North Adams Health Board Marks Chairman's Retirement

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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David Polumbo was honored for his 21 years on the Board of Health.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — After 21 years of looking over the health of the city's residents, David Polumbo attended his final Board of Health meeting on Wednesday.

Polumbo joined the Board of Health in 1990 in place of Gregory Betti and has since been credited as being the driving force behind an array of public health decisions — from the removal of cigarette vending machines to last year's "Solid Ground" temporary housing at DiSanti Field during Wilco Weekend. With his last meeting and his family in attendance, his fellow board members emotionally let him retire with kind words and a plaque.

"From the bottom of my heart, I just hope my fellow board members can do half of what you did," Board of Health Director Manuel Serrano said. "I'm going to miss you greatly. I really am."

The board highlighted his efforts to rid the city of cigarette vending machines — starting with City Hall. Polumbo knew high school students were buying cigarettes from the vending machine and despite outrage by many and people saying the students weren't, he stuck to his convictions and succeeded.

"I was crucified on that," Polumbo said as he recalled the story. "It was difficult and boy did they jump all over me."

Mayor Richard Alcombright said the board is behind the scenes but makes a lot of "heavy duty" decisions regarding the public. It takes "a certain amount of guts" to be a public servant for as long as Polumbo has.

"This is not a board, like the licensing board, that does not always make a popular decision but I want to thank you on behalf of the entire city of North Adams for everything you've done," Alcombright said. "You've stood tough for the city of North Adams and I really, really appreciate it."

But it wasn't just those tough decisions that warranted most of Wednesday's meeting. The board members all thanked him for their personal connections. Polumbo was credited with helping the others through "difficult times" and being a "father to the Board of Health."

While the board members raved about how him, Polumbo turned it back on them. He said he always supported and fought for the board's decisions because he knew his fellow board members were being "fair."

As for Wednesday's limelight, Polumbo said he didn't really care for it.

"I did my job," Polumbo said after receiving the plaque. "What am I going to do? Stand up and pat myself on my back?"

But, for the city and his fellow board members, Polumbo did a lot more than his job.

"It's been an honor to have been associated with Dave. He has been a rock when it came to the health and safety of the people of North Adams," Serrano said. "Dave always took the high road when it came to voting on regulations, keeping his focus on one thing — the health and welfare of the citizens of North Adams."

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SteepleCats Fall to Upper Valley Nighthawks

By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The North Adams SteepleCats were unable to overcome a pair of multi-run innings Friday night at Joe Wolfe Field, falling 5-1 to the Upper Valley Nighthawks.
 
North Adams pitcher Jakob Foster was making his first start after throwing only two innings earlier in the season and looked sharp early. The right-hander struck out two in a scoreless first inning before punching out three more hitters in the second, allowing just a hit batter to reach base.
 
Upper Valley broke through in the third. Alejandro Puig opened the inning with a single before James Love doubled with two outs. A two-run double by Magoulik gave the Nighthawks a 2-0 lead before Foster escaped the frame.
 
The SteepleCats struggled to generate offense against Upper Valley starter Trey Sejnoha, who retired the first nine North Adams hitters in order. Nick Lamelo finally reached in the third, hustling into second on a ball misplayed in right field.
 
North Adams put together its best threat of the game in the fourth. Bobby Stang reached on an error and Nelphie Lopez worked a walk to put two runners aboard. Chris Diaz moved both runners into scoring position with a groundout, but Sejnoha induced a foul fly ball to end the inning and strand both runners.
 
The Nighthawks added to their lead in the fifth. After an error extended the inning, Upper Valley loaded the bases before a hit batter forced home a run. Jake Bell followed with a two-run double, pushing the Nighthawks’ advantage to 5-0.
 
The SteepleCats answered with another opportunity in the bottom half of the inning. Shawn Stephenson and Owen Arias recorded back-to-back infield singles, and a walk to Evan Meier loaded the bases with two outs. Reliever Nick Tamburro entered and escaped the jam with a strikeout, preserving the shutout.
 
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