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Pittsfield Parks Commission OKs Outdoor February Events

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Locals can experience the snow-covered Berkshire landscape during outdoor February events in Pittsfield. 

The Parks Commission on Tuesday approved a winter festival, fireworks at The Common, and a fishing festival at Onota Lake for the upcoming month.

The winter festival and fireworks are part of the 15th annual 10x10 Upstreet Winter Arts Festival, which runs from Feb. 12 to Feb. 22. More than a dozen organizations collaborate to offer ten days of events that bring the community downtown during the winter. 

The third annual Winter Festival will bring people of all ages to Clapp Park on Presidents' Day, Feb. 10. It will kick off at 10 a.m. and run to 1 p.m, and is free. 

Recreation and Special Events Coordinator Jennifer VanBramer explained that the family-friendly event includes a cardboard sled design contest, sled races, snowshoeing with Mass Audubon, and a snow sculpture building contest. 

There will also be carnival field games, a campfire, and the city will bring back its touch-a-truck area with vehicles from Pittsfield's various departments. 

VanBramer pointed out that this will happen during the week of school break. 

The 10x10 fireworks will occur on Feb. 21 at The Common. The display can be seen from the public parking lot on First Street. 


"We've been doing fireworks for almost 10 years now," Director of Cultural Development Jennifer Glockner reported. 

She added that the winter fireworks go off when it gets dark around six o'clock, rather than 10:30 p.m. or 11 p.m. in the summer. This means that younger community members can enjoy them before bedtime. 

Also part of the 10 x 10 Winter Arts Festival, the Berkshire Environmental Action Team will hold a free winter tree identification walk at Springside Park on Feb 14, from 10 a.m. to noon. It will be led by BEAT Naturalist Chelsey Simmons. 

BEAT will also offer a walk during the Westside Legends' Westside Block Party on May 23 at Riverway Park. 

The commission also approved the MassWildlife's Lake Onota Family Ice Fishing Festival on Feb. 28 at Burbank Park from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The event is held at the boat launch, and registration is in the boat launch parking lot. 

"It's just a nice family event," explained James Legacy, of MassWildlife. 

He reported that they must have six inches of black ice to hold the event, and it isn't held if there is heavy rain or snow. The fishing festival typically draws hundreds of people throughout the course of the event. 

Roots Rising was also approved for the Pittsfield Farmer's Market, which was launched in 2013. The market will be at The Common from May 9 to October 10 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. 


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Parole Granted to Pittsfield Man Sentenced for Killing Toddler Son

Staff Reports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A city man serving a life sentence for killing his 2-year-old son 43 years ago has been granted parole. 
 
According to the Boston Globe, the Parole Board on Monday voted to release Richard N. Mayes Jr., 78, to a halfway house.
 
Mayes was charged with beating his son to death in 1983 when he wouldn't eat. The child, Lawrence Richon, had received blows to his head, body, arms and legs. Mayes also told police he'd hit his son four times with a plastic baseball bat. 
 
According to media reports at the time, Mayes tried to resuscitate Lawrence when he later collapsed and cried to police that he did it when arrested. 
 
The boy was taken by life flight to Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where he died from blood clots in his head. 
 
Mayes was found guilty of second-degree murder by a Superior Court jury and sentenced to life in state prison.
 
According to the Globe, Mayes had been denied parole five times previously but told the board he had been sober for three decades and had not had a disciplinary report in a dozen years. 
 
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