Monthly Archives: June 2011

Satellite Image Captures Mass. Tornado ‘Scar’

Published June 6, 2011

NASA's Landsat 5 satellite captured this image of tornado destruction. (Jesse Allen/NASA Earth Observatory)

NASA's Landsat 5 satellite captured this image of tornado destruction. (Jesse Allen/NASA Earth Observatory)

Earlier today NASA released the above image, providing a from-space viewpoint of the path of destruction left behind after last week’s most violent tornado.

In a tweet, NASA referred to the “scar across western [Massachusetts],” as the deadly tornado that first touched down near Springfield cut east, moving across Interstate 84 and parts of Sturbridge.

NASA captured the image yesterday — four days after the storms — from its Landsat 5 satellite.

Home At Last, Bruins Look To Start Cup Run

Published June 6, 2011

Vancouver Canucks right wing Jannik Hansen (36) looks to score as Boston Bruins defenseman Johnny Boychuk (55) and goalie Tim Thomas (30) squeeze the Canucks' Raffi Torres (13) during Game 2, Saturday. (AP)

Vancouver Canucks right wing Jannik Hansen (36) looks to score as Boston Bruins defenseman Johnny Boychuk (55) and goalie Tim Thomas (30) squeeze the Canucks' Raffi Torres (13) during Game 2, Saturday. (AP)

The Boston Bruins are about to host their first Stanley Cup finals game since May 24, 1990.

It’s an exciting time for the Bruins and their fans. Still, there is skepticism and negativity surrounding the Bruins after they dropped the series’ first two games in Vancouver.

It feels as if the prevailing opinion among Boston’s hardcore fans and media is ridiculous. Do people really want to remove a scoring threat like Tyler Seguin so Shawn Thornton can go back in the lineup and beat the heck out of either Maxime Lapierre or Alexandre Burrows? Should goalie Tim Thomas suddenly change his style of play just because of what happened in overtime of Game 2? Does anyone think that coach Claude Julien will change anything that has brought him four wins away from a championship?

Absolutely not. The Bruins simply need to do the things that got them to the finals. They need to play better in the neutral zone, and for goodness sake, stop turning the puck over — period.

The Bruins need to reverse a disturbing trend in which they become very passive late in the game. Too many times the Canucks were able to exert their will and get Boston back on their heels. From the 11:35 point of the second period in Game 2 when Mark Recchi gave Boston their only lead of the finals, the Bruins had no answer for what came in wave after wave from the Canucks.

[pullquote author = “”]Does anyone think that coach Claude Julien will change anything that has brought him four wins away from a championship? [/pullquote]

This has to change. Cliché as it sounds, Boston needs to play a 60-minute aggressive game and push the Canucks so that they are the ones turning the puck over, giving the Bruins quality scoring chances. Canucks goalie Roberto Luongo has really not had to make many tough saves in this series.

All season, and throughout the playoffs, the Bruins have been able to come back and make things equal. Tonight, we need to see that kind of play. Vancouver has been the best team in the NHL all season long and so far, they have the results that prove it.

The Bruins have not won a Stanley Cup finals game at home since 1978 when Bobby Schmautz scored in overtime to beat the Montreal Canadiens in Game 4. Tonight would be a nice time to return to those days and hopefully start something big.

Monday Morning: Tornado Victims Work To Recover

Published June 6, 2011

Still literally picking up the pieces, residents of the tornado-ravaged town of Monson are trying to get their lives back to some form of normalcy. It’s easy to forget that there were actual people who lost absolutely everything in the storms Wednesday, unless you read this report by WBUR’s Bianca Vazquez Toness.

Mayor Tom Menino said city authorities are working to “fine tune” Boston’s disaster readiness, after last week’s tornadoes shocked the western part of the state.

An MIT professor who has been nominated three times by President Obama to serve on the Federal Reserve’s board of governors will ask the White House to withdraw his nomination. Peter Diamond, who won the Nobel prize in economics last year, has faced Republican opposition to his confirmation.

Sal DiMasi’s team of lawyers will begin to mount its defense today in the former House Speaker’s corruption trial. It’s unclear if DiMasi plans to testify on his own behalf.

As the Nuclear Regulatory Commission weighs whether to re-license the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Plant in Plymouth, some local residents are voicing their opposition to the plan.

Goalie Tim Thomas and captain Zdeno Chara will look to atone for mistakes that cost the Bruins the game on Saturday when the team faces off in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Finals against the Canucks tonight. After dropping two games in Vancouver, the team will look for Boston fans to pick them up at home. Police are ready for a rowdy showing.

What we’re following: We’ll continue to report on the funeral for a Massachusetts state trooper who died from injuries sustained on the job years ago, redistricting hearings in Quincy and the charter school teachers who are debating dissolving their union.

Major Water Main Break In Cambridge Leaves Some Without Water

Published June 5, 2011

Broadway Street in Cambridge was flooded with water after a water main broke Saturday night. (Jeremy Bernfeld for WBUR)

Broadway Street in Cambridge was flooded with water after a water main broke Saturday night. (Jeremy Bernfeld for WBUR)

Update 12:34 a.m.: Cambridge residents living near Central Square say it seems like the water has returned to a fairly normal level.

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Many Cambridge residents found themselves without water Saturday, thanks to a major water main break near Harvard Square, according to the Cambridge Police Department.

Streets were flooded in as much as three feet of water near the intersection of Broadway and Trowbridge Streets, where the water main broke. Police towed cars that were parked in the area and closed many of the surrounding streets.

Many Cambridge residents had little or no tap water pressure and many could not flush their toilets.

“The city is making preparations to temporarily switch over to the Massachusetts Water Resource Authority (MWRA) water supply to offset the disruption caused by the water main break,” the Cambridge Police Department said in a release.

Make Way For Bruins Fans: Public Garden Ducks Fan Up

Published June 3, 2011

Public Garden Bruins Fans
(Click an image to start a slideshow)

Hubbub reader Kelsey Borner alerted us that Boston’s No. 1 fans have officially joined the rest of the region and jumped on the Bruins’ Stanley Cup Finals bandwagon.

The duckling statues and the statue of George Washington in the Public Garden are decked out in Bruins jerseys as the B’s try to bring the cup back to Boston for the first time since 1972.

The team outfitted the statues and installed the jerseys, according to Mary Hines, spokeswoman for the Boston Parks Department.

The Bruins are down a game in the seven-game series with the Vancouver Canucks. Game 2 is tomorrow night in Vancouver.

If the ducklings are any indication, the Bruins will have quite the home-ice advantage when the series returns to Boston Monday.

From The Archives: Worcester Tornado Of ’53 ‘Worse Than War’

Published June 2, 2011

This is June 10, 1953 Assumption College handout photo shows a wrecked car on the lawn of the tornado-ravaged college campus in Worcester, where three of the 94 people killed in the storm lost their lives. (AP)

This is June 10, 1953 Assumption College handout photo shows a wrecked car on the lawn of the tornado-ravaged college campus in Worcester, where three of the 94 people killed in the storm lost their lives. (AP)

Wednesday’s tornadoes, which left at least three people dead and caused catastrophic damage to parts of central and western Massachusetts, bring to memory the Bay State’s deadliest tornado.

The 1953 tornado exploded through Worcester and, as WBUR’s Bob Oakes described it, “consumed houses, and spat out their splinters.” Lasting a little more than an hour, the storm left 94 dead. The storm went down in history as one of Massachusetts’ worst, and has its own nickname: “the Worcester tornado.”

Oakes reflected on the carnage of the storm in 2003, marking the 50th anniversary of the storm:

This is June 10, 1953 Assumption College handout photo shows a wrecked car on the lawn of the tornado ravaged college campus in Worcester, where three of the 94 people killed in the storm lost their lives. (AP)

This is June 10, 1953 Assumption College handout photo shows a wrecked car on the lawn of the tornado ravaged college campus in Worcester, where three of the 94 people killed in the storm lost their lives. (AP)

Related:

Tornado Aftermath: Where To Get Help, How To Help

Published June 2, 2011

People walk by tornado damage in Springfield Thursday. (AP)

Emergency crews have arrived in the western and central Massachusetts communities affected by Wednesday’s tornadoes. At least three people are reported dead. Officials — including Gov. Deval Patrick, Sen. Scott Brown and Sen. John Kerry — are assessing the damage.

Where to get help:

How to help:

More:

Live Blog: Mass. Towns Recover From Tornadoes

Published June 2, 2011

Springfield residents were left to pick up the pieces after an apparent tornado roared through the city Wednesday. (AP)

Springfield residents were left to pick up the pieces after an apparent tornado roared through the city Wednesday. (AP)

After tornadoes and other forms of severe weather tore through parts of western and central Massachusetts yesterday, residents are putting their lives back together. We’re continuing to update our coverage of the severe weather that killed at least four at least three.

Update 5:44 p.m.: Alright, let’s close this live blog for the day. Be sure to check wbur.org for all of the latest updates. We’ll have more on both wbur.org and on Hubbub tomorrow.

Update 5:36 p.m.: WBUR’s Jesse Costa toured some of the hardest hit areas of the state today and took some amazing photos. We’ll be getting many of them onto the site today and tomorrow.

A tornado completely flattened a house on Hollow Road in Brimfield. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)

The tornado completely flattened a house on Hollow Road in Brimfield. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)

Update 5:25 p.m.: The governor says some 290 people remain in emergency shelters throughout the state. Certainly a large number, but only about half as many as those who sought shelter immediately after the storms.

WBUR’s Curt Nickisch checked in from Monson, Mass., where the storm damage was rough.

“Some houses are literally flipped over, others completely collapsed into the basement,” Nickisch said. “Roofs are off of houses. It’s devastating. Amazingly, nobody was hurt.”

Update 5:20 p.m.: Only four Mass. counties remain under a state of emergency, nearly 24 hours after three tornadoes swept the state.

Gov. Deval Patrick rolled back a statewide state of emergency to include only Hampshire, Hampden, Franklin and Worcester counties, as cleanup and recovery efforts intensified.

Also, the National Weather Service confirmed that at least three tornadoes — not just one — were responsible for heavily damaging the central and western parts of the state, according to Patrick.

Update 3:50 p.m.: More from Monson: An aerial view from State Police:

Update 3:15 p.m.: WBUR’s Curt Nickisch passes along these photos from Monson, one of the communities hit hardest by the storms. Here’s one:

Update 2:20 p.m.: WBUR’s David Boeri reported from Monson on Here & Now earlier this afternoon. Here’s his dispatch:

Update 12:35 p.m.: At a press conference this morning, the head of the state police and the mayor of Springfield said that they think one of the people who died last night died of cardiac arrest. That means it may not be a storm-related death. Until we know more, we’ll report that the storms last night killed three, possibly four, people.

Update 12:28 p.m.: Do you need help recovering from tornado damage? Do you want to donate to help the recovery? Check out this resource page we set up.

Update 12:23 p.m.: After surveying damage by helicopter, Gov. Deval Patrick, Sen. John Kerry and Sen. Scott Brown spoke to the media.

Here’s some of what they said:

  • Patrick: “The very first thing that is underway now, and was since the time the storm ended, is to complete the search and rescue. It’s about people first and foremost.”
  • Patrick: “[Recovery will] take some time, there’s no doubt about it. But we are resilient people in the commonwealth and we’ve got a great team responding to this and it will all work out in the end.”
  • Kerry: “There’s an enormous amount of work to be done, but we’re up to the task, we’re going to get it done. And if anything, the people that we have seen today and the stories that we have heard are unbelievably inspiring.”

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‘It Was Swirling And The Wind Was Going Crazy': Tornado Rips Through Springfield

Published June 1, 2011

An apartment building in Springfield destroyed by a tornado (@TheFalconsAHL/Twitter)

An apartment building in Springfield destroyed by a tornado (@TheFalconsAHL/Twitter)

A tornado? In Massachusetts?

That’s what Stephen Hanjack was thinking this afternoon.

“We heard the warnings and everything,” Hanjack said. “You really don’t even think about it until it happens.”

Hanjack and his co-workers with the Springfield Falcons, the city’s minor league hockey team, were at work on the bottom floor of the MassMutual Center when the tornado hit downtown Springfield.

“We got a few texts from people — we all live in the area — that’s when we started to realize it was getting serious,” Hanjack said. “It started getting pretty dark out. People at the windows said debris was just flying by, it just looks like a dust cloud. It was swirling and the wind was going crazy, so we just backed away from the windows.”

The tornado didn’t last long.

“We just hung tight inside and once it passed it was silent,” Hanjack said. “And then you hear all the fire and police sirens going nuts.”

Emergency crews scrambled because the tornado had hit the city hard. Hanjack and his colleagues wandered out of the arena to survey the damage.

“The first thing we did was walk down to the courthouse,” Hanjack said. “There are hundred-year-old trees, huge trees, just ripped out from their roots.”

Trees down. Cars destroyed. Buildings crumbled. The pictures Hanjack posted to the Falcons’ Twitter account look like they were taken in a war zone.

For the most part, Hanjack and the city of Springfield are still stunned.

“You look at how powerful Mother Nature can be,” Hanjack said. “I’m at a loss for words.”

Tornado Watch Declared For Massachusetts

Published June 1, 2011

Update 7:01:

This video was uploaded to YouTube.
[youtube url=”igQLRPnUzmw”]

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Update 6:55: The Twitter feed of the Springfield Falcons, a minor league hockey team has provided some incredible photos of tornado damage in Springfield.

Click an image to start a slideshow

Images courtesy of @TheFalconsAHL

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Update 5:24: From the AP — An apparent tornado has caused damage in Springfield, Mass., but no injuries have been reported.

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A tornado watch is in effect until 8 p.m. tonight for Massachusetts, northern Connecticut, southern New Hampshire and central Rhode Island.

We’ll be updating the live blog below as information becomes available.

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