The Al Nelson Friendship Center Food Pantry is planning to move into the warehouse of the former Aubuchon's on Union Street once renovations are completed.
North Adams Planners Gives Thumbs Up to Food Pantry Relocation
The Planning Board on Monday unanimously approved the Northern Berkshire Interfaith Action Initiative's application to relocate to the store's warehouse from Eagle Street, where it has operated for 13 years.
The initiative says the food pantry is the largest in North Berkshire and serves an average of 123 households across Adams, Cheshire, Clarksburg, Florida, North Adams and Savoy. There are no eligibility requirements. In addition to food, the Friendship Center provides diapers, books and provides space for community agencies to do outreach on pantry days.
The pantry's current location at 45 Eagle St. is 1,200-square-foot space and it's been utilizing the Eagle Street Room of First Baptist Church for sign-ins. In contrast, the former hardware store has 3,500-square-foot space on the first floor of the north end, which will enable the food pantry to conduct both sign-ins of guests and distribution in one site, a longtime goal. It does not include the storefront section of the building.
Pantry officials say both properties are owned by Skip Barry (the Union Street property is listed as being owned by Guity Valizadeh and Natalie Barry since 2019). The new location will need to undergo renovations before it can open.
The food pantry started operating in February 2011 in a 720-square-foot space at 43 Eagle St. then moved next door in May 2015.
In addition to consolidating the entire food distribution process in one site, the larger facility would allow for office space, room for more services, and more room for food storage. The all-volunteer organization plans to conduct a capital campaign to fund its investment.
Board member Lisa Blackmer said her office is directly across the street from the new location and she saw no problems with traffic, since most of it would occur during limited times of operation compared to the hardware store.
"I agree, if you can pull it off on Eagle Street without people noticing, I'm pretty sure the parking on Union Street is going to be a breeze," said member Kyle Hanlon.
Lois Daunis, president of the pantry's board of directors, said the building will require significant renovations before the pantry can move.
"We have had numerous meetings with Skip to outline our needs and concerns regarding the warehouse," she wrote in the application's narrative. "We also had an independent contractor do a walk-through with Skip and report back to the pantry board of directors."
Building Inspector William Meranti agreed with the board it was a good spot, but "there are issues with the building not that dissimilar to what happened on Eagle Street," he said, referring to the Barry-owned 19 Eagle St., the former Moderne Studios, which had to be demolished.
In answer to questions about trash receptacles, food coordinator Rich Davis said it would be up to the landlord but the pantry generates little trash. Goodwill delivers food from the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts and takes away the cardboard, he said.
The board also approved special permit applications for short-term rental units for Enasin LLC for property located at 17 Forrest St. and for Yina Moore for property located at 23 Eagle St.
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Keene SwampBats Down North Adams
By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com Sports
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. -- The SteepleCats battled back from an early deficit and pulled within one run midway through Saturday night’s contest, but a late offensive push by the Keene Swamp Bats resulted in an 8-4 defeat in New England Collegiate Baseball League action at Joe Wolfe Field.
Keene struck first in the opening inning. Jackson Smith led off with a single and later scored on an RBI double by Jackson Marshall. Eli Stephens followed with an RBI single to put the Swamp Bats ahead 2-0.
The SteepleCats answered in the second inning. After Matthew Colella lined a double into the gap, Parker Camelo delivered an RBI single to score Colella and cut the deficit to one.
North Adams’ defense kept the game close over the next two innings. A great catch at third base robbed Michael O’Brien of extra bases in the second, while center field and left field each came up with impressive grabs during a scoreless third inning.
The Swamp Bats added to their lead in the fourth. Consecutive singles put runners on second and third before an error allowed both to score, extending the advantage to 4-1.
The SteepleCats quickly responded in the bottom half of the inning. Nelphie Lopez opened the frame with a double before Sean Stephenson singled to put runners at the corners. Sebastian Rose followed with an RBI single, and after Stephenson aggressively advanced around the bases, Colella drove in another run with a groundout to trim the deficit to 4-3.
Richie Kerstetter provided a strong inning out of the bullpen in the fifth, retiring three of the four hitters he faced after issuing a leadoff walk. Steven Sams entered in the sixth and struck out one, though Nico Senese led off the inning with a solo home run that pushed Keene’s lead to 5-3.
Northern Berkshire Community Coalition celebrated a community hero, its 40th anniversary and kicked off its $10 million campaign drive for a new home on Thursday.
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The college community bid farewell to President Jamie Birge last week as he ended his 10-year tenure at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. click for more
The School Building Committee was updated on the progress on Tuesday night by Todd Ashford, project manager with Collier's International, the city's owner's project manager.
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The Finance Committee in the last two weeks reviewed Public Safety, auditor, Zoning Board of Appeals, City Council, election and registration, Office of Community Development, city solicitor, License Commission, information technology, Planning Board, and vital statistics. click for more