New Bedford’s BPZOO welcomes Two Sister’s Catering to the Bear’s Den Café

With a mix of Portuguese cuisine and tried-and-true family favorites, there is bound to be something that satisfies all lunchtime cravings.

The Buttonwood Park Zoo is proud to welcome Two Sisters Catering to Bear’s Den Café when it reopens for the season on Saturday, April 1, 2023. Two Sisters Catering will handle the daily operations of the café, while utilizing the kitchen space to prepare dishes for their thriving catering business.

With the gorgeous woodland mural and life-sized stuffed bear, the Bear’s Den Café, operated by the Buttonwood Park Zoological Society, is known for family-friendly snack and lunch options. The café has been in operation since 2000, when the Zoo reopened after extensive renovations. The mural, which wraps around all the walls in the café, was painted by Amy Wright, a local artist from Rhode Island.


Two Sisters Catering photo.

Always looking for ways to enhance the guest experience, BPZOO leadership wanted to put a new twist on the typical lunch at the Zoo and find a way to incorporate something that was unique to the South Coast.

“Guest experience is paramount to us,” said Buttonwood Park Zoological Society Executive Director Sarah Henry. “The Bear’s Den gives our guests a chance to take a break and have a quick bite during their visit. Using that space to also showcase a local business was an exciting new idea for us.”

Two Sisters Catering, known in the community for their wildly popular food truck and catering operation that specializes in Portuguese cuisine, was thrilled when BPZOO reached out to them.

“We were honored that the Zoo asked to partner with us for their upcoming busy season,” said Caitlyn Fontes, Owner and Operator of Two Sisters. “Being born and raised in this area, we have so many fond memories of the Zoo as children and now with our own children. What a cool thing to be able to do – work in a place that has been such a huge part of New Bedford for so long and give tourists the chance to try some authentic Portuguese cuisine.”-Buttonwood Park Zoo.


Two Sisters Catering photo.




City of New Bedford announces yard waste collection set to begin

“YARD WASTE NOTICE: Collection for yard waste will start on Monday, April 3 until Friday, December 15.”-City of New Bedford.


City of New Bedfordphoto.




Bristol County Sheriff Paul Heroux’s Office lowers Correctional Officers hiring age

“If you’re old enough to vote and serve in the military, you’re now old enough to be a Bristol County corrections officer.

The new age requirement for corrections officer cadets at the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office is 18, Sheriff Paul Heroux announced on Thursday. The previous age requirement was 19.

“We’re hearing from 18-year-olds who want to start their law enforcement career here and we’ve had to tell them to come back in a year,” Sheriff Heroux said. “If you’re old enough to fight for our country, old enough to vote, you’re certainly old enough to be a CO in Bristol County.”

The Sheriff’s Office runs an educational, career exploration program for high school students in which classes, mostly criminal justice, come to the House of Corrections for a tour and overview of law enforcement careers. BCSO staff explain how corrections work, give an overview of the different career paths available and answer questions from students interested in law enforcement.

“We’re losing good people, people interested and excited about a law enforcement career at the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office, because they’re finding other jobs and opportunities between their 18th and 19th birthdays,” Sheriff Heroux said.

The BCSO is also making it easier for new high school graduates to begin a career in corrections. Interested applicants can start the paperwork/interview process at 17, but must be 18 to start the training academy.

“If you’re 17 and want to start working for us when you turn 18, you can get the hiring process started before hand,” Sheriff Heroux said. “Jobs in law enforcement aren’t apply and start the same day. There are background checks, interviews and training. This will allow young adults to start that process earlier.”

Lowering the age limit is the latest initiative rolled out to boost recruiting and retention efforts at the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office. New COs earn a $5,000 signing bonus, and there are incentives for certain college degrees and prior military or first-responder experience.

The Bristol County Sheriff’s Office is holding a job fair on Wednesday, April 19 from 1-4 p.m. and Saturday, April 22 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the BCSO annex building, 421 Faunce Corner Road. Starting pay for corrections officers is $57,000 with the opportunity to earn more than $75,000 with overtime and incentives. Add in state pension, health insurance and other benefits, and now is the perfect time to start your law enforcement career at the BCSO. Contact recruitment@bcso-ma.org for more information about careers, the job fair, or with any other questions.”-Bristol County Sheriff Office.




City of New Bedford to begin annual street sweeping program

“The City of New Bedford will be starting its annual street sweeping program on April 6, 2023. There will be no parking on both sides of the street, overnight from 11:50 p.m. Thursday night to 6:00 a.m. Friday morning. Failure to follow the posted street sweeping signs will result in your vehicle being towed. This program will run from April 1st to November 1st.

The first sweep of this spring season will be April 6th into April 7th on the streets labeled “First and third Thursday of the month”.

The following locations will operate on a bi-weekly schedule.

First and third Thursday of the month:

• Dartmouth St. from Matthew St to Allen St.
• Kempton St. from Rockdale Ave. to Sixth St.
• Mill St. from County St. to Rockdale Ave.
• North St. from County St. to Rockdale Ave.
• Rivet St. from Route 18 to Hemlock St.
• Cove Road – from Brock Ave to the town line
• Cove St. – from East Rodney French Blvd. to County St.
• Route 18 – from Cove Road to Cove St

Second and fourth Thursday of the month:

• County St. from Rivet St. to Cove St.
• Ashley Blvd. from Nash Rd. to Coggeshall St.
• Acushnet Ave. from Coggeshall St. to Brooklawn St.
• North Front St. from Coggeshall St. to Nash Rd.

Failure to follow the posted street sweeping signs will result in your vehicle being towed. During this time frame, parking will be prohibited within the posted areas to allow sweepers full access to the curb line. These focused areas of sweeping are in addition to the regular weekly schedule of street sweeping on the City’s main thoroughfares.

If you have any questions, please contact David Nieves of the Department of Public Infrastructure at (508) 979-1550 Ext 67332.”-City of New Bedford.




UPDATE: Massachusetts skunk kit, ‘Clover’, loses battle with rat poison

The story about the skunk kit named “Clover,” who was getting all the help he could by the angels at Newhouse Wildlife Rescue, has, sadly, lost his battle and succumbed to the rat poison he ate.

Newhouse Wildlife Rescue announced the bad news this morning at around 9:00am:

“It is with great sadness that we announce Clover’s passing. We did everything we could for him. Our team is heartbroken.”


Newhouse Wildlife Rescue photo.


Newhouse Wildlife Rescue photo.




Two arrested in alleged merchandise scam at multiple Massachusetts Walmart stores

“A local police department has arrested two men in connection with an alleged merchandise scam at area Walmart stores.

According to Chief James Donovan, on Monday, just before 1:15 p.m., a Raynham Police Officer responded to Walmart, 160 Broadway, for a report of past incidents of theft or attempted theft at the store. Through an on-scene investigation, officers determined that the suspects activated a Visa gift card without paying and subsequently left the store. Officers also learned that the males returned to the store March 19 and returned merchandise worth more than $1,300.

Officers learned that the suspects were known to Walmart staff because they have allegedly taken gift cards without paying for them and used the gift cards to purchase Apple products, which they then later returned for cash. Through their investigation, officers determined that the merchandise was purchased from a Walmart in another community using Visa gift cards.

As part of a continuing investigation, officers spoke with staff at the Walmart at 36 Paramount Drive. There they learned that two male suspects entered the store at about 1:23 p.m. March 20 and attempted to return the Apple Watch and AirPods just purchased at the Walmart located at 160 Broadway. A store employee indicated that they recognized the two suspects from the previous Walmart scams and instructed employees not to process the return and to have them removed from the store.

A short time later, an officer observed two males acting suspiciously, holding a brown paper bag while walking through the Walmart parking lot at 36 Paramount Drive. An officer observed the suspects walking through the Walmart parking lot and ultimately entering the Beacon Variety store, 748 New State Highway (Route 44).

A Raynham Police Officer responded to the parking lot of the Beacon Variety store, where he observed the two males. When the officer approached the suspects in an attempt to speak with them, they fled westbound on foot. The suspects ran westbound across Orchard Street at the intersection of Route 44 and continued down Route 24 North, across Route 24, and under the Route 44 overpass to a wooded area where one of the suspects, later identified as 19-year-old Angelo Henderson of Taunton, was taken into custody.

A Massachusetts State Police K-9 Unit and Taunton Police responded to assist in the search for the second suspect. A perimeter was set around the wooded area and the suspect, later identified as 21-year-old Dyllan Lopes of Quincy, was located in the brush and taken into custody.

Raynham Police subsequently located a Walmart bag containing an Apple Watch and Apple AirPods in the wooded area.

Raynham Police determined that Lopes and Henderson were the individuals involved in the alleged theft scheme. They also had active warrants.

The incident remains under active investigation.

Lopes and Henderson were charged with Disorderly Conduct, Disturbing the Peace, Larceny Over $1,200 By Single Scheme, and Trespass on State/County Property. Both were arraigned in Taunton District Court on Tuesday morning.”




Massachusetts Dept. of Transitional Assistance in battle with public benefit thieves

By Colin A. Young, State House News Service.

“Facing a “substantial increase” in people being robbed of their public benefits by fraudsters and scammers, Acting Commissioner Mary Sheehan asked lawmakers Tuesday to support a proposal in Gov. Maura Healey’s budget that would allow the Department of Transitional Assistance to offer recipients a new way to protect their accounts.

Across the country, criminals have deployed skimming devices on ATMs and point-of-sale card readers to steal EBT card numbers and PINs, or have scammed benefit recipients out of that information through phishing campaigns, and then stolen the benefits due to that person. The problem has particularly affected the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and Sheehan said that more than $1.5 million in SNAP benefits have been reported stolen from Bay Staters.

Lawmakers at a Joint Committee on Ways and Means budget hearing Tuesday said the problem is common in Massachusetts, and that they hear about it often from constituents who try to use their benefits only to find out they have been robbed. Sen. Liz Miranda told a story of a working single mother in her district who lost $2,000 in Social Security and SNAP benefits because a machine she used at a bodega had been outfitted with a skimmer.

And while Sheehan said DTA has been working with local, state and federal law enforcement authorities to address the problem, she said her department’s role is really more about making sure its clients know to protect themselves and their accounts.

“I would love to prosecute these folks, believe me. There’s nothing more maddening to me than somebody stealing benefits from the people that need it the most,” Sheehan said when Rep. Richard Haggerty asked what DTA is doing to claw back stolen benefits and to hold bad actors accountable. She added at another point, “While DTA has implemented multiple strategies to protect client benefits, the bottom line is that we need additional resources to successfully slow down or stop these thefts.”

Healey’s fiscal year 2024 budget proposal (H 1) includes $310,000 for DTA to purchase a new functionality from the state’s EBT vendor that would allow clients to remotely lock and unlock their EBT cards through a mobile app.

“Changing your PIN, which is what we’ve been messaging our clients, it works right away. However, if that client goes to another location or the same location and the information is stolen again, they’re going to have their benefits stolen again,” Sheehan said. “So what the locking and unlocking will allow them to do is only unlock their account at the point that they want to transact the benefit and use them. So they’ll be able to access the benefit and then immediately lock it down.”

That ability, Sheehan said, “will definitely be hugely effective for our clients.”

Sheehan said that DTA is also implementing an analytics tool that is meant to identify clusters of rapid transactions happening out of state, which she said “is a clear indication that somebody has cloned a whole bunch of cards.” In many cases, DTA can verify that a transaction is fraudulent because it happens in another state on the same day that a client is making legitimate purchases at shops in Massachusetts.

Massachusetts was recently named by the federal Food and Nutrition Service as one of five states to participate in a federal mobile EBT pilot program that will give benefit recipients the ability to use their benefits by tapping or scanning their mobile device instead of using their physical EBT card. Sheehan said that program should also help protect clients from theft.

When the benefits stolen are cash benefits, DTA can reimburse the client once it has confirmed the fraud. But the situation is slightly different for stolen SNAP benefits.

The federal spending bill that Congress passed in December allows states to reinstate skimmed SNAP benefits using federal funds, but only those stolen between Oct. 1, 2022 and Sept. 30, 2024. Sheehan said Massachusetts had $1.5 million stolen prior to that “that we know of.” The federal policy also limits reimbursement to two months worth of benefits.

The House and Senate have each agreed, in a supplemental budget bill that still has not been sent to a conference committee or otherwise resolved into a final version, to provide $2 million for the reimbursement of SNAP benefits for victims who had their benefits skimmed between April 1, 2022 and September 30, 2022.

Sheehan said that the House version of the bill “aligns with the governor’s proposal, which aligns with the federal reimbursement” policy, but that the Senate bill includes “wraparound” language “where it tries to get to the full stolen benefit amount.”

“We’ll implement whichever bill comes out, or whatever compromise happens through that conference committee, and we’ll try to get those benefits out as soon as possible,” she said. “We are already working on the requirements for the systems changes to be able to do that. It will take a little bit because of the uncertainty on the bill as to what programming we need to do … we will do everything we can to get those benefits out as soon as possible.”




State funding may rise with more refugee, immigrant arrivals to Massachusetts

By Sam Drysdale/SHNS.

“The Office for Refugees and Immigrants would see a $1 million boost in state funding to increase capacity and oversight, if the Legislature agrees with Gov. Maura Healey’s budget recommendation.

Healey’s budget includes the new $1 million line item at a time when there is an influx of refugees into the state. The appropriation would expand the office’s Citizenship for New American Program, which assists legal permanent immigrants with the process of becoming U.S. citizens, to over 1,700 residents, office Executive Director Mary Truong said at a budget hearing Tuesday.

It would also expand the office’s financial literacy for newcomers program to about 300 immigrants and refugees. Truong said state funding is “essential” for administrative expansion as more refugees and immigrants come into Massachusetts. “After years of low numbers of refugee arrivals, due to federal policies, Massachusetts received an influx of Afghan humanitarian parolees,” she said, highlighting funds that have gone toward supporting these immigrants.

“During the same period, Haitian immigrants fleeing the economic and political crisis in Haiti were arriving in Massachusetts in significant and rising numbers.” Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition Executive Director Elizabeth Sweet said in December that she expects a wave of new immigrant arrivals this year “given the trends at the border.” “The number of cases pending before the immigration court here in Boston has increased significantly in the past year to more than 107,000 pending cases,” Sweet said at the time.

The $1 million line item would also fund at least six new full-time employees, Truong said. “These essential positions will allow ORI to be more proactive when thinking about the needs of immigrants and refugees across the commonwealth,” she said.”




MassDoT to hold meeting to show design for Dartmouth Corridor Improvements on Rt. 6

“On 3/29, at 6:00pm, #MassDOT will hold an in-person design public hearing to present the design for the proposed Corridor Improvements on Route 6, from Faunce Corner Road to Hathaway Road Project in the Town of Dartmouth, MA

Location:
Dartmouth Town Hall, Select Board Hearing Room 304,
400 Slocum Road, Dartmouth, MA 02747

Additional information can be found here.”-MassDOT.


MassDoT photo.




New Bedford Police launch “Operation Safe Streets” to curb illegal street riding

With multiple trails in almost a dozen surrounding towns, there’s no excuse not to take off-road vehicles…off-road. In addition, this illegal activity often leads to causing accidents as the riders ignore stop signs, red lights, and even pedestrians.

Last year, an New Bedford Police officer was injured by a man illegally operating a 4-wheeler on city streets. Residents report that the riders tailgate, throw objects, do stunts, ride in the breakdown lane, cut off other drivers, don’t yield, race, and commit other activities that put other people at risk of injury.

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“With the weather changing and spring arising, we’d like to remind the public that if you have any information on illegal street riding activity, call our tip line at (508) 99-CRIME.”-City of New Bedford Police Department.


City of New Bedford Police Department photo.