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Pittsfield Council 'Moves On' from PHS Investigation Report

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A city councilor is ready to move on from his unfulfilled records request on the Pittsfield High School investigation. 

Last week, the City Council filed a communication that School Committee Chair William Cameron forwarded from state Supervisor of Records Manza Arthur.  Arthur determined that the Pittsfield Public Schools met its burden to withhold public records, and Ward 1 Councilor Kenneth Warren's administrative appeal was closed.  

"I think we need to move forward. I'm willing to move forward, so I hope people will support my motion to file this," Warren said to the five other councilors present. 

The councilor said he has tried to be a watchdog of city finances and pointed to the cost of legal fees. 

"If I appealed, can you imagine the legal fees that would be generated by the School Department? And if you saw what we got for $156,000 with no litigation, you can imagine what it would cost if there's litigation, and the city taxpayers do not deserve that," he added. 

Three administrators and two teachers, past and present, were investigated by Bulkley Richardson and Gelinas LLP at the request of the School Committee for a range of allegations that surfaced or re-surfaced at the end of 2024 after Dean of Students Lavante Wiggins was arrested and charged by the U.S. Attorney's Office for allegedly conspiring to traffic large quantities of cocaine in Western Massachusetts.

Executive summaries released in May found allegations of misconduct "unsupported."  

Because the investigation's final report was found to be useful in making employment decisions regarding an employee, Arthur determined that the district met its burden for not releasing it. 

"Accordingly, I will consider this administrative appeal closed," the supervisor of records wrote. 

Warren said he tries not to unnecessarily have a public dispute with another elected body, adding, "I requested these and I followed through the procedure without making a public fanfare of that. You've seen the result in the decision." 


He sees "a lot" that could be appealed and thinks "some of the submissions that the School Department submitted to the state were unintentionally inaccurate."

"The main justification, if you really read that letter closely, was for the purposes of pursuing discipline. Well, that's incorrect," he said. 

"… Two people were investigated who were no longer employees. Clearly, they cannot be investigated for discipline, and no such action was taken. The other thing is, if you look closely at the summary reports, several of those incidents had already been investigated, which is sort of disappointing, because we didn't know that, and so we see that the city spent $156,000 re-looking into what I count as three to four prior investigations by the School Department." 

At the start of the fiscal year, the school district welcomed interim Superintendent Latifah Phillips after Joseph Curtis retired. Warren sees fresh leadership as an opportunity for change, explaining, "When problems arise, people want changes. You want to see that things don't happen again. I see those changes in this situation."

With this, new training materials, and coordination with nonprofit Enough Abuse, he thinks things are moving forward. 

"I think this community needs to move forward," he said. 

Resident Ciara Batory has had similar outcomes while attempting to access the full report.  

In a June communication, she wrote that her requests for documentation related to administrative hiring at PHS and the cost of a publicly funded misconduct investigation were met with an exorbitant charge for labor hours. 

"Yet instead of transparency, the Pittsfield Public Schools appear to be weaponizing the cost of access against the public. This is especially troubling given that the records I'm requesting concern hiring practices and a $155,000 taxpayer-funded investigation — the contents of which remain hidden from the very people who paid for it," she wrote. 

"This is not just a local issue — it is a warning sign. When public officials use price tags to suppress accountability, we no longer have an open government. We have a closed system designed to protect itself at the expense of the truth." 


Tags: investigation,   PHS,   

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Hinsdale OKs Police Department Audit After Fatal Shooting

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

HINSDALE, Mass. — The town has approved $25,000 for an administrative review of the police department, more than two months after police fatally shot 27-year-old Biagio Kauvil during a mental health crisis. 

Town Administrator Robert Graves said the shooting on Jan. 7 is not the only focus of the audit, and it will be several months before the Select Board receives a final report. 

During a special town meeting on March 11, an article appropriating $25,000 from free cash for an independent consultant to conduct a professional evaluation and audit of the Town's Police Department was approved. The audit includes a review of the department's policies, protocols, operations, and procedures, and concludes with a written report. 

"The Berkshire County District Attorney's Office and Massachusetts State Police are investigating the shooting, and we await their conclusions.  As we look to move forward, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, our insurance company (MIIA/Cabot Risk), and our legal counsel have recommended that the town hire an independent law enforcement consultant or firm to conduct a comprehensive administrative review of our police operation," Graves wrote in an email to iBerkshires on Friday. 

"This event is not their focus; they will assess the overall operation. We want a written assessment of our police operation's strengths and weaknesses to help Hinsdale make future changes and improvements." 

He said after completing the procurement process and signing a contract with a reputable consultant or business, it will most likely be several months before the Select Board receives the final report. 

"Still, it will help the town and police department move forward," Graves wrote. 

Last weekend, family and friends of Kauvil stood in Park Square asking for justice. A flier for the standout reads "Biagio was killed by police while experiencing a mental health crisis. Now, over seven weeks later, authorities have not yet provided any updates.

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