Pittsfield Board Approves Expansion of Therapist Office Building

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
The Community Development Board gave the OK to Darlene Berryman to expand the office building she owns.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A shared therapist office building on Gordon Street was given the Community Development Board's approval to expand.
 
Darlene Berryman, who owns the property at 20-22 Gordon St., was given approval to add offices without expanding the number of parking spaces. She now needs approval from the Zoning Board of Appeals to amend the special permit previously granted to her.
 
"There is no more than two therapists there on any given day. We are asking for four on any given day," Berryman told the board.
 
The offices are shared by at least six doctors but not all of them use it at the same time. Because of that, she had an exemption from the commercial parking requirements. Since then, a 2 1/2 car garage was demolished, expanding number of spaces.
 
"We doubled our parking since we came to you a year ago," she said.
 
The board questioned snow removal, in which she said there is enough grassy area to pile the snow up. The board also rejected a series of conditions they could have put on the permit — including the need to require a spot for an upstairs apartment and requiring where the doctors park.
 
"We don't need to step in and say designate it because we can't enforce it," said member David Hathaway. "I think the project is well thought out to handle these issues. ... There should be ample spaces available when a client shows up." 
 
The board did say it wanted to restrict the exemption to Berryman's ownership in case the property is sold to someone else for different usage.
 
"We know what you are doing there," said Chairwoman Sheila Irvin, referring to the number of doctors using the building at the same time. "If we give you the parking waiver, we understand what it means. In the future, we wouldn't."
 
Board members also agreed that their subdivision approval was not needed for a proposal to change the boundaries on Paul and Kathleen Murphy's Garland Avenue property. 
 
Those two were the only proposals fielded by the board Tuesday because Cafua Management had withdrawn its application to construct a drive-through Dunkin' Donuts on the St. Mary the Morning Star property on Tyler Street. As a formality, the board accepted the withdrawal.

Tags: community development,   doctors practice,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

BHS Provider Clinics Win MHQP Patient Experience Awards

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Health Systems (BHS) announced that three of its primary care provider clinics have received awards from Massachusetts Health Quality Partners (MHQP) for being among the top practices in Massachusetts for patient experience in primary care.
 
The "MHQP Patient Experience Awards" is an annual awards program introduced in 2018 by MHQP, a non-profit measurement and reporting organization that works to improve the quality of patient care experiences in Massachusetts. MHQP conducts the only statewide survey of patient experience in primary care in Massachusetts.
 
"The teams at Adams Internists, Berkshire Internists and Lenox Family Health have worked extremely hard to provide their patients with the highest standard of compassionate, patient-centered care," said James Lederer, MD, BHS Chief Medical Officer and Chief Quality Officer. "Berkshire Health Systems is pleased by this recognition, which validates that our patients are receiving the quality communication, care, and support that they deserve, which is our highest priority."
 
Awards were given to top overall performers in adult primary care and pediatrics in each of nine performance categories. Adams Internists of BMC, Berkshire Internists of BMC and Lenox Family Health Center of BMC received recognition for the following awards for adult care:
  • Adams Internists of BMC: Distinction in Assessment of Patient Behavioral Health Issues
  • Berkshire Internists of BMC: Distinction in Patient-Provider Communications and How Well Providers Know Their Patients
  • Lenox Family Health Center of BMC: Distinction in Patient-Provider Communications and Office Staff Professional Experience
"It is not easy for a primary care practice to thrive in the current environment," said Barbra Rabson, MHQP's President and CEO. "We are thrilled to congratulate each of them on behalf of their patients for their exceptional commitment to excellence."
 
"Primary care is the foundation of our health care system," said Julita Mir, MD, MHQP's Board Chair. "The practices from all across the state recognized with this award have distinguished themselves where it matters most – in the experiences of their own patients."
View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories