Health & Fitness

Dead Fish, Odor In Charles After Suspected 'Discharge' | Patch PM

Also: Cybercriminals attack cops | Doctors try to reattach car crash victim's arm | Cape COVID cluster grows | Eat Mass | More

The Charles River, seen from Route 109 in Medfield, where a possible discharge has been detected.
The Charles River, seen from Route 109 in Medfield, where a possible discharge has been detected. (Google Maps)

TEWKSBURY, MA — It's Thursday, July 22. Here's what you should know this afternoon:

  • State and local officials are investigating an environmental incident along the Charles River that has killed fish and left an oily sheen and "noxious" odor emanating from the water.
  • A 16-year-old Lowell resident and a 19-year-old Dracut resident were held without bail Tuesday after their arraignment on murder charges.
  • Dave's Hot Chicken, which previously said it would open 10 Boston-area stores, doubled that plan to 20 on Wednesday.

Scroll down for more on those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.


Today's Top Story: No Loving That Dirty Water

State and local officials are investigating an environmental incident along the Charles River between Medfield and Natick that has killed fish and left an oily sheen and "noxious" odor emanating from the water.

Find out what's happening in Tewksburywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The Charles River Watershed Association (CRWA) first reported the incident Wednesday. State officials are investigating if there has been a discharge into the water, according to CRWA.

The Natick Public Works Department said it investigated town-owned wastewater facilities and didn't find anything abnormal. DPW contacted the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority for further investigation.

Find out what's happening in Tewksburywith free, real-time updates from Patch.


Thursday's Other Top Stories

Doctors trying to save man's arm: Massachusetts State Police are investigating after a serious single-car crash on the ramp from Route 95 north to Route 128 north in Canton Wednesday night sent a man to the hospital. Troopers say they got to the scene around 1:25 a.m. Thursday morning, where they found a 28-year-old driver from Randolph suffering serious injuries, with his left arm amputated in the crash. A Trooper applied a tourniquet to the man, who was transported by ambulance to Boston Medical Center with life-threatening injuries. Emergency crews located the man's arm and rushed it to BMC.

No bail for teens accused of killing: A 16-year-old Lowell resident and a 19-year-old Dracut resident were held without bail Tuesday after their arraignment on murder charges. Christian Lemay, 19 of Dracut, and Braedyn Baraby, 16 of Lowell, are charged in connection to the October death of Adrian Kimborowicz, of Dracut.

No injuries in Natick standoff: Natick police took a man into custody Wednesday afternoon after a brief standoff near a North Avenue home. According to Natick Lt. Cara Rossi, police went to the home after a 911 call made around 1:30 p.m. about a disturbance. A woman there told police a man involved in the incident had gone inside the home. The man barricaded himself inside the home and refused to leave for almost 90 minutes, Rossi said. He eventually surrendered with no injuries involved.


Eat fresh: Patch's 2021 Massachusetts Farmers Market Guide


Picture This

Cleared for takeoff: Tailwind Air, a New York-based airline, will be the first to bring commercial seaplane services to Boston Harbor in two weeks. The Federal Aviation Administration gave Tailwind its final approval for the Boston to Manhattan flights last week.Tailwind says one-way fares will cost anywhere from $395 to $795, and trips will take 75-90 minutes from port to port. (Shutterstock)


They Said It

"This event has not halted our ability to respond to emergency calls, patrol the Brockton community, or perform our vital policing functions. We have no reason to believe this was a targeted attack."

  • Brockton Mayor Robert F. Sullivan. The city disclosed that a cyberattack targeted the Brockton Police Department.


In Case You Missed It

State not bringing back coronavirus restrictions: "We're not looking at changing any of our existing rules or policies," Gov. Charlie Baker said in a Thursday morning news conference in Sandwich, less than 30 miles from the site of the largest COVID-19 outbreak in months. Baker cited the efficacy of vaccines as to why things will stay the way there are — at least for now. "The vaccines are overwhelmingly effective," he said.

Muffin recall: Several kinds of muffins sold at Stop & Shop, Walmart and 7-Elevan in Massachusetts have been recalled after it was discovered the items may have listeria contamination. The voluntary recall was issued by Give and Go Prepared Foods and shared Tuesday by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. It affects 26 different kinds of ready-to-eat muffins sold at 7-Eleven, Stop & Shop, Walmart or Sam's Club.

Cape restaurant owner talks about rude customers on national TV: A Cape Cod restaurant owner remains fed up after unruly customers forced her to temporarily close her restaurant after they berated staff to the point some employees cried. And now, she's using the incident to draw national attention to a post pandemic trend of impatient customers verbally abusing workers at understaffed eateries. Brandi Felt Castellano, the co-owner of Apt Cape Cod in Brewster, went on MSNBC and shared her frustration with anchor Stephanie Ruhle, about what Castellano calls the worst customer behavior in 20 years.


By The Numbers

256: The number of cases linked to the Cape Cod coronavirus cluster that started in Provincetown over the 4th of July holiday weekend.


Eat Mass: Is Massachusetts Ready For Nashville Hot Chicken?

Eat Mass is Patch's weekly round up of food and restaurant news in Massachusetts. Click for more, including:

  • Dave's Hot Chicken, which previously said it would open 10 Boston-area stores, doubled that plan to 20 on Wednesday.
  • A Cape Cod restaurant owner remains fed up after unruly customers forced her to temporarily close her restaurant after they berated staff to the point some employees cried.
  • A look at the long-lasting changes the coronavirus pandemic brought to the Massachusetts restaurant industry.

Have a food news tip, question or suggestion? Email [email protected]. Want to make sure you don't miss each week's roundup? Sign up for our newsletter and get it delivered every weekend. It's free!


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.