Pittsfield Board Revokes Unused Liquor License

By Joe DurwinPittsfield Correspondent
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The Licensing Board reluctantly revoked an on-premises license after years of encouraging its sale to keep it operative.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The number of alcohol serving licenses available in the city has shrunk by one, following a unanimous vote by the Licensing Board on Monday to revoke a license held by Willard Curtis, former proprietor of The Tavern on 4th Street.

While The Tavern closed its doors more than four years ago, uncertainty has surrounded the fate of its license, in a saga of postponed sanction that has occupied the board intermittently for nearly two years.

"I think the board has to wash our hands of it," said board member Richard Stockwell, motioning to cancel the latent license following an update on its disposition on Monday.

Under Massachusetts law, a license cannot continue to be held if it remains inactive, a proposition the Licensing Board has struggled with, offering numerous reprieves and postponements to allow the owner to sell it rather than have the city lose the license altogether.

The recurring possibility of an upcoming sale had thus far stayed the board's hand, though repeated attempts by potential buyers have gone without response from Curtis or his attorney.

"We have been actively chasing licenses around the city," said attorney Syd Smithers, representing Main Street Hospitality's upcoming Hotel On North.



Smithers said that after about six months of trying to come to an arrangement for the former Tavern license, the hotel business has just signed a letter of intent for a license transfer from another seller.

"You sure were dogged to try and straighten all that out," said board member Robert Quattrochi

The board's reticence to take the license has been seen at repeated meetings since 2012, and in November 2013 the board issued what it called a "last chance" for the owner to negotiate its sale, which included several years in unpaid licensing fees.

With Smithers announcement on Monday, hope of this occurrence has finally dwindled away.

"I just think the license carries so much baggage that it can't be saved," said Stockwell.


Tags: alcohol license,   license board,   

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Pittsfield Woman Dies After Being Rescued From Structure Fire

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The woman who was rescued when her home caught fire on Monday has died. 
 
The Berkshire District Attorney's Office confirmed on Tuesday that Susan Steenstrup, 67, died after she was pulled from the blaze at 1 Marlboro Drive. The cause of death has not been confirmed.
 
Steenstrup was found on the second-floor by firefighters who responded to the blaze at about 6:45 p.m. She was taken by County Ambulance to Berkshire Medical Center. 
 
The two-story, 1930s home is coned off and shows signs of the emergency response such as a broken front window where crews entered to rescue Steenstrup. The fire was reported to have spread from the kitchen and a cause has not yet been determined.
 
Steenstrup was the only occupant at the time. The home had been in her family since at least the 1960s. 
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