Pittsfield City Council Briefs: Ferrin Appointed

By Joe DurwinSpecial to iBerkshires
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council on Tuesday night split on appointing a member of the Ambulance Review Commission.
 
The council voted 7-4 to uphold Mayor Daniel Bianchi's appointment of Jeffrey Ferrin to the commission. Ferrin's appointment was first challenged at the Feb. 14 City Council meeting, when several councilors expressed reservations about his appointment based on past disciplinary judgements while Ferrin was a city employee.  
 
During the public input period at the beginning of Tuesday's meeting, Ferrin expressed dismay that "the mayor was put in an awkward position as a result of my civil service record, which was discussed on two separate campaign occasions."  
 
Ferrin, who had run for a ward council seat, said he had reached out to all of the members of the City Council, and was able to speak to most to discuss the background of those documents. He specifically thanked Councilor Barry Clairmont for "really taking the time to sit down and ask a lot of good questions."
 
The motion to approve his appointment passed with Councilors Christopher Connell, Churchill Cotton, John Krol, Melissa Mazzeo, Kevin Morandi, Kevin Sherman, and Anthony Simonelli in favor and Councilors Paul Capitanio, Clairmont, Jonathan Lothrop and Christine Yon opposed.

City Accepts 35K in Cultural Funds
 
The City Council voted unanimously to accept a grant of $35,000 to the city from the Massachusetts Cultural Council.  This marks the seventh year that the MCC has awarded funding to the city in the form of this allocation to the Cultural Pittsfield initiative.  
 
This money is intended  "to support and incubate new cultural initiatives that bring visitors and attract new businesses and residents to Pittsfield; and to contribute to the city's ongoing rebranding as a vibrant cultural center by providing co-marketing efforts to broaden the market and increase economic activity for the city's arts sector and for others."
 
While this allocation requires matching funds, these come from a combination of sponsorship, in-kind and other donations from within the community and not from the city budget.  
 
This cultural funding goes to support a diverse array of initiatives and happenings throughout the year, and has helped lead to the profusion of new activities, festivals and other collaborative arts efforts, from Third Thursdays to the recent 10x10 contemporary arts festival or the Hoopla, Pittsfield's annual all-day Hula hoop extravaganza held at Springside Park in July.

Tags: appointments,   city council,   Cultural Pittsfield,   

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Pittsfield School Committee Requests Redacted PHS Report

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The School Committee and City Council have requested a redacted report of the Pittsfield High School investigation that concluded last spring. 

On Wednesday, the committee approved member Ciara Batory's request to release the PHS investigative report with proper redactions by Feb. 18.  The previous day, City Council members made the same request, but left the deadline up to the School Committee. 

Five past and present PHS staff members were investigated for alleged misconduct, and allegations were found to be "unsupported," according to executive summaries released by the former committee. 

"The fact that the City Council has urged transparency here speaks volumes. When another elected body looks at a situation and says the public deserves answers, we should listen because trust isn't built by asking people to take our word for it," Batory said. 

"Trust is built by showing our work. Honesty will always shine, and secrecy will always create doubt." 

It was noted that the report will be heavily redacted and might provide less information than the summaries. The School Committee will review the document before it reaches the public. 

"In preparation for the meeting, I have been told by legal counsel that what will be released as a redacted version will have less information than what was in the summary report," Mayor Peter Marchetti, chair of the committee, said. 

"That's what I can share." 

Batory asserted that the district cannot move forward by asking families to trust major changes in the district, such as the middle school restructuring, "while holding information they paid for, information that directly impacts their confidence in the system that serves their children." 

"Let me be clear. I'm not asking us to be reckless," she said. "I’m asking for a redacted release, a legal release so we protect students' privacy while giving the community the truth they deserve." 

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