Wednesday, April 28, 2021
By Kyle Troutman editor@cassville-democrat.com
Tim Hudson connects on a pitch during a home game for Cassville this season. The Wildcats have seven games in the next nine days as the season begins winding down. Kyle Troutman/editor@cassville-democrat.com
Cassville baseball showing growth despite losses
The Cassville baseball team is on a 3-game skid, but the Wildcats will have plenty of chances to turn their fortunes around with seven games in the next nine days.
The Wildcats (6-12) last tasted victory in a district contest at Reeds Spring on April 15, picking up a 7-5 win. In that game, Ty Hudson led with 3 hits, and Corey Thomas and Zach Acheson each added 2 apiece. Acheson led in the RBI category with 3, and Lane Mitchell added 2 RBI on a double. On the mound, Acheson went 4 innings, nursing a sore shoulder, giving up 8 hits, 3 earned runs and striking out 7. Thomas earned the win in three innings of work, giving up 2 hits and no earned runs, also s
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UpdatedThu, Apr 22, 2021 at 9:02 am ET
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(Mike Carraggi/Patch)
MELROSE, MA When Councilors Shawn MacMaster and Cory Thomas pitched their emergency order last week to require some developers to report weekly acoustic monitoring data to the city for public consumption, they said the developers were already recording the data and it would cost them nothing extra. This order was just to help the city enforce what the developers already agreed to which is keeping track of the noise coming from some larger construction projects.
But a letter from an attorney for one of the projects read at Tuesday night s City Council meeting painted a different picture. David Lucas, who represents the 99 Washington St. development, wrote providing weekly data reports for that project would cost the developer 10 times as much, saying weekly prices would increase to $2,000 and add as much as $100,000 in unanticipated costs for lengthier projects.