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The outreach committee for the proposed public safety building brainstorm ways to get information out on the project.

Lanesborough Public Safety Committee Plans Informational Outreach

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Planners of the public safety building proposal continue to grapple with how to achieve an affirmative vote from taxpayers. 

In the next couple of weeks, they will work to create a frequently asked questions fact sheet and pitch the $7.3 million project to legislators. Earlier this year, the Select Board voted to advance a combined police/emergency medical services facility, discarding the option for a $6.5 million separate build.  

The same design, then priced at $5.9 million, was shot down in 2023.

On Tuesday, members of the Public Safety Complex Information and Outreach Committee discussed how other Berkshire towns have been able to pass public safety proposals and wondered how Lanesborough could follow suit. 

Emergency Medical Services Director Jen Weber said proposals in other towns were approved after consistent information sharing and support from the community. Her department has been asked to leave the fire station at 180 South Main St., which is owned by the Fire Association, because of insufficient space. 

"Overwhelmingly, what we get back for feedback is that there's almost an FAQ page that was passed out to the important people in the town, to the Select Board, to the town manager, to the police chief, to the ambulance director, to the fire chief, to the committee, and everyone answered the questions the same," she said. 

"It is just overall and passionately supported, and there was no kickback from those people. There was only overwhelmingly positive support, and that is what got Lenox, that public safety building with zero 'no' votes, because they passionately all said the same thing, and they were positive, and they were supporting the project." 

Committee members cited negativity over social media and beyond and stressed the importance of getting the facts out in an easy-to-understand format. They voted to remove "confusing" documents from the town website, such as a calculator that says "enter your home value to see maximum annual additional cost" and gives home values ranging from $250,000 to $500,000. 

With a $6.3 million loan or bond amount, the operating budget's annual repayment would be $370,000, and the additional annual cost would range from $156.25 to $312.50. 



Town Administrator Gina Dario said resistance to big capital projects like this is not unique to Lanesborough, "It's just that the other towns have done something to get it over the line." 

"They are pounding pavement. They're getting call lists. They're kind of rallying their neighbors and saying, 'Look, you call these 10 people. You call these 10 people. You call these 10 people,'" she said. 

"It's gritty but anecdotally that is what I understand is getting people over the line at that moment, because you're trying to outweigh that minority that tend to be very vocal, very perhaps more anti." 

At the beginning of the meeting, committee member Preston Repenning suggested that they combine the special town meeting with a fun musical event, explaining, "This is either play to win or have it go by the wayside." 

Dario pointed out that, if approved at the special town meeting, the public safety proposal would go to a subsequent ballot. The planners agreed to look into the legal and practical constraints around the idea. 

Funding is the obvious barrier for town voters. Chair Mark Seigers said if they could get another $2.5 million, "We wouldn't be doing all this." The committee agreed that conversations must be had with state Sen. Paul Mark and state Rep. John Barrett III about possible state and federal funding. 

"The process here is either we find new money, additional money, or we convince a bunch of people without the resources, to do it the way we professionally do it, that it's in their best interest to support the project," he said. 

"And my experience in Lanesborough is that it tends to be a lack of community vision. It tends to be a focus on what my tax bill is, rather than what you're getting from it." 


Tags: public safety buildings,   

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Soccer Hall of Fame Adds Members, Awards Scholarships

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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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