Pittsfield Council Tables DCF Background Check Ordinance

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council decided that a policy to require clearance from the Department of Children and Families for city employees needs more time.

At last Tuesday's meeting, an ordinance requiring a background check with DCF for all new hires who have contact with minors was tabled.

Ward 2 Councilor Brittany Noto, who is an attorney, believes this is an "extreme overreach of privacy" and will have a disparate impact on otherwise qualified applicants who come from low socioeconomic status, people of color, survivors of domestic violence, and single parents.

"We want more qualified applicants in the city pool who have diverse backgrounds, not less," she asserted.

"If we want to address the actual problem in our schools then we must look to the schools themselves to follow through with disciplinary actions, disclosure, and wherever appropriate, actually removing abuse perpetrators from this field, instead of allowing them to resign and walk away quietly only to be hired by another institution."

She said that while everyone understands DCF is doing its best to serve communities, there are instances where a finding could come out negatively toward someone and then found to be without basis, successfully appealed, or overturned.

"And of note for this council, approximately half of DCF findings are overturned by the Fair Hearing office or could be the result of a non-abusive parent simply struggling to leave an abusive relationship," Noto added.

"Further, this proposed ordinance, as currently drafted, makes no distinction as to open cases versus closed cases with the department, so theoretically, otherwise qualified applicants would be subjected to having decades-old closed cases dug up for inspection, including running the risk of disclosing records involving applicants when they themselves were minors and other potential minors, of which this proposed ordinance makes no distinction."

She admires petitioner Ward 1 Councilor Kenneth Warren's "very" clear efforts and passion to address this problem, but does not think the proposed ordinance achieves that intent.

"I think this proposed ordinance is too broad, has a disparate impact on vulnerable communities, and does not get to the root of the issue," Noto said.

"I think the problem in our schools is going to be fixed when we all take allegations from all students and parents seriously and actually investigate properly, instead of simply passing these perpetrators around quietly.  I do not support subjecting qualified people who want to work for the city to a deep dive of any past struggles they may have had with their families and the Department of Children and Families."

Warren said that Noto raised some great points, "and they may or may not be addressed by the language of the statute."



"And I would confirm with her that I have dealt with DCF and they're well-meaning, but sometimes they come up with decisions that you'd be amazed at," he said as a fellow attorney.

"So I'm prepared to, and I petition for this. I'm prepared to move to table this so we can do some further looking into it."

Councilor at Large Kathy Amuso recognized the good intent of the ordinance and said the council needs to work on it more. Ward 3 Councilor Matthew Wrinn agreed, as "There is a lot more work that needs to be done."

City Solicitor Devon Grierson pointed out that the DCF background check indicates that it would show whether an individual has any supported reports of child abuse and or neglect within Massachusetts.

"The department's central registry check does not include unsupported reports, reports with a finding of substantial concern, or reports where the named individual was reported as an alleged victim of child abuse and or neglect," he reported.

Noto, referencing Greater Boston Legal Services, said that real-life examples of findings of neglect include having a successful stalker, allowing your child to play with Roblox, being unable to re-enroll your child in school, and declining to file for divorce for safety reasons.

"I have extensive experience with survivors of domestic violence and I would hate for an otherwise qualified applicant who has, maybe, a 10-year or more history with an abusive partner that then gets dug up for a hiring committee to inspect when it's not at all related to their ability to do the job," she said, adding that "I just simply don't support it."

The school district-initiated investigation into the alleged misconduct of Pittsfield High School staffers will conclude at the end of the month. DCF has cleared Dean of Students Molly West and Vice Principal Alison Shepard of misconduct claims that surfaced in December.

The proposed ordinance reads:

"The Department shall adopt a policy to conduct a background check through the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families database on all prospective employees of the City of Pittsfield who regularly interact with children as part of their job responsibilities. Said policy shall further provide that current employees of the City of Pittsfield who regularly interact with children as part of their job responsibilities shall be subject to said background checks not less than every three years from their date of hire. To the extent any collective bargaining provision conflicts with this provision, the Department will use its best efforts to advocate to amend the respective collective bargaining provisions. This provision does not alter or affect collective bargaining agreements or collective bargaining rights in effect as of the date of its passage."
 

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Soccer Hall of Fame Adds Members, Awards Scholarships

Community submission
PITTSFIELD, Mass. -- The 2026 CIAO Soccer Hall of Fame induction ceremony took place at Berkshire Hills Country Club on Thursday.
 
The Hall of Fame's mission is to preserve the sport's history in Berkshire County, to honor excellence within the game and to make a connection between the generations that bring communities together. With players who last played on a soccer field in Berkshire County in the 1960s to the scholarship winners at the banquet on May 14th who played their last high school game in the fall of last year, we are achieving our goal. 
 
It is worth noting that this class of inductees is stellar. We have four County MVP selections, 14 All-Berkshire selections, eight All-Western Mass selections and, and nine captain honors, five four-year varsity starters and one five-year varsity starter. 
 
The players were introduced by committee chairmen Al Belanger and Patrick West. The scholarship winners were introduced by Chris Dumas, a member of the CIAO Soccer Hall of Fame committee. The photographer for the evening was Ricco Fruscio. Over the past 21 years, the scholarships awarded to high school seniors in Berkshire County have topped $250,000.  
 
The 2026 Inductees:
Katie Dumas Sturm (Wahconah 2015) was a hard-nosed, and relentless four-year starter for Wahconah. She was a two-year captain in the middle of the field, scoring and assisting on clutch goals in big games. She was rewarded with being named All Berkshire, and All Western Mass in her senior year. She is married to Brent Sturm (who is also being inducted into the hall of fame this year) and has a son Banks and a 7-week-old Everett Michael. She works at General Dynamics. 
 
Brent Sturm (Wahconah 2009) was named to the All Berkshire Team in both his junior and senior years and won a Western Mass championship during his time at Wahconah. He also went on to have a stellar career at Wentworth Institute. He and his wife, Katie, are the first husband and wife inductees into the CIAO Soccer Hall of Fame in the same year.  After college, he helped coach the Wahconah Soccer and basketball teams. He works at General Dynamics.
   
Nicole Gamberoni (Lenox 2019) was an impact player on her team for five years while at Lenox making All-Berkshire teams four times. She was captain twice, finished with 107 points, and was the league MVP two times. She also went on to play soccer at AIC. She is working at Lenox High School while she is getting her master’s degree. 
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