Best Buy In Berkshire Mall To Close At The End of October

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Best Buy at the Berkshire Mall will close.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Best Buy at the Berkshire Mall will close at the end of October.
 
The retail company informed employees on Sunday that it will not renew the lease for the location, which will leave 63 employees jobless.
 
"The location lease was up for renewal and we made the business decision not to renew," said Best Buy Spokeswoman Carly Charlson on Monday morning.
 
Charlson said the company opts to close stores generally based on increasing lease costs, low sales or the strength of the retail center the store is located in. Charlson didn't specify what factors led to this particular store's decision.
 
"We don't take decisions like this lightly," Charlson said.
 
The Berkshire Mall location, which opened in August of 2002, employed 28 full-time employees and 35 part-timers. Charlson said employees will have an option to be hired at other stores such as ones in Albany or Holyoke and others will be eligible for severance packages. The store's last day will be on Oct. 31 and it hasn't been determined if there will be a close out sale or if the inventory will be moved to another store.
 
Charlson said there are no plans right now to open another location in the Berkshires.
 
The company closes or moves stores on an ongoing basis; in addition to the Berkshire Mall location, the store in Hadley is also slated to close. Customers can now either go to the other stores or receive service online. The closest stores to the Berkshires are in Holyoke as well as in Albany, N.Y., at Crossgates Mall.
 
The Lanesborough location was spared from closing just three years ago when the company closed some 50 stores nationally. The store is one of the largest in the Berkshire Mall so its closure leaves a hole. Representatives from the Berkshire Mall have not yet returned a request for comment about the store's impact on the mall.

Tags: Berkshire Mall,   big box retailer,   

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Pittsfield Public Schools Hold Unified Game Day

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Kids get a kick out of the Pittsfield Fire Department's Sparky. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Pittsfield Public School children united on Friday morning to take part in the district's third annual Unified Game Day. 
 
The event brought together not just the district's special needs children and mainstreaming students but also their families, administrators, and staff, all participating in a daylong Special Olympics event at Clapp Park. 
 
"That inclusivity is something that's so important. It's such an important part of the Pittsfield Public Schools. It's a chance to celebrate the diversity of our students and that each student and staff member has so much to offer together," Superintendent Joseph Curtis said. 
 
"And then certainly the impact on our entire community as we are making every effort to diversify our school attendance districts, and this is certainly an opportunity to showcase how important that is."
 
The event featured several activities for kids, including soccer, softball catching, lacrosse, and long jump. The Fire Department also brought Sparky, the robotic firehouse dog, and handed out firefighter caps. 
 
The children danced, ran, laughed, played, ate lunch under the warm sun, and cooled off to the water sprayed by Sparky's fire hose. 
 
They kicked off the event with a gathering in the park's front baseball field. More than 400 students gathered in a circle to show off their classroom posters, which they made signifying their schools.
 
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