A Snowy Owl hovers above the future of Brodie

By John HitchcockPrint Story | Email Story
The best of times...the worst of times! Winter refuses to die, with up to 90 inches of snow still reported at the Bousquet Ski Area in Pittsfield, the new home of the former Brodie Mountain St. Patrick’s Celebration and Irish Olympics. But spring persists, persists to the point that a Williams College sports team traveled to ice-bound Maine Saturday to beat Bates, not in hockey or skiing, but in lacrosse. And Jiminy Peak continues to grow, with work started last week on its $5 million plus Village Center, while thousands enjoyed winter conditions on their skis and snowboards. And once proud Brodie Mountain Resort faces an uncertain future, a future bearing the name Snowy Owl Resort ...if Brian H. Fairbank, CEO and president of both Jiminy and Brodie, can close the deal with a major developer whose name will not be disclosed until papers are signed. A total of 332 condo units are planned and Fairbank hopes to continue his popular snow tubing operations at Brodie as well as upgrade Andy’s Chair, the Swiss-made double installed by Brodie founder James W. Kelly more than 25 years ago. (The other two long chairlifts would be removed, under the new ownership, but Andy’s Chair would serve the most popular trails and slopes.) “This is all dependent on the condo plans going through,” said Fairbank, who has been at Jiminy since 1969 and at Brodie since November, 1999. When Fairbank and silent partner Joseph O’Donnell, (head of Boston Concessions) bought Brodie, it was Fairbank’s intentions to upgrade the entire area, hoping to bring the customer count up dramatically. Last winter’s bleak conditions convinced Fairbank that it would not be feasible to spend the necessary $5 million for the project. So this winter saw (or sees) only snowtubing, using the beginners’ lift and snowshoeing. “Nobody could be more disappointed than me about the Brodie situation,” said Fairbank, who stepped down last year as the highest elected officer of the National Ski Areas Association. O’Donnell, who became involved in Jiminy years ago after winning the food and beverage contract, has never made a public statement about either area. He is also the co-owner of Bromley Mountain and has the food and beverage contract at Catamount in Egremont. With 600 acres involved, there could be a lot of changes at Brodie, sometime, by somebody. Fairbank said he will continue to represent the developer in securing the necessary permits from the town and state for the condo project, which could be in the $50 million range. He will appear before the New Ashford Planning Board April 15. In the meantime, the 57-year-old resort operator presided last Thursday over a ground-breaking ceremony for the Jiminy Peak Village Center. Work is progressing on the foundation for the first of the two new buildings and will start on the other structure next week. T & J Construction of Pittsfield is doing the work, which is supposed to be ready for winter sports people in late November. Fairbank had continued the Kelly /St. Pat’s program at Brodie the past two years, but said he had to concentrate on Jiminy this year, with the big Mountain Dew Festival this coming weekend. Jiminy’s annual Spring fling will be March 22 - 23. Bousquet’s George Jervas, with a core of former Brodie ski instructors, has staged his version of St. Patrick’s Day and Irish Olympics ever since former Brodie Ski School Director John Koch switched to the Pittsfield resort, which is also working on a condo project...dependent on the city’s installation of water and sewer lines on Dan Fox Drive. Koch said the Bousquet party will start Friday at 8:30 p.m. with “a real Irish band,“ The Carrie Brothers. Saturday and Sunday will see every type of snow game and contest, featuring the always wet and popular Slush Jump Sunday at 1 p.m. Whatever happens at Brodie, Jim Kelly will not be far away. He plans to resume work on his Donnybrook Golf Club as soon as the three feet of natural snow melts at his Donnybrook Farm on Route 7, less than a mile south of the ski area. Nine holes will be located on the west side of the road, with the back nine on the east side on the former Brodie Mountain Ski Touring Center. All of the Berkshire ski centers should offer good conditions well into April. Ski Butternut in Great Barrington is particularly proud of its snowboard shop, which was voted “Best in New England” by the New England Winter Sports Representatives Inc. Jill Zwick, manager of the Ski & Snowboard Shop at Butternut, said the award “represents the overall commitment of the shop staff and the entire Ski Butternut organization toward snowboarding.” She added, “Also key to success is our knowledgeable and helpful rental staff and professional snowboard instructors who make learning to ride fun.” Customers can demo boards on Butternut’s two terrain parks, outfitted with a number of rail slides, fun boxes, tabletops and a number of hits. It is usually surprising to Vermont people who come to South Berkshire and find great and deep snow and sporty slopes and trails. The depth of snow near Otis Ridge and Butternut was vividly and sadly viewed by the national TV audiences, who saw rescue teams up to their waist in snow at Beartown State Forest after the tragic private plane crash, which took the lives of four of the seven family members aboard. But if Berkshire areas are talking about late March skiing, they talk late April, May and early June in Vermont, particularly at mighty Killington, where the target date is always June 1. All of the Southern Vermont areas, Mount Snow, Stratton, Bromley and Okemo, have interesting and elaborate parties and contests every weekend for the next four or five weeks at least. If it was not for Jake Carpenter Burton, who introduced modern snowboarding to the Northeast a quarter century ago, there might be more Brodies, Dutch Hills, Peterburgs and Berkshire Snow Basins. Burton’s persistence led Stratton Mountain to allow snowboarding some 25 years ago and now he heads the world’s largest supplier of the boards and will preside today through Sunday at the 21st annual US Open Snowboarding Championships. More than 500 of the world’s best boarders will be in action every day, watched by up to 25,000 fans and competing for a share of the $180,000 purse. Come on up! Two of the local stars in action will be Stratton’s Ross Powers and Mount Snow’s Kelly Clark, both Bold Medal winners at last winter’s Olympics in Utah. Powers will conduct a snowboarders’ training camp at Stratton March 19 - 21 and Clark will be heading a camp at Mount Snow the same time. Take your pick. Back to lacrosse in the snowfields of Maine. Veteran Williams Coach Renzi Lamb said March 8 was the earliest he had ever put his players into a regular season game in his 36 years as an Eph lacrosse coach. “It was on a turf surface. The snow was brushed off. It was cold and we won, 4 - 3,” he said. The lacrosse and all other Williams sports teams will head south during spring break, March 21 through April 7. The snow may be off the Williams playing fields, but don’t count on it! And when the stickmen were in action in Lewiston, the handful of Williams skiers eligible for the NCAA Division Ski Championships at the Dartmouth Snow Bowl in Lyme, N.H., finished way down in the field of 16 teams, most well stocked by European champions. Utah won, with Vermont second. John Hitchcock of Williamstown writes frequently about the area sports scene.
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Why the Massachusetts Art Community Is Worth Continued Investment

By James BirgeGuest Column
How do we quantify the value of art on society and culture? Even eye-popping figures, like the $100 million estimate for the jewels stolen from the Louvre, or the record auction last fall that saw a piece by Gustav Klimt sell for more than $236 million can't fully account for the value of the history, stories, and emotions behind the creations themselves. But beyond that, there is a measurable financial, cultural and social benefit of the arts that is often taken for granted. 

Closer to home, arts and cultural production in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts totals nearly $30 billion annually, representing more than 4 percent of the state's economic output, according to the Mass Cultural Council. All told, more than 130,000 jobs are spread across the commonwealth creating a vibrant and thriving artistic community for us all to enjoy. 

Despite the obvious impact, these figures are under threat. A recent survey by MassCreative compiled recent federal cuts to the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum and Library Services and identified 63 grants canceled and $4.2 million in grant funding rescinded across New England so far this year. 

The dollars, of course, are important. But they also only scratch the surface on what they bring to the community. Today, we risk losing part of the culture and identity many now take for granted. 

While others choose to look past these less tangible, but just as vital benefits, we're doing the opposite. Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts is all in to ensure the next generation retains their access to works of art, while also being empowered to create themselves. 

Last fall, MCLA officially broke ground on the new Campagna Kleefeld Center for Creativity in the Arts, which will serve as a new hub for the campus and the local community for arts programming. When complete in fall of 2027, our students will benefit, but so will all of Berkshire County and artists in the surrounding area. 

This exciting new facility is just one of the many forthcomings our region can enjoy in the coming years. Just a few miles away, anticipation builds for the Fall 2027 anticipated opening for the Williams College Museum of Art. Years in the making, the museum likewise grows from an enduring commitment to the arts, both in curriculum and in practice. Exciting times are also underway for the Clark Art Institute with the construction of a new facility to house a collection of 331 works of art, including paintings, sculptures, drawings and other works. Their wing is scheduled for completion in 2028. And listeners will no doubt enjoy the sounds and melodies from Mass MoCA Records, the latest endeavor to foster creativity and artistic pursuits through music launched in October as well. Of course, many are also awaiting the reopening of the Berkshire Museum anticipated this summer, after a tremendous renovation process to rejuvenate the experience for visitors. 

So much time, energy, and yes, dollars, have already been invested in taking these facilities from ideas and sketches and making them reality. But they represent much more than new buildings. They represent new opportunities to cultivate and accelerate the thriving arts community in Massachusetts and the northern Berkshires. 

Art, regardless of the medium, is a reflection of who we are, where we've been, and what we aspire to be. It can be inspired by hopes or fears and chronicle collective triumphs as well as tribulations. The goal of art is not only to document history, but to inspire those positioned to change it and to feel something new or even to provoke us to revisit our own assumptions or misconceptions. 

As unfathomable of a number as $30 billion can seem, boiling down the impact to any number inherently discounts the unknowable downstream effects our graduates will bring to the community and the broader world after they leave our institutions. Likewise, rescinding $4.2 million now removes a huge chunk of that growth potential.  

Justification for making these investments today when simply boiled down to dollars and cents still places us on solid ground strictly from a financial perspective that forgoes all of the intangible, but no less valuable, benefits as well.  

The arts are still worth our support. And our community will be richer for it. 

James Birge, PhD, is president of Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts in North Adams.  

 

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