In new england. Elizabeth also tonight, a New Hampshire state trooper turning in his badge forever. After he handed out this brutal beating caught on camera by sky fox at the end of a wild police chase. Today, one of those troopers involved took a deal and avoided jailtime. Mark fox 25s bob ward joins us live from nashua and there is some controversy here. The reporter thats right. The issue here is were this former New Hampshire state trooper should have had received jailtime. Received jailtime. Now a man who was beaten says the plea agreement shows two completely different sets of rules. I apologize to members of Law Enforcement especially those that were there that day, but most importantly, i apologize to the citizens of New Hampshire. Former New Hampshire state trooper andrew monaco standing up in Nashua District Court pleading guilty, taking full responsibility for a case of police brutality, caught on video by sky fox. Massachusetts, New Hampshire hand Massachusetts Police final
The reporter george, weymouth herring warden, shows us the dry conditions along the herring run, which has stopped the fish migration from Whitmans Pond out into the bay and ocean. This is pretty bad. Every single rainstorm that comes, you see it. Coming and it splits, it goes north and south and we dont get any. The reporter george has been doing this work for more than 30 years. I dont remember seeing it this low before. The reporter many of the fish did make it out before the drought hit hardest, but there are a lot of fish now Whitmans Pond for the water levels to come back up. At certain times of the year, this is what the herring run looks like. Today, its barely running. The more people conserve, the more water theres going to be in the system. The reporter according to the u. S. Drought monitor, severe Drought Conditions are now in 75 of the state, including metro boston towns like weymouth. We have gotten almost through the summer without having to trigger those bans, well see
WEYMOUTH Officials approved a Quincy developer’s plan to knock down a two-story industrial building on Libbey Parkway and build a three-story medical building that will be used by Boston Children’s Hospital.
FoxRock Properties will build a new, 69,000-square-foot medical building at 200 Libbey Parkway, a 4.3 acre site inside an industrial park. The project will include 270 parking spaces.
The zoning board of appeals at its meeting Wednesday approved a special permit for height and variances for lot coverage, minimum required parking and landscaping.
Edward Fleming, an attorney for FoxRock, and representatives for the project confirmed Wednesday that Boston Children’s Hospital will use the building for medical offices. The zoning regulations allow for medical offices, specialty care, diagnostic services and occupational and physical therapy, for example.