Category Archives: Downtown

‘Carmine the Tailor’ sells longtime Lowell business to Eleni Zohdi

You can find Nancy Tuttle’s story in today’s SUN.
http://www.lowellsun.com/ci_10445642?IADID=Search-www.lowellsun.com-www.lowellsun.com

Dayne Lamb & Middlesex Community College

I received this from Dayne Lamb…and am pretty excited about a neighborhood resident partnering with MCC…the other person who comes to mind is Eleni; who has had many years of success with her MCC Fashion Camp. I suspect their are more people with an area of expertise they can share…maybe a certain Mr. Greene should consider a developing a “Green” program that would help city residents learn more about initiatives, including the new “trash” policy.

From Dayne-
A number of folks in Lowell have asked Gardner and me about personal financial planning. The result is that I (with Gardner’s assistance) have arranged to teach/lead a two-session adult enrichment course at MCC. MCC offered a good way to share some of what we do with our clients with a larger group of friends, neighbors and other community members. Here is the course description:

Mastering MoneyFinancial planning is the art of controlling your spending, optimizing your income, maximizing your savings and properly diversifying your investments. The proliferation of financial products, tax law requirements and human nature can make implementation of your financial plan a challenge. J. Dayne Lamb, MBA/CPA will share with you the tools, techniques and tactics she employees with her wealth management clients to enable you to master your money and be your own best financial advisor. (3 hours) $49.
10/21-10/28 7pm-8:30pm T L LF-205PER 637 80 14087 LAMB

Entire fall catalog is here:
http://www.middlesex.mass.edu/careertraining/courses/F08/default.html

Registration info is here:
http://mymcc.middlesex.mass.edu/?Tab=1

License Commission meeting

Since the SUN does not bother to cover the License Commission meetings, and I was there anyway…I thought I would write a little report of my own. Not to mention I have the luxury of never being confused with a journalist, so I don’t have to refrain from adding my own “two-cents”.
You can find the entire agenda at the city web site:
Agenda August 7, 2008
http://www.lowellma.gov/depts/license/agenda.2008-08-07.3953521462

Sometimes it is better to start at the end and work backwards…in the end I learned a few things:
1. I was really impressed with how thorough the discussion of evidence was between the commissioners and those charged with violations. Stephen Greene, VP, LDNA usually attends these meetings…I may go more often; I was impressed!
2. I did not know that a police officers testimony is “hear-say”… I always thought if something was documented in a police report that would pretty much be “solid” evidence. Turns out I was wrong (there are criminals out there somewhere thankful I was never one of their jurors). The commissioners gave all testimony a full hearing. I did find it interesting that all three commissioners seemed to interpret the same information differently. I think this a positive thing…there wouldn’t be much of a “fair-hearing” if everyone thought the same way. No kidding, I really learned something.
3. Should you ever be in trouble and find yourself in need of an attorney… call George Eliades.

I will not bore you with the details of every item; just a few things of particularl interest to me.
Commissioner Akashian – on the matter of the festivals listed in agenda item one and two mentioned last year he could hear the music from the festival all the way at his house five streets away “as if it was in his own yard”. He asked if that could be monitored better this year. The applicant presented a plan to monitor the sound “and” have it signed off by police at intervals throughout the event. This was cool… there was a question; there was a prepared response and resolution to the situation that will accommodate both sides. The applicant was granted the license. What if this kind of thing happened all the time? YIKES!

sidenote: I was considering calling commissioner Akashian at about 12:30 Thursday night when I was sitting at Caffe’ Paradiso with friends and we were listening to the music from the Under Impact Café “as if we were inside the place”!!! If I knew where it was located, I would have “pulled the plug” on this place. I hope the neighbors called the police. I have received emails from the neighbors; they have been calling the police to report the gross violation of the city noise ordinance. The neighbors, and most everyone else, longs for the days of the old Underground Café…it was a great place and a good neighbor.

Oh, before I forget…I am going to have t-shirts made that say, “CALL A COP”! I am going to give them to the staff at all the bars so they will be reminded to call the police dept. when they have a problem (I may have mentioned this before; LDNA members learned this lesson the hard way). I was positively giddy when Mr. Bayliss reminded the proprietors, when there is a problem, any problem; you are required to call police.

I do not know why the logic of this simple statement eludes so many bar owners. When you “throw them (trouble-makers) out” onto the street to save yourself from trouble and don’t’ call the police to alert them; what you are doing in reality is sending your trouble out to become someone else’s trouble… endless…and kind of cruel to your fellow bar owners who have to deal with your mess.

In the end, the commissioners’ decision for what they determined to be proven violations against the Under Impact was:
Take away the license for six days. However, that was suspended in lieu of six months probation. If the club has another proven violation during the next six months, they will have to close for six days, all of which must be Fridays and Saturdays.

I was personally satisfied with the decision…I really think the owners will start to call the police when they see a situation starting. I know for sure their upstairs nieghbors are going to be calling the police more often.

A hearing on the allegations against the owner of the Dubliner was scheduled for September 4th at 3PM.

I will leave it at that… for your consideration and comment.

Where is the story?

I am told by someone who has a bird’s-eye-view that there was an incident involving the arrest of the owner of the Dubliner early Thursday morning… there is no mention in the SUN… but I certainly hope they will not suppress a story about what really goes on through the night in some downtown bars…

Rob Mills has a story in today’s SUN with the details of the incident. We’ll see how the License Commission handles this.

Lowell bar owner facing chargesBy Robert Mills, rmills@lowellsun.comArticle Last Updated: 07/27/2008 05:06:55 PM EDTLOWELL — The owner of one of downtown’s most popular bars is facing charges he was drinking in the bar early Thursday morning with two other men and a prostitute, and that he assaulted an officer who was investigating.
Thomas Economou, 52, of Tewksbury, owner of The Dubliner, at 197 Market St., admits he was in the bar drinking at about 5 a.m., but says police have blown the allegations out of proportion.
Police were called to the bar on Thursday about 5 a.m., for what a caller thought was a break-in. Once inside the bar, police say they found Economou drinking and serving two other men.
Officers said they also found Economou in the bathroom with a prostitute, police say, though the woman was not immediately charged. It was not clear if she will be summonsed to court at a later date.
Police also say Economou struck an officer with the bathroom door when the officer tried to enter, and that an undisclosed class B substance was found in the bar.
Economou says he was in the bar’s basement stocking coolers to prepare for the Lowell Folk Festival weekend, with all the lights turned off upstairs.He admits he was sharing a few beers with his helpers, but says there was no prostitute. The woman was just a friend who had just arrived. He says there were no drugs, and that that drug accusation stems from a rolled-up dollar bill in one man’s pocket.
Economou says he did push back against the bathroom door as the officer tried to enter, but only because he did not know who was trying to get in, and was alarmed because no one should have been inside with him at that hour when all the doors were locked.
“They’re blowing it completely out of proportion,” Economou said of police.
Economou was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (door), sexual conduct for a fee, unlawful delivery of alcohol, delivery of alcohol to an intoxicated person, hindering an investigation, and delivery of a class B substance, police said.
He was arraigned Thursday in Lowell District Court and released.
Capt. Jonathan Webb said police plan to take the allegations before the city license commission. Webb could not comment on possible sanctions.

"PLAY DATE"

I am volunteering a few hours this weekend at the Revolving Museum during the Folk Festival… I hope that some or all of you will be willing to give the hard-working people at TRM a hour or two of your time this weekend… just think if you don’t have your own youngsters (I have an “oldster” now) this is a great excuse to hang around and play with all the good kid stuff.

We all enjoy this event so much (well, most of us) please call Elaina at TRM and give her an hour of your time.

And one other thing… tomorrow, Wednesday, come meet at Caffe’ Paradiso at 7:30 PM and make a tour of ArtWalk windows. Thank you to everyone who contributed to LDNA so we could sponsor a window again this year.

Cafe Aiello

I just read this one from Kathleen Pierce at the SUN

Breaking news: Sign on the Gorham Street cafe today says “had to close store.” What? I just bought some killer tatoosh beans on Sat. and there was no inkling the cafe was about to shutter. I even chatted w/ the owner Aaron. Now that I think about it, he seemed a little down. I blamed it on being overworked, but maybe he was on the way out. Anyone know anything?Im headed over there now to find out. If this is true (and he’s not taking an abrupt vaca) it’s a big loss to the downtown eating/drinking/cafe scene. Im pissed.
Update: It’s true. No vaca for Aiello. The owner was behind on rent. Look for my story in tomorrow’s sun. Now where can we go for our velvet foam lattes?


I just think I’m going to cry… where will I get coffee…what is a Starbucks junky to do in Lowell?
How can it be that Lowell can support about 1,000 Dunkin’ Donuts, but not one or two really good coffee shops?

Lowell Folk Festival

Lowell Folk Festival is next weekend, July 25-27th.
www.lowellfolkfestival.org
There is not much that has not been said about The Lowell Folk Festival…it’s fabulous!
But as a reminder to people who live downtown and complain every year about all the hassles…you still have time to get out of town.
For the rest of us…looking forward to another excellent year!

JAMFLIP

Since I was out-of-town, I missed the June meeting, I lifted this from the JAMBRA meeting notes.

A facade improvement program for the JAM neighborhood has been adopted. Called the JAM Flip Program, the city will provide a matching grant in amounts up to $25,000 for facade and landscape improvement. Information available at the DPD website: http://www.lowellma.gov/depts/dpd/projects/jam/JAMFLIP

Having talked to a few business owners in the JAM area who really wanted to improve the exterior of their spaces but lacked the funding, this is an exceptional idea. Since much of the JAM area is within an historic district, regulation requirements can dramatically increase the cost of an improvements.
During this year’s “Neighborhood Clean-Up Day” there was an overwhelming turn-out of volunteers in the JAM area. Many contractors, landscapers, donated time and materials to clean-up the area. For anyone who doesn’t get to Middlesex St. every morning, Tim Shanahan leads a group of volunteers, many from the Lowell Transitional Living Center, in keeping the area clean. It’s a wonderful statement about the future of the neighborhood.
You can get more at the JAMBRA wiki page.
http://jambra.wetpaint.com/