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The Berkshires online guide to events, news and Berkshire County community information.           
Sunday November 8, 2009
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Sports


High School Football
Hoosac Valley beats Drury in Saturday action. More photos on Monday
Thursday, Nov. 06

Boys' Soccer: State Vocational Championship Game
McCann Tech 3, Keefe Tech 2

Girls' Soccer: State Vocational Championship Game
Blackstone Valley 8, McCann Tech 0
Fall Basketball Clinics

What's Playing


Milla Jovovich vs. alien abduction in "The Fourth Kind." What more do you need to know?


'Michael Jackson's This Is It': But It Is Always There
Movie schedules and times

Daily Digest


This is Jake
He's been lost in Pittsfield for weeks but frequently sited. He was last seen heading toward the fire station on Peck's Road. He's tired, dirty and needs seizure medication. He's chipped. If you see him, call Julie at 413-537-5616, the vet 24/7 at 413-499-2820 or animal control at 413-448-9700.
How Much is Heating Oil this Week?
It's breaking $2.50 but still cheaper than gas.
Thanks to Gabriella Bond for sharing her memories of the Quincy Street house torn down last week.
Send press releases and announcements to info@iberkshires.com. Need to contact someone at iBerkshires? Here's how.

Election

Barrett Reflects on Accomplishments with Capital News 9
Alcombright's Victory Speech

Which election's more important?
Pittsfield
North Adams
Neither, nothing will change
  
pollcode.com free polls

Trying to remember who won what and why? All the information is right here.

Obituaries

Milton E. Pharr, 75
Alice R. Filiault, 87
Lucille Burt, 92
Ellen E. McCarthy, 98
More obituaries
Mary M. Hanlon, 82
George F. Sarrouf, 73

Sales Fliers

 
 

 

Bazaars

Nov. 14

Berkshire Community Church, Richmond
10-4; Crafters, bake sale. Contact Evelyn Goggia at 413-445-5747

Lanesborough Elementary School annual Fall Craft Fair from 10 to 4. Free admission, huge variety of arts and crafts, raffles, food and more. Proceeds go to sixth-grade trip to Cape Cod.

Vendors can contact Deb at 413-738-5349 or debhutton@aol.com or Lori at 413-499-0065 or lorittod@yahoo.com to secure a spot.

Dec. 12-13

North Adams Country Club, crafts 9-4; food from That's a Wrap from 11-2. Contact Sheryl Morehouse at 413-822-3329.

Planning a bazaar this season? Submit information to info@iberkshires.com to have it listed here.

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Patrick Vows to Veto Sales Tax Hike If Ethics Reform Falters

Staff reports
iBerkshires
06:18PM / Friday, June 19, 2009

BOSTON — Gov. Deval Patrick said Friday that he will veto any attempt to raise the state sales tax unless the Legislature follows through with ethics reform.

Lawmakers approved a $27.4 billion spending plan for fiscal 2010 on Friday that cuts local aid up to 15 percent and funding for 800 local projects, according to The Boston Globe.

The Legislature earlier agreed that raising the sales tax from 5 percent to 6.25 percent was necessary to partially offset a multibillion-dollar deficit; the House-Senate conference committee budget approved today also includes a 1.25 percent increase in meals taxes to be targeted toward local aid.

Municipalities for the first time will get a local option to raise meals taxes by 3/4 percent and rooms and meals taxes by 2 percent to help fill budget holes left by reductions in state aid.

Chapter 70 education aid is being cut 2 percent across the board; school districts that fall below foundation level can expect to receive federal stimulus funding to make up the difference.

Lawmakers rejected the governor's calls for a 19 percent gasoline tax to fund transportation needs.

The governor has 10 days to sign or veto all or part of the bill. He's said that without all three reforms he's pushed for — transportation, pension and ethics — he won't back a hike in the sales tax.

The following is a statement released by the governor this afternoon:

I pledged to veto the Legislature's proposed sales tax increase unless the Legislature first enacted meaningful reforms in the pension system, the transportation network, and our ethics and lobbying rules. In the last 10 days, the Legislature has passed and I have signed legislation eliminating long-standing pension abuses. They have also passed what, at first review, seems to be a good-faith effort at reforming our broken transportation system. I commend the House and Senate for their work on these reform measures.

However, the fact that we have not been able to pass a strong ethics reform bill — despite the clear need to restore the public's trust - threatens all the progress we have made. For the Legislature to enact a 25 percent increase in the sales tax without first passing a strong ethics bill goes against the pledge that the Legislative leaders and I made, and that the public expects us to keep, to deliver all three reforms before new revenue. 

We know what to do. The House passed a solid ethics bill. The Senate's bill contains a good new idea regarding campaign finance. Legislative leaders should quickly agree to final ethics legislation that includes the strongest provisions from the House, the Senate and my original bill — including a gift ban and campaign finance reform. Without that, I will veto the sales tax.
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