House Bill Earmarks Half-Million for Bike Path

By Justin SaldoiBerkshires Intern
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PITTSFIELD — The $500,000 earmarked for a southern extension of the Ashuwillticook Rail Trail may be just enough to kick start the long-awaited project.

"It's a step in the right direction, but there is still a lot of work left to do," said Marjorie Cohan, president of the Berkshire Bike Path Council, on Friday. "Development issues such as swamps and wetlands go through that area and the earmark will help pay for appraisals and feasibility studies that are difficult to secure specific types of funding for."

The money for the extension from the Berkshire Mall to Crane Avenue is in the $1.5 billion transportation bill that just passed the House of Representatives. It still has to get by the Senate and the governor.

That part of the trail lies in the district of state Rep. Denis E. Guyer who described it as "an excellent opportunity to help extend a very popular and heavily used recreational asset."

"By finally extending the trail into Pittsfield we will allow easier access to a wider community and also enhance the existing trail with an extension," said the Dalton Democrat in a press release announcing the passage.

Situated between Mount Greylock and the Hoosac Mountains, the rail trail takes its name from an American Indian word meaning "the pleasant river between the hills" and is aptly known by locals and visitors to the Berkshires for its scenic views.

Beginning in Lanesborough, the popular 11.2-mile trail parallels Route 8 through Cheshire into Adams following the railroad corridor developed by the Pittsfield & North Adams Railroad in 1845. Another extension for the trail is planned to begin at its terminus at the Discover the Berkshires Visitor Center north to Lime Street, with a possible spur toward Mount Greylock. Planning for a leg in Lenox is complete.

Path advocates envision a trail system that will eventually span most of the length of the county, north to south. Last year, the project received a grant for technical assistance from the National Park Service.


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The Pittsfield section of the trail, which would link the city to Lenox, has come under some fire in past years from residents along Williams Street, concerned about the trail running behind their properties.

The city expects to build the trail in three phases. The funding in the transportation bill only covers the first phase of the southern leg along the rail line from the Lanesborough town line to Crane Avenue, behind the Allendale Shopping Center.

In order for any development to begin, negotiations must be completed with the Housatonic Railroad to purchase the additional 1.5 miles of land the rail trail would run over.

Nevertheless, rail trail supporters say the funding is a step along the right path.

"This $500,000 will be a great help in the expansion of the Ashuwillticook Rail Trail and is wholly supported by the city of Pittsfield," said James McGrath, program manager for the Pittsfield Department of Park, Open Space, and Natural Resources.
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North Adams Man Indicted on Murder, Arson Charges

Staff Reports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Darius Hazard was arraigned in Berkshire Superior Court on Thursday on two counts of first-degree murder related to deaths of his parents last November. 
 
Hazard, 44, pleaded not guilty to the charges and to a third charge of arson of a dwelling house.
 
He is being held without bail at the Berkshire County House of Correction, where he has been housed since Nov. 25. 
 
Hazard is accused of assaulting his parents, Donald Hazard, 83, and Venture Hazard, 76, on Nov. 24, 2025, and setting fire to the family on Francis Street. 
 
The bodies of his parents were discovered in the home by firefighters. 
 
North Adams Police said Hazard allegedly confessed to the assaults and the arson when he was taken into custody that day.
 
Hazard was initially arraigned in Northern Berkshire District Court on Nov. 26 and was to appear for a pretrial hearing on March 3. That hearing was postponed but he was indicted March 23 on the felony charges and his case removed to Berkshire Superior Court. 
 
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