Clarksburg Gathers for Vigil to Honor Sandy Hook Victims

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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The small town of Clarksburg expressed its sympathy and shared grief with the Newtown, Conn., with an hourlong vigil on Monday. Left, Krista Chilson sets her candle at the memorial.

CLARKSBURG, Mass. — Cynthia Schock felt the need to express her feelings about Friday's shooting in Connecticut. 

Dozens of her townsmen felt the same. 
 
More than 75 Clarksburg residents — from young to old to in-between  — silently gathered in a circle around the Veterans Memorial stone at the Town Field on Monday evening. They quietly paused for nearly an hour, their breaths curling in the cold air above candles. 
 
"I was moved by the whole thing and I called North Adams to see if they were doing something," said Schock, who has a son at Clarksburg School. "Whatever it was I felt there needed to be, I needed to acknowledge it on a larger level than just talking to my family."
 
The killings of 20 first-graders and six teachers and principal at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., has struck a chord around the nation with expressions of grief and fear that the same tragedy could happen anywhere.
 
"It's just the tragedy," said Krista Chilson, who attended with Joe Champney and three youngsters, one of whom, Landon, 8, attends Clarksburg School. "I have children so I can relate. It's scary it hits home, even though it's not home."
 
Schock had reached out to a fellow native of the Naugatuck River Valley in Connecticut, Town Clerk Carol Jammalo, and to Town Administrator Thomas Webb to help get out information about the vigil. Jammalo penned the names of the victims "in loving memory" on a card that was placed at the veterans' stone.
 
Schock called it our "rock of solidarity" and invited vigilers at the end to light the stone and card with their candles. They quietly took turns setting the candles in pint-size milk cartons saved from the cafeteria. 
 
"They've got frozen toes but they're troopers," said Chilson after she and Champney helped the youngsters with their candles. 
 
Principal Linda Reardon said the older students at the school connected over the weekend and spread the word to wear blue in mourning on Monday. Because the tragedy had occurred on Friday, there had not been discussion on what the school community might do to recognize what happened, she said.
 
But the principal wasn't sure what more the school can do to keep its students safe. 
  
"We work all the time on school safety," said Reardon, adding that policies will be reviewed once again. "Something like this, how do you react to something like this?"
 
Selectman Carl McKinney said the school had done a commendable job in terms of safety and security, but he and Webb want to meet with school administrators to see if anything more can be done. 
 
"What do you do? Put bars over the windows so they can't get in even if they break the windows?" said McKinney, who believed an assault weapons ban or ammunition regulation is needed. "What's the answer? I don't know but it's a discussion I want to have because children are the most valuable asset we have."

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Toy Library Installed at Onota Lake

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Feel free to use or leave a toy at Onota Lake's newest infrastructure meant to foster community and benefit kids.

Burbank Park now has a toy library thanks to Wahconah Regional High School senior Alexandra Bills. Located along the wall at the beach area, the green and blue structure features two shelves with sand toys that can be used to enhance children's visits.

The Parks Commission supported Bills' proposal in February as part of her National Honors Society individual service project and it was installed this month. Measuring about 4 feet wide and 5.8 feet tall, it was built by the student and her father with donated materials from a local lumber company.

Friends and family members provided toys to fill the library such as pails, shovels, Frisbees, and trucks.

"I wanted to create a toy library like the other examples in Berkshire County from the sled library to the book libraries," she told the commission in February.

"But I wanted to make it toys for Onota Lake because a lot of kids forget their toys or some kids can't afford toys."

Bills lives nearby and will check on the library weekly — if not daily — to ensure the operation is running smoothly.  A sign reading "Borrow-Play-Return" asks community members to clean up after themselves after using the toys.

It was built to accommodate children's heights and will be stored during the winter season.

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