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  • Newton, MA - The Top Newsmakers of 2007

    The Newton TAB and Press
    Newton, Massachusetts

    Wednesday, December 26, 2007


    The Top Newsmakers of 2007

    1. Lt. Richard Geary & the Newton Firefighters
    2. Everyone involved in the Newton north construction project
    3. David Boyajian
    4. Noam Chomsky
    5. Paul Levy
    6. Newly elected public officials
    7. U.S. Army Capt. Michelle Jacobs
    8. Boston Red Sox
    9. Kristin Kenney
    10. TAB Bloggers

    Newton - 1. Lt. Richard Geary and the Newton firefighters

    Newton firefighters have endured a tough 2007, but none more than
    Lt. Richard Geary.
    Geary, a 20-year department veteran, suffered severe injuries in the
    early morning hours of Tuesday, May 15, when an engine used to fight a
    Boston College Dumpster fire lunged forward and trapped the
    firefighter underneath.
    Geary was transported to Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, where he was
    found to have a compound arm fracture, a shoulder blade broken in two
    places, a large head laceration and fractured ribs.
    Although far from healed, the lieutenant returned to his Franklin home
    on May 20 to continue his recovery process. No word on when, or if, he
    plans to return to the Fire Department.
    Lt. Tom Lopez, the newly elected union president, spoke recently with
    Geary. He said his colleague is still on the road to recovery and was
    busy preparing for the holiday season.
    Meanwhile, Engine 13 - the 24-year-old truck involved in the Dumpster
    fire accident - has been impounded.
    Three separate investigations were held to study exactly what happened
    that morning to cause the accident. Two reports - one from a
    city-hired contractor, the other from state police - pointed to
    operator error. The third, engaged by the firefighters' union,
    reported that the engine driver was forced to rely on misfiring
    mechanical signals.
    Firefighters pointed to the incident as an accident waiting to happen
    because of the rundown and faulty equipment and apparatus provided to
    firefighters. Since Geary's accident, union members overwhelmingly
    voted no confidence in Chief Joseph LaCroix. However, Mayor David
    Cohen has not retracted support for his fire chief.
    Many aldermen threw their political weight behind firefighters by
    supporting a citizen-sponsored petition to ask the mayor to nix the
    sick leave clause in the firefighters' contract.
    Meanwhile, July 1, 2007 marked the beginning of the Firefighters'
    Union's fifth year working off an old contract, without a pay
    raise. The contract negations are now in the preliminary stages of
    arbitration.

    2. Everyone involved with the Newton North construction project
    The ongoing saga surrounding the construction of a new Newton North
    High School nearly drained this newspaper's owner's supply of ink and
    occupied the time of many city officials, community activists and a
    nervous public.
    Though plans for addressing North have been a hot topic for years,
    2007 began with a contentious referendum that pitted neighbors against
    neighbors and aldermen against aldermen, but resulted in passing a
    site plan for the new school.
    Opponents worried about the cost, the mayor's financing plan, the
    location of the building's entrance and warned about toxic materials
    waiting to be discovered underground. Supporters saw a new building as
    the only alternative and envisioned a high school that wouldn't be
    plagued by poor air circulation and lack of natural light.
    Shortly after the referendum passed, following multitudes of design
    review, aldermanic and liaison committee meetings, the city broke
    ground on the project in June - while architects were revising the
    cost estimates upward.
    With sledgehammer in hand, Mayor David Cohen said, `This is a
    historic day. It has taken us nearly a decade to get here=85This event
    isn't just about today. It's about tomorrow as well. Long after we
    have all departed from the scene, the new Newton North will be
    teaching our young men and women and reminding those who will come
    after us of the importance of public education.'
    Within six months of shuffling the dirt around the site in
    preparation for a foundation, the project encountered more
    hiccups. Friable asbestos - a hazardous material necessitating an
    orchestrated removal process - and underground ledge stalled the
    project. Architects also determined that the planned cafeteria and
    voc-ed spaces were too small. In all, a project that voters were told
    would cost $141 million in January is now believed to be closer to
    $170 million - even though construction has yet to begin - and the
    mayor does not expect to unveil a price ceiling until May.
    `There is also no guarantee that doing anything else would cost any
    less,' Cohen said. `I believe that at whatever the price comes in, we
    are going to be able to find a way to pay for it.'

    3. David Boyajian
    Newton resident David Boyajian illustrated the power of a simple
    letter to the editor when he ignited a debate that made national
    headlines.
    In his July 6 letter to the Watertown TAB and Press - the Newton
    TAB's sister paper - he questioned the Anti-Defamation League's stance
    on the Armenian genocide.
    Boyajian was disturbed about ADL national director Abrahan Foxman's
    refusal to unequivocally recognize the genocide that resulted in the
    deaths of 1.5 million Armenians. Neither would Foxman support
    congressional legislation that would make recognition official. For a
    major organization advocating human rights, the ADL's position was
    unacceptable for many.
    Boyajian's letter tugged at the heartstrings of the
    Armenian-Americans living in Watertown. Rallying against the ADL, they
    asked the town to withdraw from the ADL program, No Place for Hate.
    Regional ADL director Andrew Tarsy supported recognition of the
    genocide and was subsequently fired.
    A few days later, the ADL's national director, Abraham Foxman,
    changed the organization's position by calling the deaths of Armenians
    under the Ottoman Empire `tantamount to genocide.'
    But, it was too late and too little. Newton decided to withdraw from
    No Place for Hate as long as the program's parent organization refused
    to unequivocally acknowledge the genocide and did not support
    congressional recognition of the Armenian genocide. Other
    Massachusetts communities followed suit.
    Following the Anti-Defamation League's annual meeting, the anti-hate
    organization did not change its stance, and communities like Newton
    and Waltham remained detached from No Place for Hate.
    All this from one man's letter to the editor.

    4. Noam Chomsky
    When the Social Awareness Club at Newton South invited left-wing
    activist
    Noam Chomsky to speak at the school, they had no way of knowing that
    they were setting off a media firestorm that would initiate their
    nascent principal into the political and controversial battlefield of
    the Newton schools.
    The club invited Chomsky to speak about his perspective of
    U.S. foreign policy in Iraq. Protestors and critics asked Principal
    Brian Salzer to intercede and prevent Chomsky from spewing what they
    believed was anti-Israel rhetoric to which students should not be
    subjected.
    Salzer talked with parents who raised objections, with school
    administration and with the students, and decided not to intervene in
    the club's decision.
    Chomsky spoke to a lecture hall full of students, while 30 parents
    watched via a live feed into another room. True to the request of his
    hosts, Chomsky spoke of what he sees as failed policy in Iraq, and his
    belief that the United States is the center of blame for what he sees
    as a road to World War III. He spoke of Israel once, but only in
    response to a student's question.
    While students were listening inside, some parents were protesting
    outside in an orchestrated media event. TAB columnist Tom Mountain,
    who could have attended the presentation as a South parent, with media
    in tow, tried to walk in with non-Newton South parent and Holocaust
    survivor Stephan Ross, with media in tow. Ross was not allowed in and
    the TV stations had their story.
    Chomsky told the TAB that his presence at a speaking engagement
    hadn't aroused that much controversy in 20 years. In a letter to the
    editor he wrote that the protestors' stories about his involvement in
    Middle East politics were `mere deceit' and he corrected protestors'
    claims.
    `In reading an article devoted solely to character assassination, it
    is a good idea to check the facts, and having done so, to ask what
    lies behind the exercise,' Chomsky wrote.

    5. Paul Levy
    When mayoral-appointed Blue Ribbon Commission chairman Paul
    Levy said that the commission would not release a final report on city
    finances until after the Jan. 23 referendum on Newton North, the TAB
    and several community members were concerned that voters would not
    have the complete picture needed to make a decision. Levy, whose day
    job title is president and chief executive officer at Beth Israel
    Deaconess Hospital, proved us wrong and showed the city what
    transparency really means.
    Levy posted audiotapes of the meetings on the city Web site, released
    draft reports and maintained a Blue Ribbon Commission blog updating
    the community on the committee's findings. Equally impressive was that
    once the final report was released, Levy spoke his mind on the BRC's
    former blog, chastising Mayor David Cohen and mayoral spokesperson
    Jeremy Solomon for suggesting that the administration would take its
    time considering the BRC's recommendation to raise property taxes
    through a series of overrides.
    Warning of a projected $100 million deficit over the next five years,
    Levy said that the time for studying had passed.
    `This is not `Star Trek,' in which we have to explore distant
    galaxies,' he wrote. `The exploration phase is over. Dear Mayor Cohen
    and Aldermen: Get to work and raise our taxes.'
    The work of Levy and his fellow commission members was invaluable, as
    was Levy's openness both in managing the process and in speaking his
    mind.

    6. New public officials elected
    Eight residents challenged public officials for their seats this
    fall. And - bucking a trend - a long winning streak by Newton
    incumbent politicians was broken with three political upsets.
    Campaigning on a platform of improving math, science and technology
    in the public schools, Geoff Epstein decisively defeated Gail Glick,
    marking the first time since 1993 when a sitting School Committee
    member was defeated at the ballot box. Whether voters chose Epstein
    based on his message or because they were unhappy with the School
    Committee and its image as a cliquish group is hard to decipher
    because it was the only contested school race.

    In aldermen contests, Newton Highlands resident Bill Brandel ousted
    14-year veteran Christine Samuelson thanks to an incredibly
    well-orchestrated campaign. The Ward 5 incumbent was criticized for
    neglecting concerns from her constituents, for being too close to
    Mayor David Cohen, and for dismissing concerns from the city's
    firefighters while serving as chair of the board's Public Safety
    Committee.
    The omnipresent Greer Tan Swiston, a Republican who ran for
    state representative in 2004 and for alderman two years ago, ousted
    first-term alderman Leslie Burg, in spite of Burg's attempts to ride
    into re-election on the coattails of fellow Ward 3 at-large Alderman
    Ted Hess-Mahan.
    Three other new faces enter public office in January as well:
    health care consultant John Freedman in Ward 8; police officer Allan
    Ciccone Jr. in Ward 1 and Kurt Kusiak on School Committee for Ward 3.

    7. U.S. Army Capt. Michelle Jacobs
    Hopping from one battle to the next has become second nature for
    U.S. Army
    Capt. Michelle Jacobs.
    The 39-year-old Army Reservist returned home from a yearlong medical
    tour in Tikrit, Iraq, to find her home of 10 years destroyed in a
    two-alarm fire at New Falls Apartments on Sunday, Sept. 2. The fire
    gutted six units in all, displacing Jacobs and her two teenage
    children, along with other families.
    At the time, Jacobs was finishing up the last weeks of her Iraq
    tour. Her days were sporadically filled with trauma cases unlike any
    she'd dealt with as an emergency room nurse at Beth Israel Deaconess
    in Boston.
    Gunshot wounds and burns took the place of heart attacks and strokes.
    Jacobs doesn't consider herself a hero. She reserved that title for
    the men and women she patched up on a daily basis in Tikrit.
    Since returning, Jacobs and her children moved into a spacious
    Nonantum apartment and are waiting on when they can move back to their
    New Falls home.
    She was recognized by the city on Veterans Day and gave a keynote
    address before a crowd of other Newtonites who had served their
    country on different fronts.
    Jacobs plans to return to school in the spring to pursue another
    nursing degree. Returning to Iraq is not the first priority on her
    list. She would much rather see her children graduate first from high
    school.

    8. World Champion neighbors
    They play at Fenway Park, but one third of the 2007 World Champion Red
    Sox
    starting lineup sleeps in Newton.
    And Newton residents have gone out of their way to celebrate their
    famous neighbors, while also respecting their privacy.
    These are the people in your neighborhood: Catcher Jason Varitek
    (Waban); outfielder J.D. Drew (Oak Hill) and first baseman Kevin
    Youkilis (Auburndale).
    In April, zealous pranksters converted a street sign for Varick Road
    (just blocks from catcher Jason Varitek's Waban home) into `Varitek'
    Road, with the help of a little duct tape and marker. Then, during the
    Sox's final stretch of the World Series, Waban residents posted
    homemade signs in support of Varitek along Beacon Street.
    The Barry's Deli-loving catcher paid back some of that respect by
    opening his doors to hundreds of overexcited trick-or-treaters during
    Halloween. Forget king-sized candy bars. Varitek dished up autographs
    for all pint-sized baseball fans.
    First baseman Youkilis's romance with Ben Affleck's ex, Newton native
    Enza Sambataro (her mom owns Salon De Cinzia) kept his name on the
    gossip pages but Yoooukkk was also a regular a local Little League
    games and local bagel shops.
    And while Drew was about as popular during most of the season as
    Donald Rumsfeld, the slugger's strong finish in September and playoff
    heroics had every Newton resident happy to have him as a neighbor by
    October.
    There have been recent sightings of knuckleball catcher Doug
    Mirabelli, a Thompsonville resident. And, of course, we harbor hopes
    that Johan Santana will soon be checking out the Newton real estate
    market.

    9. Kristin Kenney
    Odds don't apply to people like Kristin Kenney.
    The 2003 Newton South grad survived a horrific car accident on June
    19, 2006, during which she suffered two strokes and lost her left arm
    - among other injuries.
    It seemed no one could have overcome that level of trauma. But Kenney
    did.
    Her family, which owns and operates Bob's Sub Shop in Upper Falls, and
    the Newton community closely followed her journey from convalescence
    to full recovery.
    On the morning of the accident, Kenney was driving to work at
    Connecticut's Assumption College when she suffered two bilateral
    strokes. She lost control of her Jeep, crunching it along at least 150
    feet of highway guardrail.
    Paramedics pried the then 20-year-old from her car with the Jaws of
    Life.
    Kenney was airlifted to a Connecticut trauma center and remained there
    for several weeks in a semi-comatose state. She was then transported
    to Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital and later to the Spaulding
    Rehabilitation Center for the rest of her recovery.
    The now senior at Assumption College took two classes last
    spring. Summer was not a time of rest either. Kenney took a community
    college course and juggled two part-time jobs to fill her days.
    Kenney dreams of someday going to grad school for chemistry.

    10. TAB bloggers
    The Newton TAB blog was born in April 2006, and in 2007, it took on a
    life
    of its own.
    A discussion board of sorts, visitors have posted more than 10,000
    separate comments on the blog over the twelve months. From the
    firefighters' contract to Newton North and from the city's best
    cheeseburgers to the perils of trans-fats - residents discussed,
    debated and dissected all aspects of life in the Garden City.
    By the summer as many as 2,000 unique visitors were checking out the
    blog at least once a week, although a much smaller portion of those
    visitors chose to comment.
    Dubbed `The Fellowship of the Miserable' by one frequent blogger, the
    discussion venue initially attracted - and continues to attract - many
    angry residents, several of whom can find a way to blame Mayor David
    Cohen for everything, including, probably, the record snowfall this
    month. But behind many silent computers are residents who watch, read
    and, at times, can't stay away.
    The TAB began regularly posting videos on its blog this year, with
    some videos capturing the attention of thousands of non-Newton
    viewers. The mayor's press conference after the injury of Lt. Richard
    Geary, for example, was viewed more than 3,000 times.
    All told, the TAB's blog has become a must-read for insiders and a
    place where TAB editors and reporters post breaking news first but
    also learn from residents. `The blog has leveled the playing field in
    Newton, giving anyone who cares to comment a voice in our community,'
    said Greg Reibman, the TAB's editor in chief. `And as we saw in this
    last election, and in other instances, it's starting to have an impact
    on city politics as well.'

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