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Dalton Water Board Approves Participation in EMS Regionalization Study

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Board of Water Commissioners agreed at its recent meeting to participate in a  Central Berkshire and Hill Towns Emergency Medical Services regionalization study.
 
The study would provide information and be a "very helpful guide" to the future of EMS services and would not commit the district to any future changes, resident Dr. Thomas Irwin said during several meetings. 
 
Irwin explained that there is a push statewide to support regionalization of EMS services because having separate full-blown EMS services in each town is not financially viable. 
 
The study will be sponsored by the town of Hinsdale, as the state does not recognize the Dalton Fire District for grant purposes.
 
With this approval, the University of Massachusetts' Collins Center will apply for the state grant, and if awarded, the center will coordinate the study.  If approved for the grant, the study would likely start during fiscal year 2026, Irwin said in a follow-up. 
 
The study would include the bordering towns of Savoy, Dalton, Hinsdale and Peru. 
 
Windsor was also asked if it wanted to participate in the study but opted out because it was already involved in a separate study with Amherst College. 
 
Windsor didn't want to "confuse the picture by being involved in two studies at the same time," Irwin had told the board previously. 
 
Although Windsor is not part of the study, its call data and dispatch data are available through Dalton's dispatch.
 
The Hampshire County town of Middlefield was also going to be included, but its fire chief decided not to sign the letter of participation despite heavily relying on bordering towns for its EMS services, resident Don Davis explained. 
 
Irwin could not attend the meeting so Davis stepped in to present the study to the board again. 
 
Middlefield does not have an ambulance service and relies on Dalton and Hinsdale to help meet that need. 
 
Dalton Fire Department made six calls to Middlefield last year, which is a large chunk of its total calls.
 
Background: 
 
Irwin presented the study to the board during its meeting in October, but the item was not on the agenda, so a decision could not be made then.  
 
The board delayed the decision again at the end of October until they could receive input from its chair, James Driscoll, who was out of town and could not attend the meeting.
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Growth of Girls Basketball Reflected in County Hall of Fame Inductees

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. – Each year, the Berkshire County High School Girls Basketball Hall of Fame adds more chapters to the history of the game.
 
Sometimes, that history can be traced through a single family.
 
“I can go back to the days that show how far we've progressed in women's basketball,” Deborah Donovan told the crowd at Saturday’s induction ceremony at Proprietor’s Lodge. “Because when I started at St. Joe, we had pinnies -- do you know what pinnies are? They were things you threw over your head, and it was either red or yellow, and you had to tape on a number.
 
“We didn't have a league, per se. We didn't have anyone go out and follow us.”
 
Donovan and her sisters, Patricia Donovan and Laura Donovan-Najimy, all graduates of St. Joseph Central High School, joined the county Hall of Fame on Saturday afternoon, along with Donovan-Najimy’s daughter, Alice Najimy, a graduate of Lenox Memorial, Hoosac Valley’s Alie Mendel, Wahconah’s Maria Gamberoni, Lee’s Karli Retzel, Drury’s Bonnie Eichorn and Mount Everett’s Gwendolyn Carpenter.
 
Coach Ron Wojcik, who led Hoosac Valley to six state finals and two state titles, and Peter Arment, the long-time president of the Lenox Youth Basketball Association, rounded out the 11-member Class of 2026.
 
Patricia Donovan, in her remarks, noted that her sister Deborah played high school basketball in the days when teams played six on a side and players were not allowed to cross half court.
 
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