Drury Senior's Winning Essay Earns $1,000 Award

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Luke Grant
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Drury High School senior Luke Grant earned a $1,000 award for his production technology classroom after submitting an essay to Woodshop News.
 
The December issue of the woodworking magazine invited high school and college students to write about the products they would create with a Laguna Tools computer numerical control machine — a computerized woodworking machine. Grant wrote that he would use a CNC machine to create molds to shape fiberglass or carbon fiber into body panels for an entry in the Tour De Sol, a rally for solar power vehicles.
 
"The woodworking classes at Drury High School participate every year in community service learning projects. I'm told they'll use the award to fix some shop equipment that had been idled by lack of repair funds," Laguna Tools Vice President Catherine Helshoj said in a statement.
 
In addition, Grant also identified the need to update Drury's current CNC machine. Each year students in Keith Davis' computer-assisted drafting and woodworking classes participate in community service-learning projects using the machine. Such projects included building dressers, raised-bed community gardens, carnival games and sheds for the Habitat for Humanity.
 
One project — a sign for the Hoosic River Revival — was put on hold because of a lack of funds to repair the current machine. With the grant, this project will resume.
 
Grant's essay was chosen from several hundred entries.
 
"It shows you the power that you have over a situation where you can solve it by using your imagination and skills from class," Grant said.

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North Adams Hopes to Transform Y Into Community Recreation Center

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Mayor Jennifer Macksey updates members of the former YMCA on the status of the roof project and plans for reopening. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The city has plans to keep the former YMCA as a community center.
 
"The city of North Adams is very committed to having a recreation center not only for our youth but our young at heart," Mayor Jennifer Macksey said to the applause of some 50 or more YMCA members on Wednesday. "So we are really working hard and making sure we can have all those touch points."
 
The fate of the facility attached to Brayton School has been in limbo since the closure of the pool last year because of structural issues and the departure of the Berkshire Family YMCA in March.
 
The mayor said the city will run some programming over the summer until an operator can be found to take over the facility. It will also need a new name. 
 
"The YMCA, as you know, has departed from our facilities and will not return to our facility in the form that we had," she said to the crowd in Council Chambers. "And that's been mostly a decision on their part. The city of North Adams wanted to really keep our relationship with the Y, certainly, but they wanted to be a Y without borders, and we're going a different direction."
 
The pool was closed in March 2023 after the roof failed a structural inspection. Kyle Lamb, owner of Geary Builders, the contractor on the roof project, said the condition of the laminated beams was far worse than expected. 
 
"When we first went into the Y to do an inspection, we certainly found a lot more than we anticipated. The beams were actually rotted themselves on the bottom where they have to sit on the walls structurally," he said. "The beams actually, from the weight of snow and other things, actually crushed themselves eight to 11 inches. They were actually falling apart. ...
 
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