News & Notes: Pump Down the Volume
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PITTSFIELD - It may cost you more in the future to blast that car radio or roar down a Pittsfield street with an extra loud motorcycle or car.
The Pittsfield City Council has approved the first reading of a proposed noise ordinance that would beef up a similar ordinance approved in 2001. At-Large City Councilor Matthew Kerwood submitted the newest version of the noise ordinance that would increase enforceability by decreasing a strict reliance on noise meters to measure decibel levels. The new rules would define "unreasonable noise" that is plainly audible at a distance of 100 feet.
Motorcycles with excessive noise and blaring car radios you can feel and hear, generally cruise around the city during the summer. A second reading of the noise ordinance will take place at the next City Council meeting on March 11.
Pittsfield Losing Tuition Dollars
PITTSFIELD - The Pittsfield School Committee has a dilemma on its hands. The committee is trying to figure out why 263 students took their tuition dollars to nearby communities this year. That number is up from 252 last year.
Usually, students from surrounding communities make the leap from their school district to the Pittsfield School System, mostly to attend vocational classes at either Taconic or Pittsfield high schools. That said, only three fewer vocational students from the Southern Berkshires enrolled in city schools through a separate agreement. The only other vocational school in the Berkshires is McCann Technical in North Adams. In addition, the number of city students enrolled at the Berkshire Arts and Technology Charter Public School in Adams more than doubled - from 22 to 46 this year.

