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On Wednesday, organizers gathered in front of the Silvio O. Conte Federal Building to discuss why they will be protesting.
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Organizers Preview Upcoming 'No Kings' Rallies

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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Wendy Penner, of Greylock Together with a T. Rex.

PITTSFIELD, Mass.— Almost ten "No Kings" rallies will take place around Berkshire County on Saturday to oppose actions taken by the Trump Administration. 

On Wednesday, organizers gathered in front of the Silvio O. Conte Federal Building to discuss why they will be protesting.  Community members said they were concerned about Immigration and Customs Enforcement's deployment into cities, threats to health insurance and education, and preserving the nation's civil rights, among other issues. 

"We are working to push back against the harms of the MAGA movement and this administration," said Wendy Penner, of Greylock Together. 

"The No Kings Coalition is working with the No Kings movement on events across the county. Over 2,500 events are planned nationwide and across the globe. This mass mobilization is to emphasize the moving threat of authoritarianism playing out in communities across the country, and right here in Berkshire County, we're taking to the streets for another nationwide day of protests to let Trump know that our peaceful movement to oppose his authoritarian regime is getting bigger and stronger and isn't going away." 

From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Oct. 18, there will be events in Lee, Stockbridge, Bennington, Vt., Great Barrington, Adams, West Stockbridge, North Adams, Dalton, and Pittsfield. 

"I am really, really proud of the way in this movement, we come together to take care of each other, to take care of our neighbors," said Jessica Dils, of Greylock Together. 

"As a movement, we are committed to taking care of our communities in these local areas during the most extremely difficult times with the cuts to health care, the rising costs, the assaults on our most vulnerable neighbors. This requires all of us to be more vigilant and to build trusted relationships with the people being most impacted. An important part of the work is showing up for each other." 

The No Kings events in Pittsfield and North Adams are asking participants to bring non-perishable food donations for local pantries, including pet food. 

Eileen Gloster, an organizer with I Lean For Justice, said the people's resistance is an opportunity to come together as a community. 

"Not only to express our very deep concerns about this administration, but also to express the joy and the beauty of our shared community," she continued. 

"Through all the arts, music, comedy, poetry, sometimes some very creative signs, and apparently, costumes, we're able to point out, yes, the failures of our current administration, but also share our positive, inclusive, respectful, and lawful vision of this country." 

From noon to 2 p.m. protesters will gather at North Adams City Hall. 

Robin O'Herin, of StandUp Berkshires!, estimated that the Pittsfield rally held earlier this year drew at least 5,000 people to The Common.  

"Safety has been a real issue. Things are getting very heated and scary in our country," she said, explaining that the event will have a safety marshal team and police liaison. 


From 2:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., there will be speeches, music, and informational tabling.  

O'Herin distributed fliers that outline protesters' constitutional rights, such as those for peaceful assembly, not to be detained without a valid reason, to refuse searches, and to remain silent. 

"Our rally in Pittsfield on Saturday is going to be the safest, most joyous event that you have ever experienced. It's going to be pure fun," she said. 

Anita Schwerner, of the Stockbridge Democrats, said they will rally at the town's offices from 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. "because we're concerned about what's going on, the local impact and the attacks on our rights." 

"A young mother, the wife of a prominent physician in our community, was unable to get COVID boosters for her young boys. Families who might be targeted by ICE are frightened of leaving their homes. Parents are keeping their children home from school. The violence and scare tactics used by ICE are un-American and inhumane," she said. 

"Food pantries are overwhelmed with escalating need, having to pivot to delivery because of the valid fear from our immigrant neighbors of being surveilled in public spaces." 

Youth advocate Shirley Edgerton addressed young people, explaining, "We need you, and we fight for you," because they are our future.  

"Let us just imagine what is going on now: The systematic demise of the educational system, starting with Head Start. What barriers and challenges are we putting in place for our future leaders? Too many. Too many challenges, too many barriers, and hell no," she said. 

"K through 12. What compromises are we creating for our students? The demise of special education. Where's the equity there? Higher education. We are putting our young people on a trajectory where they will not be able to realize their greatness. This we cannot stand for." 

Holly Morse, of Left Field in Great Barrington, said at the last No Kings rally in June, millions peacefully took to the streets for one of the largest protests in U.S. history to declare, with one voice, ‘We live in a constitutional democracy, not a monarchy.'

"But President Trump didn't get the message. Since then, he has doubled down on his authoritarian agenda, turning federal law enforcement and the military loose in American cities with masked agents to terrorize communities, taking away health care and workers' rights from millions, defunding public schools, dismantling public health, attacking our freedom to vote, and defying Congress and courts at every turn,"  Morse said. 

"And now, Trump and his GOP allies would rather see the human cost of the government shutdown escalate rather than negotiate with Democrats for lower health care costs for working families. Meanwhile, his disastrous trade policies are doing the opposite of what he promised, raising costs for millions of Americans who struggle to make ends meet. So we're taking to the streets for another nationwide day of protest to let Trump know that there are millions of us in our grassroots movement to protect our democracy and our rights," Jonathan Perloe, of the South County Resistance, added. 

Rally times and locations: 
  • Adams: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Town Common
  • Bennington, Vt.: 10:30 to noon, Vermont State Office Building
  • Dalton: 1 to 2 p.m., Dalton CRA sidewalk
  • Lee: 9 to 11 a.m. at the library
  • North Adams: noon to 2, City Hall
  • Pittsfield: 2:30 to 5 p.m., the Common
  • Stockbridge: 10 to 11:30 a.m., town offices
  • West Stockbridge: noon to 1:30, Village Congregational Church



 

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New Pittsfield Therapy Office Offers Support to All Ages

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Words of inspiration at Berkshire Heart &  Mind. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A new therapy office has opened in the downtown area helping people of all ages.

Berkshire Heart and Mind Therapy cut the ribbon Thursday for the new office on at 34 Depot St., Suite 303.

Executive Director Colleen Passetto has been a therapist a little over 10 years and recently decided to go into private practice.

"I went and became a private practice clinician after working for years at a community mental health clinic. That was amazing," she said. "That was amazing to me, but then decided a little over a year ago, that I was going to expand, and I slowly started working on becoming a group practice."

Berkshire Heart and Mind Therapy is a group private practice for all ages and Passetto wants everyone to feel welcome there. 

"My group practice is basically designed to welcome everybody in, from ages like 4 or 5 up that need therapy through elders. So no matter who they are, what they're carrying, we welcome them," Passetto said. "We don't discriminate, we don't judge. We like everybody to feel like when they come here, that you know, they're welcomed, that everything they have that is strengths, skills, history, experiences, is valued and is used as part of their healing and treatment."

The practice provides in-person therapy in Berkshire County and telehealth services throughout Massachusetts. The organization also offers individual therapy sessions and ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) consultants.

Passetto wanted to create a space for people to come together and help each other. Through a recent diagnosis, she was was able to bring a different perspective to the practice in terms of trauma care and neurodivergence.

"We work with clients to help meet them where they're at, but we also do it from the lens of neurodivergent affirming, because I am a neurodivergent therapist who has AuDHD lately diagnosed, but I've had it for a long time," she said, using a term now used for autism/ADHD. "It's just as we women get older, some of us are now getting diagnosed because it was overlooked when we were younger. So it's a practice that I developed so we could actually come together and be able to help our communities.

"It's really needing mental health therapy. It needs additional support, but trying to find ones that you know, where everybody can come no matter what."

Passetto said her diagnosis helps her understand and be empathetic to others.

"It's kind of turned into my superpower, so to speak. I use it, I'm very creative, I'm very empathic. I'm able to think outside the box and be creative about different solutions, but I also can understand where others are coming from from my own trauma history as a child, I'm able to pretty much kind of understand where they're coming from," she said. "So I'm able to see it from a whole new different angle and lens as well."

Passetto said she got help from organizations including Common Capital, 1Berkshire and others, plus a grant from the city to open her office.

She hopes to slowly expand and progress her business as they grow. She is currently hiring clinicians and would like to start out with at least three. 

"Our goal is over five years to slowly expand to about between five and 10 clinicians. But to start this year, our goal is to have about at least two to three. Obviously, as we have more clinicians apply, we have the available funding from working capital that we're working with, Common Capital, and the more need of people that are needing services, then we can slowly start adding on more commissions as we need them," she said. "So we don't over grow too quickly, but we can grow with the community as it's needed, and this way we can make sure that we are successful in here for a long time."

She is also hoping to expand her therapy groups and open up different areas of expertise, to offer "a wide range and eclectic kind of types of therapy groups that are needed."

"Obviously, we're going to eventually be adding stuff like grief support groups. We're going to be adding groups for like different things like anxiety and depression for all ages," Passetto added.

She said she is looking into a program in which clients can play a games with others to help them with their anxiety. One therapy group uses Dungeons and Dragons for adolescents and adults who have like social anxiety, anxiety, depression, even maybe trauma, as way for them to engage with community. 

People who are struggling with these mental health issues often feel they are not listened and are unfairly stigmatized.  

"For example, those that have ADHD, ADD, stuff like that, bipolar, other diagnosis, some people in the community may tell them that they're lazy or, they bring things onto themselves, but they don't. They're just going through the same thing other people are, but in a different way.," she said. "And they kind of think and feel that they're broken, but they don't need to be fixed.

"They need to be nurtured, supported, help them to grow, to heal in ways that they have their own strengths and individualities and personalities they can use to do that so they're not forgetting who they are, and others can start seeing who they are with positive support."

Berkshire Heart and Mind Therapy accepts most insurances and Passetto is currently working on getting Medicare credentials.

The office is open weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. More information can be found on the website.

"It's kind of like a family atmosphere. Even though we do therapy, we don't want them feeling like they're in a clinical atmosphere. We want them to be able to sit down like they're at home, become grounded, but comfortable."

 
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