Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse claim of exoneration after UMass investigation findings misses point (Editorial)
Updated Jan 24, 2021;
Holyoke Mayor Alex B. Morse says the report of the University of Massachusetts investigation into allegations of misconduct by him with students is an exoneration.
The report found Morse, as a UMass lecturer, violated no laws in using dating apps as he socialized with members of the student-run UMass Democrats and other College Democrats organizations.
The report found Morse violated no university policy regarding faculty-student relationships or sexual harassment and discrimination.
The report found: “The preponderance of the evidence supports a finding that, as early as 2015, members of UMass Democrats and other University students were contacted by and communicated with Alex Morse on social media and dating apps like Tinder and Instagram. As Morse himself admits, he entered into personal and dating relationships with students he met using these a
UMass weighs faculty-student relationships policy in wake of report on Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse’s conduct
Updated Jan 13, 2021;
Posted Jan 13, 2021
8/17/2020 -Springfield- U.S. Rep. Richard E. Neal, D-Springfield, and his challenger in the Sept. 1 Democratic primary, Holyoke Mayor Alex B. Morse, met in a debate in the New England Public Media TV studios in downtown Springfield. This is Morse during a sound check before the start of the debate. (Don Treeger / The Republican)
Facebook Share
AMHERST Leaders of the University of Massachusetts Democrats and two other student-led Democratic organizations debated among themselves for close to a year whether to go public with concerns about the conduct of onetime lecturer and Holyoke Mayor Alex B. Morse in pursuing dates and sexual relationships with their membership, according to an investigator’s report issued Wednesday by the university.
Nashville Fire Marshal terminated effective immediately due to performance 997wtn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 997wtn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
FLORENCE Calling the strain on correctional officers “ridiculous,” a union vice president is speaking out about short-staffing issues that worsened during the coronavirus pandemic at the four-prison Federal Bureau of Prisons complex near Florence.
“We have a logistical nightmare,” said Christopher Tyndall, a correctional officer who has worked at the medium-security Federal Correctional Institution for 16 years. As vice president for the American Federation of Government Employees Local 1169 union, which represents employees at the complex, he is allowed to speak out about staffing issues.
“Obviously morale is down because of staffing issues. Mandated overtime is affecting our health, sanity and marriages,” Tyndall explained.
please don t. hard to watch. mike barnes report thousand brawl outside of the arlington walmart. woman with the blue scarf was shoplifting. barnes and another employee confronted her but she couldn t produce a receipt. another customer outside started going after. walmart is investigating employee conduct. police were never called. a new book claiming almost every song you hear on the radio is written by the very same people. wow. they do sound similar. according to the book the song machine an artist rarely writes their own songs, groups of a-list producers and melody