS Celebrates Its 20th

Innovative Business Systems staged a 20th-anniversary party recently at the Log Cabin Banquet & Meeting House. More than 100 clients, friends, and vendor partners attended. From left, Dave Delvecchio, president and owner; Scott Seifel, owner and technician; Bill Tremblay, former owner and president; Tremblay’s wife, Elaine; Ben Scoble, owner and technician; Brian Scanlon, owner, vice president, and treasurer; and Scott Benoit, owner and technician.

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Me Time

Reeds Landing, one of the Loomis Communities, staged an event called Me Time last month to provide “an evening of relaxation and rejuvenation for adult children of aging parents.” The event featured massages, live music, door prizes, and opportunities to connect with other caregivers. Clockwise, from left, Deborah Donaldson, co-owner of Heartfelt Elder Massage, provides a massage to one of the guests; representatives of the Alternative Health booth greet visitors; representatives of Tanya Gets You Fit are pumped up for the event.


Nuts, Bolts & Thingamajigs

An Evening with John Ratzenberger, hosted by the Western Mass. National Tooling and Machining Assoc. (WMNTMA), was staged May 12 at the Museum of Springfield History. Attendees heard Ratzenberger (‘Cliff’ on the TV show Cheers) talk about Nuts, Bolts & Thingamajigs, a group he founded to address the urgent need to prepare young people for careers in manufacturing, and also about a summer-camp program designed to introduce middle-school students to such careers. A camp session will be conducted this summer at Springfield Technical Community College. At left, Ratzenber, center, is flanked by Eric Hagopian, left, president of the WMNTMA, and Chris Kielb, vice president of the organization. Above, the wing of a GeeBee aircraft, one of the prominent displays at the history museum, hovers above the gathering.

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Women’s Leadership Conference

More than 1,000 people were in attendance for Bay Path College’s 15th annual Women’s Leadership Conference at the MassMutual Center on April 30. The day-long event featured a number of keynote speakers and panels. Clockwise from left: one of those keynoters, Soledad O’Brien, an anchor and special correspondent for CNN, signs a book for Rhyshia Manga, a student at Bay Path; Vivian Ortiz, left, representing the President’s Office at Mass Bay Community College, visits with Patricia Faginski, vice president of client services at St. Germain Investment Management; Bay Path staff recognize President Carol Leary, center, for 15 successful years overseeing the annual conference.


Business Market Show

The MassMutual Center hosted hundreds of exhibitors at the 2010 Business Market Show on May 5. Clockwise from top left: from Holyoke Gas & Electric, Calvin Ellis (left), marketing coordinator, and Rich Carnall, telecommunications sales representative; from GetSet Marketing in Springfield, from left, Yelena Zinchenko, graphic designer, Michael Herbert, marketing consultant, and Dan Bessette, vice president of marketing and sales; from the Zoo in Forest Park, Emily Bouwer, animal care staffer; and from the Mercy Medical Center Blood Bank, back row, from left, Cindy Brown, medical assistant, Frank Menard, mobile tech, Paulina Tomaszewska, medical assistant, Geri Morris, medical assistant, and (kneeling) Gina Duncan, blood donor recruiter.

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Legislative Breakfast

The annual Higher Education Joint Legislative Breakfast was staged on March 26 at Springfield Technical Community College. Hosting colleges were Greenfield Community College, Holyoke Community College, STCC, and Westfield State College. Also in attendance were the presidents of Berkshire Community College and Mass. College of Liberal Arts, as well as the chancellor of UMass Amherst. At left are state Rep. Cheryl Coakley-Rivera, STCC President Ira Rubenzahl, and Lorenzo Gaines, director of the ACCESS Springfield Promise Program. Above are three area legislators who serve on the Joint Committee on Higher Education: state Rep. Donald Humason; state Sen. Benjamin Downing, acting chair of the committee; and state Rep. William “Smitty” Pignatelli.


The SOS Turns 20

The Spirit of Springfield celebrated its 20th birthday on March 31 with a pizza-and-beer party at the Sheraton Springfield. On hand were dozens of supporters of the SOS and its events — Bright Nights in Forest Park, the annual pancake breakfast, the Big Balloon Parade, the July 4th fireworks, the annual golf tournament, and others. Pictured from left are Judy Matt, director of the Spirit of Springfield; Leslie Bercume of Health New England; Jean Jenks and Florence DeRose, former partners of Design & Advertising Associates; Diane Rodriguez of the Springfield School Department; and Dan Walsh of Columbus Hotels.


Cutting the Ribbon

Balise Honda recently celebrated its official grand opening on March 25 with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and open house, an event attended by local politicians, media, and invited guests. The dealership is located at 400 Riverdale St. in West Springfield, site of the former Yale Genton. Above, Balise President Jeb Balise (second from left) cuts the ceremonial ribbon with, from left, state Sen. Stephen Buoniconti, West Springfield Mayor Edward Gibson, and state Rep. James Welch. Below, the entire Balise Honda staff poses for a picture.

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At top, hundreds turned out last month for the annual Go Red Breakfast in the ballroom of the Springfield Sheraton. The event was staged by the American Heart Association to create awareness of heart disease, the number-one cause of death among women.


Monarch Place served as one of the most prominent reminders of the Go Red for Women movement.


Traumatic Experience

Students and staff in the Springfield Technical Community College School of Health recently presented an unscripted emergency scenario in the trauma unit of the school’s Virtual Hospital. Using one of the simulators, who for the occasion was designated Scott Willard, a 20-year-old car accident victim suffering from severe chest pain and difficulty breathing, the students responded as they would if the incident was real. At below, students and staff tend to the ‘patient,’ while above, they watch a videotape of their actions, analyzing what went well and also what could or should have been done better.