Valenti to Speak on Major League Experience

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Dan Valenti

PITTSFIELD - Local broadcaster and writer Dan Valenti will speak about being a baseball sports writer and the current steroid controversy at a book signing and lecture at Berkshire Community College.


Valenti , an instructor at BCC, will appear Thursday, March 13, at 7 p.m. in the student lounge at the Susan B. Anthony Center. His talk is being presented by the Berkshire Writers Room's "Creative Experience" and BCC's Forum Credit Division.

Valenti wrote about baseball in the 1980s. He will talk about how the major-league experience has changed in the past 25 years. Valenti knows Roger Clemens, who is being investigated for steroid use, and conducted the first extended e-mail-interview Clemens ever gave from a major-league camp.

Valenti's latest book, the nonfiction extended essay "Under a Grapefruit Sun: Red Sox Spring Training a Quarter Century Ago," will be available for purchase and signing. It was published in March 2007.

Valenti operates Media Services Group, a company he founded in 1980. He is also senior editor/writer of Marian Helper magazine, for the Association of Marian Helpers.  A columnist for The Berkshire Eagle and The Pittsfield Gazette from 1996 to 2006, he was voted the region's "Best Columnist" in the 2000 Berkshires Week Readers' Poll.

He has written a dozen books, many on baseball. His work has been widely published in newspapers and magazines, and his poetry and fiction has appeared in the nation's literary press and, in his early career, wrote for several newspapers. From 1992 to 2006, he hosted, wrote and produced "The Dan Valenti Show," a daily talk show on WBRK-AM 1340. The show won numerous awards, including "Best Talk Show" in its category from The Associated Press and finalist honors for "Best Talk Show Host" in the Boston Achievement in Radio (AIR) Awards. He also hosted, for two years in the mid-80s, a Boston Red Sox pregame show for WUPE/WUHN radio called the "Red Sox Report."

Valenti has taught at LeMoyne College in Syracuse, N.Y., and is currently adjunct professor of English at BCC. He has been a member of its English department since 1992.

He grew up in Pittsfield and lives with his wife, Paula, in Stockbridge.

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Lanesborough Town Meeting to Vote Budget, Bylaws & Vehicle Purchases

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Tuesday's annual town meeting includes a $14 million operating budget, new short-term rentals, accessory dwelling units and sign bylaws, and free cash article appropriations.

Voters will gather at Lanesborough Elementary School on June 9 at 6 p.m. to decide on 20 warrant articles.

The fiscal 2027 budget is up a little over 10 percent. Some of the main increases are the Mount Greylock Regional School District and McCann Technical School: the McCann assessment is up more than 30 percent based on factors including enrollment and the school renovation project, and Mount Greylock's is up 11 percent.

Article 11 is for the town to vote to approve from free cash the sum of $16,298.48 for the McCann Technical School roof and window replacement project so as not to impact the budget. Article 3 is  appropriate $7,586,284 for Mount Greylock Regional School assessment.

Another notable increase was in life and health insurance, showing an increase of about 26 percent.

Ambulance Director Jen Weber is planning 24-hour coverage, which means more staff and a hike in her budget. One of the articles asks the town to appropriate $234,100 to operate the Ambulance Enterprise Fund for salaries and expenses.

Many town departments are looking for new vehicles. The Fire Department is looking to replace its outdated 1996 fire engine. There are two articles related to the truck at a total of $813,366. Article 12 would transfer $225,000 from free cash into the Fire Truck Stabilization Fund; Article 13 would transfer $605,000 from the fund and authorize the borrowing of $208,366.08.

The total includes a $100,000 contingency cost to cover any additional costs if a 2026 model-year chassis cannot be secured before new emissions standards go into effect in 2027.

The board at its last meeting moved the $225,000 transfer to come before the borrowing article, changing the stabilization number. If the $225,000 is not voted on, then they will amend the next article's number on the floor, subtracting the $225,000. This shows the borrowing number significantly lower.

Article 17 asks for the transfer of $80,000 from free cash to replace a police cruiser.

Police Chief Rob Derksen's aim is to replace one vehicle every other year, meaning the oldest vehicle gets replaced about every 10 years. 

He stressed that if delayed this year, the town may have to double up in a future year to get back on schedule, and that paying later usually costs more. The article will ask for $80,000 from free cash, the vehicles used to be funded by the BHRD.

Lastly, the Highway Department is looking to replace a 2014 International dump truck that will be a total of $330,000 and will take two to three years to receive.

Money will be used from last year's approval of $250,000 from free cash for the replacement of a 2012 highway front-end loader that was underspent $49,261. Town meeting is being asked to approve  a transfer of $53,274.85 from free cash and the use of $227,464 from funds from the Sale of Town Real Estate to fund the balance.

Other free cash proposals include $1,200 to purchase software to support tracking and ongoing maintenance schedules of town-owned vehicles; $42,000 for the replacement of the Highway Department's storage shed roof, $200,000 to reduce the tax levy.

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