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Mindy Hackner will retire next year after five years at North Adams Public Library.

North Adams Library Director to Retire Next Year

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Library Director Mindy Hackner plans to retire in a year and urged the board of trustees to start looking for her replacement sooner rather than later.
 
Hackner told the trustees Wednesday that Assistant Library Director Kim DiLego, whom Hackner hoped would step into the director position, is not interested.
 
"I had always hoped to cultivate Kim as the person who would succeed me ... but we have discovered that she doesn’t want to do it," Hackner said. "So that being said, you are going to be tasked with finding someone because I will be retiring in June of 2019."
 
Hackner was hired in 2014. She had worked at the David and Joyce Milne Public Library in Williamstown for nearly 18 years and then a brief stint at the Dalton Public Library. The previous director, Rick Moon, is now the McCann Technical School librarian.
 
She has already begun preparing her job description and a list of her duties. 
 
"I am going back now and making a complete compendium of annual chores ... quarterly things, things that come up monthly, things that come up weekly and things that come up daily," she said.  
 
Hackner also recommended that the city hire someone with a business background who recently obtained a master of information science degree, so that he or she is abreast of new technology and other things the modern librarian needs to know.  
 
Trustee Rich Remsberg asked if they should conduct a nationwide search but Hackner said for how much the position pays, it would not be worth it.
 
"For what I am paid no ... you would pay some heavy-duty money to advertise," she said. "I am the lowest paid library director in the state and the city knows that ... you are competing with much larger salaries."
 
Hackner suggested they start the search process this winter.
 
In other business, Youth Services Librarian Sara Russell-Scholl said this summer the library will utilize a $5,000 grant through the North Adams SteepleCats collegiate baseball team to host a new summer reading program.
 
"The SteepleCats would really like to see this collaboration of creating what they call the 'Cubs Club,' " Russell-Scholl said. "It would help to foster some more youth culture at the ballpark and the SteepleCats players would be involved in summer reading program activities that would be community-based."
 
She said kids would receive some sort of membership card at a game and would be assigned a player as a mentor.
 
Russell-Scholl said the players will be involved in summer reading program at the library as well as programming at the former Sleepy's property on Main Street, which is slated to become a temporary baseball museum and community space. 
 
Russell-Scholl said $2,000 from the grant will be used to hire a summer employee to help run the program. 
 
"We already have a really robust summer reading program that we do, and it would just not be possible for me to do all that they are asking," she said.

Tags: NAPL,   retirement,   

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North Adams to Begin Study of Veterans Memorial Bridge Alternatives

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Mayor Jennifer Macksey says the requests for qualifications for the planning grant should be available this month. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Connecting the city's massive museum and its struggling downtown has been a challenge for 25 years. 
 
A major impediment, all agree, is the decades old Central Artery project that sent a four-lane highway through the heart of the city. 
 
Backed by a $750,000 federal grant for a planning study, North Adams and Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art are looking to undo some of that damage.
 
"As you know, the overpass was built in 1959 during a time when highways were being built, and it was expanded to accommodate more cars, which had little regard to the impacts of the people and the neighborhoods that it surrounded," said Mayor Jennifer Macksey on Friday. "It was named again and again over the last 30 years by Mass MoCA in their master plan and in the city in their vision 2030 plan ... as a barrier to connectivity."
 
The Reconnecting Communities grant was awarded a year ago and Macksey said a request for qualifications for will be available April 24.
 
She was joined in celebrating the grant at the Berkshire Innovation Center's office at Mass MoCA by museum Director Kristy Edmunds, state Highway Administrator Jonathan Gulliver, District 1 Director Francesca Hemming and Joi Singh, Massachusetts administrator for the Federal Highway Administration.
 
The speakers also thanked the efforts of the state's U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Edward Markey, U.S. Rep. Richie Neal, Gov. Maura Healey and state Sen Paul Mark and state Rep. John Barrett III, both of whom were in attendance. 
 
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