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Coleman Nee, Massachusetts secretary of veterans affairs, speaks during a ceremony at MCLA on Wednesday.
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MCLA Christens New Veterans Resource Center

By Rebecca Dravisiberkshires Staff
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Brian Nelson, center, an MCLA student and Navy veteran, holds the big golden scissors to cut the ribbon in front of the new Veterans Resource Center at the college. With him are, from left, Sen. Benjamin B. Downing, state Secretary of Veterans Services Coleman Nee, MCLA President Mary Grant, and North Adams Mayor Richard Alcombright.

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Looking back 50 years to the Vietnam War, Coleman Nee, the state secretary of veterans services, knows that veterans returning home were not greeted with love and support.

"When you came home, we did not meet our obligation to you as a system," Nee said Wednesday.

But maybe some belated appreciation can still help.

"It may be 50 years late, but hopefully it's not too late," he said. "Thank you."

Nee thanked all of the veterans who attended a ceremony Wednesday at Massachusetts College of Liberals Arts marking the opening of a new Veterans Resource Center in the college's Venable Hall that will give all veterans in the MCLA community the support they need and deserve.

"It's a huge first step," Nee said.

Before helping cut the ribbon on the door of Room 309 with Sen. Benjamin B. Downing, Mayor Richard Alcombright, MCLA President Mary Grant and MCLA student and Navy veteran Brian Nelson, Nee said student veterans are the fastest-growing segment of students.

"Student veterans are really unique," said Nee, a fact that offers an opportunity to "redefine" how we as society support those veterans. "Your pathway to the classroom is difference than your classmates. You are also bringing some sacrifices and some wounds."

Nelson, a business major scheduled to graduate in 2015, said he was pleased to see the VRC come to fruition.

"We now have a space to get together, to be together," he said.

That space is a large, sunny room, complete with comfortable couches and television, computers, and a food and coffee area. It is decorated with flags and banners and even a map of the world donated by the Williamstown American Legion on which pins mark where MCLA veterans have served. Sitting on a desk is a calendar, opened Wednesday to April 14 with "VRC grand opening" written on it with bold black marker. The center will provide MCLA veterans with the essential components in assessment and screening, general academic support systems, professional and peer support, outreach, student organizations, wellness, and access to training and campus-based computer technology.

None of it would have been possible without the support from not only the college community but the greater Northern Berkshire community as well, said Associate Dean of Students Theresa O'Bryant, who spearheaded the effort. O'Bryant said she asked a lot of people for a lot of support while planning the VRC.

"I got a lot of yeses," she said "I had a lot of help."

In the end, that's what makes MCLA's new Veterans Resource Center so special.

"It truly takes a campus to raise a VRC," she said.


Tags: MCLA,   veterans,   

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Summer Street Residents Make Case to Williamstown Planning Board

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Neighbors of a proposed subdivision off Summer Street last week asked the Planning Board to take a critical look at the project, which the residents say is out of scale to the neighborhood.
 
Northern Berkshire Habitat for Humanity was at Town Hall last Tuesday to present to the planners a preliminary plan to build five houses on a 1.75 acre lot currently owned by town's Affordable Housing Trust.
 
The subdivision includes the construction of a road from Summer Street onto the property to provide access to five new building lots of about a quarter-acre apiece.
 
Several residents addressed the board from the floor of the meeting to share their objections to the proposed subdivision.
 
"I support the mission of Habitat," Summer Street resident Christopher Bolton told the board. "There's been a lot of concern in the neighborhood. We had a neighborhood meeting [Monday] night, and about half the houses were represented.
 
"I'm impressed with the generosity of my neighbors wanting to contribute to help with the housing crisis in the town and enthusiastic about a Habitat house on that property or maybe two or even three, if that's the plan. … What I've heard is a lot of concern in the neighborhood about the scale of the development, that in a very small neighborhood of 23 houses, five houses, close together on a plot like this will change the character of the neighborhood dramatically."
 
Last week's presentation from NBHFH was just the beginning of a process that ultimately would include a definitive subdivision plan for an up or down vote from the board.
 
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