Foliage Bed Race Raises More than $1K for Hospital

Staff reportsiBerkshires
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Brian and Janeen Flagg check the check for Northern Berkshire Healthcare.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — It's not often you can dress up in cool clothes, push a heavy bed down the main drag and change into your PJs in the middle of the street.

So when the opportunity came up to do just that, plenty of people were willing and able to join in. Why not? And so was born the Fall Foliage Charity Bed Race, which was held for the second time during this past Fall Foliage Festival Weekend.

But it's not all about the competition, and that's where the "charity" comes in.

The bed race benefits the nonprofit Northern Berkshire Healthcare, parent company of North Adams Regional Hospital. On Friday morning, bed race founders Brian and Janeen Flagg presented the hospital with a check for $1,150.

"The real story is this group's efforts and the lengths they go to to support our programs," said Richard Palmisano, president and chief executive officer of NBH. "It awes me that people put this much effort into it."

Palmisano did his own part for the race, too, as a member of the hospital's "Bed Bugs" racing team.


Brian and Janeen Flagg pose with NBH President Richard Palmisano as they present the him with a check for $1,150 from the Fall Foliage Charity Bed Race.
The Flaggs had chosen NBH as the recipient because of the care the hospital had given to Brian's parents in their final years.


Janeen Flagg said the business community had responded overwhelmingly when asked to donate gifts for the racers and other needs, providing upwards of $1,600 in prizes.

"I can't say enough about how great these businesses were," said Flagg, noting the gift baskets for the top three teams had to be big enough for five people. "Each person gets their own prize."

The first year, there was only enough to give the winning team a basket; this year, it was win, place and show as well as a winning entry for creative design.

With the amount creativity shown in the decorated and constructed beds for this year's race, both Flaggs said that category should be expanded, too. "We're hoping to triple or more [the number of contestants] next year," said Janeen Flagg.

The money from the race will be used for urgent needs, said Palmisano, such as equipment or materials not covered in the budget.

"So we may help buy something the hospital really needs," said Brian Flagg. "That's great."
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North Adams Finance Recommends Public Safety, Administration Draft Budgets

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Finance Committee in the last two weeks reviewed Public Safety, auditor, Zoning Board of Appeals, City Council, election and registration, Office of Community Development, city solicitor, License Commission, information technology, Planning Board, and vital statistics.
 
The committee consists of Chair Lisa Blackmer and Councilors Andrew Fitch and Lillian Zavatsky. 
 
The City Council budget includes a 3 percent cost of living increase, in line with the across the board COLA for all departments.
 
Mayor Jennifer Macksey said she included a codification administration line of $6,000 to cover the extra meeting the city clerk is doing as the council reviews the city's codes.
 
The elections budget is up about $10,500, largely for worker salaries to accommodate two state elections this year, the primary and the general. City Clerk Tina Leonesio said the extra poll workers are needed because state elections tend to draw a higher number of voters. The cost of the ballots, however, are covered by the state.
 
Leonesio explained how her office was able to save money on the city census and mailings by printing and folding the documents in house, as well as purchasing the supplies and training to maintain the vital statistics rather than sending them out.  
 
"The cost is in the supplies, because we have to put so many things in the census now, it would be a very large expense to have it done by a vendor outside," she said, estimating it would cost three times as much "because we have to pay for every piece of paper they have to print and fold, plus the mailing."
 
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