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Evans Road House Fire

Photos from house fire in Brookline yesterday 2/16/2010 at 82 Evans Road

http://www.box714imaging.com/Fire-Photography-2010...

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Police urging people to stay off their phones on exiting the Stony Brook T stop

Joseph Porcelli reports on a community meeting with police and city officials in Jamaica Plain last night. District E-13 reports there were 21 robberies within 1,500 feet of the Orange Line stop between Nov. 1 and Feb. 14 and that most of the attackers are teens with prior robbery records:

Robbers get away because if your phone is stolen you can't call the police immediately. Don't use your phone on the way home, it won't get stolen, and you won't have to call the police.

Earlier:
Three teens arrested for failed robbery down the street from Stony Brook station.
Three charged for early-morning stickup near Stony Brook T stop.
Police detail five Jamaica Plain holdups Tuesday evening.


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Boston Public Library looking at closing branches, cutting hours

Nathan Spencer livetweeted a BPL trustee meeting at the BPL main branch this morning at which officials sounded dire warnings about the fiscal year starting July 1.

"We are broke," BPL Trustee Chairman Jeffrey Rudman said. The system is looking at a $3.6-million budget hole for the coming year, Rudman said.

At a meeting attended by only five of the library system's nine trustees, trustees discussed options ranging from closing many branches one to three days a week to simply shutting up to eight of the city's 26 neighborhood libraries. Other possibilities would include closing off some desks where people get help at the Copley main branch and shuttering libraries on Sundays before Monday holidays. Trustees say they have already tried to cut personnel expenses but are now running so shortstaffed that some branches experience "brownouts" because they don't have enough workers for them on some days.

Trustees said they would make a final decision in late March or early April after public meetings. The next meeting is March 9 at the BPL main branch.

Draft BPL budget - lays out the issues in more details (but does not name specific neighborhood branches).

BPL budget page.


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Dead criminal fingered for 1972 Back Bay murder

DNA evidence now ties a man who died in prison while serving time for raping a woman in the Back Bay to the 1972 murder of Ellen Rutchick, 23, in her Beacon Street home, officials say.

Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis and Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley said DNA evidence also connects Michael Sumpter of Roxbury - who died in 2001 - to a 1985 rape of another woman on Marlborough Street.

Officials say the police cold-case unit was using the FBI's Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) in 2005 to try to clear unsolved sexual attacks when Rutchick's family contacted the unit to ask for help in finding her killer. Officials say that because Rudnick had been sexually assaulted in addition to being killed, they had tissue samples on slides. An independent lab was able to extract enough DNA information to lead to a match with Sumpter's profile last year.

In a statement, Conley said:

Were Sumpter alive today, we would indict him for murder and expect to prevail at trial. The Boston Police investigation was thorough 38 years ago and the scientific evidence is very strong today.

Davis added:

Today's announcement marks another success for the Boston Police Cold Case Squad while also hopefully providing the Rutchick family with a long-awaited sense of peace and justice for their loved one.

Officials say the Rutchick case is the oldest yet solved through use of the DNA database.


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Neighbors cheered when Amy Bishop moved out of Ipswich

Martin Solomon is friends with a guy who was the alleged mass murderer's neighbor in Ipswich before she and her husband moved to Alabama. He posts the neighbor's less-than-fond reminiscences of her:

... The day they moved out I was getting home as their moving van pulled away and went up the street. I got out of my car and a bunch of the neighbors were outside and I yelled "Ding Dong the witch is dead!" and a cheer went up all around. Soon after the new people showed up to clean the house and move some things in and the whole street celebrated with a pizza party. We welcomed the new folks with open arms. It was like the sun finally came out again.


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WBUR to answer daily local shows at WGBH with one of its own

The battle for ratings between our two bigfoot public-radio stations is stepping up a notch: 'BUR is turning Radio Boston, which now airs only on Fridays, into a daily show.

Take a look at the job postings for executive producer and associate producer.

The former seeks somebody to:

Oversee a new, local daily program (five days a week) which will cover a full range of topics, from public affairs and politics, to the arts and economy, from cutting edge culture to the highs and lows of daily life that matter to the WBUR audience. Responsible for the editorial content of the program and its web-site and manage a six-person broadcast team.

The latter advertises:

[A] brand new daily program that will mix news and culture and which will be fast paced with multiple subjects and a myriad of voices including listener calls.

Via Sean Smyth and Helen Rose (in the comments below).

Ed. note: Yes, 'BUR already has two daily, locally produced shows on its schedule, but neither "On Point" nor "Here and Now" focus primarily on Boston issues.


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Nightlife Web site coming to Boston

OK, another nightlife Web site - and they're looking for part-time "ambassadors" to promote it.


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Amy Bishop: Snarling ball of white-hot fury

Hokay. Now the Globe reports she punched another woman in the head in a Peabody IHOP in 2002 because the woman got the last child seat in the restaurant.


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Brigham and Womens' project will mean new housing, mental-health facilities

The Boston Redevelopment Authority today approved a 10-year construction project that will reshape the gateway to the Longwood Medical Area at the Riverway and Brookline Avenue.

The project, which also needs zoning changes and approval from parks officials, would replace a series of existing buildings with a new 16-story residential building, a 12-story medical research and clinical building and and a facility to provide transitional housing for mental-health patients who no longer need hospitalization.

The project will include 66 rental and 70 condo units in a 16-story building to be built by Roxbury Tenants of Harvard. Construction of the housing units could begin in 2012, with the new lab space in a 12-story building to start sometime between 2014 and 2018.

The mental-health facility would include 47 beds for people who no longer need hospitalization but who have yet to be placed in residential settings, and would be run by the state Department of Mental Health, which now houses such patients at Shattuck Hospital. Brigham and Women's Vice President Arthur Monbouquette said the Brigham would pay for construction of the mental-health project and would spend up to $4.2 million for a new athletic center and community space.

He estimated the new buildings would mean 500 permanent new jobs.


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Children's Hospital to add new beds, expand ER with 10-story addition

With in-patient stays on the rise and community hospitals beginning to close pediatric units, Children's Hospital said today it hopes to break ground this spring on an addition on Binney Street to add new beds.

The proposal, approved by the Boston Redevelopment Authority this afternoon, would essentially add 130,000 square feet of space to existing Children's floors - with 30 new inpatient beds and a number of other patient rooms, as well an expanded emergency room and radiation department.

The plan replaces an earlier plan to build an extension above the existing main Children's building, which the hospital abandoned because it couldn't afford the loss of revenue that would have come from shutting beds under the project during construction, Charles Weinstein, a hospital vice president, told the BRA board at a hearing this afternoon.

Weinstein said the hospital continues to see increased business. ER visits were up 11% this year - which he said might be partly due to H1N1-related visits - and inpatient stays were up 9%. "We are intending to continue to expand our pediatric beds."

Weinstein said that with a start this spring, the new space could be ready by 2013.

A number of local politicians and business and union leaders voiced approval. Nobody spoke against the proposal.


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