Pittsfield Passes Resolution for 28th Amendment

By Joe DurwinPittsfield Correspondent
Print Story | Email Story
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved a citizens' petition to add their voice to the list of local governments calling for a constitutional amendment to invalidate the Citizens United ruling.

The resolution had garned favor from councilors at a previous subcommittee hearing devoted to the subject, and was passed with little debate. Numerous Pittsfield residents spoke adamantly in favor of its passage during the council meeting's open mic period Tuesday.

The only significant resistance from the Pittsfield residents to the resolution has come from Alexander Blumin, a colorful frequent commentator at city meetings. During the public input period, Blumin reiterated his belief that for the council to issue such a resolution would be a violation of Massachusetts General law, a contention city attorney Kathleen Degnan denied at a previous subcommittee hearing on the issue. 

Tricia Farley-Bouvier, in her first time addressing Pittsfield's council as its state representative, said she came to encourage the resolution because she sees the Citizens United decision as "the single biggest issue that we have in our country," and the "amount of money in politics today, the single biggest threat to our democracy."

"When corporations are spending this amount of money to sway elections, it's just exactly like putting a 'For Sale sign' out in front of the White House," said Farley-Bouvier, referencing a recent Time magazine cover.

The Supreme Court's ruling on Citizens United vs. the Federal Elections Committee held that limiting corporate election spending was a violation of the First Amendment. Opponents are calling for a 28th Amendment to deny "corporate personhood."

With this resolution, Pittsfield becomes the 69th municipality in the state to have issued proclamations in favor of such an amendment. A similar measure passed with bipartisan support in the Legistlature two weeks earlier, with a unanimous vote in the House and a single dissenter in the Senate. Massachusetts is the seventh state to have passed such a resolution. A map of local resolutions nationwide can be found here.

Tags: citizens petition,   Citizens United,   city council,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Berkshire Habitat ReStore Overwhelmed With Unwanted Donations

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The lot is under surveillance and the stores is considering cracking down on dumpers.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Central Berkshire Habitat for Humanity ReStore won't be taking any donations on Saturday — because it's already overloaded with items dumped on its property.
 
ReStore on Hubbard Avenue sells donated furniture, building supplies and home improvement materials to help keep bulky items out of landfills and to raise money for Habitat for Humanity.
 
But people have been dumping their unwanted items on the property without an appointment and sometimes after hours. That's left a pile of trash for the nonprofit to deal with. 
 
"So people just, you know, came and even if it's closed, I personally catch several people in the camera out of hours," said ReStore general manager Alex Valdivieso.
 
Valdivieso has been the general manager for less than a year but says last summer was a big problem with dumping and with the weather getting nicer, people have started to come again to dump their unwanted items. 
 
To help get rid of the waste, 20 to 25 teens are volunteering from Lenox High School to help fill dumpsters and clean up the lot that's now littered with items needing to be thrown away.
 
Valdivieso says he has two 30-foot-long trash roll-offs that will be filled this weekend. 
 
View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories