Simon’s Rock College of Bard is pleased to announce that Doug Ahlers will be the speaker at the 37th Commencement ceremonies. On Saturday, May 13 at 11 a.m., Mr. Ahlers will address the members of graduating class, their families and guests, the Simon’s Rock faculty and staff, and community members.
Doug Ahlers, a 1977 alumnus of Simon's Rock, is a Fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. As a resident and business owner in New Orleans, Mr. Ahlers has also been in the forefront of the efforts to restore vitality to that city, and in his role at Harvard, Mr. Ahlers has been instrumental in applying the resources of the University to the redevelopment needs of New Orleans. After Katrina, he was appointed to mayor Ray Nagin's Bring New Orleans Back Commission's Economic Development Committee.
In January, he led a team of Harvard Business School students to help the Mayor's Commission draft the economic recovery plan for the city. The plan for New Orleans recovery was developed at the request of the White House. Mr. Ahlers has also launched the Neighborhood Empowerment Initiative in New Orleans. The Initiative involves volunteer students, faculty and staff of the graduate schools of Government, Business, Education, Law and Design at Harvard University. The Harvard volunteers have adopted a neighborhood in New Orleans and are applying their expertise in urban planning, education, and economic development to empower the neighborhood residents to develop their own plan for the recovery of their neighborhood. The community-based planning process is meant to serve as a model for other New Orleans neighborhoods to follow.
Mr. Ahlers is also a fellow at the National Democratic Institute, and in that capacity has served as an election monitor in the Ukraine, Palestine, and Egypt. He has studied the use of technology by many international groups, including extremist organizations, hate groups, and neo-Nazi groups, as well as dissident and opposition groups in North Korea and China. He works on major policy initiatives, and next year he will be at Stanford’s Center for International Security and Cooperation's Preventive Defense Project, a joint project between Stanford and Harvard. His work is based on the concept of international dialogue and cooperation as a means of establishing international security and stability. His research there will remain focused on the role of technology and its use by groups and individuals vis-a-vis nation-states.
One of the pioneers of e-commerce, Mr. Ahlers has been involved in the development and deployment of online services since the early 1980's. He helped design and build the first online shopping sites and the first online travel site, built the first commercial website on the Internet and created the first banner ad to appear on the Internet. Mr. Ahlers is the co-founder of Modem Media, Inc., where he created comprehensive Internet strategies for Fortune 500 companies. Modem Media subsidiary Poppe Tyson created the first website for the White House and also created the spin-off company DoubleClick. Mr. Ahlers has also started two venture capital firms in the technology arena, funding companies in the areas of online radio, database marketing and data mining.
Mr. Ahlers was a Spring 2005 Fellow at the Shorenstein Center for Press, Politics and Public Policy, where he examined the impact of the Internet on the way people get their news information. He is currently working on a book that examines the role the Internet is playing in society and government.
His distinguished record of both public service and entrepreneurship stem from his approach as an original thinker whose concepts of cooperation and expertise in the use of technology are shaping public discourse in several areas, both geographical and intellectual. Mr. Ahlers remains an active member of the Simon's Rock College Board of Overseers and an active alumnus. The college looks forward to welcoming Doug Ahlers at the upcoming commencement exercises and festivities. The ceremonies will take place on the Daniel Arts Center Lawn, and the public is welcome.
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Pittsfield Police Chief Retiring in January
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Police Chief Thomas Dawley will retire next month after 24 years with the Pittsfield Police Department, and the mayor will appoint his successor.
Dawley's last day will be on Jan. 9, and he told iBerkshires that it was "just time." He began his law enforcement career in 1995 at the Berkshire County House of Corrections and was appointed police chief in June 2024.
"Reasons for leaving are cumulative. I have been in law enforcement for almost 30 years. There is no particular reason for my retirement, I just feel that it is time," he wrote in an email.
"I love the profession and love this department. The duties, responsibilities and obligations as a Chief are very demanding. It is a lifestyle, not a job. It is a 24/7–365 days a year responsibility."
According to The Berkshire Eagle, Dawley told Mayor Peter Marchetti of his intention to retire back in April but had kept the decision quiet. Marchetti is expected to choose his successor in the next couple of weeks.
Dawley, 52, was "honored and humbled" when he was chosen two years ago to succeed Michael Wynn, he said, and he misses being an officer out in the community, as the role of chief is more administrative by nature. He described the officers and civilian staff at the department as "the best of the best" and is proud of the "second to none" dedication, professionalism, and commitment they bring to work every day.
"Policing is different than it was 10-20 years ago and the profession is being tested daily," he noted.
"I want a new challenge and preferably something that does not involve law enforcement, but I am definitely not ruling it out!"
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