More than 200 volunteers gathered at the Church Street Center prior to participating in the 21st annual Day of Service on Monday morning.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — In North County, Martin Luther King Jr. Day isn't a day off — it's a day on.
"I know it's nice to take some time off, but today as the event is, it's a day of service," said state Rep. Gailanne Cariddi, D-North Adams, at a packed Church Street Center following lunch on Monday.
More than 200 volunteers entered the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts' center early in the morning for the 21st annual Day of Service and were dispersed throughout the community to work on a variety of projects. Volunteers were sent to many sites, such as the Friendship Center, Louison House, various homes in Williamstown, Florida, Adams and North Adams for winterization, to the Adams Youth Center and more.
Mayor Richard Alcombright had two questions and a request for everyone after.
"Did you have fun," he asked. "Did you feel good?"
Both short questions elicited a loud, positive response.
"So we're talking about the gift of time, what we receive back on the gift of time," Alcombright continued. "Our receipt is to feel good and have fun. So that means we need to keep doing this ..."
State Sen. Benjamin Downing, D-Pittsfield, who traveled up from a community service of knitting scarves in Pittsfield, stressed the importance of staying positive and rejecting cynicism despite social issues — lack of good-paying jobs, drug abuse, poverty, homelessness, hunger.
"We have the ability to change that," Downing said. "We have the ability to solve those problems if we reject that cynicism. And being here today, going out and doing that work today together we're reminded of that. That doesn't mean we solve every problem in the world over three hours ... but it means we pushed the rock a little bit farther up the hill."
Paul Austin of the Northern Berkshire Habitat of Humanity received this year's Peacemaker Award.
MCLA President Mary Grant credited the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights leaders for inspiring the community to join together and help each other out.
"When we have a chance on a day like this to gather together, to make a difference, to be part of the community, we do it because we're on the shoulders of Andrew Young, we're on the shoulders of Martin Luther King, we're on the shoulders of John Lewis," Grant said.
The celebration was capped off with the presentation of the Peacemaker Award to Paul Austin, the president of Northern Berkshire Habitat for Humanity. Alex Daugherty, chairman of the Martin Luther King Jr. Day Committee, said Austin volunteers a lot of his time and encourages others to help any way possible.
"If you ever had the opportunity to know Paul or work with him, he's one of the guys that says, 'If you show up, you're on the job,'" Daughtery said.
Austin thanked the volunteers and his present and past board members at Habitat for all their work.
"I love you all, thank you so much," Austin said.
This year's celebration included numerous acts in between speeches. MCLA's a capella group Allegretos and dance group Nexxus performed. In addition, Drury High School Jazz Band singer Jake Daughtery and guitarist Michael Mazzu played "The General" by Dispatch and "Hallelujah" by Jeff Buckley. Percussionist Otha Day closed the celebration.
In addition to the regular celebration, the "Wall of Hope" was displayed in the hallway leading to the Church Street Center's back exit. In 1994, students from North County were asked to create essays, poems and drawings to share their dreams. Twenty years later, Northern Berkshire Neighbors, a program of the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition, asked about 275 fourth- and fifth-graders from Greylock, Sullivan, C.T. Plunkett, St. Stanislaus Kostka, Gabriel Abbott Memorial and Emma Miller Memorial schools to participate.
There were a variety of messages, many conveying the need for less violence and weapons, not smoking cigarettes and being more tolerant towards others.
The lunch was provided by MCLA's Aramark and the Berkshire Food Project.
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'Swatting' Incident at Mount Greylock Regional School
Staff Reports iBerkshires
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Williamstown Police on Wednesday morning responded to an apparent 'swatting' incident at Mount Greylock Regional School.
At 10:17 a.m., police were notified by the middle-high school that a threat was phoned in to the school, police reported in a news release.
Mount Greylock implemented its security protocols, and the police responded to the Cold Spring Road campus with assistance from the North Adams and Lanesborough Police Departments and State Police, according to the release.
Law enforcement officers conducted a search of the school and surrounding areas. The search uncovered no evidence to support the threat and the school returned to normal operations at 11:03 a.m., police said. Additional public safety resources were to remain on scene for the remainder of the school day.
The investigation is continuing, and persons with information are requested to notify the Williamstown Police Department at 413-458-5733.
Swatting is a dangerous, illegal hoax where perpetrators make false emergency reports — such as bomb threats or active shooters — to provoke a heavily armed law enforcement (SWAT) response to a target's address, police said. It is a criminal act of harassment or retaliation that puts victims, officers, and the public in immediate physical danger.
The Williamstown Fire Department and Northern Berkshire Emergency Medical Services also provided assets to assist in the police response.
Colleen Taylor and her brother and business partner Sean Taylor grabbed the concession offered by the Five Corners Stewardship Association, which purchased the store at the junction of Routes 7 and 43 in 2022.
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The Prudential Committee last week reviewed a draft annual fire district meeting warrant that includes an operational expenses budget up 9.4 percent from the figures approved at the May 2025 annual meeting.
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At issue is a 4.3-acre riverfront parcel owned by the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation off Woodlawn Drive near the site of the town's new fire station.
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The Planning Board this month voted unanimously to recommend that the Select Board ask town meeting to accept the provisions of the provisions of the commonwealth's Seasonal Communities law.
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