Dalton Health Board Pushes Recycling Reporting

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Board of Health is looking to issue an educational pamphlet on recycling to residents and waste haulers after haulers failed to report their tonnage.

The company Solid Waste Haulers was not reporting its tonnage quarterly as required. This sparked a conversation with the Green Committee about the need to educate the public about recycling.

"I don't think the residents of Dalton know that recycling is mandatory, so I think the Green Committee is going to do some education during Earth Week about the fact that recycling is mandatory," Nancy Hopper said.

The solid waste town bylaws adopted in 2020, states that all generators in town must separate recyclables whether by taking them to the transfer station, contract with a hauler, or deposit recyclables in recycling receptacles provided by owner.

According to the solid waste haulers regulations, haulers must report their tonnage to the Board of Health quarterly. They must also send out public education materials.

One out of seven haulers supplied their tonnage report and reported who is not recycling. Dave Baumann Trucking was the only one who reported tonnage and described how they report their recyclables.

"[Green Committee member] Laurie Martinelli and I are going to meet with Linda Cernik who manages Northern Berkshire Waste Management, about this issue, and how that the small haulers would be able to weigh their tonnage, and where they would do it, and then, and we were going to put that directly into a letter to give the small haulers, and then we can put it in permanent about how that they're supposed to report it quarterly," Hopper said.

The board decided to send out a letter to the waste haulers with the reiteration of the bylaws stating they must be reporting their refuse and recyclable tonnage, recycle information as well before a formal warning if they do not report their tonnage in March.


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Thistle 'N Thorn Floral Announces Closing

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Another North Street business has announced their sudden closure.

Thistle 'N Thorn Floral announced on Instagram that its doors will close. 

"What many people don't see behind a creative business is how much it grows, shifts, and eventually asks more of you than one person can realistically carry. Between the rising costs of flowers, increasing rent, and the sheer volume of work, the business has become almost too successful for one person to sustain alone."

Owner Ashley Davidson opened the shop at 393 North St. a couple years ago and was selling flowers long before that according to her social media history.

Thistle 'N Thorn sold floral arrangements for events like weddings, funerals, and more. She also sold gifts, bouquets and wreaths according to Downtown Pittsfield Inc. Davidson also hosted events and workshops for those to create their own arrangements. 

"While this chapter is closing, I want to be very clear about something. This is not the end for me," Davidson wrote on Instagram.

"I'm incredibly proud of what I built. It took vision, grit, creativity, and a lot of courage. Those things don’t disappear just because a business chapter ends. If anything, they’re the reason I’m confident stepping into whatever comes next."

She also said she will be honoring the weddings and events she has already scheduled and plans to offer more workshops.

 
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