State Rep. William 'Smitty' Pignatelli presents an award to Barbara Minkler at the third annual Berkshire County Educator Recognition Award ceremony. For more photos, see the slideshow.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts is making sure teachers are recognized for their efforts with the annual Berkshire County Educator Recognition Award.
President Mary Grant recalled the first award ceremony when Cynthia Roper-Patenaude was honored during her opening remarks.
"On the very first year we did this, it was so moving because the teacher who won the award that year got up... And she had the whole room rapt when she said very emotionally from the heart, 'This doesn't happen for teachers,'" Grant said at the third annual ceremony on Wednesday evening at MCLA's Church Street Center.
"And you could tell that everyone in the room thought this really should."
This year, Charles Bradshaw from Wahconah Regional High School in Dalton, Carol Ide of Undermountain Elementary School in Sheffield and Barbara Minkler of Muddy Brook Elementary School in Great Barrington received the awards, presented by 4th Berkshire district state Rep. William "Smitty" Pignatelli.
"I argue with people all the time about school teachers, but I argue for you. There's too many knuckleheads out there that think they only work on 180 days a year, work 9 to 3 every day, they get a weeks of vacation every six weeks," said Pignatelli, noting his familiarity because he grew up with educators and his sister teaches first grade. "I know about the nights and the weekends and the summers and the preparations and the money out of your own pocket because you go to the Staples or Walmart or something or somewhere local to buy supplies because of the budget cutbacks we've all experienced."
Bradshaw, who teaches Latin, currently has about a quarter of Wahconah High enrolled in his classes. In addition, he brought in the Senior Assembly Program, which is held a few days prior to graduation and honors the senior class before the entire community.
Pignatelli presents an award to Carol Ide.
Although grateful for the award, Bradshaw said the award is for the village, the Central Berkshire Regional School District and his "favorite building in that district, which is a blue and white building called Wahconah Regional High School."
"I have to say that when I started 47 years ago I used to leap out of bed in the morning to go to teach, and I tell the kids now they're the reason I can still get up," Bradshaw said. "Things feel a little different when you're 68.
Ide, a third-grade teacher at Undermountain and part of the Southern Berkshire Regional School District, grew up with a music background, even having a stint in Arlo Guthrie's band Shenandoah. Since then, she's been an educator for 26 years.
She mixes her love of music and teaching, and in her statement for the award said, "We rap the continents, we sing about habitats, I share the stage with my students when we dance geometric shapes and addition and subtraction problems."
Ide was inspired to teach by her mother and has no regrets.
"Most of all I wanted to say this job of teaching is a love and if you don't love it, you're not in the right job," Ide said. "I do love it and I do, like Charlie, get up every morning and really wanting to be there still."
Minkler, a 22-year veteran of the Berkshire Hills Regional School District, most recently was an academic intervention teacher at Muddy Brook. During her speech, she stressed the importance of her fellow staff and family for helping her achieve in her career.
"I was deeply humbled when I was nominated for this award, words cannot convey how deeply honored I am by being chosen," Minkler said. "Achieving this award in this time of my career is not a solo journey."
Currently, she's keeping up to date on subjects related to reading and teaching the English language.
Jessica S. Bazinet, Catherine Marquet Elliot and Teresa Kardasen won the award in 2012. Roper-Patenaude won the award in 2011.
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Berkshire County Getting $4M Toward Housing Improvements
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
Housing Secretary Ed Augustus has been a frequent visitor to the Berkshires and says a new rural designation for the Housing Choice Initiative grew out of conversations with small towns.
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Millions of federal Community Development Block Grant funds are coming to Berkshire County for housing and economic development.
On Thursday, Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll said announced $33.5 million in federal CDBG funds, of which $5.45 million will be coming to the county.
Great Barrington, in conjunction with Egremont and Stockbridge, has been allocated $1.25 million to rehabilitate approximately 14 housing units.
"We really recognize the importance of having strong local partners who are doing that hard work every day, educating our kids, keeping our neighborhoods safe, investing in the best of what makes our community special, places we make memories, places that drive the economy," said Driscoll at the Housatonic Community Center.
"These dollars in particular can help do all of that, along with helping cure older housing stock and meet the needs of community members who might find a desire to have a new roof or make a housing unit more accessible, but don't always have the resources to do it. These dollars are really special, and we're really grateful."
The federal fiscal 2025 CDBG awards, funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and administered by the state Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities, help small cities and towns undertake projects that benefit low and moderate-income residents.
The more than $33 million will be dispersed to 52 communities across the commonwealth. Hinsdale and Florida will share a total of $950,000 to rehabilitate 11 housing units; Lenox and Sandisfield will share a total of $1,050,000 to rehabilitate 12 housing units, and New Marlborough, Mount Washington, and Otis will see a total of $1,250,000 to rehabilitate 15 housing units. North Adams is getting $950,000 for the second phase of senior center improvements and road repairs.
The funds can be used for projects involving housing rehabilitation, sidewalk and road improvements, planning studies, public facility upgrades, and social services such as food pantries, youth programming, and homelessness prevention.
Town Manager Liz Hartsgrove said this reflects what is possible when federal, state, and local governments work together, and that the public investment shares significance beyond dollars alone.
"These programs and projects become instruments of stability, equity, and trust. It allows the government to meet real needs, strengthen neighborhoods, and ensure residents can remain safely and securely in their homes. Places where lives are built, memories are formed, and community identity is shaped for generations to come," she said.
"Investments like CDBG reduce uncertainties for families, provide reassurance for seniors, and create pathways for households to remain rooted in the communities they contribute to every day. When individuals and families are supported in this way, they are better positioned to thrive, and when people thrive, communities grow stronger, more resilient, and more connected."
Third-grade students in Brandon Boule's art class at Lee Elementary School showcased a diverse selection of men's apparel at Zabian's Clothing, located at 19 Main St.
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State Secretary of Housing Edward Augustus visited Berkshire County on Tuesday to hear about the region's needs and see opportunities for adding more units. click for more
The Wildcats marched 84 yards in a drive that consumed 11 minutes, 17 seconds of the third quarter for a critical touchdown in a 48-36 win over Boston’s Cathedral High in the quarter-finals of the Division 8 Tournament. click for more
The Norman Rockwell Museum will showcase two new collections on Saturday: one highlighting a local artist and the other exploring publications from the Jazz Age. click for more
The awards were presented to John Toole, Kathleen DeVarennes, Laurie Norton Moffatt, Susie Brown and Joshua Bloom at the chamber's annual meeting held at Greenock Country Club.
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