Lanesborough Winter Fest a Success

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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LANESBOROUGH, Mass.— The town's winter fest had a packed house at the Skyline Antique and Event Center early this month.

Town Administrator Gina Dario reported that the event met expectations — and probably even the capacity of the venue at 405 South Main St., the former Skyline Country Club.

"We had a great turnout. We had probably somewhere between 150 and 200 people," she told the Select Board on Monday.

The Feb. 2 event was sponsored by the Community Development Committee and supported by a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council. For a few hours beginning at noon, there was entertainment, food, and activities to gather townsfolk during the cold months.

"Most people came in and kind of stayed for the hour or two, rather than coming in and out," Dario said.

"The Fire Department was there supporting the event in managing the bonfire outside. We had representatives from the Police Department and ambulance there as well."

The festival also garnered interest in the town's Homecoming Heroes project to display banners honoring past and present armed forces members and first responders, with about 30 applications so far. Community members have until the end of the month to submit registrations for this year's program.


This is the second event that the Community Development Committee has facilitated after its rebrand.

"I'm going to give us a pat on the back," Selectman Timothy Sorrell said. "I think we did good by redefining and giving them a different thing to go after."

This is the second event that the Community Development Committee has sponsored since being rebranded.

Last summer, the inaugural Lanesborough Day celebrated the small town and offered a chance for residents to get together under the new pavilion. Bill Laston Memorial Park was filled with food, music, and activities.

The Community Development Committee (formerly the Economic Development Committee) led the effort after the Select Board approved its rebrand earlier last year. Dario took inspiration from gatherings in nearby communities and those of Lanesborough's past.

In other news, Dario reported that the Berkshire Mall has still not paid taxes to the town. In December, principal Jay Jones said he envisions them being paid by February 2025, though he told the Select Board that it could be sooner.

In November, the Lanesborough Fire and Water District filed a suit for more than $105,000 in back taxes and interest. JMJ Holdings, which purchased the mall last year, owes about $211,000 to the town.


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Parole Granted to Pittsfield Man Sentenced for Killing Toddler Son

Staff Reports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A city man serving a life sentence for killing his 2-year-old son 43 years ago has been granted parole. 
 
According to the Boston Globe, the Parole Board on Monday voted to release Richard N. Mayes Jr., 78, to a halfway house.
 
Mayes was charged with beating his son to death in 1983 when he wouldn't eat. The child, Lawrence Richon, had received blows to his head, body, arms and legs. Mayes also told police he'd hit his son four times with a plastic baseball bat. 
 
According to media reports at the time, Mayes tried to resuscitate Lawrence when he later collapsed and cried to police that he did it when arrested. 
 
The boy was taken by life flight to Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where he died from blood clots in his head. 
 
Mayes was found guilty of second-degree murder by a Superior Court jury and sentenced to life in state prison.
 
According to the Globe, Mayes had been denied parole five times previously but told the board he had been sober for three decades and had not had a disciplinary report in a dozen years. 
 
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