BCC to Present Guantanamo Teach-In

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On Thursday, October 5, BCC will be one of hundreds of colleges, universities and law schools that will carry a nine-hour simulcast of a 14-segment program entitled “A Prison Beyond the Law: How Should We Respond to the Problem of Guantanamo Bay” Easy-to-locate posters on campus will list panel subjects, times, and room schedules. The Guantanamo Teach-In will bring together prominent journalists, scholars, human rights activists, military officers, lawyers for detainees and released detainees themselves, to engage in an unprecedented discussion on an issue of great national importance. The Teach-In will document the history of Guantanamo, through a series of panel discussions hosted by Seton Hall University School of Law. Various issues, involving journalism, medicine, religion, and the constitutional division of powers, will be addressed during the event. This Teach-In will hopefully begin a national conversation about actions taken in Guantanamo. Overall, the Teach-In will pose two important questions: can the institution of Guantanamo be reconciled with a democracy committed to the rule of law, and what should be done about this problem of Guantanamo? The seven session Teach-In, with each session about one-hour in length, will start at 10am in Melville Hall, room 119, and close at 7pm in Hawthorne Hall, room 115. All segments, held on the main campus of Berkshire Community College in Pittsfield, are free and open to the public. For further information, call Donald Lathrop 499-4660, Ext.351.
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Dalton Officials Talk Meters Amidst Rate Increases

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The anticipated rise in the water and sewer rates has sparked discussion on whether implementing meters could help mitigate the costs for residents
 
The single-family water rate has been $160 since 2011, however, because of the need to improve the town's water main infrastructure, prices are anticipated to increase. 
 
"The infrastructure in town is aged … we have a bunch of old mains in town that need to be changed out," said Water Superintendent Robert Benlien during a joint meeting with the Select Board. 
 
The district had contracted Tighe and Bond to conduct an asset management study in 2022, where it was recommended that the district increase its water rates by 5 percent a year over five years, he said. 
 
This should raise enough funds to take on the needed infrastructure projects, Benlien said, cautioning that the projections are a few years old so the cost estimates have increased since then. 
 
"The AC mains, which were put in the '60s and '70s, have just about reached the end of their life expectancy. We've had a lot of problems down in Greenridge Park," which had an anticipated $4 million price tag, he said. 
 
The main on Main Street, that goes from the Pittsfield/town line to North Street, and up through woods to the tank, was priced at $7.6 million in 2022, he said. 
 
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