Williams Announces Local Olmsted Awards

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. - Williams College has announced its 2009 local Bicentennial Olmsted Awards for faculty development to McCann Technical School, Mt. Greylock Regional School, and the Williamstown Elementary School. The $ 5,000 awards will fund professional and curricular development projects.

"Integrating Nanotechnology into High School Science Courses" is the winning project at McCann. Led by Kristin Steiner the grant will support the attendance of a McCann science faculty member at the 2009 Nanotechnology Summer Institute at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. "The knowledge obtained from the 2009 Nanotechnology Summer Institute will allow science teachers at McCann to apply an important aspect of science and industry to the various career and technical programs within the high school," Steiner said.

The award to Mt. Greylock will support two team projects. One, proposed by the ninth-grade teachers, will rearrange the daily schedule to enable students in that grade to have experiences that build collaboration and help with the transition to high school. The other, designed by biology teachers, will create in-class research projects designed to help students develop independent research skills.

At the Williamstown Elementary School, the funded projects are Stephen Johnson's "Crisis Team Training" and Tom Welch's "Taking Educational Technology to a New Level."


"Crisis Team Training" is a continuation of the faculty crisis training from 2008/09. This year the school is planning to develop a "crisis protocol," to focus on four key components of handling a crisis: understanding, grieving, commemorating, and going on.

The second project will involve attendance of a team of teachers at the 30th annual National Educational Computing Conference in Washington, D.C. and who will serve on the school's Technology Committee for 2009/10. "Our students, our tools, and our technology infrastructure are ready to move forward," says Welch. "With quality professional development and time, our teachers can also be ready."

An endowment from the estates of George Olmsted, Jr. '24 and his wife, Frances, fund the local Olmsted Awards. The awards were established during the 1993 Williams Bicentennial Celebration as an extension of the national Olmsted Prizes, which are awarded each year to great secondary school teachers from across the country, nominated by the Williams senior class. Olmsted, a lifelong proponent of superior teaching, was the president and chairman of the board of the S.D. Warren (Paper) Company.
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Pittsfield Council Passes $232.7M Budget

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council unanimously approved a $232.7 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year. 

It is a modest, almost 2.9 percent increase from FY26. 

"I do want to give the community kind of a heads up as we move forward on budgets. What we see coming out of the federal government that's trickling down to the states, it's going to be harder and harder for us as a community to meet our needs under the Proposition 2 1/2," Councilor at Large Alisa Costa said. 

"We're going to have challenges, as we've seen communities across the state trying to override the Proposition 2 1/2, because we have dwindling amounts of money coming from the state and federal government." 

She pointed out that, at the same time, utility bills are going up for both residents and the city, as are the costs of pavement and other items. 

The amended budget of $232,777,720, down from the $232,782,090 originally proposed, includes cuts to the Department of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and the restoration of funds for councilors to attend the annual Massachusetts Municipal Association conference. 

The Pittsfield Public Schools' $86,855,061 budget includes $68,886,061 in state Chapter 70 funding and $18 million from the city. With $345,000 in school choice and Richmond tuition revenues, it totals $87,200,061 and is an approximately $300,000 increase from the Pittsfield Public Schools' FY26 budget of $86.9 million. 

The district's budget will fund 13 schools, as Morningside Community School will retire in the fall, and includes the middle school restructuring. 

Councilors also approved the use of $2 million in certified free cash to reduce the tax rate, and appropriated $450,551 for parking-related expenditures. 

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