News and events in Pittsfield, Mass.
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Market 32 Campaign Raises $70Kfor Disabled American Veterans10:34AM / Sunday, January 22, 2023 | | SCHENECTADY, NY. — Price Chopper/Market 32 concluded its November fundraising campaign benefiting Disabled American Veterans (DAV), during which customers were encouraged to round up their totals at the register. $70,400 was raised to directly benefit veterans and their families. "Disabled American Veterans goes above and beyond in their efforts to provide veterans and their families lifetime support, free rides to medical appointments and connections to meaningful employment opportunities," said Mona Golub, Price Chopper/Market 32's vice president of public relations and consumer services. "Here at Price Chopper/Market 32 we are proud to bolster 0 Comments Read More >> |
1.5 Million Meals Donated to Food Banks from Big Y08:00AM / Sunday, January 22, 2023 | | SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — Big Y's annual Sack Hunger campaign provides funds for the four food banks within their 2 state marketing area. In turn, these food banks support local soup kitchens, food pantries, senior food programs, daycare centers and many others of the 2,100 member agencies that they help every day. Their goal is to maximize access to nutritious food and other resources that support food security for those at risk of hunger. For $5, customers supported Sack Hunger at Big Y's 72 supermarkets or Table & Vine Fine Wines and Liquors. Every $5 donation brings 10 meals to those in need of support. Big Y's Sack Hunger campaign started in 0 Comments Read More >> |
Crosby Students Have Winning Name for MassDOT Snowplow04:29PM / Saturday, January 21, 2023 | |
The name will be a decal on the side of the truck this winter season. PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Look out for the Flurry Fighter this winter season. The name submitted by fourth-graders at Crosby Elementary School was selected for one of 12 state highway trucks by the state Department of Transportation. The classroom will get a $100 gift card and a visit from its snowplow truck. The Name a Snowplow contest received submissions from public elementary and middle schools statewide. A selection panel composed of MassDOT employees chose two school classroom winners located within each of the six Highway Division districts. The second truck named in 0 Comments Read More >> |
Dalton Looks to Increase Revenues at Transfer StationBy Sabrina Damms, iBerkshires Staff 02:04PM / Saturday, January 21, 2023 | | DALTON, Mass. — The Select Board this week brainstormed some ways to increase use and revenues at the transfer station. The transfer station was budgeted at $244,626 this year and projected expenses are at $200,487. Although expenses are low this now, it does vary year to year, cautioned Town Manager Tom Hutcheson. The station's projected income is $178,847 with a subsidy from the town of $21,640. Historically the town's provided $11,000, with $7,000 in hazardous waste expenses, $3,000 for miscellaneous services, and $950 for state Department of Environmental Protection compliance, so the subsidy is up by $10,000, Hutcheson 0 Comments Read More >> |
Lower Tech Onota Lake Boat Wash Proposal Seeks CPA FundsBy Brittany Polito, iBerkshires Staff 01:24PM / Saturday, January 21, 2023 | |
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Plans for an Onota Lake boat wash station were made lower-tech after the original proposal became too expensive. This iteration cuts costs while warding off zebra mussels. The new design includes on-site water storage — rather than sewage and plumbing — and is priced at around $75,000. Park, Open Space, and Natural Resource Program Manager James McGrath explained the revision to the Parks Commission on Tuesday while presenting Pittsfield's fiscal 2023 Community Preservation Act applications. In collaboration with the Lake Onota Preservation Association, the city is requesting $74,500 in CPA funds for a 8 Comments Read More >> |
Foster Parent Bill of Rights is Law10:35AM / Saturday, January 21, 2023 | | BOSTON — Long time priority of State Representative Tricia Farley-Bouvier, the Foster Parents' bill of rights, is now law. According to a press release from Farley-Bouvier, the Foster Parent Bill of Rights (FPBoR) was sent to the governor's desk for signature in the final hours of the 192nd legislative session and was signed into law on Wednesday Jan. 4, 2023. This comes after years of collaboration between House sponsors Rep. Farley-Bouvier and Representative Paul Donato (D-Medford), Senate sponsor Senator Jo Comerford (D-North Hampton), and countless foster parent advocates across the state. The FPBoR offers a range of protections for foster 55 Comments Read More >> |
State Receives COVID-19 Homeless Care Funds From FEMA08:12AM / Saturday, January 21, 2023 | | BOSTON — The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) will be sending more than $7.3 million to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to reimburse the Executive Office of Health and Human Services for the costs of providing outpatient care sites to homeless populations during the COVID-19 pandemic. The $7,339,766 Public Assistance grant will reimburse the commonwealth for setting up and operating isolation and recovery sites in Everett, Lexington, Northampton, Pittsfield, and Taunton for homeless individuals who contracted COVID-19 between April 2020 and May 2021. By contracting temporary nursing staff to monitor the health, safety, and welfare of homeless individuals at 0 Comments Read More >> |
Tenpin Alley Coming to Former Imperial BowlBy Sabrina Damms, iBerkshires Staff 06:00AM / Saturday, January 21, 2023 | |
Robert Ireland, in this image from Imperial Bowl, retired and closed the candlepin alley in November after running the lanes for 45 years. PITTSFIELD, Mass. — When one door closes another one opens as the saying goes, and this is the case for Pittsfield's last candlepin bowling alley, Imperial Bowl. Robert Ireland took over what was Imperial Lanes on Lyman Street around 1970 after returning home from Vietnam. Ireland and his business partner, Zigmund Wojtkowski, were always serious about candlepin bowling — a New England version using smaller balls and narrow pins — and wanted to further the sport by getting involved in associations. 0 Comments Read More >> |
Pittsfield Sees COVID Spike in Sewage Testing, Another DeathBy Brittany Polito, iBerkshires Staff 07:04PM / Friday, January 20, 2023 | |
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Sewage testing is showing a post-holiday COVID-19 spike. On Tuesday, the city's virus concentration in sewage rose to 3 million copies per liter, compared to 1.3 million copies per liter on Christmas. Director of Public Health Andy Cambi has indicated that the sewage concentration is the most accurate indicator of the virus' presence in the community because the other metrics don't include at-home tests. There was also another death that occurred in late December, bringing the city's total to 92. Hospitalizations have remained low, as there were fewer than 10 COVID patients at Berkshire Medical Center earlier in the week. Pittsfield saw
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2nd Street Secures Additional Office Space in North Adams06:03PM / Friday, January 20, 2023 | | PITTSFIELD, Mass. — 2nd Street, an organization supporting formerly incarcerated men and women in Berkshire County, has partnered with Community Legal Aid (CLA) to open additional office space in North Adams. Located at 33 Main Street, North Adams, the office suite will be shared with CLA, which currently uses the space as a satellite office. Beginning Feb. 1, 2023, 2nd Street will meet with clients by appointment only. Clients wishing to schedule an appointment may call (413) 443-7220, ext. 1275. The intent behind offering space beyond the Pittsfield office is to bring services closer to where clients live, explained Jason Cuyler, 2nd Street Executive 0 Comments Read More >> |
Pittsfield Decides Taconic Vocational Status Next WeekBy Brittany Polito, iBerkshires Staff 04:47PM / Friday, January 20, 2023 | |
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Is Taconic a traditional high school or a vocational one? The School Committee will decide next week. On Wednesday, Jan. 25, the committee will determine a proposal to start the school's transition to a solely vocational institution. If approved, Taconic will only accept Career Technical Education (CTE) students in the fall of 2023 and, by the fall of 2027, will be all vocational. All non-CTE students would attend Pittsfield High School regardless of the middle school they went to. This conversation started around two years and an official recommendation was made last year. It is fueled by a growing demand for 1 Comment Read More >> |
Pittsfield Concom Ratifies Enforcement Order to New England FenceBy Brittany Polito, iBerkshires Staff 03:08PM / Friday, January 20, 2023 | |
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Conservation Commission has cited a South Street fence company for violating buffer zone regulations on over 8,000 square feet. Last week, the panel ratified an enforcement order to New England Fence Inc. for the construction of a parking and storage area within 100 feet of intermittent water and bordering vegetated wetlands. "Pictures were provided, it’s an obvious violation," Chair James Conant said. According to the order from the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection from December, work involved the ongoing construction of employee parking and material equipment storage areas located east of the 965 0 Comments Read More >> |
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