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Mount Holyoke College pauses plans to build hub for its $180M geothermal heating system
06-12-2025 5:02 PM

By EMILEE KLEIN

SOUTH HADLEY — Mount Holyoke College will indefinitely pause construction of its geothermal pump hub — the heart of its $180 million effort to build a carbon-neutral heating and cooling system — due to uncertainties with potential tariffs and economic downturn.

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Along Route 202: Dwight Day returns to Belchertown; Four-town food drive coming up; New trash carts roll out in South Hadley
06-19-2025 10:59 AM

By EMILEE KLEIN

BELCHERTOWN — Dwight Day returns for a second year to celebrate Belchertown’s historic village with conservation and wildlife activities, a cemetery tour and a portrayal of Emily Dickinson’s friendship with famous Dwight author Josiah Gilbert Holland.


Martha Terry: Mount Holyoke College listened, but did they hear?
06-11-2025 11:54 AM

A good-sized group of people attended the informational session on Mount Holyoke College’s proposed Geothermal Hub/Energy Center/Power Plant, held June 5 at Gamble Auditorium, though the college did not appear to engage in widespread publicity. Citizens from the community used other methods to alert the public to this meeting. Except for one speaker, all attendees who either ventured to the microphone or spoke from their seats, praised the concept of geothermal energy, and requested that MHC relocate its Energy Center elsewhere on their vast campus. Speaker after speaker raised the following concerns: noise from this “electric power plant” with air handlers outside the building and on the roof would disturb abutters, neighbors, and patrons of nearby restaurants; air pollution from the gasoline still compacted into the soil beneath the site, which had long ago been a gasoline station, would damage the health of abutters and neighbors.


Mary Hall: The deployment of brutalism
06-08-2025 12:34 PM

There has been, since Ivan the Terrible, in Russia a philosophy of brutalism. Its justification might be understood in terms of two approaches to taking a band-aid off of a wound: A slow removal produces somewhat less pain over a longer period of time than follows from ripping it off quickly. In this way, I imagine state-sponsored brutality is not supposed to be about being cruel per se, and there may be a certain reasoning around it. While Russians are targeting civilians in Ukraine to hurt or kill, the theory would go that this is to hasten an end to the war, after which survivors will go on to have many children.


Guest columnist Peter B-G Weller: School privacy bill a digital wolf in sheep's clothing
05-28-2025 12:55 PM

By PETER B-G WELLER

Last week, my 8-year-old daughter used her school-managed internet browser to research information for a science report on cheetahs. She entered key words to discover sites describing the big cat’s sleek golden coat, tear-marked face, and explosive speed. She learned about its habitat, prey, and the unique features of its claws, designed to grip the ground like cleats. She then paused, looked up, and asked if the computer was “watching her type.” I wasn’t sure how to answer.


Values on display: Gov. Healey urges 600-plus Mount Holyoke grads to practice equality, community each day
05-26-2025 1:01 PM

By EMILEE KLEIN

SOUTH HADLEY — Instead of figuratively wearing their heart on their sleeves during this momentous occasion, the 2025 graduating class of Mount Holyoke College choose to literally wear their values on their gowns.


Military, families honored at State House
05-23-2025 2:21 PM

By SCOTT MERZBACH

NORTHAMPTON — Service, sacrifice, the commitment of veterans and active military service members from across Massachusetts and support from their families should always be recognized, says retired U.S. Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford.


Residents flag issues with Mount Holyoke’s plans for energy center on Woodbridge Street
05-19-2025 4:15 PM

By EMILEE KLEIN

SOUTH HADLEY — Mount Holyoke College’s proposed site for a new Energy Center on Woodbridge Street — a key piece of a long-range plan to install a new geothermal heating and cooling system to serve campus — is drawing criticism from residents who worry that noise and potential gasoline fumes from the power plant will impact their health and quality of life.


South Hadley TM creates first historic district, declares town a ‘welcoming community’
05-15-2025 1:40 PM

By EMILEE KLEIN

SOUTH HADLEY — Town Meeting members on Wednesday overwhelmingly supported the formal creation of the town’s first historic district, declared the town a “welcoming community,” and established an affordable housing trust.


Ex-physical therapist Edward Kostek’s rape trial begins
05-14-2025 6:25 PM

By ALEXANDER MACDOUGALL

NORTHAMPTON — A new jury trial has begun for a former physical therapist from South Hadley previously convicted for indecent assault and battery on a patient, who is now facing two counts of rape after another alleged victim came forward.


Bombyx, others who maintain cultural spaces in region secure significant grants from state
05-10-2025 9:05 PM

By SCOTT MERZBACH

NORTHAMPTON — A sprinkler system, renovated bathrooms and a freshly painted exterior at the Bombyx Center for Arts & Equity in Florence, a rebuilt outdoor performing arts venue at Buttery Brook Park in South Hadley and theatrical lighting and sound equipment for the Northampton Community Arts Trust’s Hawley Street building are projects being supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council.


South Hadley TM to consider welcoming community ordinance, lower speed limits, 1st historic district
05-09-2025 1:59 PM

By EMILEE KLEIN

SOUTH HADLEY — On Wednesday, Town Meeting members will contemplate approval of the town’s first historic district, reduction of speed limits on thickly settled roads and a citizen petitioned ordinance declaring South Hadley a welcoming community.


Alanna Hoyer-Leitzel: South Hadley Welcoming Community
05-09-2025 10:09 AM

At the annual Town Meeting on May 14, Town Meeting members will vote on a citizen’s petition for a Welcoming Community ordinance. This ordinance asks town officials and employees to welcome all people in our community, so that they can live positive and productive lives in South Hadley, without fear of investigation and deportation by local officials. The majority of the proposed ordinance is already aligned with Massachusetts laws and current town and police department policies.


Mary H. Hall: Questions of myth and fact
05-08-2025 1:27 PM

While elements of the Roman Catholic Church may go in different directions, there is a long history of close association between that communion and the state. Of some note, the conservative members of the current U.S. Supreme Court all have had some Catholic formation. This would school them to protect the office of the presidency regardless of who is president, as that is how Catholics are taught to navigate their church hierarchy. This approach can help parishioners to get through it if, for example, their parish priest should have an alcohol addiction.


South Hadley Police investigating ‘extensive’ vandalism at high school
05-07-2025 11:34 AM

By EMILEE KLEIN

SOUTH HADLEY — South Haldey Police are investigating a vandalism incident that occurred at South Hadley High School over the weekend.


Internal candidate emerges for South Hadley school superintendent
05-06-2025 11:48 AM

By EMILEE KLEIN

SOUTH HADLEY — With Superintendent Mark McLaughlin poised to leave the district at the end of the school year, the School Committee has identified a front-runner to take his place in Jennifer Voyik, current assistant superintendent of finance and business operations.


Karen Hyvonen: Stand up for preserving library funding
05-04-2025 10:28 PM

Before our family moves to a new town, and sometimes when we visit, a first stop is the public library. As the heart of the community, the state of the library says much about its priorities: how it values preserving and sharing knowledge, its welcoming of a variety of people and perspectives, how much it fosters conversation and education. Our family lives libraries. They are a source of entertainment (movies, TV series, crafts), education (books, programs, online and in person language courses), computer literacy, to name a few. They have provided social connections and part-time employment for our grandchildren, guidance through consumer reports, ancestry and grant writing programs.


Linda Sachs: College’s proposed Energy Center does not belong in a South Hadley residential zone
05-02-2025 10:30 AM

Mount Holyoke College (MHC) is attempting to pressure South Hadley into allowing a 6,000 square foot electrical power plant to be constructed on Woodbridge Street, next to All Saints Episcopal Church and across from The Ruby apartment building. MHC calls the proposed building an “Energy Center” to “showcase” their commitment to carbon neutrality. Yet MHC’s own architect said at a public hearing on April 14: “Basically it’s an electrical power plant.” This is a residential zone. The South Hadley Planning Board must prohibit this industrial use. It will destroy the neighborhood’s charming village character, and abutters and nearby residents will be subjected to constant noise from the electrical power plant heat pumps. After encountering significant opposition from residents at that public hearing, MHC now claims the Planning Board has no jurisdiction and zoning regulations do not apply. They claim that the college is exempt under a state law called the Dover Amendment. The Dover Amendment gives institutions latitude in using land and structures for educationally significant purposes. But the Dover Amendment also stipulates the educationally significant goal must be the primary or dominant purpose. If an electrical power plant is educational, so too is a garbage dump. After all, it could teach students about the importance of recycling. The South Hadley Planning Board needs the courage to stop this industrial facility in a residential neighborhood. I urge town residents to come to the next public hearing. It’s June 23 at the South Hadley Senior Center, 45 Dayton Street; 6:30 p.m.


Book Review: Meeting her where she is: ‘Aperture’ by Wally Swist details the realities of Alzheimer’s caregiving
04-30-2025 10:40 AM

By TINKY WEISBLAT

I wrote only one poem during my stint as an Alzheimer’s caregiver. Most of my writings were either straightforward recountings of my days with my mother as she unlearned things (finding her way home, tying her shoelaces) or analyses of lessons I learned from our time together.


Leaders at Five Colleges push back on cuts, threats
04-27-2025 8:31 AM

By SCOTT MERZBACH

NORTHAMPTON — A restructuring of the progressive New College of Florida by that state’s Republican leadership in 2023 prompted Hampshire College to offer students there a respite and opportunity to continue their studies in Amherst.


South Hadley mulls legal options over stalled Bardwell Street condo project
04-24-2025 11:12 AM

By EMILEE KLEIN

SOUTH HADLEY — After five years of little to no progress redeveloping the former Bardwell Library property into condominiums, the Select Board decided to investigate legal options against the developer for breach of contract.

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