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    This 61 mile project originates in Vernon, Vermont, travels through Hinsdale and Winchester, New Hampshire then continues through a number of towns within Northern Massachusetts including, Warwick, Royalston, Winchendon, Gardner, Westminster, Fitchburg, Leominster, and Sterling.

    Coming off the mainline, this project also includes the Athol Tap and the Crystal Lake Tap. The Athol Tap runs from Royalston Substation to Chestnut Hill Ave Substation in Athol, Massachusetts. The Crystal Lake Tap runs from Gardner Switching Station to Crystal Lake Substation in Gardner, Massachusetts.


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    Community Garden at St. Paul’s in Gardner MA Now has 27 Beds

    Originally established 2 years ago with a $3000 grant from the Diocese, the Community Garden located at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church on Cross Street in Gardner almost doubled its capacity in 2023 and now has more than 2 dozen beds. Mayor Michael Nicholson posted on April 28th,”Big shout out to St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Gardner MA for starting up their community gardens again this year to support the Gardner CAC! They are adding even more raised beds to bring the total to 27! Thanks for all you do for the City and it’s residents! “. Fresh produce grown on the property is distributed to area families by the CAC.

    The sign states “For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat” – Matthew 25:35. Distribution of food grown will occur through the Food Pantry of the Community Action Committee. The CAC serves disadvantaged individuals in Gardner, Ashburnham, Baldwinville, Hubbardston, Otter River, Templeton, and Westminster. Gardner CAC website, CLICK HERE. To donate to the CAC securely click here. St. Paul’s Episcopal Church website, CLICK HERE.

    According to the Church, “”Many faces, one faith. We are a diverse group of believers – bankers, musicians, social workers, teachers, public servants, business owners, parents  – united by our shared faith in a loving God.” Sunday services are at 10am


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  • Altercation at Starbucks in Marshfield prompts school lockdown, police say
    on May 15, 2024 at 9:26 am

    An altercation at a Starbucks in Marshfield, Massachusetts, prompted a nearby school to go into lockdown, police said Wednesday. The incident happened at the Starbucks on Route 139, according to Marshfield police, who said Furnace Brook School has been placed in lockdown. The district says that a letter from the principal will be released soon and that all students are safe. This story will be updated once more information becomes available.

  • At Vatican, Healey makes climate tech workforce pledge
    by Colin A. Young on May 15, 2024 at 7:43 am

    Speaking to a climate summit at the Vatican on Wednesday morning, Gov. Maura Healey announced that Massachusetts is partnering with a social impact investing firm to launch a climate technology workforce training fund, shooting for an initial $10 million combination of public, private and philanthropic dollars it can loan out. With ambitious mid-century emission reduction targets on the books, Massachusetts wants to electrify heating and cooling, personal vehicle travel and more, but the state will need more than 30,000 new workers who can install heat pumps, prepare residential homes to charge electric vehicles, build offshore wind farms, and more to get there. The Healey administration called the workforce need “a once-in-a-generation call to build an expanded and inclusive workforce.” The Massachusetts Climate Careers Fund, to be led by nonprofit Social Finance, will offer loans to “help participants access and succeed in high-quality training programs that prepare them for good-paying, in-demand skilled climate jobs such as Heating, Ventilation, Air Conditioning and Refrigeration technicians, electricians, energy auditors, and electric vehicle mechanics, among others,” the governor’s office said. “It will provide low-cost loans to support high-quality training, including needs like childcare and transportation. That will enable more women, workers of color, and low-income residents to participate in the clean energy economy,” Healey said in her Vatican remarks, according to a copy of her speech as prepared. “It’s a recycling fund, where workers and employers pay back the loans into the fund to help more people and fill more jobs.” In her remarks at the Vatican Climate Summit, Healey talked about the flooding of Massachusetts farms and downtowns last summer, and said she doesn’t “need to cite the Book of Genesis to say that a flood can send a message.” She said that most government systems “were not designed to meet the scale and urgency of this challenge,” and offered her setup (with a first-in-the-nation climate chief appointed at the Cabinet level to weave climate policy through all executive offices) as a model. “We need to change the way we work. We have to be nimbler and more innovative than ever before, to adapt to urgent new realities. We need to be more evidence-based than ever before, to inform all our policies with climate science. We have to be more collaborative than ever before, to work across every function of government and every sector of the economy. We need to align all our efforts around our climate goals,” Healey said. “In short, we need a new way of governing to meet this challenge.” More Massachusetts news lottery 14 hours ago Arrest warrant issued for worker charged with extortion in $3 million lottery case Stratford 18 hours ago Fairfield University student from Mass. was killed in wrong-way crash in Connecticut: officials Swampscott 23 hours ago Humpback whale washes ashore in Swampscott

  • Water main break shuts down street in Boston
    by Staff Reports on May 15, 2024 at 7:13 am

    A water main break shut down a street in Boston early Wednesday morning. The incident happened at about 3 a.m. on Sudbury Street between Cambridge and Congress streets in downtown, Boston police said. The water main break will affect foot and car traffic, police said. “Please seek an alternative route,” police advised. It’s unclear what caused the water main break and if any businesses were impacted. More Massachusetts news lottery 14 hours ago Arrest warrant issued for worker charged with extortion in $3 million lottery case Sumner Tunnel 22 hours ago Delays expected after overheight tractor-trailer gets stuck in Boston's Sumner Tunnel Somerville May 13 Alleged illegal liposuction under investigation at Somerville home after woman dies

  • Witness in Karen Read trial who said she saw object in snow outside Canton home to testify again: Watch live at 9 a.m.
    by Munashe Kwangwari and Marc Fortier on May 15, 2024 at 6:14 am

    Shocking testimony in the Karen Read trial is revealing new details from the night that Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe died. One witness claimed that they did in fact see something that night. The witness, Julie Nagel, a friend of Caitlin Albert’s brother Brian Albert Jr., was one of four people that took the stand Tuesday. She was at Brian Albert’s home until 1:45 a.m. the day O’Keefe’s body was found out in front of lawn.  Watch the Karen Read trial live on nbcboston.com, NECN, NBC Boston streaming platforms (including Roku, Peacock and Samsung TV) and NBC10 Boston’s YouTube page. Every night of the trial at 7 p.m., come back for analysis and more. Caitlin, daughter of Brian Albert, led off Tuesday morning, took the stand for the second day in a row. She allegedly was the last person to leave her dad’s Fairview Road home in Canton, Massachusetts, the morning of Jan. 29, 2022. O’Keefe was found dead outside that home later that morning. The final witness of the day was Nagel, who testified that she saw a black SUV similar to the one Read drives outside the home that morning, and a “black blob” in the front yard, when she left. Read is charged with second-degree murder in the 2022 death of O’Keefe, her boyfriend. He was found in the snow outside retired Boston Police Officer Brian Albert’s home in Canton. Prosecutors say Read hit O’Keefe with her SUV, while Read says she has been framed in a wide-ranging coverup, claiming the Albert family — which includes a Canton police officer and current selectman — and the state’s lead investigator, a family friend, put the blame on Read. Read has pleaded not guilty and is free on bond. Julie Nagel returns to the stand Nagel returned to the stand Wednesday morning, a day after testifying that she saw a black SUV outside the Albert home and a “black blob” on the lawn as she left the house on Jan. 29, 2022, the day of O’Keefe’s death. Watch Karen Read trial Day 11 testimony (May 14, 2024) Brian and Nicole Albert took the stand on Friday. They have been the subject of intense public speculation for months — while prosecutors say Read killed her boyfriend, Boston Police Officer John O’Keefe, on their lawn on Fairview Road during a snowstorm in January 2022, Read’s lawyers have claimed there was a coverup, one that may have involved at least Brian Albert, a fellow Boston police officer. Their testimony came as the second week of trial proceedings in Norfolk Superior Court, in Dedham, wrapped up. Brian Albert returned to the stand on Monday to be cross-examined by Read’s defense team. Caitlin Albert returns to the stand Caitlin Albert returned to the stand on Tuesday morning, and was grilled by defense attorney David Yannetti about her connections to Canton firefighter/paramedic Katie McLaughlin, one of the initial responders to the scene where O’Keefe was found. Yannetti asked how well the two know each other, and Albert said they were in the same high school class and have some mutual friends. “I went to high school with her and she’s the same age and we graduated together,” she said. Yannetti also established that on multiple occasions since high school, the two have gone on trips and attended events together, including a baby shower in 2021, a trip to Maine and trips to the beach. He displayed several photos where Albert and McLaughlin were shown together in the same group of people. He also showed photos that confirmed that Albert and McLaughlin played on a sports team together. “I’ve gone away on trips she was on,” Albert said. “I didn’t drive with her or go with her, but she was there.” Albert also said one of her college roommates was also a friend of McLaughlin’s. Yannetti also asked Albert about the night before O’Keefe’s death, talking about how her boyfriend left the Waterfall to return home to Easton because he was expecting to get up early the next morning to plow the snow that was falling. But he later returned to Canton at 1:45 a.m. to pick up Albert at her parents’ house. Albert said when she left, she didn’t hear any noise or see anything, including O’Keefe’s body. Tristin Morris, Caitlin Albert’s boyfriend, testifies The next person to testify on Tuesday was Tristin Morris, Caitlin Albert’s boyfriend of the past seven or eight years. He was asked about the events of Jan. 28, 2022 and the early-morning hours of Jan. 29, 2022. “For me it was just an ordinary day. I went out and I met (Caitlin) for a drink” at the Waterfall Bar & Grill. He said he doesn’t remember who else was there that night. He said he couldn’t recall how long he was there but “it wasn’t very long.” He said he didn’t stay long because he was going to have to be plowing snow early the next morning and wanted to get some sleep. “I just had to be on call for 3, 4 in the morning,” Morris said. After he returned home to Easton, he said Caitlin Albert began calling and texting him. He couldn’t recall what time. Based on those calls and texts, Morris said he left Easton and went back to Albert’s parents’ home in Canton, about a 20-25 minute drive. When he arrived, he said he texted Albert and she came out of the house a short time later. He said there was no delay in them leaving, and that Albert’s mood was normal. During cross-examination, Yannetti showed Morris a photo including him and members of the Albert and McCabe family, taken four days after Read was indicted. Yannetti asked him if the group was celebrating the indictment of Read when the photo was taken, but Morris said they were not. Yannetti also tried to get Morris to say what time he was at the Albert’s home in Canton on Jan. 28 or Jan. 29, 2022, when he drove there to pick up his girlfriend. But he wasn’t able to recall what time it was or where he pulled into. “Must’ve been,” Morris said when asked if it was the driveway that he pulled into. Yannetti also pressed Morris on why he went from Canton to Easton and then back to Canton to pick up Caitlin Albert when he had to wake up as early as 3 a.m. to plow snow. “The plan from the beginning was not for you to leave the Waterfall, go to Easton and then drive back from Easton to pick up Caitlin in Canton, correct?” Yannetti asked him. “No, it wasn’t,” Morris replied. “But the plan changed, correct? And that was because you heard from your girlfriend Caitlin, correct?” Yannetti asked. “For some reason, Caitlin now needed to get picked up before you went plowing, correct?” Sarah Levinson takes the stand The day’s third witness was Sarah Levinson, a friend of Brian Albert Jr. who was at the Albert house on the night before O’Keefe’s death. She testified that she was at the house to celebrate Albert Jr.’s birthday. The testified about some of the other people who were at the Albert home on the evening of Jan. 28, 2022, and how Albert Jr. took a couple people upstairs to see the family dog. She said people were drinking White Claws and Trulys and eating calzones. She said everyone was there about 2-3 hours and the mood was good. Levinson also testified about the order that people began arriving at the house from the gathering at the Waterfall shortly after midnight. She said she left the home between 1:30 and 2 a.m. with Nagel, her friend, and it was snowing at the time. During cross-examination, Yannetti asked if Levinson is close friends with Brian Albert Jr. She said she was, and they even attended junior prom together. She said she is also on good terms with other members of the Albert family, including Brian Albert Jr.’s brothers and sisters, and some cousins. She was also asked if she knows Brian Albert, and if he is “stand-offish,” as Yannetti put it. “He’s quiet,” Levinson said. She also testified that when she left, she didn’t remember hearing anything. She also confirmed previous testimony before a grand jury that she could see some of the pavement when she left, despite the fact that it was snowing. Levinson said lights were on, and she had a view of the front lawn, but she did not see anything or anyone on the lawn where O’Keefe was later found. She said she and Nagel wound up getting a ride home from the Albert home with Jennifer and Matthew McCabe. Julie Nagel testifies Nagel, another friend of Brian Albert Jr. who was at the Albert home on the night before O’Keefe’s death, was the next witness to testify. She also testified about the birthday gathering, saying they were listening to music, drinking beer and seltzers and eating some food. “It was Brian’s birthday, so you know, we were there just to have fun,” Nagel said. She was asked about how people arrived at the home, specifically Colin Albert, Brian Albert Jr.’s cousin. She said at some point between 11:30-11:45 p.m. someone picked him up but she didn’t know who it was. Nagel said she stayed at the house until about 1:30 a.m. on Jan. 29. She had texted her brother around 12:15 a.m. asking him to pick her up. He arrived a short time later and texted him to say that he was outside. He arrived with two other people. She said she had looked out to the driveway at one point and saw a vehicle by the mailbox, but by the time her brother arrived that vehicle was gone. “It was a black SUV,” she said. Nagel said she invited her brother and his friends to come inside, but they said they just wanted to go home, so she ultimately decided to stay and arranged to get a ride home later in the evening from Jennifer and Matthew McCabe. Prosecutors showed Nagel a photo of the outside of the Albert home, and she used a laser pointer to show the door she exited the house from to speak with her brother. She also pointed out that her brother’s truck was parked at the end of the driveway. She also pointed to three areas in front of the home where she said she had seen the black SUV before her brother arrived. As Nagel left the home later that night in the McCabes’ vehicle, she said she noticed “something out of the ordinary… like a black blob” on the ground by the flagpole in front of the home. “It was pretty dark out, but the snow was kinda heavy at that time,” she said. “You couldn’t really see too much.” Using the laser pointer, she pointed to an area near the flag pole where she saw the “black blob” — around the same area where she said she had seen the black SUV at one point earlier in the evening. “I did say out loud, ‘I think I might have saw something,’ but I was also intoxicated, drinking, so didn’t really know what it was, what I saw.” She said the object she saw was “probably 5 or 6 feet long.” Yannetti then cross-examined Nagel, getting her to acknowledge that she was at the Albert home for about eight hours in all. He also pointed out that Nagel wasn’t interviewed by Massachusetts State Police Trooper Michael Proctor, the lead investigator in the Karen Read case, until eight months after O’Keefe was found dead on the Alberts’ lawn. Yannetti also asked Nagel about her ties to the Albert family, including being a close friend of Brian Albert Jr. and having driven the McCabes’ daughter around and pet sat for their dog. Nagel also testified that she saw Colin Albert at the Albert home that night, but wasn’t sure what time he left. Yannetti also asked her how much she drank that night, to which she replied, “A decent amount.” She said she was drinking Michelob Ultras, but doesn’t remember if she brought them or if they were there at the house already. He also asked Nagel about how she originally asked her brother to come pick her up, but later changed her mind and decided not to go home with him. She said when he arrived, she decided she wanted to stay at the Albert house longer. When she eventually left the house around 1:45 a.m., Nagel said she did not see a body in the yard. Yannetti also pointed out that the first time Nagel said that the object she saw in the snow outside the Albert home was “5 or 6 feet long” was during her testimony on Tuesday. He also asked Nagel if she thought the object she saw in the snow was a body, and she said she did not. “You didn’t think that this was a person who was in trouble, correct?” Yannetti asked. “I don’t know, no,” Nagel said. “You didn’t ask Matthew McCabe to stop? You didn’t ask him to back up?” Yannetti asked. “No,” Nagel replied. Yannetti pointed out that Levinson, who was in the car with her, was a nurse, and Brian Albert, the owner of the home, was a police officer and first responder. But she didn’t ask either of them. “That’s because you did not see a body on that lawn, correct?” Yannetti said. “I mean, I don’t know what I saw, but I saw an object,” Nagel said. “You were drinking for hours, is that correct?” Yannetti countered. “You were intoxicated.” “Some would say, yeah,” she said. Yannetti then pointed out that even after Nagel found out that O’Keefe had died, she didn’t contact investigators to let them know what she had seen that night. Court adjourned for the day around 1 p.m. with Nagel still on the stand. Tuesday was a scheduled half day. A full day of testimony is expected on Wednesday. More on the Karen Read trial Karen Read May 13 Brian Albert and 2 of his children testify in Karen Read murder trial Karen Read May 10 Karen Read trial: Owners of home where John O'Keefe was found testify Karen Read May 9 Jurors in Karen Read murder trial hear testimony from Albert family members This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.

  • Showers and cool temperatures return to New England Wednesday
    by Pete Bouchard on May 15, 2024 at 5:34 am

    Our foray into the 80s was short-lived. Cooler readings are expected Wednesday with a thickening cloud cover and a few faint, passing afternoon showers. We’ll keep sliding Thursday as the winds switch from south (Wednesday) to east/northeast. If this rings a bell, then you’ve been closely watching the weather over the past several weeks (month). Our cool, and sometimes damp, onshore wind has been incessant, and the primary reason Boston has yet to crack 80 degrees. There’s nothing of that sort in the days ahead, although I think we sneak in a mild day on Friday. While our winds will be onshore along the coast, we could still nudge 70 inland. The weekend isn’t looking awful, but it’s still not up to our mild mid-May standards. Again, onshore winds will keep us in check, along with a steady supply of clouds. It’s conceivable that we only manage 60 or so right at the coastline both days. At this point, both days also seem dry.

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  • AdaptX organizing a race for everyone
    by Nick Mallard on May 15, 2024 at 11:00 am

    At its roots, running is about the most simple feat in athletics. Any able-bodied person can run, whether it’s fast or slow. One foot in front of the other, always moving forward. But for those with disabilities, it’s not always so simple. Whether it’s a mental or physical hurdle to clear, just getting out and

  • Cultivating a profound passion for human services
    by Cheryl A. Cuddahy on May 15, 2024 at 8:07 am

    FITCHBURG — When Rhea Anderson assumed the role as a worker in the Elder Service Program in 1999, the Fitchburg resident had embarked on what would become a two-decade journey with The Arc of Opportunity. This path resonated with her deeply, influenced by her mother’s commitment as a nurse to caring for others. Witnessing firsthand

  • State agricultural commissioner visits local farms
    by Submitted Article on May 15, 2024 at 7:45 am

    LANCASTER — State Agricultural Resources Commissioner Ashley Randle toured three farms in North Central Massachusetts on Monday to celebrate the success of the innovative Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement (LFPA) program. The program is administered by the state Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR) and funded through the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) by the

  • Local nonprofits launch training program for migrants
    by Brendan Lewis on May 15, 2024 at 7:45 am

    GARDNER —  Several nonprofits in Gardner and Fitchburg have formed a new work preparation program they hope will help new Americans in the area as well as address local issues. This program – funded by the Community Foundation of North Central Mass. – has united around a common goal: to support the integration and success

  • Editorial: Exploiting pot law’s loopholes with social spots’ OK in a haze  
    by Editorial on May 15, 2024 at 4:35 am

    Back in October 2018, the state’s cannabis control regulators predicted that a time when marijuana users would be able to congregate at an establishment and socially consume pot remained years away. They weren’t just blowing smoke. Nearly six years removed from that statement, that eventuality is still a pipe dream. The Cannabis Control Commission has

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A to Z Dictionary
TV Listings Gardner MA
Movies Gardner MA
MA Lottery Numbers
Financial page and stocks
World Factbook
Holy Bible
Learning Tools
Real Estate Listings
Gardner MA History
Gas Map
Gardner MA City Hall
Gardner MA Municipal Golf Course
Gardner MA Dog Park

Gardner MA Public Service, History, and Editorials

Guide to Gardner MA area Public Service Organizations
Editorials by Editor and Publisher Werner Poegel
Greater Gardner MA Event Machine
Greater Gardner MA Public Meetings
Gardner MA Furniture Heritage and history of the Big Chair
Public Servants

Complete list of pages

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