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Ex-Principal Wins $326M Jackpot

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An 80-year-old retired school principal is the sole winner of the Nov. 4 $326 million Mega Millions jackpot, the biggest prize in New York Lottery history.

Harold Diamond of the Sullivan County town of Wurtsboro says he bought the ticket at a highway service center where he had stopped at his wife Carol's insistence to wait out a storm on Election Day.

Diamond said that he bought 10 tickets for $10, then put them in his wallet. He didn't even check to see if he won until after hearing the winning ticket had been purchased at the service center the next day while playing a round of golf.

“I put the ticket in my wallet and forgot about it,” he said matter-of-factly. “I went to play golf the next day and the guys in the clubhouse were talking about the jackpot-winning ticket someone bought at a Valero on Route 302 and I thought, 'Wait a minute, I bought a ticket there last night.'”

The New York Lottery's Yolanda Vega presented a giant ceremonial check to Diamond on Monday. He has chosen to take the cash value of the annuitized prize, which comes to about $130 million after taxes.

Diamond, who was an elementary school principal for 35 years,  says he plans to use the money to help family and give back to the local community.

Diamond was the principal at Emmac C. Chase Elementary School in Wurtsburo and George L. Cooke Elementary School in Monticello. He has also been a member of the Wurtsboro Volunteer Fire Department for 50 years.


Tsarnaev Pal to Plead Guilty

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With jury selection underway and the start of the Boston Marathon bombing trial looming, the U.S. Attorney's Office confirms a friend of accused bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is planning to change his plea to guilty.

Khairullozhon Matanov, a cab driver from Quincy, Massachusetts, who had dinner with the Tsarnaev brothers the night of the bombings, is charged with obstructing the investigation by destroying evidence and lying to investigators.

NECN legal analyst and Massachusetts School of Law Associate Dean Michael Coyne says it’s unlikely Matanov has just had a sudden change of heart.

"I think it's more likely that they have worked out some form of arrangement where his testimony will in fact be offered by the government and in return he may receive less of a sentence than he would otherwise because of his cooperation," said Coyne.

Meanwhile, the government and Tsarnaev's defense team have agreed to excuse 124 prospective jurors "for cause" out of the first two jury pools of roughly 450 people.

"I thought we would actually have more disqualified at this point," said Coyne. "I think it bodes well for eventually being able to impanel a jury that will be able to hear this case somewhat impartially."

But Coyne says that doesn't mean the next phase, where jurors are questioned individually, will be any easier.

"The likelihood is there's a bunch of people in this next group who are probably likely going to be disqualified but the attorneys are now trying to save their actual challenges for the ones that they really need further down the road," said Coyne.

Attorneys will exclude more jurors on Tuesday and Wednesday, then begin voir dire – or the individual questions – on Thursday.
Each side gets 20 peremptory challenges where they can excuse jurors without having to give a reason.

Classes Canceled Over Weather Concerns

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Many schools around the state sat empty today as superintendents decided to cancel classes amid concerns over the weather.

Hartford, Wallingford, Cromwell and Wethersfield were just some of the districts around the state that canceled classes Monday, only to see above-freezing temperatures and rain falling rather than ice or snow.

"I think it was a good idea. It was icy. I'd rather them be safe than sorry," said Bonni Standiford, of Cromwell.

In Wallingford, classes were initially delayed and then canceled about an hour later.

"I found some slippery patches but I think they could have gone to school. A delay would have been fine," said Paige Ryan, of Wallingford.

Ryan wasn't the only one who thought the decision may have been preemptive.

"I understand part of it is for the safety. They're worried about school buses, they're worried about maybe people who have to walk to school, but why don't you wait and see?" said Wallingford resident Beth Naccarato.

While temperatures stayed warm enough to keep the rain from turning to ice, some say when it comes to canceling classes, it's better safe than sorry.

"I'd rather have them cut a day off vacation than risk my child's life in a bus," said Jay Nach, of Wallingford.

Both the Hartford and Wallingford school districts declined to comment on their decisions to close.



Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut.com

Cadbury Egg Recipe Tweak Slammed

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Cadbury Creme Egg fans received some rotten news this week.

Cadbury, owned by Illinois-based Kraft, has changed its recipe for the Creme Eggs and will no longer use its signature Dairy Milk chocolate for the treats' shells.

The gooey chocolate treats, long considered an Easter candy staple, will now be made with “a standard, traditional Cadbury milk chocolate,” a spokeswoman for Kraft's Mondelez International said in a statement.

“The fundamentals of the Cadbury Creme Egg remain exactly the same – delicious milk chocolate and the unique crème centre that consumers love,” the statement read. “We have always used a range of milk chocolate blends for different products, depending on their shape or consistency.”

The change, which only applies to Cadbury eggs in the United Kingdom, sparked outrage from fans of the iconic candy.

“The product that Americans know and love and can find this time of year has not changed,” said Anna LIngeris, a spokeswoman for The Hershey Company, which manufacturers and distributes Cadbury products in the United States.

According to Cadbury’s website, the company makes about 500 million creme eggs a year, nearly two-thirds of which are consumed in the UK.

The recipe change is not the first upset for lovers of the “yolk-filled” chocolate candy, as it comes shortly after news that packages would now come with only five eggs instead of six.



Photo Credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images
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Navy SEAL Dead in Training Accident

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A Navy SEAL from New Hampshire was killed Saturday in a skydiving exercise during military parachute training in DeLand, Florida.

Petty Officer William Marston, 31, of Concord, was found on the ground unconscious with a broken leg, taken to a local hospital and pronounced dead, police said.

The deadly accident is under investigation, naval officials said.

"He was very competitive. He expected a lot of himself," his father Bill said.

"I was always proud of his determination and his effort," his mother Nancy added. "How could I not be proud of him?"

Marston was part of an East Coast-based Navy SEAL team. He had graduated from the Derryfield School in Manchester in 2001 and had been a second baseman on the Stonehill College baseball team in Easton, Massachusetts.

"The entire Naval Special Warfare community extends our sincerest condolences to the family and friends of our teammate, Blake. He will be missed by all who knew him," said Navy Special Warfare Command spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Mark Walton.

Elected officials also praised Marston's service and offered their condolences.

"Blake Marston represented the very best of New Hampshire's long tradition of service, dedicating himself to protect his fellow citizens and defending the enduring concept of freedom that is our very core," Gov. Maggie Hassan said.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen praised his "incredible commitment to his fellow servicemembers, the state of New Hampshire and our country," while Sen. Kelly Ayotte called him "a patriot who served our nation with honor and courage" and Rep. Annie Kuster called his service "an inspiration."

Marston's memorial service will take place in Bedford, Massachusetts on Saturday, and he will be buried in Arlington National Cemetery.  



Photo Credit: U.S. Navy Public Affairs Office

Quinnipiac Students Return From Paris After Attacks

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As 14 Quinnipiac University students joined their professor for a one-week study abroad program in Paris, the unconscionable happened: terrorists shot down a dozen people at French magazine "Charlie Hebdo," then targeted a kosher market, killing four others.

“My phone was ringing off the hook, and it was my parents, so I answered and they explained to me everything that was going on from what they were seeing in America,” explained student Jessica Sola, who took the trip as part of a communications class to study French cinema.

Sola said the attacks took place across the city, but students were told to stay put nonetheless.

“On the day that it happened, we were on lockdown. We weren't able to leave the hotel,” she said.

Professor Raymond Foery said the directive came from place of caution.

“We were nowhere near where this was occurring, but we tried to be as prudent as we could. We didn't want the students wandering the streets of Paris before we knew what was going on,” he said.

It was only after the situation was considered under control that students ventured back out to continue their studies.

“There was absolutely a sense of respect and sensibility on the street," Sola said. "It was pretty somber, but nobody put a halt on their life."

Neither did the students. They finished up the week-long program and arrived back home Sunday.

“I should say openly, I love France, and I love Paris. I did my dissertation research in Paris," Foery said. "Having said that, I was never so happy to land at JFK airport as I was yesterday, and I think everybody felt that. We were enormously relieved.”

1 Dead After Fire in DC Metro

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One woman is dead, dozens of other people were hospitalized, and three remain in critical condition after the upper level of the L'Enfant Plaza Metro station in southeast D.C. filled with smoke Monday afternoon.

A Virginia-bound Yellow Line train was in the tunnel just south of the station around 3:20 p.m. when it stopped for unknown reasons.

Dozens of people were trapped inside the train's cars as the tunnel filled with thick, black smoke.

"People could barely breathe," passenger Denzel Hatch said. "They had to evacuate us through the tunnel and walk back through the front. No electricity, no visibility, nothing. Couldn’t see anything at first."

"You're hearing other people crying, you're seeing people passing out... it was a horrific thing to witness," passenger Adjoa Adofo said.

Firefighters gained access to the tunnel at one of the evacuation points at Ninth Street and Maine Avenue SE. One injured firefighter was transported from that location by ambulance.

According to D.C. Fire and EMS, 84 patients were taken to hospitals. Three are in critical but stable condition, two of them at George Washington University Hospital. More than 200 people were evaluated. 

"There was a woman who was in distress on that train, and I'm sorry to say she's passed away," Metro General Manager and Chief Executive Officer Richard Sarles said.

The woman's cause of death and identity remain unknown. 

"We are all saddened by today's fatality aboard the Metrorail, and our thoughts and prayers go out to the family of the passenger who passed away," a statement from D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser read.

Though an exact cause of the smoke and fire is unknown, NTSB investigators said there was an electrical arcing involving the third rail and the power supply cables to that rail prior to the fire. There was water along the tracks near the accident scene, which would have helped facilitate smoke along the third rail, investigators said.

"It was just very smoky in there," said passenger Fitz Carter from aboard a Metro bus waiting to be taken to a hospital. "We couldn’t see anything. The visibility was poor. Right now, there’s a lot of burning in my throat and my chest. Everybody got as low as they possibly could to the ground, because that’s where the best possibility for oxygen was."

The FBI is assisting Metro Transit Police in determining a cause, which is standard procedure for incidents in the capital region.

Green Lines trains will operate on a normal schedule Tuesday. Blue Line trains will replace the Yellow Line from Huntington to Largo Town Center; trains will run every 12 minutes.

Metro GM Sarles retires Friday.


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Pipe Bursts at Willimantic Apartment After Heat Turned Off

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Water from a burst pipe flooded a Willimantic apartment building Monday afternoon after a college student left for winter break and turned the heat off, according to the management office.

Police said flooding at the Foster Drive apartment unit caused sheet rock from the ceiling to collapse, leaving one or two people without a home. No was was hurt but the building suffered significant water damage.

A tenant of the affected unit said she returned to her apartment Monday to find water damage and realized her roommate had turned off the heat.

Affected residents are being put up in a hotel until property management can assess the damage.

Check back for updates on this developing story.



Photo Credit: Viewer Photo

Lawmakers Consider Statewide Ban on Plastic Shopping Bags

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Connecticut lawmakers are in talks to reintroduce legislation that would either ban the use of disposable plastic bags at grocery stores and similar retailers or impose new restrictions on them.

“They’re such a waste,” said State Rep. Jack Hennessy, of Bridgeport, who has supported the legislation in the past.

Approximately 400 grocery stores in Connecticut would likely be affected under any proposal.

“Now is not the time,” said Stan Sorkin, president of the Connecticut Grocery Association. “Especially in today's economic environment, we hear about a lot of the middle class to lower-income families who are still suffering in terms of no salaries and no growth in disposable income and that's a cost.”

Hennessy, who’s been involved in environmental matters throughout his years in the General Assembly, said Connecticut has the opportunity to get rid of something that becomes an eyesore in the state’s urban areas.

"They become an unsightly nuisance on the side of the roads, requiring state and municipal employees to use state taxpayer dollars to clean up these bags that are not biodegradable,” Hennessy said.

Westport has had regulations in place since 2008 that ban most plastic bags in grocery stores and similar retailers, including pharmacies.

Last year, California became the first state in the country to place restrictions on plastic bags and required retailers to charge 10 cents per bag at grocery stores and pharmacies. Grocery stores pocket the money and were provided more than $2 million in state assistance to help with the transition.

Shoppers who received assistance paying for groceries do not have to pay the fees.

Kathy Droney, of West Hartford, said she’s been using reusable bags for years and called the bags “so annoying.”

"Getting to use reusable bags is so easy and why build up all this plastic?” she said.

Sarah Howland, who had several plastic bags in her grocery cart said, “I normally use reusable ones but a law would definitely force me to use my other ones.”

Sorkin said he wants the conversation to be a reasonable one and for lawmakers to avoid jumping to conclusions, and said grocery stores have always been open to adjustments.

“We’ve been ahead of the game with environmental issues in the past,” Sorkin said. “We were at the forefront of recycling cardboard.”

JetBlue Flight Bound for Bradley Diverted Due to Fumes

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A JetBlue flight heading from Tampa to Bradley International Airport was diverted to Virginia on Monday afternoon after "an unknown odor" was reported in the cockpit, according to an airline spokesperson.

Flight 1534 landed safely in Norfolk, Virginia shortly after 4:30 p.m., airline officials said.

NBC affiliate WAVY reports that the Embraer 190 carrying 93 people was taxied to Landmark Aviation, where airport fire officials checked the aircraft for hotspots.

A spokesperson for the Norfolk International Airport told WAVY that JetBlue would decide whether to continue the flight with the same aircraft or switch the passengers to another plane.

Flight status information posted to the JetBlue site shows Flight 1534, which was scheduled to arrive at Bradley at 4:42 p.m., was diverted and expected to get in around 9:08 p.m.

No injuries were reported.



Photo Credit: WAVY/Rob Rizzo

Gas Prices Drop Below $2 Per Gallon in Middletown

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Declining gas prices have dipped below $2 per gallon at one gas station in Middletown, and another station in Waterbury said it plans to follow suit.

GasBuddy.com reports that the Gasman station at 28 Broad Street in Middletown is charging just $1.99 per gallon for regular-grade gasoline, the lowest the state has seen in years.

The last time gas prices hit $1.99 was in 2009.

Regular gas costs $2.01 per gallon at a Sunoco station at 519 Washington Street in Middletown, according to the site. The Sunoco accepts Price Chopper gas points, which would further slash the price

A Sunoco station at 519 Washington Street in Middletown is charging $2.01 per gallon, according to the site, and accepts Price Chopper gas points, which would further slash the price for Price Chopper customers.

Three other stations in Middletown are selling gas for $2.01 or $2.02 per gallon, according to GasBuddy.com.

Middletown isn't the only part of the state where drivers can fill up for less. The owner of Winz Gas Station at 3484 East Main Street in Waterbury said he plans to lower the price of gas below $2 per gallon on Tuesday for the first time in more than a decade.

Despite declining prices, the state average remains at $2.48 per gallon.

A full list of the state's lowest gas prices is available online.

NFLer Swims 9 Miles After Boat Fall

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The former Miami Dolphins player who survived a nine-mile swim to shore after falling off his boat in the waters off Palm Beach County last week said he endured a "boater's nightmare."

"I shouldn't be here," Rob Konrad told reporters at a news conference in Plantation Monday.

Konrad, 38, was aboard his 36-foot boat Thursday when he tripped and fell overboard as the boat was on autopilot at 5 mph, according to a Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office report.

Konrad said he'd hooked a fish when a bog wave hit his boat, knocking him off as the boat motored away.

"I quickly realized I was in a real bad situation and made the decision that I was going to start swimming toward shore," Konrad said.

A fishing boat passed within 50 yards of him as he swam, but he wasn't able to flag them down, he said. A Coast Guard helicopter also flew over him but didn't see him. He also said he was bitten by jellyfish and had a shark swim circles around him.

"I prayed to God to send a boat or the Coast Guard to come get me," Konrad said. "After some time I just said, 'Look, I'm not dying tonight. I'm going to make it to shore.'"

He swam the nine miles to shore and approached an officer wearing only his underwear, the report said. The report said he told the officer he had been swimming for 10 hours, but Konrad said he was in the water for about 16 hours.

Konrad was taken to a nearby hospital and treated for symptoms of hypothermia and dehydration. He was released after several days.

The Dolphins drafted Konrad in the second round of the 1999 NFL Draft. The fullback played parts of six seasons in Miami, recording seven touchdowns.



Photo Credit: NBC6.com

PURA Commissioners Want Autonomy

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The state Public Utilities Regulatory Authority is pushing for more independence in the wake of a 2011 merger that put it under the aegis of the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.

In a memo to members of the Malloy administration outlining PURA’s 2014 report and 2015 agenda, the three commissioners cite a need for “radical restructuring” in 2015.

“Work remains to be done to bring PURA to where it needs to be as a serious, independent, professional, respected and efficient regulatory body,” the PURA commissioners wrote.

While the memo applauds DEEP Commissioner Rob Klee for working to improve relations with PURA, the commissioners outline problems they say are a direct result of the agency’s ties to DEEP.

“PURA believes we urgently need to change our structural relationship with DEEP,” the memo says. “The inclusion of the public utility regulatory authority within DEEP was an unusual step, one not taken elsewhere in the United States, and one that should be discontinued.”

Problems include DEEP’s control over PURA’s budget and personnel management, staffing cuts resulting in an “aggressive reduction” in the size of the agency and trouble agreeing on “human resource decisions,” according to the memo.

“Now entering the fourth year of experimenting with the placement of PURA within DEEP, much of the relationship remains dysfunctional and ethical strains are obvious despite the best efforts and good will of all involved,” the commissioners wrote.

Gov. Dannel Malloy responded with skepticism to the agency’s demands.

“I’m not in agreement with it,” he said. “I’ve been in government a long time. I used to people wanting to have their own empire. I don’t believe that’s what’s necessary. I think we need to constantly be looking for greater efficiencies.”

Malloy urged the commissioners to resign if they’re unhappy with the state of affairs.
 



Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut.com

Madison to Spend $500K on School Security Cameras

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The town of Madison has allocated nearly $500,000 to school security improvements.

The measure passed automatically in a town meeting Monday evening, which lacked the necessary quorum of 75 residents to put it to a vote.

Per to Board of Education's request, most of the $472,000 sum will go toward the installation of security cameras in district schools. Thirty percent of the funding comes from a state grant and the rest will fall on the shoulders of taxpayers, according to the first selectman.

Some residents who attended the meeting said the plan doesn't sit well with them.

"I think we really need to know the details about a proposal to put cameras in schools, because, quite frankly, it could be a civil liberties issue," said lifelong Madison resident and school system graduate Alex Taubes.

"I think it was really shocking when the first selectman basically told us that we don't have the right to know where the cameras are going to be put and when uses the cameras are going to be used for, even what problem they're trying to solve," he added. "And I think that everyone has the right to know and we deserve a lot better from our town government."

Town officials have declined to reveal the proposed locations of cameras, citing security concerns.

"We don't want to publicize what may be a loophole in security now because that's like saying, 'OK, if you want to do something bad, hurry up and do this before we fix it,'" explained Madison First Selectman Fillmore McPherson.

McPherson declined to elaborate on which schools are slated to security upgrades but said the process will begin immediately, more or less. Per Madison's agreement with the state, the project must be finished by June 30.

1 Dead in Bristol Fire

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One person died and several others were forced from their homes when a two-alarm fire ripped through an apartment building on Redstone Hill Road in Bristol late Monday afternoon, according to a deputy fire chief at the scene.

It was the second fatal fire in Bristol in less than a month. Fire officials said they arrived shortly after 4:15 p.m. to find flames blocking the entrance to a first-floor apartment unit.

Firefighters fought the blaze from outside. They had the flames under control within 10 minutes, but when they searched the apartment where the fire broke out, they found the body of a man in the living room, the deputy chief said.

"When the fireman was at the front door, I don't even think he got the door open as the flames burst through the door, and it just came right out like a big ball of fire," said neighbor Adam Hebenstreit, who watched the scene unfold.

The identity of the person killed has not been released at this time.

Although no one else was hurt, three apartments suffered heavy fire damage.

"The windows were out, everything was charred. They're brick buildings; the brick was charred on the outside," explained Christina Brown, who lives three doors down from the unit where the fire broke out. "Pretty much just black. That's all you saw on the inside. Everything was black."

The Red Cross is helping some of the displaced residents, and the state fire marshal is investigating to determine the cause of the flames.

"No one wants to see this," said Mayor Ken Cockayne. "It's an awful, awful thing."

The cause of the fire is unknown at this time. Bristol's fire marshal is investigating the cause of the fire.

In late December, two people died in a morning house fire on High Street.

It's the city's second deadly fire in a month.

The American Red Cross is assisting other residents in the building.




Photo Credit: Tyler Jankoski

3-Alarm Fire at Penn Station:FDNY

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Trains coming in and out of Penn Station early Tuesday were temporarily delayed following what officials are calling a "suspicious" fire by the LIRR concourse.

More than 150 firefighters battled the three-alarm fire that took over two levels of a construction site by the west end of the LIRR concourse at Penn Station at West 33rd Street and Eighth Avenue in Manhattan, FDNY Chief James Leonard said.

The blaze, which started just before 2:30 a.m., caused A and E trains to temporarily bypass the station. Subway service returned to normal by 5:30 a.m., and some residual delays were possible throughout the morning.

Tracks 19-21 for LIRR trains into Penn Station were shut down, but were not affected by the fire. Officials were in the process of restoring power to those tracks. Some residual delays were possible.

Some LIRR trains were being diverted to Atlantic Terminal or Hunterspoint Avenue and some were canceled at the Jamaica station. NYC Transit is cross-honoring LIRR fares for the Nos. 2, 3, 7 and E subway lines.

The investigation also closed several roads in the area. The westbound side of West 33rd Street between Eighth and Ninth Avenues remained closed Tuesday morning.

Two firefighters were hurt fighting the flames but are expected to be OK. The fire caused substantive structural damage to the station, according to the FDNY.



Photo Credit: @___ninoblak___/Instagram
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Fire in Montville

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An blaze broke out at a home in Montville overnight.

The structure fire happened at 29 Carol Drive.

More information wasn't immediately available.

Water Main Break in East Hartford

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There is a water main break in the area of 630 Tolland Street in East Hartford.

Emergency crews are at the scene and police said they expect the road to be blocked in the area.
 

Fire Ravages Lumber Company

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A Cornwall lumber company has been heavily damaged by fire.

Flames broke out at the Northeast Building Supply Lumber Yard at 26 Kent Road around 11:30 p.m. on Monday and the building was still smoldering on Tuesday morning.

Twenty-one fire departments from New Milford to New York state responded to help put out the massive blaze because of the large amount of material inside fueling the flames.

Crews had to use tankers to shuttle in water from the Housatonic River since there were no fire hydrants nearby. While the river is nearby, the cold weather made obtaining it a challenge.

While no one was inside the building when the fire broke out, this is a loss for the community.

"Hopefully they'll get back on their feet and rebuild, but now people are out of work, even some of the firefighters here now actually worked here," Cornwall firefighter Gordon Ridgway said.

Neighbors reported seeing a glow in the sky, smelling the smoke and feeling the heat.

Route 7 was closed for several hours, but it has since reopened.

The business owns a hardware store next door, but that building was not damaged, according to the owner.



Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut.com

9th Earthquake Rattles Eastern Connecticut

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Plainfield police have received more phone calls reporting an earthquake this morning, the ninth to rattle the area since last Thursday.

The Weston Observatory at Boston College is recording a magnitude 2.1 earthquake and they are calling it an aftershock.

Police said they heard a boom and felt the ground shake a little.

The Web site for the Weston Observatory is recording activity at 7:27 a.m. on Tuesday, centered around 3 and a half miles south-southwest of Danielson.

The observatory is sending a team to Plainfield today to investigate the recent activity.

On Monday, there were several earthquakes in the area, including a magnitude 3.3 around 6:30 a.m. That was stronger than the previous quakes over the last few days.

Earthquake Timeline in January 2015:

1) Jan. 8: 9:28 a.m. -- 2.0 magnitude quake, centered 1.8 miles south-southwest of Danielson.

2) Jan. 9: 10:26 a.m. -- 0.4 magnitude earthquake in eastern Connecticut

3) Jan. 12: 6:33 a.m. -- 1.1 magnitude earthquake, centered 3.1 miles south of Danielson

4) Jan. 12: 6:34 a.m. -- 1.0 magnitude earthquake, centered 3.1 miles southwest of Danielson

5) Jan. 12: 6:36 a.m. -- 3.1 magnitude earthquake, centered 3.1 miles south-southwest of Danielson

6) Jan. 12: 6:50 a.m. -- 2.0 magnitude earthquake, centered 3.1 miles south of Danielson

7) Jan. 12: 12:03 p.m. -- 1.3 magnitude earthquake, centered 1.2 miles south of Danielson

8) Jan. 12: 1:04 p.m. -- 1.2 magnitude earthquake, centered 1.2 miles southeast of Danielson

9) Jan. 13: 7:27 p.m. -- 2.1 magnitude earthquake, centered 3.7 miles south-southwest of Danielson

Dis you feel it?
 



Photo Credit: Weston Observatory
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