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The new consignment shop offers wide variety of quality secondhand items for babies and new moms.

Pittsfield Consignment Shop Offers Infant, Maternity Items

By Joe DurwinPittsfield Correspondent
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A colorful corner at Kikking Kidding Around Consignment store on North Street. The shop dedicated to infant and maternity items opened this week.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Downtown's newest entreprenuer hopes to carve out a retail niche in consignment sales in the Berkshires, offering merchandise geared to new and expecting parents.

Kidding Around Consignment's owner, Jennifer Haven-Lunt, appeared to already find herself fairly busy with foot traffic during a soft opening Tuesday afternoon prior to North Street's 3rd Thursday festivities.

Haven-Lunt says she grew up around secondhand sales, from tag sales to a Lenox consignment shop owned by a close friend of her mother, but her interest in having her own shop began after the birth of her daughter.

"I would do the consignment sale they have in Lee twice a year, and I would just get really excited when that would roll around every six months," said North Street's newest shopkeeper. "I realized I'm good at it, I have an eye for it, and this is just something I want to do."

Kidding Around's owner believes one of the key features of the store is its maternity section.

"It's kind of an untapped resource around here," said Haven-Lunt. "I had to go to Holyoke Mall myself."

Kidding Around will sell clothing and other relevant items on consignment for a cut of 40 percent, a fairly standard proportion for consignment. Those wishing to put merchandise in her shop are asked to call to make an appointment to bring in their wares, which if accepted will sell at the shop for an eight-week cycle, after which if they go unsold the owners can come pick them up.

Among the shop's offerings are a variety of attractive handmade goods, representing the crafts of nine local artisans so far.

Haven-Lunt said she had already had quite a few customers walk in within the store's first few hours Thursday, with two more who entered while she was being interviewed. Dozens more were seen coming and going later in the evening as 3rd Thursday got into full swing.

Kidding Around is open 10 to 5, Tuesday through Saturday, at 397 North St. in the Lloyd Building. While the store  opened to the public Thursday, Kidding Around officially celebrated its grand opening Tuesday, Aug. 21.

Tags: consignment,   infants,   maternity,   new business,   

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Pittsfield Signs Negotiating Rights Agreement With Suns Baseball Team

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Suns will call Wahconah Park home again. 

On Tuesday, the Parks Commission accepted a negotiating rights agreement between the city and longtime summer collegiate baseball team, the Pittsfield Suns. It 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. 

"It certainly looks like it lays out kind of both what the Suns and Pittsfield would like to see over the next year or so during this construction plan, to be able to work together and work exclusively with each other in this time," Commissioner Anthony DeMartino said. 

Owner Jeff Goldklang, joining virtually, said he shared those thoughts, and the team looks forward to starting negotiations. After this approval, it will need a signature from Mayor Peter Marchetti and the baseball team. 

The negotiating rights agreement recognizes the long-standing relationship between Pittsfield and the team dating back to 2012, and the Suns' ownership group's historical ties to Wahconah Park and the city dating to the 1980s. The team skipped the 2024 and 2025 seasons after the historic grandstand was deemed unsafe in 2022.  

The Suns were granted the exclusive right to negotiate in good faith with the city for a license or lease agreement where the Suns will be the primary tenant. During the terms of the agreement, the city can't negotiate or enter into an agreement with another party for leniency, licensing, or operation of Wahconah Park for professional or collegiate summer baseball. 

"The Parties acknowledge the historic and cultural importance of Wahconah park to the residents of Berkshire County and share a mutual goal of providing community access, engagement, and programming on a broad and inclusive scale," it reads. 

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