Cumberland Farms Cuts Ribbon On Renovated Dalton Store

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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The Girl Scouts of Central and Western Massachusetts helped cut the ribbon on the renovated Cumberland Farms store on Thursday.

DALTON, Mass. — Cumberland Farms is trying to break the stigma of "gas station food."

The company has been revamping its nearly 600 stores with ovens, coffee bar and an array of freshly made food offerings — from pizza to chicken tenders to hot dogs to macaroni and cheese bites.

On Thursday, company officials celebrated the Dalton store's renovation with a ribbon cutting and tastings of the new menu.


"We're trying to get away from the 'gas station food' stigma," said Matt Balaschi, a company marketing associate. "This is our 'grand' opening but we've been open for the last month."

Williamstown's Cumberland Farms was among the first stores to get a face-lift five years ago after a fire severely damaged the building.

The company is planning a new store in North Adams at the former Greenberg's Home Center location on Curran Highway.

The company shut down the Dalton store for about three months to completely renovate the interior. Dalton's location in 175th remodel completed — so they are about one-third of the way through. The company has store though New England, New York and in Florida.

Coupled with the grand opening, the store is running a fundraiser for the Girl Scouts of Central and Western Massachusetts. For every hot coffee the store sells in the next month, 10 cents will be donated to the organization. Balaschi said the goal is to raise $1,000.

The Girl Scouts were on hand Thursday to cut the ribbon with company officials.

Cumberland Farm began in 1939 as a farm in Cumberland, R.I., and opened the first convenience store in 1962. It now has stores in 11 states and employes 6,000. The Massachusetts-based company says the entire chain sells 20 million cups of coffee a year.


Tags: convenience store,   fundraiser,   grand opening,   

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Force 16U Defends Home Field with Tourney Title

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. – The Berkshire Force 16U travel softball team Sunday rallied for three runs in the top of the seventh inning to pull away for an 8-4 win in the championship game of their Battle of the Berkshires tournament at the Doyle Complex.
 
Ava McMahon struck out six and gave up just one run after the first inning as the Force completed a 3-0 run through the playoffs after going 1-2 in pool play.
 
Mollie Crawford, Amelia Polidoro and McMahon each drove in a run in the late rally that finally gave McMahon a little bit of breathing room.
 
The Force jumped on top early with three runs in the top of the first, but the Nor’Easters out of New Hampshire’s Lakes Region responded right away, tying the game.
 
In the second, Amaya Alger (3-for-3) singled, moved up on Mackenzie Biros’ sacrifice bunt and scored on a combination stolen base/errant throw to give the Force a 4-3 lead it never relinquished.
 
But Berkshire missed chances to add to that lead in the third, fourth and fifth, leaving runners in scoring positions in each inning.
 
Meanwhile, McMahon was brilliant in the circle after a rough first inning, striking out six, walking just one and allowing three earned runs in a complete-game effort.
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