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Dottie's owner Jessica Rufo says she has to prioritize her time for her family. She's hoping the right person will come along to reopen Dottie's.

Dottie's Coffee Closes Sunday; Owner Rufo Says It was Time

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — After announcing the sale of Dottie's Coffee Lounge, owner Jessica Rufo spoke about her reasoning behind it.

"I just decided that I couldn't and didn't have to do it anymore. My real focus right now is where I want to prioritize my time and energy is just with my kids. My oldest daughter is 14, and I just don't want to miss any more time with her," she said. "I have two other children who are younger, and I'm recently divorced, and so there are also a lot of complications with trying to manage running a business this size and be the mom that I need and want to be without any help. So it's entirely personal."

Rufo opened the coffee shop in 2007 to bring New York City-style coffee to the community. 

"The city was just like, so supportive. You know, I came here thinking I'm gonna open up this coffee shop in Pittsfield, I moved back from Brooklyn, and if I open up a cool spot, then someone else will open up a cool spot, and then someone else will and then we'll have a nice, vibrant downtown, it was very childish, but it was very true," she said.

Rufo said she'd planned on stepping back over the last couple of years but didn't expect it to come so soon. She was hoping to hit 20 years.

"When I took over Mission in 2022 that was an exit plan for me. I just didn't know it was going to come up as early as it did. I figured that I would make it to the 20-year mark and then make a decision. But I knew when I bought that, when I had that opportunity, it was one that I had to take because the size of the kitchen, there was a hood, there was a dishwasher," she said of the adjacent space that became Dorothy's Estamint. "I didn't have any of that over here. So I was either gonna have to walk away from my business whenever I was ready to walk away from it, or have an opportunity to sell it, because it'd be much more marketable with a real kitchen."

Rufo also explained that when her father passed away, her life changed.

"The past two years I just really fell out of love with what I was doing. I lost my dad two years ago, and I think that my whole way I wanted to live my life just kind of changed. And I just realized how much time I've given my business and how little time I've given my family, and it just seemed like a real waste, seemed like a misdirection, whereas before, it felt like I was really pursuing my dreams of being a business owner and being a female business owner and building community," she said. "I just feel like I did it, and now, like my dad's not here to pat me on the back and tell me what a good job I'm doing ... So it just felt empty, almost like I wasn't doing it for the right reasons anymore."

Rufo said she wouldn't have been able to make it through the last 18 years without her loyal customers and employees.

"The people who came here and supported it every day, 70 percent of our customers on a daily basis were regulars. Came in like, four to seven times a week, you know, I get the credit, and I shouldn't, because, I just made sure there was coffee and that the lights were on, you know, I paid the bills, tried to steer the ship," she said. "But we just always had the best employees and the best customers."

Rufo said she had two dream buyers in mind — one is musician Amanda Palmer but the one she says is more realistic is Nancy Thomas, who owns Mezze Bistro and Bar.

"Nancy's integrity and her quality and her attention to detail and her wisdom, and she's just like a woman doing bad ass things. And I just feel like she and Pittsfield would be such a great collaboration," she said, adding she was going to reach out to Thomas.

Regardless, she hopes anyone who decides to buy it has the heart and passion for Dottie's.

"The message that I want to put out there is really about connecting with potential buyers that want to do a project like this, it's a really great opportunity for somebody who wants to hop in on a mature business. I mean, I really am much more interested in finding a buyer who has the heart, you know, as opposed to a wallet, and that's more important to me. I don't want downtown to lose Dotties."

Dottie's last day will be Sunday, July 6, with normal hours and will have live music. Rufo is hoping that it won't be closed for long.


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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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