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  • Worcester won’t allow tents in public parks for temporary shelter, City Council decides

    Worcester won’t allow tents in public parks for temporary shelter, City Council decides

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    The City Council unanimously decided to file the petition to allow tents in public spaces but discussed other interim solutions to help the growing homelessness population in Worcester.

    City of Worcester

    The Worcester City Council unanimously decided against a petition last week to allow tents in public spaces at temporary shelter for the city’s growing homeless population, while councilors called for other interim solutions during a tense discussion.

    The City Council discussed Samantha Olney’s petition at their regular meeting Feb. 6, which would have allowed tents in public spaces as a temporary solution to homelessness, especially in the winter months. Olney is the director of Homeless Addicts Leadership Organization in Worcester, according to her petition, and is unhoused herself.

    The petition also recommended guidelines for the people living in the tents, including capacity limits, trash disposal, and tent size. Olney wrote that allowing the tents would allow for a more inclusive atmosphere in Worcester and would protect people experiencing homelessness from being arrested.

    “These things are needed to address the continually growing crisis of homelessness in the City of Worcester because most unhoused individuals know from previously lived experience that the city is NOT there to help,” Olney wrote. “We believe that the city would much rather push our issues to the side rather than deal with them directly.”

    While the councilors voted unanimously to place the petition on file — meaning to stop considering it — after about an hour of discussion, they traded arguments about how to combat homelessness in the city.

    Worcester’s homeless population is growing year to year due to high rents and the opioid epidemic, the Telegram & Gazette reported last year, and the second-largest city in Massachusetts is a hub of resources for unhoused people.

    District 5 Councilor Etel Haxhiaj said that, while she agreed with filing the petition, Olney’s experiences living unhoused, as well as others, would be valuable to the city’s Homelessness Task Force. Haxhiaj was the only councilor applauded after speaking.

    “I’m not endorsing the idea of people sleeping in parks. I am endorsing the idea of folks like Samantha coming to the table and joining the conversation,” Haxhiaj said. “I feel a genuine responsibility to protect my residents, to protect your rights to have a respectful, dignified solution. That is all I’m asking. Please invite those folks to the table.”

    Last month, a homeless encampment was set up outside an emergency shelter in Worcester to protest the lack of shelter available for unhoused people, especially women, the Telegram & Gazette reported. The shelter opened in December with 45 beds for men and 15 beds for women.

    District 3 Councilor George Russell spoke against the petition, citing safety concerns for residents and especially seniors. He said with encampments in public parks and near private land, residents say they “can’t enjoy (their) property.”

    “I understand that folks that are in an encampment are in a desperate situation. What about the people that live right next door? What about the people who want to use the park? What about the families who want to use the park? What about the senior citizens who want to use the park?” Russell said. 

    The councilors also moved for the Worcester city manager to report to the council “how the city is engaging with the State to ensure funding for housing solutions for the city’s homeless population.”



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    Molly Farrar

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  • Biden forms task force to avoid mishandling of classified documents

    Biden forms task force to avoid mishandling of classified documents

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    WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Monday launched a task force aimed at addressing the “systemic” problem of mishandling classified information during presidential transitions, days after a Justice Department special counsel’s sharply critical report said he had done just that.

    The Presidential Records Transition Task Force will study past transitions to determine best practices for safeguarding classified information from an outgoing administration, the White House said. It will also assess the need for changes to existing policies and procedures to prevent the removal of sensitive information that by law should be kept with the National Archives and Records Administration.

    The report from special counsel Robert Hur listed dozens of sensitive documents found at Biden’s home in Wilmington, Delaware, and at his former Washington office. The papers were marked as classified or later assessed to contain classified information.

    The majority of the documents, Hur’s report stated, appeared to have been mistakenly removed from government offices, though he also detailed some items that Biden appeared to knowingly retain. He concluded that criminal charges were not warranted in the matter..

    “I take responsibility for not having seen exactly what my staff was doing,” Biden said last week after Hur’s report was released. He added that “things that appeared in my garage, things that came out of my home, things that were moved were moved not by me but my staff.”

    Biden aides first discovered some of the documents as they cleared out the offices of the Penn-Biden Center in Washington in 2022, and more were discovered during subsequent searches by Biden’s lawyers and the FBI.

    Biden promptly reported the discoveries to federal authorities, which prompted the special counsel probe. That’s unlike former President Donald Trump, who is accused of resisting efforts to return classified government records that he moved to his Florida residence before leaving office in 2021 and of obstructing the investigation into them in a separate special counsel investigation.

    In even the best of circumstances, presidential transitions can be chaotic as records of the outgoing administration are transferred to the National Archives and thousands of political appointees leave their jobs to make way for the incoming administration. Officials of multiple administrations have said there is a systemic problem with mishandling of classified information by senior government officials, particularly around transitions, magnified by rampant over-classification across the government.

    Former Vice President Mike Pence turned over some classified documents discovered at his home last year. And former officials from all levels of government discover they are in possession of classified material and turn them over to the authorities at least several times a year.

    “Previous presidential transitions, across administrations stretching back decades, have fallen short in ensuring that classified presidential records are properly archived at NARA,” the White House said. “In light of the many instances that have come to light in recent years revealing the extent of this systemic issue, President Biden is taking action to strengthen how administrations safeguard classified documents during presidential transitions and to help address this longstanding problem going forward.”

    Hur’s report said many of the documents recovered at the Penn Biden Center in Washington, in parts of Biden’s Delaware home and in his Senate papers at the University of Delaware were retained by “mistake.”

    Biden could not have been prosecuted as a sitting president, but Hur’s report states that he would not recommend charges against Biden regardless. Investigators did find evidence of willful retention of a subset of records found in Biden’s Wilmington, Delaware house, including in a garage, office and basement den, but not enough to suggest charges. The files pertain to a troop surge in Afghanistan during the Obama administration that Biden had vigorously opposed. He kept records that documented his position, including a classified letter to Obama during the 2009 Thanksgiving holiday.

    Biden also retained his personal notebooks after leaving the vice presidency, some of which investigators found contained classified information, though other officials have kept similar documents as their personal property.

    “President Biden takes classified information seriously – he returned the documents that were found, he fully cooperated with the investigation, and it concluded that there was no case,” said Ian Sams, a spokesperson for the White House Counsel’s Office. “Now he is taking action to help strengthen future transitions to better prevent classified documents from being accidentally packed up and removed from the government, like we have seen with officials from every administration for decades.”

    The task force will be headed by Katy Kale, deputy administrator of the General Services Administration, who was assistant to the president for management and administration during the Obama administration, the post that oversees the human resources and document retention functions at the White House.

    The panel will include representatives from the White House, General Services Administration, NARA, the National Security Council and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

    The task force is to produce its recommendations ahead of the next presidential transition. It is set to operate independently from the White House Transition Coordinating Council, which is chaired by the White House chief of staff and required by law to be stood up six months before any presidential election.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    By ZEKE MILLER – AP White House Correspondent

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  • Man injured in industrial accident

    Man injured in industrial accident

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    HAVERHILL  — A worker was injured in an industrial accident late Monday morning at Merrimack Industrial Sales, which is located at 111 Neck Road in the Ward Hill Business Park.

    The incident was reported 10:47 a.m.

    Fire Chief Robert O’Brien said Rescue 1 from the Central Fire Station on Water Street responded to the incident and that a 47-year-old male was transported to Lawrence General Hospital for a non-life threatening injury.

    “Police notified OSHA of the incident,” O’Brien said, adding that the accident may have involved a piece of equipment falling on the man’s leg. 

    According to the company’s website, Merrimac Industrial provides customers with automation technology products from leading manufacturers. The company also operates a tool shop for sales and repairs of power tools. The company also expanded its product offerings to include lighting fixtures and more.

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    By Mike LaBella | mlabella@eagletribune.com

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  • Boston’s Mass & Cass housing in use as state seeks shelter solution

    Boston’s Mass & Cass housing in use as state seeks shelter solution

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    BOSTON — Massachusetts’ immigration policies have made it a “magnet state” for new arrivals fleeing into the United States and policymakers ought to consider making the state “less attractive,” Republican Sen. Peter Durant said Sunday, as a rise in immigration is being felt around the country and becomes one of the top issues of the 2024 presidential election year.

    Republicans have proposed amending the state’s right-to-shelter law, a policy which — up until late last year — guaranteed qualifying families housing in the state’s shelter system. Lawmakers proposed changing the law to require that families have been in the state for a period of time ranging from a few months to a few years, in order to qualify for a spot in state shelters.

    Though the law remains in place and untouched, Healey capped the number of families guaranteed shelter at 7,500 last November, as the emergency housing system buckled under the weight of tens of thousands of new entrants, largely driven by new immigrants leaving war-torn or financially unstable countries.

    Durant, a newly-elected Republican senator from Spencer, said on WCVB’s “On the Record” Sunday that the right-to-shelter law is attracting more immigrants into Massachusetts than other states in the country, none of which have the same legal requirement.

    “It’s about making Massachusetts less attractive for those crossing the border,” Durant said.

    “You cross the border in Texas or New Mexico, wherever you happen to be, you’re greeted by a bunch of NGOs — nongovernmental organizations — that say, ‘Where do you want to go? You can pick a state, say, South Dakota, that doesn’t have any benefits. Or we can send you to Massachusetts where you get free housing, free health care, free food, free education, cash benefits. Where would you like to go?’”

    WCVB political reporter and co-host Sharman Sacchetti pointed out that the governor has capped the number of families it will shelter.

    “Well, I mean, she said that we’re going to have no more than 7,500 families, yet we just filled up the Melnea Cass arena, and now we’re looking at space in Fort Point. So I don’t think it’s — I don’t think we can trust the governor in some of the things she’s saying,” Durant said.

    The state closed the Melnea Cass Recreational Complex in Roxbury for community programming earlier this month to temporarily convert it into an overflow shelter with 100 beds for families placed on a waitlist for more permanent shelter. It was met with mixed reactions from the neighborhood’s residents.

    State officials have said they’re looking into the Fort Point area of Boston near the Seaport District for the next overflow shelter.

    Converting the Roxbury community center to an overflow housing site was the first time statewide that a building already in use has been tapped for shelter, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu said on another Sunday show, as a guest on @Issue on NBC Boston.

    Boston had been doing its own search for space that could be turned into shelter for the growing population of homeless individuals in the city, mainly concentrated around the intersection of Melnea Cass Boulevard and Massachusetts Avenue in the South End.

    “We in some ways have already been doing this search ourselves for the last two years as we’ve been primarily addressing Mass and Cass, the type of homelessness that’s often connected to substance use that local municipalities are often uniquely responsible for,” Wu said.

    She added that Boston serves the whole state in helping house this population, many of whom come from other parts of the state into the capital for services related to drug use.

    “We had identified every single vacant school building, other city building, much of it was put to service to address that larger crisis of individual adult homelessness and substance use as well, we’ve been seeing some major progress there,” the mayor said.

    Over the last year and a half, the city opened nearly 200 units of low-threshold housing — spaces that provide counseling and case management services for people with histories of substance use disorder or who are chronically homeless. Wu’s administration propped up these shelters as a housing option for folks living in tents on the street, before clearing the area around Mass and Cass of homeless encampments.

    Now, 25% of that previously created low-threshold housing is being used for newly-arrived immigrants through the state-run emergency housing program as the family shelter system has overflowed, Wu said Sunday.

    “We’re seeing that impact at all levels,” Wu said.

    The mayor added that almost 90 children living in the state’s family shelters have been enrolled in Boston Public Schools. They’ve been connected to schools within walking distance that had empty seats and go to school in cohorts with other children in their same situation.

    “They have been getting to school in a walking bus, where everyone kind of holds their hands with their parents and gets to school. There’s been a lot of community support with volunteers and neighbors providing extra clothes for those who might not be prepared for this weather, and other supports for the young people,” she said.

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    Sam Drysdale

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  • Danvers Town Meeting members must reconvene to dissolve meeting after adjournment vote was overlooked

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    Danvers Town Meeting members must reconvene on Feb 26 in the Danvers High School auditorium for the sole purpose of taking a vote to adjourn and dissolve the meeting after the motion was overlooked at the end of the last Special Town Meeting on Feb 5.

    After the conclusion of the discussion on the final warrant article of the night, the citizen’s petition to adopt a new bylaw to remove the town’s trash fee, the Town Moderator Patricia Fraser stated: “That concludes our Town meeting. Thank you very much and have safe travels home.” According to a letter from Fraser and Select Board Chair David Mills, there were no objections made or points of order raised at that time.

    Town Counsel David DeLuca first considered if the Town Moderator’s words and subsequent actions by Town Meeting Members constituted an actual or “constructive dissolution” of the Special Town Meeting, but ultimately determined that the only authority that can dissolve the Town Meeting is a motion and vote of Town Meeting.

    This means that before the items in the warrant can be given effect, a quorum must be reconvened in order to dissolve the Town Meeting, as it technically remains open.

    “We are mindful that this is an inconvenience to each of you and appreciate your cooperation under these unusual circumstances. Thank you,” read the letter from the Town Moderator and Select Board Chair.

    There is no discussion of the warrant articles planned for the Feb 26th meeting, and the sole item will be a motion to dissolve.



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    By Michael McHugh Staff Writer

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  • Five firearms, large amount of ammunition seized from Plainfield Street home in Springfield

    Five firearms, large amount of ammunition seized from Plainfield Street home in Springfield

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    SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) – Three people were arrested Friday after Springfield police seized five firearms, eight Glock switches, a trafficking amount of cocaine and more than 200 rounds of ammunition inside a Plainfield Street home.

    According to Springfield Police Spokesperson Ryan Walsh, detectives received information Friday afternoon that a suspect, 18-year-old Jemsen Ortiz of Springfield, was allegedly in possession of a firearm with a Glock switch attached, which allows the firearm to become fully automatic.

    Officers requested a search warrant for Ortiz’ home on Plainfield Street and conducted a search around 6:20 p.m. Five people were inside the home during the search and detained. Police seized the following items:

    • Machine Gun with sear-selector switch loaded with 14 rounds of Ammunition
    • Machine Gun with sear-selector switch loaded with 23 rounds of Ammunition
    • Firearm Loaded with 20 Rounds of Ammunition and capable of holding 28 Rounds
    • Firearm Loaded with 15 rounds of Ammunition
    • Firearm Loaded with 20 rounds of Ammunition
    • Firearm Loaded with 10 rounds of Ammunition
    • Eight unattached Sear Selector Switches
    • 31 Round Magazine Loaded with 31 Rounds of Ammunition
    • Two 17 Round Magazines, both Loaded with 17 rounds of Ammunition
    • Two 13 Round Magazines, both Loaded with 13 Rounds of Ammunition
    • 10 Round Magazine Loaded with 10 Rounds of Ammunition
    • 10 Round Magazine Loaded with Six Rounds of Ammunition
    • Unloaded 31 Round Magazine
    • Unloaded 10+ Round Magazine
    • Unloaded 50 Round Drum Magazine
    • 55 rounds of loose Ammunition
    • $4643 in Cash
    • Approximately 24 grams of Cocaine
    • Eight Suboxone Strips
    • Various Sized Bags of Marijuana

    Ortiz and two other people were arrested for firearm and drug charges. Ortiz has been charged with:

    • Possession of a Loaded Machine Gun (Two Counts)
    • Possession of a Firearm without an FID Card (Three Counts)
    • Possession of a Large-Capacity Firearm during the Commission of a Felony (Three Counts)
    • Possession of a Firearm with a Defaced Serial Number during the Commission of a Felony
    • Possession of a Firearm with a Defaced Serial Number
    • Possession of a High-Capacity Feeding Device (Six Counts)
    • Possession of Ammunition without an FID Card
    • Improper Storage of a Large-Capacity Firearm
    • Trafficking Cocaine (18-36 Grams)
    • Conspiracy to Violate Drug Law
    • Possession with the Intent to Distribute a Class D Drug

    Angel Vasquez, 41, of Springfield was changed with:

    • Possession of a Loaded Machine Gun
    • Possession of a Firearm without an FID Card
    • Possession of a Large-Capacity Firearm during the Commission of a Felony
    • Possession of a High-Capacity Feeding Device (Eight Counts)
    • Possession of Ammunition without an FID Card
    • Improper Storage of a Large-Capacity Firearm
    • Trafficking Cocaine (18-36 Grams)
    • Conspiracy to Violate Drug Law
    • Possession with the Intent to Distribute a Class B Drug

    Eduardo Clavijo, 21, of Springfield was also charged with:

    • Possession of a Loaded Machine Gun
    • Possession of a Firearm without an FID Card
    • Possession of a Firearm with a Defaced Serial Number
    • Possession of a High-Capacity Feeding Device (Two Counts)
    • Possession of Ammunition without an FID Card
    • Improper Storage of a Large-Capacity Firearm

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