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The Veterans Services office hosts its annual picnic at Friday at the Greylock Club in North Adams.

North Berkshire Veterans Enjoy Summer Barbecue

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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The picnic includes food, beverages and gift cards and bags for local veterans and their families.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Friends, family, community organizers and leaders, and veterans from multiple generations gathered under the Greylock Club pavilion on Friday for the Veterans Summer Barbecue. 
 
Even the nearly 90-degree heat didn't stop more than 50 people from attending the event to support the community's veterans and hear their stories. 
 
"As we're here talking, you can hear the noise of people chatting. Sometimes, you go to these things, and it's a silent room. It's one way to beat the heat, for sure," Mitchell Keil, North Adams' veterans services officer, said. 
 
Events like this give people the opportunity to learn about the history of veterans, which is especially important with the younger generation because history is not really taught anymore, 
Travys Rivers, a city firefighter and veteran, said. 
 
Rivers said about 100 people, including kids, came out on a Saturday morning before Memorial Day to put flags up at the graves of veterans
 
Opportunities to interact with the community's veterans and hear their stories, as well as seeing their graves respected, are important because it connects youth with the sacrifices made by veterans to maintain the freedom and way of life we enjoy today, he said.
 
When veterans return to civilian life, they recuse themselves because they feel like other people can't relate to the situations they have been in, Keil said. 
 
With events like this, veterans rediscover the brotherhood that they built while in service, Rivers said. 
 
They are able to swap stories and learn from each other's experiences and knowledge, Rivers and Keil said.
 
"So, getting everybody together for the camaraderie of it all, it's really important for everybody's physical and mental health," Keil said, who served with the Marines in Afghanistan.
 
Unless technology was part of their job in the military, some veterans won't know how to use pieces of technology that change every day, Rivers said. This is why the North Adams Veterans Services office is so important because they can help with that; the office also covers other North Berkshire communities and Dalton through a shared services program.
 
The younger veterans can also learn from the older ones by listening to their stories and experiences, Keil said, because the older veterans have a "lifetime of wisdom." 
 
There has been a new push toward mental health that had not been at the forefront to help veterans and families deal with the after-effects of war, Keil said. 
 
Now that everybody is starting to open up, the older veterans are, too. The younger generation of veterans can look at these experiences to give them insight into what and how they could live a better life with their families, he said. 
 
The veterans office has held picnics in the past but Administrative Assistant Tina Samson said when it resumed as an annual event after the pandemic it was held in the memory of Michael Hansen. 
 
The Hansen family donates to Veterans Services every year to make the picnic possible. Michael Hansen was an Air Force veteran of the Vietnam War who died in 2021.
 
"It's heartwarming. I think my brother would be blown away by [the picnic." Hansen's sister Pam Wilk said. 
 
Hansen had moved to the Berkshires after being homeless in Virginia, and Wilk said she does not know what would have happened if it wasn't for the North Adams Veteran Services staff at the time. 
 
"The help that he got from the Veterans [Services] was absolutely amazing. It made a huge difference in his life. When he passed, obviously, we had the money. I made donations to be given to the Veteran Services, and that's how the picnic started. That's where the money went to," Wilk said. 
 
"They were calling it the Michael Hansen picnic. I asked him to stop because he's just one of many deserving veterans who should have a picnic." 
 
The picnic grows every year, and they hope to continue to see it expand every year. People donate their time or gift baskets, gift cards, and other items, Samson said. 
 
"It takes a village to do this for our veterans," she said. 
 
The local Veterans Services office uses state Chapter 115 benefits to help low-income veterans who are struggling by providing financial support, food assistance, and filing federal U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs claims.  
 
The North Adams office also has a food pantry that is open on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays for veterans. 

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Navigators Hand SteepleCats Sixth Straight Loss

By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The North Shore Navigators capitalized on aggressive baserunning and timely hitting Friday night, defeating the North Adams SteepleCats 13-4 at Joe Wolfe Field and dropping the Cats to 0-6 on the young NECBL season.
 
The Navigators struck first in the opening inning against North Adams starter Garrett Gates. Michael Brown opened the game by reaching after being hit by a pitch before Hunter Kingsbury followed with an infield single. After a double steal moved both runners into scoring position, Gates recorded his first strikeout of the season by retiring Jay Slater. North Shore quickly responded, however, as Grant Hunter lined a two-run double into the gap to give the visitors a 2-0 lead.
 
North Adams threatened in the bottom of the first. Bobby Stang singled and stole second while Evan Meier worked a walk, but North Shore starter John Hegarty escaped the inning without allowing a run.
 
Gates settled in during the second inning, striking out Luke Johnson and working around a two-out double by Tyler Shulman to post a scoreless frame. He added two more strikeouts in the third, but Slater connected for a solo home run over the left-field fence to extend the Navigators' lead to 3-0. Gates recovered by picking off Simmi Whitehill after a single and later struck out Hunter to end the inning.
 
The SteepleCats broke through in the bottom of the third. Alex Barrist reached base and advanced into scoring position on a throwing error before Nelphie Lopez worked a walk. A wild pitch moved both runners up, and after Evan Meier battled back from a 1-2 count to draw another walk, Tony Woodie delivered North Adams' biggest hit of the night. His two-run ground-rule double brought home Barrist and Lopez, cutting the deficit to 3-2.
 
North Shore answered immediately in the fourth. After Steven Sams entered in relief, the Navigators used a combination of walks, stolen bases, wild pitches and defensive miscues to plate three runs and stretch the lead to 6-2.
 
The game began to slip away in the fifth. Grant Hunter opened the inning with a single before the Navigators loaded the bases. Daniel Leikus delivered a bases-clearing double to right field, helping North Shore push four more runs across the plate. Jake Foster eventually entered to stop the rally, but the damage had been done as the Navigators moved comfortably in front.
 
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