Mayor Richard Alcombright spoke with Stamford Elementary School pupils about a proposed skate park on Monday afternoon.
STAMFORD, Vt. — Nicholas Fahey's seventh- and eighth-grade class at Stamford Elementary School made their case for what would be the best skate park in North Adams to Mayor Richard Alcombright on Monday afternoon.
The nine pupils split into three groups to argue for three of the locations — Noel Field, Holden Street and Houghton Street in the Massachusetts city. They discussed various points, including safety, location, price and the Holden Street group even advocated for a green park.
"First it wouldn't cost as much, secondly it would provide a strong connection to the community, and finally, it would be safer than the other sites," said Alyssa Joly. "Out of the top three considerations, Houghton Street is by far the best choice."
The group said there wouldn't need to be much construction and overhead lights are already in use. They also said the park would improve connection for the community, since it already includes a playground and is close to downtown.
"It's location and existing use would just attract even more people if they see a skate/BMX park," Joly said.
The mayor agreed with the Houghton Street group, citing the same reasons and elaborating further on the possibility of collaborating with Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art across the street from the park.
"They're very optimistic about helping and making the property work," Alcombright said.
The Noel Field group explained the location made it the best candidate for a skate park, which makes it safer, very accessible to the community — especially the south side neighborhoods — and would be located very close to the Hot Dog Ranch. The group, consisting of Aimee Dowling, Lorenzo Cristofolini and Brandon Condon, noted that the police and fire stations are about half a mile away and the hospital is about a mile away.
The group advocating the Holden Street skate park stressed its large area, a safe location also not far from the police station. In addition, they pushed for a green park with many trees and greenery.
After the presentation, two-thirds of the class voted that it liked the Houghton Street park as the best spot.
The mayor told the students he's expecting the project to be completed in three years in different phases, explaining the city needs to acquire community development block grants, fully design the park and then construct it.
Fahey's class worked on the project throughout the last three weeks. Their project included a PowerPoint presentation with 3D renderings and a brochure.
"They did a great job," Fahey said. "They pulled it together."
Fahey explained that the city's project was chosen because it fit the curriculum well and that his students will eventually attend Drury High School and McCann Technical School in North Adams.
Alcombright also said he would like the students to eventually present their projects to the city.
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SteepleCats' Late Rally Falls Short Against Newport
By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The North Adams SteepleCats had two runners in scoring position in the bottom of the ninth inning but could not complete the comeback, falling to the Newport Gulls, 5-1, at Joe Wolfe Field on Tuesday night.
The game got off to a disastrous start for North Adams as Newport scored twice in the opening inning without recording a hit. SteepleCats starter Samuel Formus struggled with his command, issuing three walks to begin the game. A fielder's choice plated the first run before a sacrifice fly from Cole Johnson made it 2-0.
Despite the rocky opening frame, North Adams' pitching staff settled in. Tyler Tedeschi entered in the first inning and immediately escaped further trouble by striking out Mason Ligenza with the bases loaded. Tedeschi then tossed 3 and two-thirds scoreless innings, allowing just one hit while striking out four and repeatedly working around traffic.
The SteepleCats' offense, meanwhile, was quiet early against Newport starter Burkley Bounds. North Adams did not collect its first hit until the fourth inning.
That spark came off the bat of Evan Meier, who ripped a double that hugged the third-base line and barely stayed fair. One batter later, Nelphie Lopez delivered the SteepleCats' biggest hit of the night, lining an RBI single to right field to score Meier and cut the deficit to 2-1.
The momentum was short-lived, however. Sean Stephenson followed by grounding into his second double play of the evening, ending the threat.
Newport answered in the fifth. Cade Brown singled into left-center field and promptly stole second base. After advancing to third on a flyout, Brown crossed the plate on a passed ball to extend the Gulls' lead to 3-1.
The School Building Committee was updated on the progress on Tuesday night by Todd Ashford, project manager with Collier's International, the city's owner's project manager.
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The Finance Committee in the last two weeks reviewed Public Safety, auditor, Zoning Board of Appeals, City Council, election and registration, Office of Community Development, city solicitor, License Commission, information technology, Planning Board, and vital statistics. click for more
On Friday, June 12, Matthew Parker will be arraigned in Northern Berkshire District Court for an incident that occurred on Wednesday evening, June 10, into the early morning of Thursday, June 11. click for more
The upper section of Houghton Street was blocked off for hours on Wednesday night as authorities sought to deal with an individual reportedly having a mental health issue.
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