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Board Chairman Chris Moon addresses shoppers and volunteers.
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Executive Director Carolyn Valli said the ReStore has made $1 million sales has helped to build one Habitat house a year.
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Mayor Daniel Bianchi.
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The new location is triple the space of the first one opened five years ago.
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More than a dozen people went in to shop as soon as the doors opened.

Habitat For Humanity Cuts Ribbon On New 'ReStore'

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Store manager Steve Gingras and Mayor Daniel Bianchi cut the ribbon on the new store.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Habitat for Humanity has tripled retail space for its ReStore.
 
ReStore accepts and resells home improvement items such as furniture, cabinets and other material. The sales support the construction of new homes through Habitat's program.
 
Central Berkshire Habitat for Humanity first opened the ReStore on Jefferson Place — off West Housatonic Street — five years ago and has outgrown the space.
 
"We had almost as much in storage as we did on the sales floor," Executive Director Carolyn Valli said.
 
On Saturday, the organization cut the ribbon (caution tape) on a new 17,500-square-foot store on Hubbard Avenue.
 
The new space is nearly triple that of the previous location and the organization hopes to double the amount of sales with the more visible and larger space.
 
"It's been a dream of ours to get to a facility as big as this and as beautiful as this," said store manager Steve Gingras.
 
Gingras was joined by Mayor Daniel Bianchi to cut the ribbon, welcoming more than a dozen shoppers to the new store. The mayor spoke highly of Habitat for Humanity's work in not only recycling items that would otherwise go to landfills but in the work of building homes for families in need. 
 
"Habitat for Humanity is such a wonderful organization," Bianchi said, encouraging residents to shop at the store to increase the number of homes the organization can build.
 
Valli said the store previously made enough to build one house per year. She hopes to double that income, especially with a large six-unit project ahead of the them.
 
"Our hope is that we will double our net," Valli said. 
 
The store first opened in a 6,000-square-foot facility with a donation from the Berkshire Bank Foundation and an all-volunteer effort. The operation now supports 2.5 full-time jobs and still has some 30 volunteers.
 
Hours are Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 9 to 5; donations can be dropped off on Wednesdays from 9 to 1.
 
So far, the store has prevented 700 ton of materials from going to landfills, Valli said, and has made more than a $1 million in sales. The donated items come from contractors, new homebuyers, and renovation projects in which the old items are repurposed and resold. 
 
The organization began looking for a new space almost two years ago. It took a year to find the new space and then almost eight months to negotiate a lease. In the last six weeks, the organization has built out the inside of the 399 Hubbard Ave. location with shelving and stocking. 
 
"This has been a long time coming," board Chairman Chris Moon said. "We were at the old store for five years and we hope to be here for another 25 years."

Tags: grand opening,   habitat for humanity,   home & garden,   

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Adams Couple Sentenced to Staggered Prison Terms in Death of Foster Infant

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — An Adams couple will serve staggered three-to-five year prison sentences for the 2020 death of their foster infant. 
 
Matthew Tucker and Cassandra Barlow-Tucker on March 16 were found guilty of involuntary manslaughter and reckless child endangerment in the death of Kristoff Zenopolous on Feb. 18, 2020.  
 
Their sentencing was delayed by Judge Tracy Duncan until Thursday to determine how their four children, two of whom have high needs, would be cared for. 
 
Kristoff was just 10 months old when he died from complications with respiratory illness, strep throat, and pneumonia. A Superior Court jury determined that his death was a result of neglect. The commonwealth requested five years in prison and three years of probation for both defendants.
 
On Thursday, the rescheduled hearing for sentence imposition was held, and Tucker and Barlow-Tucker were sentenced to state prison for manslaughter involving neglect of legal duty, and three years of probation for reckless child endangerment. 
 
Court documents state that Barlow-Tucker was committed to the Massachusetts Correctional Institution in Framingham. She will serve three to five years there first; her husband, will serve his sentence once hers is completed but will be on probation.
 
"The sentences imposed will be a state prison sentence of not less than 3 years and not more than 5 years to MCI as to each Defendant as to count #1. The sentences will be staggered. Ms. Barlow-Tucker will serve her incarceration sentence first," court dockets read.  
 
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