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Select Board meetings are moving back to the more accessible Senior Center.

Dalton Select Board Back at Senior Center

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Select Board meetings are back at the Senior Center. 
 
Residents raised concerns regarding the accessibility of Town Hall following the board's July decision to move its meetings back to the Callahan Room on a trial basis. 
 
"Not a surprise," Select Board member Anthony Pagliarulo said.
 
"I'm not surprised either, because it is a challenge," Chair Robert Bishop said. 
 
During the meeting in July, several of the board members were hesitant to move back to Town Hall because of its lack of accessibility but agreed to hold its meetings in the Callahan Room for August and September to see how it goes.
 
According to the town's calendar, the board's Aug. 18 meeting has been relocated to the Senior Center, after just one meeting in Town Hall. 
 
The Americans with Disabilities Act Committee approved sending a letter to the board, during its Aug. 4 meeting, advocating for moving the meetings back to the Senior Center.
 
"[The town hall] is not ADA friendly," ADA Chair Pat Pettit said. 
 
During the July Select Board meeting, board members demonstrated that accommodations could be made with advance notice, using the library lift. 
 
"[This sentiment] is the most ableist disenfranchising thing they could have said. Accessibility is accessibility for all, and my husband and I shouldn't have to make plans ahead of time to have someone let us in through the library. We're not convicts. We're disabled," committee member Lynn Clements said. 
 
Additionally, there is no parking, and getting to the library is a long way around Town Hall, Pettit said. 
 
"I didn't appreciate their reasoning. I didn't appreciate their reasoning at all …The reasoning was that it's much easier to have their files readily accessible across the hallway," Clements said. 
 
"But if my husband is in that meeting and a fire breaks out, it's going to take him a while to find someone to help him with the lift in the library."
 
The Town Hall has another lift at the police station. However, its functionality is unreliable, committee members said. 
 
Pettit explained how the lift only works when he is there because he knows how to run it. 
 
"It's a very lengthy instruction manual on how to operate it and if you jolt it, because you get nervous with it, you actually, like, jump the chain, so to speak. And then that's it's done. You can be halfway up and become stuck," Pettit said. 
 
Clements highlighted that there have been instances where someone got stuck on the lift and needed assistance from the fire department to carry them off. 
 
When raising her concerns to Bishop, Clements said he was "fantastic, as he always is" and was advised to write a letter to the board advocating for the board to move back to the Senior Center and why. 

Tags: accessibility,   senior center,   

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Pittsfield Celebrates Arbor Day at Taconic

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Mayor Peter Marchetti presented the framed original cover art for the day's program. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Generations of Taconic students will pass the tree planted on Arbor Day 2026 as they enter school. 

Pittsfield's decades-long annual celebration was held at a city school for the first time. Different vocational trades at Taconic High School worked together to plant the Amelanchier, or flowering serviceberry, mark it with a plaque, record the ceremony, create artwork for the program's cover, and feed guests. 

Parks, Open Space, and Natural Resources Manager James McGrath said the students' participation reflects the spirit of Arbor Day perfectly: learning by doing, serving the community, and helping Pittsfield grow greener for generations to come.

"It's not unknown that trees help shade our homes, help clean our air and water, they support wildlife, and make our neighborhoods and public spaces more beautiful and resilient," he said. 

"And Arbor Day is our chance annually to honor that gift and to remember that when we plant something today, we are investing in the future of our green world."

The holiday was established 154 years ago by J. Sterling Morton and was first observed in Nebraska with the planting of more than a million trees.

CTE environmental science and technology teacher Morgan Lindemayer-Finck detailed the many skilled students who worked on the event: the sign commemorating this Arbor Day was made by the carpentry and advanced manufacturing program, specifically students Ronan MacDonald and Patrick Winn; the multimedia production program recorded the event, and the culinary department provided refreshments. 

The program's cover art was created by students Brigitte Quintana-Tenorio and Austin Sayers. The framed original was presented to Mayor Peter Marchetti. 

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