Archive for April, 2012

April 26th, 2012

In the Merrimack Valley: L’Italien Considering 18th Essex Re-Run

by Marie

As I mentioned in yesterday’s post about rep and senate races in the Merrimack Valley, a well-qualified and prominent Democrat is considering a run the the newly reconfigured 18th Essex House District. Barbara  L’Italien who formerly held the seat for four terms is a high ranking member of the administration in the State Treasurer’s office –  director of government affairs. Treasurer office policy would compel L’Italien to resign or take a leave from her job - the rules do not allow an employee to run for a full-time office.  She has been urged by people in the district and many of her former colleagues to run against freshman incumbent Jim Lyons (R-Andover). His recent budget amendment suggestions don’t set well with many advocates and district activists especially as they affect programs.  For now, L’Italien and her supporters are collecting signatures for the rapidly approaching deadline. Until the legally needed number of signatures are certified by the Secretary of State,  L’Italien won’t officially launch a campaign. The new 18th Essex District has added precincts 3 and 3A in (North) Tewksbury to precincts in Andover, North Andover and Boxford – while shedding precincts in Georgetown, Haverhill and Methuen. I have a vested interest in Barbara L’Italien’s decision as I vote in Tewksbury’s precinct 3.  As for GOP-er Lyons, he claims to be ready for any challenger.

Read more about this race here in today’s Eagle Tribune.

April 26th, 2012

Lowell’s Appleton Mill Project in Today’s Globe North

by Marie

 Mark Wilson’s photo in today’s Boston Globe

The renovated Appleton Mills property on Jackson Street in Lowell is part of the city’s Hamilton Canal District project.

The Boston Globe North has a front page story on the current use of tax incentives in community development. Writer Brenda Buote cites Lowell as among the most successful of communities using this development opportunity. Read more about the Appleton Mill project and others in Greater Lowell and Greater Lawrence here: http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/regionals/north/2012/04/25/incentives-luring-developers-build/VXQJEKbeY3CoD9I7qg6NFJ/story.html

April 25th, 2012

“In her own words . . .” A tribute to Mary Sampas

by DickH

Paul Marion reading a column by Mary Sampas

It was curiosity more than anything else that drew me to the Whistler House tonight for a retrospective on the work of Mary Boutselis Sampas who wrote for Lowell newspapers, mostly the Sun, for 75 years. I confess to being only an occasional reader of Mary’s columns. Perhaps that’s because my twin passions of politics and history kept me jumping from the city page to the obituaries and left little time for anything in between. Tonight I realized to my great regret what I had missed. Listening to a dozen and a half of her columns being read this evening was a thoroughly enjoyable experience that made me truly appreciate what a superb talent and a hard worker Mary Sampas was for an unbelievable three-quarters of a century.

When I arrived at the Whistler House for the 7 pm start, the room was already packed with a crowd that exceeded 130 admirers. The program featured readings of selected poems and columns on topics like Kerouac and Kennedy, Sinatra and Satchmo, and much, much more. What made the evening especially enjoyable was the excellent roster of readers on stage: Lura Smith, Paul Marion, Walter Bacigalupo, Effie Dragon, John Boutselis, Nancye Tuttle, Cathy O’Donnell, Michael Lally and Sara Bogosian (with Lew Karabatsos as the master of ceremonies) brought the cadence, timing and inflection of a professional theater cast to the readings. But the content was everything. There was humor, poignancy, great descriptions, more humor with everything seen through a Lowell lens.

Fortunately, a camera crew from Lowell Telecommunications was present, recording the entire evening for future playback (we’ll let you know when as soon as a date and time is set). In the meantime, check out the website of the Lowell Hellenic Heritage Association which has a number of Mary Sampas columns available online.

April 25th, 2012

Jane Brox’s List for ‘Sense of Place’ Writing & Reading

by PaulM

At her Lunchtime Lecture at the UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center this past Monday, Jane Brox distributed a list of “Works Mentioned” in her talk about “Reading, Writing, and Sense of Place.” The books about Sicily are included because Jane is preparing for a trip there in the fall. By starting her reading now, she feels the trip has already begun. Following are the books:

G. B. Edwards, The Book of Ebenezer Le Page (NY: NY Review of Books Classics, 2007)

Robert Frost, Complete Poems of Robert Frost (NY: Holt, Rhinehart Winston, 1969)

Henry David Thoreau, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers (NY: Penguin Classics, 1998)

Elizabeth Bishop, The Complete Poems: 1927-1979 (NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1984)

Carlo Levi, Christ Stopped at Eboli, trans. Frances Frenaye (NY: The Noonday Press, 1989)

Carlo Levi, Words are Stones: Impressions of Sicily, trans. Antony Shugaar (London: Hesperus Press Limited, 2005)

Danilo Dolci, Sicilian Lives, trans. Justin Vitiello and Madeline Polidoro (NY: Pantheon Books, 1981)

Mary Taylor Simiti, On Persephone’s Island: A Sicilian Journal (NY: Vintage Books, 1995)

April 25th, 2012

Tax Lien auction tomorrow

by DickH

Outside of New England, property tax collection is primarily the domain of county government and so at the registry of deeds we frequently get calls from out-of-staters asking for the date of our next tax lien sale. Aside from a way of raising cash from government, dabbling in tax liens seems to be big business in much of the rest of the country. To such callers we explain two things: (1) property taxes in Massachusetts are handled at the city and town level so call the local tax collector; and (2) the law of property tax liens in Massachusetts and the legal/procedural culture that has grown up around it prefers to allow the lien to remain on the property until some change in circumstances causes it to be paid off.

Tomorrow the city of Lowell will depart from this past practice and hold an auction of tax liens on city property. The sale will take place at 10 am in the city council chambers at Lowell City Hall. Details of the sale are available on the webpage of the city’s Tax Title Division, a site that also includes a complete list of the 350 properties to be sold. According to the city’s procedural explanation, all 350 (or however many remain once some are pulled back from the sale for whatever reason) are to be offered for sale as a single group. If there are no bidders for that or if an insufficient amount is bid, then three separate multi-parcel bundles will be offered for sale. It’s pretty clear that individual properties will not be auction separately.

Because this is such a rare occurrence, here’s my understanding of the legal principles involved. The city has an automatic lien on all real estate for unpaid property taxes. That’s why any time you buy or refinance, the lender requires you to obtain from the city and record at the registry of deeds a “municipal lien certificate” which certifies the amount of any outstanding taxes. (This document is deceptively named because it typically shows no taxes due but years later homeowners become panicky when they see a document with the word “lien” in its title associated with them in the registry of deeds database).

When a property owner falls behind in payment of taxes, the city may “perfect” its lien by recording a document called a “tax taking” which says the property was taken for non-payment of taxes in a particular amount. Even though the word “taking” is liberally used in this document, it really only serves as a tangible lien in the property records (as opposed to the “automatic” one that initially occurs upon non-payment but which is not represented by any particular document placed on record). The reason the “taking” does not literally take the property for the city is that our law is strongly slanted towards (1) getting the taxes paid and (2) allowing the original owner to keep on owning the property. If you recall that much of our property law emerged from medieval England, the idea of the government seizing someone’s private property was repugnant and so many procedural safeguards to prevent abuse were put in place and remain.

Even after one of these “takings” has occurred, the owner of the property (or someone acting in his stead) has the absolute right to “redeem” the property by paying all back taxes and fees. Unless the city files a petition in land court to foreclose this right of redemption – a costly and time-consuming process – no change in ownership of the property will occur. With the statutory rate of interest on unpaid taxes set at 16%, leaving a “tax taking” lien untouched on a property is in some ways the best investment the city can make on its money. By just patiently waiting until the property is sold, renovated, or refinanced – any of which would require the moving party to pay the city in full – the city receives a return of 16% plus expenses.

By selling these tax liens, the city of Lowell will simply be assigning its rights to proceed in the above manner to some third party. I assume the bidders will be fairly large companies that are already in the tax lien business. I’m unsure of their business models but can assume several scenarios: paying a few cents on the dollar now for the right to receive a 16% return later or perhaps aggressively pursuing foreclosure of liens in Land Court (although if any entity follows a timetable of its own setting, it’s Land Court) and then flipping the properties to third party buyers. Whatever the ultimate plans of the bidders, tomorrow’s auction should certainly be an interesting event.

April 25th, 2012

In the Merrimack Valley: Rep Marcos Devers Challenged and More

by Marie

Former Lawrence Mayor – albeit briefly – now incumbent State Representative Marcos Devers is being challanged in his reelection bid on two fronts. Jose L. Santiago both a former state representative and former but fired Methuen police sergeant, has taken out papers to run as an unenrolled candidate. Santiago held the 16th Essex District rep seat prior to his defeat by current Lawrence Mayor William Lantigua. Devers will be challenged in the Democratic primary by Chally Ramos who also ran in the 2010 special election to replace Lantigua. The district is a Lawrence-only seat. Three hundred certified signatures are need by Tuesday to qualify for the ballot. No Republicans have pulled papers to run in this district.

The redistricting created another Lawrence-centric seat in the new 17th Essex rep district currently held by Republican Paul Adams.  Back in February Lawrence City Council President Frank Moran announced his run for this district seat. Adams is switching political gears to challege incumbent State Senator Barry Finegold (D-Andover) in the Second Essex District covering Andover, Dracut, Lawrence and Tewksbury. Incumbent Republican Rep Jim Lyons of the 18th Essex District now covering precincts in Andover, North Andover, Boxford and precincts 3 and 3A in Tewksbury, will be challenged by a well-known Democrat.

Stay tuned for more on these races as well as the race to replace State Senator Steve Baddour (D-Methuen) who resigned recently to take a position with a prestigious Boston law firm. Former Methuen Mayor Bill Manzi – who had pulled papers to run for Essex North Register of Deeds - looks to be the front runner in that State Senate race. The various race fields will be made clear when signatures are certified and returned to the Secretary of State’s office. It’s an active political season in  the Lower Merrimack Valley! We’ll stay on top of the action!

Read more about the Devers race in Douglas Moser’s article here in today’s Eagle Tribune.

April 25th, 2012

Uncertain results of Arab awakening will have definite impact on U.S. strategic interests by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog. Be sure to check it out too.

We won’t know for some time the long-term impact of the Arab Spring or which nations will thrive, but, for now, the United States views Tunisia as a model of what should happen. That was one message given to Monday’s State Department briefing of editorialists from the Association of Opinion Journalists (formerly the National Conference of Editorial Writers) in Washington.

How “the Arab spring” countries evolve toward democracy is key to United States strategic interests, so much so that the State Department has named a special coordinator to monitor the transitions. He is William Taylor, Jr., named last September to make sure that” assistance to the countries of the Arab revolutions is coordinated and effective.”

Tunisia, where the news of 26-year-old street vendor Mohamed Bouzazi’s self-immolation sparked the first national uprising, offers the most promising example. According to Taylor, it has successfully written a constitution and elected a constituent assembly. Its interim government is a coalition of moderate Islamist and secular parties. Tunisia “worked hard, shows moderation and is a model for the region,” said Walker, noting “They’re doing the right thing.” Tunisia, with its10 million people, could be a solid ally in this new Middle East.

Because Tunisia is already looking at a significant deficit in its first budget, the United States is looking to make a $100 million cash transfer, $30 million in loan guarantees allowing it to borrow ten times that much in the international financial markets, and $2o million in an enterprise fund to leverage private sector investments. Walker also sees a return of the Peace Corps to Tunisia.

The prospects are not so clear for Egypt, a dramatically larger and more strategically pivotal country, where we already have a large economic investment. To outside observers and to many Egyptians, the current situation is fraught with peril, but to Taylor, the five preliminary election rounds have been “pretty good ones.”

While the Muslim Brotherhood promises to be middle of the road and focus on economics, the United States is waiting to see what kind of government emerges before deciding how to be of assistance. A presidential election is anticipated mid May. The problem right now is that no one is particularly in charge, and recent raids on NGO’s and harassment of bloggers are particularly worrisome threats to stability . Egypt, home to 85 million people, is also in financial crisis. Congress has conditioned future assistance on Egypt’s continuing to adhere to the Camp David Accords’ commitment to Israel and to the continuing transfer of power from military to civilian authorities. But this commitment is not a done deal.

Libya has plenty of money (from oil and gas production, with another $100 billion stashed around the world by Ghaddafi) but is far behind in the democratization process. June 23 marks the first election in 40 years. They don’t know how to create voting lists or even how to handle ballot boxes. If Libya gets its act together, it could actually be a source of financial assistance for Tunisia and Egypt. The United States is also counting on money from Eurozone and wealthy Arab nations to aid “awakening” cash-strapped nations. But given the parlous economic condition of Europe and the frequent difficulties of Arab states to act in concert, this fulfillment of this expectation is unclear.

Down the road, Yemen and eventually Syria may emerge to join those in the transitional office portfolio, which has the potential to influence the balance of power in the region and the geopolitical landscape in the Middle East. Obviously the timing here is uncertain and the outcomes, at this early stage, seriously in question.

Whether the American position, as expressed by our State Department is just optimistic thinking or rooted in hard reality, will become clearer in the next few months, especially in light of developments with Iran, which were not addressed..

I’d greatly appreciate your thoughts in the comments section below.

April 25th, 2012

Lowell General TeamWalk 2012

by Tony

On Sunday, May 20, 2012, Lowell General Hospital will hold its 13th annual TeamWalk for CancerCare. Last year, with the help of our generous corporate partners and more than 5,000 participants, TeamWalk raised $854,000 to support services for patients in our cancer center. Since its inception, TeamWalk has raised more than 5 million dollars in support of patients at the Cancer Center at Lowell General Hospital (Lowell General TeamWalk Website).

You can register to participate in this years Lowell General TeamWalk by clicking here.

April 24th, 2012

Poet Tom Sexton Collaborates with Composer Libby Larsen

by PaulM

Lowell-born poet and former Alaska Poet Laureate Tom Sexton recently provided the inspiring words for acclaimed composer Libby Larsen’s new work “Alaska Spring,” which premiered this week in a performance by the Alaska Chamber Singers. Read Mike Dunham’s article in the Anchorage Daily News here.

Minnesota composer Libby Larsen has written a cycle of choral pieces, Alaska Spring, using poetry by Tom Sexton of Anchorage, former Alaska poet laureate. The music premiered Saturday and will be performed again today with the Alaska Chamber Singers.

Composer Libby Larsen and poet Tom Sexton. Web photo by Erik Hill courtesy of Anchorage Daily News

 

April 24th, 2012

Jane Brox at UMass Lowell

by DickH

Dracut native Jane Brox, author of Brilliant: The Evolution of Artificial Light; Clearing Land; Five Thousand Days Like This One; and Here and Nowhere Else spoke at the UMass Lowell Inn and Conference Center yesterday as part of UML’s lunchtime lecture series. The topic of Brox’s talk was “Reading, Writing and Sense of Place.”

Brox said that a well-written book about a place she already knows “makes my old place seem new” but if the book is about a place she’s never been to, “it captures the spirit of the place for me.” Much historical writing uses what she called “a BBC voice”, something very formal and cold. She always searches for the “warmer voices of history” and cited Thoreau’s book about his journey on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers as an example. The lower Merrimack Valley is a great setting for books because it has “all the nation’s history concentrated in one place.”

Writing about place – in her case the family farm in Dracut – allowed Brox to preserve a thing she saw slipping away. She also talked on the nature of farming. Regarding the family farm, she said the American conception of a farm as “the stable icon of civilization” is “a ruse” because a farm must constantly change to survive. This idea that not only farms but the entire world changes at high speed was a recurring theme of her talk. She observed that today’s information age is really just a “hyped-up” industrial age and that the real disruption occurred nearly two centuries ago with the transition from agriculture to industrialization.

The power of disruptive change became a more personal topic during the question and answer period when Brox expressed, as someone who earns a living from writing books, some trepidation about the changing reading habits of the American population, changes conveyed by technology (e-readers), economics (demise of the bookstore) and personal habits (more distractions than ever). But despite all of these changes, Brox believes, as she stated earlier in the afternoon, that as our society becomes more and more mobile and transitory, that literature about place will become all the more important.