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Mount Everett graduates pose for a final class picture at the Shed on Saturday.

'Element'ary Education for Mount Everett Grads

By Stephen DravisSpecial to iBerkshires
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Salutatorian Samantha Swartz and valedictorian Gabriella Makuc look over the Mount Everett graduation program before speaking to the class of 2012.
LENOX, Mass. — Gabriella Makuc got her best graduation present from Mother Nature.

The Mount Everett Regional School valedictorian already had an honor speech built around the theme of water. Needless to say, the drenching rain pouring down outside the Serge Koussevitzky Music Shed at Tanglewood was music to her ears.

"I'm glad the rain decided to join us," Makuc said.

It certainly made a fitting backdrop for her remarks, which used water as a metaphor for the universality of the human experience.

"It flows through rivers, down mountainsides, evaporates, joins the world in another hemisphere, gets tossed around in the Great Lakes, but remains the same," the Lawrence University-bound Makuc said. "We return to the water when we're true to our pure selves. We are all made of the same stuff — perhaps the stuff of which stars are made, or perhaps this simple element that's common to all humanity.

"Sometimes it's easy to see life for the moments and the passing images. It's easy to get caught up in our appearance and our status and forget that who we are inside is, like water, always changing form and expression while remaining that same pure soul."

Sixty-seven other graduates of the Southern Berkshire Regional School District high school joined Makuc on Tanglewood's main stage.

Earlier in the week, Makuc explained that she wanted to encourage her classmates not to buy into a cultural tendency to live only for the moment.

"I want to motivate people to not only work hard but to enjoy the work they're doing and enjoy life," she said in a telephone interview. "The culture is full of a lot of instant gratification. But I think a good path for everyone in society to at least try is to enjoy the process — to not be afraid of long-term commitment and long-term sacrifice.

"In the world we're in today, we're connected to everyone around the world but sometimes not connected in the right ways, and we've lost some of the human connection we can find in great literature, music and art."

Makuc is well acquainted with great music. She plays first trumpet in the school band and has played piano since she was 5. She plans to study music and literary studies in Appleton, Wis., and one of her possible career aspirations is to be a choir director, she said.

On Saturday morning, she encouraged her fellow graduates to stay true to their goals and open to life's possibilities.

"We must understand that the world, like a river, is in a constant state of creativity and flux," Makuc said. "We must understand others this way, not judging, but encouraging, not limiting, but giving second chances. Water has no limits. We are made of the most giving and transformative substance on the planet. Its purpose is to connect. It connects civilization to civilization, community to community — it connects us all to our Earth."

Connection was a theme for each of the principal speakers at graduation exercises.


The small high school graduated 67 seniors on Saturday.
Salutatorian Samantha Swartz talked about the bonds she felt with role models who put her on the path to Worcester Polytechnic Institute, where she plans to study robotics engineering in the fall.

"Regardless of what you do after today, regardless of where you go or who you become — strive to be a role model, to be a mentor," Swartz said in her welcoming remarks. "Both now and in the years to come, pay forward what you have been given by the members of this audience and others who have encouraged and inspired you."

Mount Everett Principal Glenn R. Devoti lauded the class of 2012 for its sense of obligation and its success "paying forward."

"A small school our size has no business having a band like the one we hear today," Devoti said. "We have no business having clubs like FFA, Interact and SADD that do so much. We have no business having two teams competing for Western Mass championships this week.

"The reason why we do is all of you understand the obligation that goes along with being part of a community that is connected. Without that sense of obligation, none of these things would happen."

On Saturday, Makuc reminded her audience that the Sheffield high school encourages students to connect with one another by promoting "cross-curricular projects."

She is looking forward to continuing that style of learning in college.

"Lawrence seemed like the absolutely perfect place for me," she said last week. "It's so small, and they made it clear from the start the college and conservatory are really collaborative. If you want to do a project with history and music, the professors will work with you to make the connections.

"I feel more of a connection between music and the college than at any other school I've been to."

Tags: graduation 2012,   Mount Everett,   

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Pittsfield 2025 Year in Review

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city continued to grapple with homelessness in 2025 while seeing a glimmer of hope in upcoming supportive housing projects. 

The Berkshire Carousel also began spinning again over the summer with a new patio and volunteer effort behind it.  The ride has been closed since 2018. 

Founders James Shulman and his wife, Jackie, offered it to the city through a conveyance and donation of property, which was met with some hesitation before it was withdrawn. 

Now, a group of more than 50 volunteers learned everything from running the ride to detailing the horses, and it is run by nonprofit Berkshire Carousel Inc., with the Shulmans supporting operating costs. 

Median and Camping Petitions 

Conversations about homelessness resumed in Council Chambers when Mayor Peter Marchetti proposed a median standing and public camping ban to curb negative behaviors in the downtown area.  Neither of the ordinances reached the finish line, and community members swarmed the public comment podium to urge the city to lead with compassion and housing-first solutions. 

In February, the City Council saw Marchetti's request to add a section in the City Code for median safety and pedestrian regulation in public roadways.  In March, the Ordinances and Rules subcommittee decided it was not the time to impose median safety regulations on community members and filed the petition. 

"If you look at this as a public safety issue, which I will grant that this is entirely put forward as a public safety issue, there are other issues that might rate higher that need our attention more with limited resources," said former Ward 7 councilor Rhonda Serre. 

The proposal even ignited a protest in Park Square

Protesters and public commenters said the ordinance may be framed as a public safety ordinance, but actually targets poor and vulnerable community members, and that criminalizing activities such as panhandling and protesting infringes on First Amendment rights and freedom of speech. 

In May, the City Council sent a proposed ordinance that bans encampments on any street, sidewalk, park, open space, waterway, or banks of a waterway to the Ordinances and Rules Subcommittee, the Homelessness Advisory Committee, and the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Task Force.

Several community members at the meeting asked city officials, "Where do unhoused people go if they are banned from camping on public property?"

It was referred back to the City Council with the removal of criminalization language, a new fine structure, and some exceptions for people sleeping in cars or escaping danger, and then put in the Board of Health’s hands

Housing 

Some housing solutions came online in 2025 amidst the discourse about housing insecurity in Pittsfield. 

The city celebrated nearly 40 new supportive units earlier in December.  This includes nine units at "The First" located within the Zion Lutheran Church, and 28 on West Housatonic Street. A ceremony was held in the new Housing Resource Center on First Street, which was funded by the American Rescue Plan Act. 

These units are permanent supportive housing, a model that combines affordable housing with voluntary social services. 

Terrace 592 also began leasing apartments in the formerly blighted building that has seen a couple of serious fires.  The housing complex includes 41 units: 25 one-bedrooms, 16 two-bedrooms, and three fully accessible units. 

Pittsfield supported the effort with $750,000 in American Rescue Plan Act funds and some Community Development Block Grant funds. Hearthway, formerly Berkshire Housing Development Corp., is managing the apartments and currently accepting applications.

Allegrone Construction Co. also made significant progress with its $18 million overhaul of the historic Wright Building and the Jim's House of Shoes property.  The project combines the two buildings into one development, retaining the commercial storefronts on North Street and providing 35 new rental units, 28 market-rate and seven affordable.  

Other housing projects materialized in 2025 as well, including a proposal for nearly 50 new units on the former site of the Polish Community Club, and more than 20 units at 24 North St., the former Berkshire County Savings Bank, as well as 30-34 North St.

Wahconah Park 

After the Wahconah Park Restoration Committee completed its work with a formal recommendation in 2024, news about the park was quiet while the city planned its next move.  

That changed when it was announced that the city would bring outdoor ice skating back with a temporary rink on the baseball park’s lawn.  By the end of the year, Pittsfield had signed an exclusive negotiating agreement with the Pittsfield Suns baseball team.  

The ice rink was originally proposed for Clapp Park, but when the project was put out to bid, the system came back $75,000 higher than the cost estimate, and the cost estimates for temporary utilities were over budget.  The city received a total of $200,000 in donations from five local organizations for the effort. 

The more than 100-year-old grandstand’s demolition was also approved in 2025.  Planners are looking at a more compact version of the $28.4 million rebuild that the restoration committee recommended.

Last year, there was $18 million committed between grant funding and capital borrowing. 

The Parks Commission recently accepted a negotiating rights agreement between the city and longtime summer collegiate baseball team, the Pittsfield Suns, that solidifies that the two will work together when the historic ballpark is renovated. 

It remains in effect until the end of 2027, or when a license or lease agreement is signed. Terms will be automatically extended to the end of 2028 if it appears the facility won't be complete by then. 

William Stanley Business Park 

Site 9, the William Stanley Business Park parcel, formerly described to have looked like the face of the moon, was finished in early 2025, and the Pittsfield Economic Development Authority continues to prepare for new tenants

Mill Town Capital is planning to develop a mixed-use building on the 16.5-acre site, and housing across Woodlawn Avenue on an empty parcel.  About 25,000 cubic yards of concrete slabs, foundations, and pavements had to be removed and greened over. 

There is also movement at the Berkshire Innovation Center as it begins a 7,000-square-foot  expansion to add an Advanced Manufacturing for Advanced Optics Tech Hub and bring a new company, Myrias, to Pittsfield. 

The City Council voted to support the project with a total of $1 million in Pittsfield Economic Development Funds, and the state awarded the BIC with a $5.2 million transformation grant. 

Election 

Voters chose new City Council members and a largely new School Committee during the municipal election in November.  The council will be largely the same, as only two councilors will be new. 

Earl Persip III, Peter White, Alisa Costa, and Kathleen Amuso held their seats as councilors at large.  There were no races for wards 1, 3, and 4. Patrick Kavey was re-elected to Ward 5 after winning the race against Michael Grady, and Lampiasi was re-elected to Ward 6 after winning the race against Walter Powell. 

Nine candidates ran to fill the six-seat committee.  Ciara Batory, Sarah Muil, Daniel Elias, Katherine Yon, Heather McNeice, and Carolyn Barry were elected for two-year terms. 

Katherine Nagy Moody secured representation of Ward 7 over Anthony Maffuccio, and Cameron Cunningham won the Ward 2 seat over Corey Walker. Both are new to the council. 

In October, Ward 7 Councilor Rhonda Serre stepped down to work for the Pittsfield Public Schools. 

 

 

 

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