image description
Bradlee escaped with just a gash on his foot but it could have been much worse.

Pittsfield 4-Year-Old Attacked By Fox

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

 

Bradlee O'Keefe gives thumbs up  after being treated at
Berkshire Medical Center.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Britney O'Keefe stepped outside of her back door on Robbins Avenue on Monday and just had a bad feeling.

Her 4-year-old son, Bradlee, had followed her and she turned to bring him back inside.

Before she could, a fox was in mid-air lunging at the toddler. She grabbed her son and quickly threw him into the house but the fox kept charging.
 
She slammed the door on the animal and she expected it to run away. It stood up after falling and kept coming, jaws open, exposing teeth.
 
"He kept trying to push through the door," O'Keefe said. "It just kind of came out of nowhere."
 
Her husband, Roderick Powell, came running. A roommate quickly grabbed the first thing available — a hammer — to fend off the fox.
 
O'Keefe heard her son say he was bleeding and ushered him into the living room to find a gash on his foot. It was 5:57 when she called police and two minutes later they were at her door.
 
"I feel bad. I yelled at the the guy on the phone at the Police Department," O'Keefe said. She remembers drawing a blank when she tried to tell the dispatcher her address.
 
She could chuckle a bit about it on Thursday despite not being able to sleep soundly since the incident.
 
While she was on the phone, her husband was hitting fox on the head with the hammer as it tried to push its way through the door. Powell killed the fox and police took care of the remains.
 
Bradlee was taken by ambulance to Berkshire Medical Center, where he received three stitches on his foot. O'Keefe said Bradlee was a trooper and didn't shed a tear until she did. And even then, the toddler tried to console his mother.
 
"If I didn't get him when I did, it could have been much worse," O'Keefe said.
 
On Thursday, she said she was notified that the fox was rabid. Bradlee now has to go back for three weeks worth of shots in case he was infected through the gash on his foot. Despite the ordeal, Bradlee is "back to his normal self" and tells his friends how the fox tried to "eat his foot." 
 
Health Director Gina Armstrong said on Thursday that she has not yet seen the final report on whether the fox was rabid but knew that the child was being treated because of the probability that it was.
 
"This appears to be an isolated incident," Armstrong said, adding that the department hasn't fielded any other complaints this year. 
 
But she's reminding residents to report any sightings of sick animals.
 
"We encourage people to make a report to the Police Department if they do observe an animal that appears to be sick," she said.
 
For O'Keefe, the ordeal has been traumatic. She constantly wakes up at night worried about it. She thinks about all of the children in the neighborhood playing outside and the number of stray cats and pet dogs around the residential area.
 
"Now I am more concerned with everybody in my neighborhood," O'Keefe said. "I can just think about all of the kids playing outside."
 
Earlier in the day that Monday, neighborhood children had said they saw the fox but O'Keefe thought it was just a dog or a cat and they were exaggerating. Now she hopes everybody else nearby is aware that there could be rabid animals in the area.

Roderick Powell had to kill the fox that kept trying to push its way through the family's back door.

The fox was young and O'Keefe thinks other animals may have been attacked and are now carrying the disease. 

She hopes others will be aware of the possibility because it hasn't happened a lot. The last reported rabid animal in Pittsfield was a skunk last year; recently in North Adams a cat was found to have rabies, which led to a neighborhoodwide rabies clinic

Five of 34 suspected rabies cases in the Berkshires tested positive in the first half of this year.

Rabies is potentially deadly as it attacks the central nervous system. The disease is spread mostly through raccoons, skunks, bats, and foxes, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The disease causes anxiety and confusion and then progresses to cause hallucinations and delirium.
 
Once those signs appear, it is "nearly always fatal," according to the CDC. Those attacked need injections of antibodies.
 
Armstrong said rabid animals are rare despite an outbreak among skunks last year. She said it is "infrequent" that the office has human rabies cases.
 
Nonetheless, Armstrong encourages residents to take precautions to prevent wildlife from entering properties and to be aware — particularly this time of the year when bat populations tend to find their way from attics and into homes.
 
"This is the time of year where we see more prevalence in the bat population," she said.
 
For Bradlee O'Keefe, all signs show that he'll be alright, ending this next three-week period with just a story to tell his preschool classmates on Sept. 1. For his mother, it is an experience she'll never forget. 
 
"It was scary," she said.

Tags: rabies,   wild animals,   

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

Pittsfield Kayak Kiosk Proposal Withdrawn After Pushback

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — It is the "end of the road" for a kayak kiosk proposal after pushback from community members and the City Council.

Whenever Watersports has withdrawn its proposal for a kayak rental program at Onota Lake. Safety concerns arose around the company's self-serve model though it was stipulated that users sign liabilities away with a waiver as part of the process.  

"It's unfortunate. I had hoped the outcome would be different and I think (Recreation and Special Events Coordinator Maddy Brown) and you as well thought this was an opportunity to provide an additional level of services, recreation opportunity to folks at the park through a modern-app-based system," Park, Open Space, and Natural Resource Program Manager James McGrath said to the Parks Commission on Tuesday.

"It would have cost the city nothing to have this sited. We wouldn't be responsible for any maintenance but there would be maintenance to the units and to the boats, etc. Everyone was going to get life preservers and there are instructions through the app so we thought it was it was safe and secure and a good fit for the park."

In December, the commission granted a request for the pilot program and City Solicitor Stephen Pagnotta had been reviewing and revising a proposed contract that had not yet been approved. Last week during City Council, residents Daniel Miraglia and Gene Nadeau submitted a petition requesting a legal opinion on the proposal from the solicitor.

Miraglia expressed concerns about the lack of a bidding process, safety hazards, and the impact on a local business that rents kayaks on the lake. Onota Boat Livery owner Caryn Wendling was upset to hear that an out-of-town company would be allowed to operate the kiosk on the same lake as her business and also cited safety concerns.

Councilors asked that Pagnotta look into items such as the commission's authority with entering into contracts and if a bidding process would be needed for this.

Later that week, a request to the Conservation Commission for determination for the kiosk at Burbank Park located within the buffer zone associated with the inland bank was withdrawn. According to the application, it was proposed to be located before the beach area coming from the main parking lot.

View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories