Pittsfield's Mayor Bianchi Launches Re-Election Campaign

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Mayor Daniel Bianchi sent out a statement Monday morning announcing his candidacy for re-election. Bianchi is running for a third term; November's winner will be the first mayor to serve a four-year term as outlined in the new city charter.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — When Mayor Daniel Bianchi took office, PEDA was looking to bring a big box store to the William Stanley Business Park and talks about a new high school were "stuck in neutral."
 
Now, Taconic High School is on its way to being built and the city won a $9.75 million grant to build the Berkshire Innovation Center at the business park.
 
Those two major initiatives are the start of an "economic and educational dynamic" to bring more jobs to the city, the mayor said.
 
On Monday, Bianchi said those are just two of a number of initiatives he helped put in motion and that he would like to see completed as he kicks off his re-election campaign.
 
"I want to run again because there are so many things that we are working on that I think can really have such a tremendously positive impact for the city, for young people, and for the businesses, that I would like to continue," Bianchi said.
 
"I am extremely optimistic about the future of the city and the future of Berkshire County."
 
Bianchi is being challenged by City Clerk Linda Tyer and residents Craig Gaetani and Eric Bassett for the corner office. Bianchi took office in 2011 after defeating Peter Marchetti by a narrow margin. He ran unopposed in the 2013 election and now, with the new city charter, the position is a four-year seat.
 
"It took be a few years to get my bearings and get focused on some of the programs that will make sense. In my fourth year, we were able to secure the grant for the innovation center, we were able to get a positive vote on the new high school. And, we are seeing more market rate housing, more interest in small business, and we need to keep that going," Bianchi said.
 
The mayor boasts of his ability to bring various groups together to execute a plan to improve the city. When it comes to Berkshire Innovation Center and Taconic, he said he wants to focus on the "nitty-gritty" of developing the curriculum of job training in conjunction with Berkshire Community College.
 
"I want to see more and I wanted to see greater progress. What we are doing at the BIC has a strong connection with what we are doing with the new Taconic High School and also a collaboration with BCC, which I don't think is as strong as it can be and will be," Bianchi said.
 
"I see that we can put together and economic and educational dynamic with those institutions that can make a tremendous difference."
 
The plan is eyed to create a pathway for young students to graduate from Taconic with the skills needed to fill jobs created at the innovation center. Bianchi said he will focus on trying to greater buy-in at the center from additional educational organizations and businesses.
 
Beyond that, he is focusing on improving both the downtown and the neighborhoods. He said he's been able to attract contractors who develop market-rate housing to help young people live and work downtown - particularly with the Howard Block and the Onota Building, which is under construction. He says there are other contractors looking to do more.
 
Meanwhile, he cited the private investment of Hotel on North in the downtown. Next, he is eyeing the Morningside neighborhood, where the city was able to secure a Transformative Development Initiative to kick start the revitalization there. Bianchi's vision is to turn Tyler Street into a "unique, hip, place to live and work."
 
"I do have a business background and I have managed the business operation of city government in the past. I've had experience doing it now as mayor as well as director of administration and finance. I have the capacity to sit down with a developer, to sit down with unions, to sit down with citizens groups, and create a collaboration," Bianchi said.
 
The City Council recently passed his 2016 proposed budget with little changes. The $146.2 budget raised the taxpayer's contribution by an estimated 3.61 percent. Bianchi said the biggest contribution to that was the school's $1.9 million increase that included some "extraordinary expenses."
 
"From the city side, the budget increased so we can maintain services that people find very important - certainly protecting people's lives and property with increases to the police budget and the fire budget. That made common sense while the school department was looking for somewhere in the neighborhood of a $4 million increase and I felt they could get by with a $2 million increase, which many departments would love to have," Bianchi said. 
 
"We put together a budget that is responsible and will allow us to continue to provide critical services."
 
The capital budget does include various items like money for the Transformative Development Initiative on Tyler, planning for Springside Park, a new fire truck among the initiatives.
 
Bianchi said next year will be "tight" and that  the initiatives he began will help increase the commercial base. 
 
"We want to control any increase and keep it reasonable. We do want the city of Pittsfield to be livable for everyone," Bianchi said. "With some of the increases we have going on, with the increase in market-rate housing in the downtown area, with interest from small businesses to invest, I think we are going to strengthen our tax base. By strengthening our tax base, we should be alleviation some of the burden for folks."
 
Bianchi had taken some criticism for the maintenance of the roads and recently Tyer held a press conference saying the city needs to do more to tackle blight. Bianchi said there is going to be a "tremendous" amount of road work done this year and the winter was extraordinary so that criticism is just "cheap shots." 
 
For blight, he said that is a priority of his as well and there is a system in place to tackle it.
 
"Every community of our size is going to have a turnover of commercial properties and a turnover of residential. I think we've put together programs that will address that. We've put together a task force of operational groups within city hall to address those issues. So, I don't think those are well-founded blames," Bianchi said.

Tags: #PittsfieldElection,   Bianchi,   election 2015,   


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Two Men Found Guilty of Marijuana Trafficking

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — On Monday, May 6, Yebin Mai, 32 of Staten Island, NY and Dem Wu, age 52 of Staten Island, NY, were found guilty by jury of their peers in Berkshire Superior Court.
 
Yebin Mai was found guilty of two charges: Marijuana Trafficking in 100 pounds or more but less than 2,000 pounds and Witness Intimidation. Dem Wu was found guilty of Marijuana Trafficking in 100 pounds or more but less than 2,000 pounds.
 
According to a report, on July 30, 2020, State Police responded to a request for assistance from the Eversource Electric Company. The emergency dispatcher stated that two Eversource linemen were attempting to fix an electrical problem when they had a confrontation with individuals at 72 Jackson Road, Savoy. The residence belonged to Bin Huang after he purchased it in 2017 for $200,000 cash.
 
When state troopers arrived, the linemen stated that they responded to a report from a resident at 72 Jackson Road, Savoy claiming that power was fluctuating. When the linemen arrived at the house, they observed severely damaged wires and insulators leading from the roadside poles to the residence. When the Eversource linemen approached the house a man came out to meet them. The man, later identified as Yebin Mai, spoke limited English; therefore, communication between the Eversource linemen and resident became difficult. The linemen tried to explain that they would need to turn the power off to conduct a safety check of the electric meter and surrounding electrical connections. Mai became agitated. He handed the linemen an envelope filled with money later determined to be $600. The linemen attempted to return the envelope multiple times, but Mai would not take it. The linemen decided to leave the property. They called the police and waited for them to arrive, stated a report.
 
A trooper and Eversource supervisor arrived on the road at the end of 72 Jackson Road's driveway. A short time later, Mai drove down the driveway and attempted to leave in a pick-up truck with New York plates. There were two other passengers in the truck, including Dem Wu.
 
The trooper instructed Mai to stop and turn off the truck which he obeyed. All the individuals returned to the residence so the linemen could complete their inspection.
 
In a police report, the following items were observed at and around the house:
  • 4 separate electrical meters in poorly constructed boxes on the side of the house
  • Some melted wires and metal around the meter boxes (believed to be due to an excessive amount of energy being drawn through the wires)
  • Evidence of a small fire around one of the meter boxes
  • A smell of fresh grown marijuana (which grew once power was cut to the house and fans in the residence stopped running)
  • The sound of multiple fans inside the residence with no visible air ventilation system on the outside of the house
  • Windows with curtains drawn and boarded shut
  • A backyard covered in debris from a renovation, green planning pots, and large florescent light fixtures
  • Ring door cameras
  • A small path in the woods that ended in a pile of used potting soil and roots and stalks of freshly harvested marijuana plants

Additionally, Eversource reported that the monthly electric bill for 72 Jackson Road was approximately $10,000 per month, much higher than the average homeowner's bill.

The individuals on the property were questioned and ultimately allowed to leave. On July 31, 2020, Massachusetts State Police, including the State Police Detective Unit assigned to the District Attorney's Office, and a member of the DEA arrived at 72 Jackson Road to execute a search warrant. 
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