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Clarksburg Hopes to Name School Project Manager in June

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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CLARKSBURG, Mass. — School officials hope to have a finalist for owner's project manager by June for the school project.  

Superintendent Jonathan Lev told the School Committee on Thursday that the bidding materials are ready after consultation with the Massachusetts School Building Authority.

"We've gone back and forth with the MSBA on this [request for services]," Lev said. "It's 35 pages or something of material to outline the process."

 That was slightly cut down from the original document but still includes criteria on a point scale for initial and final interviews to guide a subcommittee of the School Building Committee in recommending a contract. The committee's final selection will be submitted to the MSBA for vote at its July meeting.

"We feel we'll get a lot of people interested in this project," Lev said, adding that the owner's project manager selected will then have the primary responsibility for preparing bid documents for the architect and contractor.

The superintendent said Laura Wood, a member of the School Building Committee, has been integral in the process. Wood is a Clarksburg resident with children in the school but is also the procurement officer for the city of North Adams.

"Laura Wood has been very, very helpful," he said. "Any questions on the RFS will go to her."

Principal Tara Barnes reported that the Parent-Teacher Group is raising funds for Chromebooks to reach the school's goal of one for each student.

The need for the technology became apparent as pupils were taking the Partnership for Assessment for Readiness for College and Careers tests this past week. The tests are taken online, as next year's Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (2.0) are expected to be. As students took them for testing, other students weren't able to use them for projects or classes.

"You can really see the need for the Chromebooks right now, so you can understand the need for investment," Barnes said.


She also reported that this year's test had been changed and students were taking less time. A separate "open-answer" section for the eighth grade had been removed, with some questions of that type integrated into the multiple choice test.

"The kids were done a lot quicker, there weren't surprises," Barnes said.

Lev said, "the format and what they were testing was the same ... but this year, there were less days, less testing."

The school is being held harmless in testing results — upward movement will be recognized but dropping scores won't. Lev noted that PARCC and the MCAS 2.0 will both be new it takes at least three years of testing to compile usable data.

Internal testing, however, will continue to provide guidance, and courses are tied to the state's Common Core curriculum.

In other news, the School Committee voted to confirm school-choice slots put forward last month.

School-choice opening will be four in kindergarten; one in first grade; four in third grade; two in six grade; five in seventh grade; and one in eighth grade.

Lev said the largest class size will 17; there are nine expected kindergartners, 13 total with the school-choice.

The school union will be sharing a speech language pathologist and certified assistant next school year. Lev said the union had been contracting with Berkshire Speech with good results but it was felt the schools would have more control over costs and hours by having a pathologist on staff.

"We have two viable candidates that look good," Lev said. "I do feel doing it this way will save us some money and increase our services ... with increased personnel I think we can do a better job."


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Pittsfield Celebrates Robert 'Bob' Presutti on Arbor Day

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Bob Presutti, right, is presented the Hebert Award in 2017 for his volunteer efforts at Springside Park. He died in 2023 at age 88.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A tree has been planted next to the Berkshire Athenaeum in honor of local "giant" Robert Presutti.

Officials celebrated Arbor Day on Friday by installing a commemorative plaque next to the American elm sapling. This is a tree that James McGrath, the city's park program manager, said Presutti would have been particularly proud of.

"Today is a day where we yes, celebrate trees, but today is also a day where here in the city we intentionally try to acknowledge the good work of folks in our community who spend their time and their efforts and their talents to make Pittsfield a more beautiful place," he said to a crowd of about 20 people.

"Today we are honoring a longtime community volunteer named Bob Presutti. I'm sure a lot of you here know Bob and know his contributions to the city, not only when it comes to trees and parks but also to the Retired Senior Volunteer Program."

The longtime volunteer passed away last year at the age of 88. He contributed more than 10,600 hours to RSVP and had great impacts on the Parks Department over the years from sharing his knowledge and talents to ensuring that workers were safe when working on trees.

"This morning I went through my emails to see how many emails Bob Presutti sent me since the year 2001 when I started with the city. Bob Presutti sent me 14,000 emails and nearly every single one of those was about trees," McGrath said, prompting laughter and smiles from attendees.

One thread struck him as particularly important because it showed Presutti's empathy when it comes to the safety of city workers while caring for trees.

"There were multiple emails from Bob about the need to get the Parks Department maintenance guys into a program learning about chainsaw safety and learning about ladder safety. He was really into making certain that our city workers were well cared for and had all of the instruction that they needed and in fact, he even offered his own time and services after he became certified to teach our city workers," McGrath said.

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