Pittsfield Man Honored as Rotary's Paul Harris Fellow

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Vincent Marinaro of Pittsfield was named a Paul Harris Fellow at the annual Pittsfield Rotary dinner.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Pittsfield Rotary Club has honored longtime community activist Vincent P. Marinaro, executive director of the Catholic Youth Center, as its most recent Paul Harris Fellow. 

Named after the founder of Rotary International, Paul Harris, the honor is presented to an individual who best personifies the ideals of Rotary: to provide humanitarian service worldwide, to encourage high ethical standards and to help build goodwill and peace in the world.

The honor was presented at the club's annual dinner dance on Saturday, May 16, at the Country Club of Pittsfield.

A Pittsfield Rotarian since 1995, Marinaro has been an active participant on the Auction Committee, the GSE Committee and many other committees, including the Golf Tournament Committee, for which he can be credited with its Marinaro Rotary Award's creation and early success.

He has been a member of Rotary's board of directors for three years and served as president in 2005-2006. He also has been an adviser to the Pittsfield Interact Club for 11 years and district chairman of the Rotary Youth Leaderships Awards program for more than nine years. He also serves on the District Interact Committee and, since 2007, as an assistant district governor. He has received the Don Butler Award, the Area 1 Service Above Self Award, a Governor's Citation and, in 2005, a district certificate of merit.

Marinaro's service to the community includes membership in the Knights of Columbus, Downtown Inc., the Berkshire Chamber of Commerce and Pittsfield UNICO (of which he was president last year); serving on the Pittsfield Youth Commission and Pittsfield Diversity Coalition, and as chairman of the Diocesan Catholic Schools and Santa Fund advisory boards. He is a Eucharistic minister in Sacred Heart Parish, a senior counselor for the University of Wisconsin World Affairs Youth Seminars and the mayor's representative to the Youth Council of the Berkshire County Regional Employment Board.

The son of Angelica Marinaro and the late Frank Marinaro, he has been an elementary school teacher, a day-camp director, an assistant program coordinator, a softball coach, a soccer coach, a youth group adviser and, for the last 14 years, executive director of the Catholic Youth Center. A Pittsfield resident, he is a graduate of St. Joseph's High School and of St. Anselm College, earning a degree in biology.

Rotary President Ronald Latham and John O'Brien, master of ceremonies for the evening, presented Marinaro with the Paul Harris Fellow's commendation and the Harris medallion. A contribution of $1,000 was made to the Rotary International Foundation in Marinaro's name.
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Lanesborough Passes FY 2027 Budget, Warrant Articles

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Town meeting on Tuesday approved an almost $14 million fiscal 2027 budget, and approved bylaws for short-term rentals and signage, and for public safety vehicles. 
 
Of the 20 warrant articles, one, Article 7, to use free cash to pay prior fiscal year bills of $941.27 was indefinitely postponed by Moderator David Rolle because the bills were for the fire association.
 
Some 247 of the town's more than 2,600 registered voters filled Lanesborough Elementary School, debating articles during a meeting that lasted more than three hours. 
 
The town's 2027 spending plan is up more than 10 percent, with the main increases from higher enrollment in the regional schools and the McCann Technical School renovation project.
 
Voters approved the assessment of $7,586,284 for Mount Greylock Regional School. They also approved Article 11, which was the use of $16,298.48 in free cash for the McCann's roof and window replacement project so as not to impact the budget. 
 
Ambulance Director Jen Weber is planning 24-hour coverage, which means more staff and a hike in her budget. Article 5 asked the town to appropriate $234,100 to operate the Ambulance Enterprise Fund for salaries and expenses, which passed.
 
Fire Chief Jeff DeChaine spoke to the audience on his articles and the need for a new truck to replace the 1996 fire truck, listed on the warrant articles for a total $813,366, which includes a $100,000 contingency cost on whether a 2026 model-year chassis can be secured before new emissions standards in 2027. If they get the 2026 chassis, that contingency likely won't be needed.
 
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