Relay office for deaf closing

Miss-Delectable

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A center in the city that helps deaf people statewide communicate on the phone will close in June, resulting in the elimination of 62 jobs.

"These kinds of things don't help the local economy," Mayor Michael J. Sullivan said yesterday. "It's a sign of the times. The economy continues to shrink."

Communication Services for the Deaf plans to "permanently close its entire relay office" at 489 Whitney Ave. on June 30, according to a letter sent to Sullivan dated Monday from the Sioux Falls, S.D.-based company.

The company was contracted by the state to provide telecommunications relay service statewide for deaf people, according to Rick Norris, the company's communications director.

The service allows deaf people to communicate on the phone by typing text and having it read aloud by someone from the company to another person.

The company's contract with the state expires on June 30 and the contract was not renewed, Norris said. He added he did not know which company will take over providing the service in Massachusetts on July 1.

Communication Services for the Deaf has been operating in the Holyoke office since April 1, 2004, when it took over an existing contract another company had with the state to provide the federally mandated phone relay service for deaf people, Norris said.

Employees at the Holyoke office earned a starting salary of $8.25 per hour, Norris said. The average salary for the 62 workers there was approximately $10 per hour.

The center is one of the 11 nationwide operated by the company, Norris said. In general, the Holyoke office provides relay services mainly for state residents. But Norris said the office can handle overflow calls from other states.

The job losses are the latest in a string of recent local business closings or layoffs in recent months. In March, MassMututal laid off 30 workers from its retirement services division.

In January, Hasbro Games, the former Milton Bradley in East Longmeadow, eliminated 200 jobs. That same month, Buxton Co., a maker of leather goods, announced plans to lay off 65 of its 105 local workers and move warehouse operations from Chicopee to California because the manufacturing is all done in China. Mansir Holden also announced in January it was closing its printing plants in Holyoke and Deerfield. But good news came in March, when Tiger Press of Northampton announced it was buying the Deerfield plant and reopening it. That same month, three former Mansir Holden managers bought the Holyoke plant and reopened it.

Sullivan referred to the Mansir Holden reopening yesterday when discussing the impending closing of Communication Services for the Deaf's Holyoke office.

"We seem to have one victory like Mansir Holden, then we backslide on this," Sullivan said.
 
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