Williamstown Select Board OKs LGBTQIA+ Petition, Pride Flags

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday became the second elected body in the last week to express its support for the LGBTQIA+ community.
 
A few days after the Mount Greylock Regional School Committee OK'd updated policies on sexual orientation and gender identity, the Select Board had a chance to weigh in on a town meeting article that seeks to affirm equal protection under the law in the town.
 
Article 28 on the 30-article warrant for the May 22 meeting is titled "Resolution Declaring the Town of Williamstown a Community that Supports and Upholds the Rights of Transgender and Gender-Diverse People."
 
The article, submitted as a citizens petition to the annual town meeting, cites the "targeting" of members of the LGBTQIA+ community by the Trump administration which is, "seeking to end gender-affirming care and ending federal legal recognition of trans people," the article language reads.
 
The article goes on to reference the Massachusetts Constitution and state law, specifically 2022's "An Act Expanding Protections for Reproductive and Gender Affirming Care," which "protects individuals seeking sanctuary from out-of-state prosecution."
 
The petitioner asks town meeting to reiterate its commitment to equal protection of transgender and gender diverse people and prohibit the use of town resources from assisting "any individual or out-of-state agency or department in furtherance of restrictions on the provision of gender-affirming healthcare or gender-affirming mental healthcare."
 
Police Chief Michael Ziemba confirmed this week that nothing in Article 28 would impact the operations of the Police Department, which already complies with the 2022 state law.
 
The Select Board voted 5-0 to recommend town meeting passage of the article, one of three citizens petitions on this year's warrant.
 
The bulk of Monday evening's meeting was devoted to a relatively obscure and, in most years, innocuous fiscal article related to the sewer rate.
 
But the transgender/gender diverse article was echoed later in the evening.
 
Randal Fippinger asked his colleagues to approve a plan to celebrate Pride Month by lining Main Street (Route 2) with Pride Progress flags.
 
The town regularly displays American flags on utility poles along the town green from Memorial Day through Veterans Day. Fippinger asked that every fourth flag pole be used for a Progress Pride flag during the month of June.
 
"I spoke with [DPW Director Craig Clough], and he said it is possible and not onerous," Fippinger said of the process of swapping out the flags. "We would need to use some of [the Diversity Inclusion and Racial Equity Committee's] money to pay for the new flags. Bob said it just needs Select Board approval."
 
Menicocci explained that while town meeting was asked last year to approve the use of the Pride Progress flag on certain town flag poles — a request that was approved by a two-thirds majority — it is within the board's purview to authorize public displays like Fippinger suggested.
 
Jane Patton, who last year argued against the article at town meeting, again spoke on a topic that hits close to home.
 
"There might be one person in [the meeting room] who doesn't know that I'm gay," said Patton, who raises two children with her wife. "I struggle with a couple of things.
 
"It would be one thing if we were talking about maybe putting Pride flags where there hadn't been flags before. I think Williamstown is a very gay-friendly town. … My struggle is taking down one flag, especially one that represents the country and has deep meaning to veterans and all manner of people who may be very pro gay rights — to move that flag may be troublesome for them."
 
Patton suggested that, as an alternative, the town buy hundreds of smaller Pride Progress flags and make them available to residents to display at their homes. She said that seeing individuals voluntarily choose to support the LGBTQIA+ community would be a meaningful expression of the sentiment of the community.
 
"I'd rather it be a voluntary option for people than we just say, 'This is how it's going to go,' " Patton said.
 
Fippinger noted that his proposal was just for one month of a more than five-month display and that 75 percent of the flags on the poles would be American flags during that month.
 
He said he respected Patton's point of view but asked that the board could decide one way or another on the proposal on Monday in order to allow time to procure the flags.
 
On a roll call vote, with Jeffrey Johnson participating via Zoom, the board voted 4-1 to go ahead with the temporary installation of the Pride Progress flags with Patton voting nay, "because I feel like the town should have an opportunity to speak on this."
 
As for one flag pole the town did speak to, the one in front of Town Hall, that will fly a Progress Pride flag for one month starting on June 1. On Monday, the board decided to let Fippinger, a proponent of the 2024 bylaw amendment, speak on the panel's behalf at a flag raising ceremony even though his term expires when his successor is sworn in after the May 13 annual town election; Fippinger is not running for another term.
 
Monday marked the closure of the warrant for the annual town meeting, and the Select Board finished its process of making recommendations on all of the items it did not get to at its March 24 meeting.
 
The body voted 5-0 to recommend both of the Planning Board's proposed zoning bylaw amendments — setting limits on the number of days a home can be utilized as an Airbnb and creating rules for geothermal wells in the Water Resource Districts.
 
It likewise unanimously recommended the meeting pass a change in the minimum age for a local property tax exemption from 65 to 60. This is a follow-up to last year's town meeting vote on a home rule petition asking the legislature for permission to adjust the age; that permission was granted, and now the town has an opportunity to act on it.
 
The Select Board voted, 4-1, to recommend the meeting adopt a bylaw proposed by William Raymond to ban tobacco smoking and vaping in multi-unit housing (exempting owner-occupied buildings with four or fewer units).
 
Again, Patton voted in the minority, saying the action felt like government overreach.
 
"There is no more passionately anti-smoking person than me," Patton said. "My mother was a heavy smoker. She didn't care. She'd sit there at the table, she'd have four cigarettes going at once. It was disgusting.
 
"My challenge is telling people who own property what to do."
 
And the board voted, 5-0, to recommend town meeting OK Article 30, the final of three on the warrant by way of citizens petition. It seeks to have the meeting reaffirm a policy on immigration enforcement.
 
Citing an executive order President Trump signed on his first day in office in January seeking to deport "all undocumented persons," the article asks the town to reaffirm its 2017 town meeting resolution to seeking to protect due process rights of residents and clarifying that "Federal immigration requests and administrative warrants are not binding on Town officials."
 
Ziemba also confirmed this week that Article 30, like its predecessor in 2017, would not change the procedures at the WPD. Eight years ago, his predecessor told the Select Board that he already had a standing order on the books that reflected the language in the resolution. "[The WPD] does not investigate civil immigration laws, as this role falls to the federal government," then-Chief Kyle Johnson said.
 
The deadline to register to vote in the town election and at town meeting is Friday, May 2, at 5 p.m.
 
In other business on Monday, the Select Board:
 
Learned that an article seeking to fund the town's Stabilization Fund with $50,000 from its unrestricted fund balance (free cash) had been pulled by the Finance Committee after the town's certified free cash number from the Department of Revenue came in short of the town's projection.
 
• Approved an expansion of the Clark Art Institute's alcohol license to allow full-year sales and expand the areas of the museum where liquor can be served. The Clark's chief financial officer, who manages the license, told the board that the change means the museum will not have to come to the Select Board with requests for special one-day licenses if it wants to host an event at, for example, its Lunder Center at Stone Hill.
 
• Appointed Ursula Bare to the DIRE Committee. Bare talked with the committee at its April 7 meeting  and said she moved to town last year from North Carolina and was struck by the lack of diversity. She said she hopes to be an ally for people of color and the LGBTQIA+ community.
 
 Issued its annual Arbor Day proclamation.

Tags: pride,   town meeting 2026,   

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Puppets Teach Resilience at Lanesborough Elementary School

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The kids learned from puppets Ollie and a hermit crab.

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Vermont Family Network's Puppets in Education visited the elementary school recently to teach kids about being resilient.

Puppets in Education has been engaging with young students with interactive puppets for 45 years.  

The group partnered again with Bedard Brothers Chevrolet, which sponsored the visit. 

Classes filtered through the music class Thursday to learn about how to be resilient and kind, deal with change and anxiety, and more.

"This program is this beautiful blending of other programs we have, which is our anxiety program, our bullying prevention and friendship program, but is teaching children the power of yet and how to be able to feel empowered and strong when times are challenging and tough," said program manager Sarah Vogelsang-Card.

The kids got to engage with a "bounce back" song, move around, and listen to a hermit crab deal with the change of needing a new shell.

"A crab that is too small or too big for its shell, so trying to problem solve, having a plan A, B and C, because it's a really tough time," Vogelsang-Card said. "It's like moving, it's like divorce of parents, it's changing schools. It's things that children would be going through, even on a day to day basis, that are just things they need to be resilient, that they feel strong and they feel empowered to be able to make these choices for themselves."

The resiliency program is new and formatted little differently to each of the age groups.

"For the older kids. We age it up a bit, so we talk about harassment and bullying and even setting the scene with the beach is a little bit different kind of language, something that they feel like they can buy into," she said. "For the younger kids, it's a little bit more playful, and we don't touch about harassment. We just talk about making friends and being kind. So that's where we're learning as we're growing this program, is to find the different kinds of messaging that's appropriate for each development level."

This programming affirms themes that are already being discussed in the elementary school, said school psychologist Christy Viall. She thinks this is a fun way for the children to continue learning. 

"We have programs here at the school called community building, and that's really good. So they go through all of these strategies already," she said. "But having that repetition is really important, and finding it in a different way, like the puppets coming in and sharing it with them is a fun way that they can really connect to, I think, and it might, get in a little more deeply for them.

Vogelsang-Card said its another space for them to be safe and discuss what's going on in their life. Some children are afraid because maybe their parents are getting divorced, or they're being bullied, but with the puppets, they might open up and disclose what's bothering them because they feel safe, even in a larger crowd. 

"When we do sexual abuse awareness that program alone, over five years, we had 87 disclosures of abuse that were followed up and reported," she said. "And children feel safe with the puppets. It makes them feel valued, heard, and we hope that in our short time that we're together, that they at least leave knowing that they're not alone."

Bedard Brothers also gave the school five new puppets to use. Viall said the puppets are a great help for the students in her classroom, especially in the younger grades. 

"Every year, I've been giving the puppets to the students. And I also have a few of the puppets in my classroom, and the students use them in small groups to practice out the strategies with each other, which is really helpful," she said. "Sometimes the older students, like sixth graders, will put on a puppet show. They'll come up with a whole theme and a whole little situation, and they'll act it out with the strategies for the younger students. It's really cute, they've done it with kindergarteners, and the kids really like it."

Vogelsang-Card said there are 130 schools in Vermont that are on the waiting list for them to come in. Lanesborough Elementary has been the only Massachusetts school they have visited, thanks to Bedard Brothers. 

"These programs are so critical and life-changing for children in such a short amount of time, and we are the only program in the United States that does what we do, which is create this content in this enjoyable, fun, engaging way with oftentimes difficult subjects," she said. "Vermont is our home base, but we would love to be able to bring this to more schools, and we can't do this without the support of community, business funders or donors, and it really makes a difference for children."

The fourth-grade students were the first class to engage with the puppets and a lot of them really connected with the show.

"I learned to never give-up and if you have to move houses, be nervous, but it still helps," said William Larios.

"I learned to always add the word 'yet' at the end," said Sierra Kellogg, because even if she can't do something now, she will be able to at some point.

Samuel Casucci was struck by what one of the puppets talked about. "He said some people make fun of him if he dresses different, come from different place, brings home lunch, it doesn't matter," Samuel continued. "We're all kind of the same. We're all kind of different, like we have different hairstyles, different clothes. We're all the same because we're all human."

"I learned how to be more positive about myself and like, say, I can't do this yet, it's positive and helpful," said Liam Flaherty.

The students got to take home stickers at the end of the day with contact information of the organization.

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