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The center is located at 175 Mohegan Street.
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The Berkshire United Way will help parents with teaching children to read.
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Berkshire Health System plans to provide services as well.

Pittsfield Opens Third Community Center In Public Housing Complex

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Heather Fletcher from the Berkshire United Way shows neighborhood children a collection of books the organization gives away.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city has opened its third community center to provide services to residents in public housing.
 
On Tuesday, city officials and representatives from an array of social service groups held an open house at a unit in Wilson Park.
 
Justine Dodds, the city's housing specialist in the office of Community Development, will be in charge of scheduling programs developed by community groups.
 
"The idea is to bring the services and resources we have in the city to the residents in public housing," Dodds said at the open house. 
 
The programming will replicate the two other community centers at Dower Square and Francis Plaza. Groups interested in providing programs can schedule time and they'll have space to run it.
 
Groups have put on sports mentoring, wellness clinics, nutrition and healthy cooking classes, back-to-school fairs, and theater demonstrations. It also serves as a meeting place.
 
"It can run the gambit from small to large," Dodds said. "We're trying to replicate the same idea but this is larger and the residents may want different programs."
 
Dodds is giving out surveys to the residents in an effort to try to find the most beneficial and demanded programs. The focus is particularly on programs for families and children. 
 
"We've got a number of different agencies involved," Mayor Daniel Bianchi said. "It is just a general outreach program to encourage people to seek out different services."
 
The Berkshire United Way, for example, had a presence at the open house. Heather Fletcher, the organization's family literacy coordinator, said it will have a presence in the space. The agency will be focusing on bringing programs to help teach children to read at a young age and providing parents with books and guidance in ways to teach.
 
"Some of the parents don't realize that they need to work with them before school age," Fletcher said. "I'm here for outreach and we would schedule playgroup sessions."
 
Bianchi said not only does the center provide a place for services but will serve a role in helping those who feel "disenfranchised" back into the community. 
 
Stacy Parsons from Head Start, Adam Hinds from Pittsfield Community Connection, and Mayor Daniel Bianchi.
The unit features three bedrooms used by different organizations, a living room/dining room area, and a kitchen. The utilities will be paid by the Housing Authority, who freed up a space in each of the three public housing complexes for the centers. 
 
"They have the wherewithal to manage these," Bianchi said. "But, we'll look for grants to help."
 
The program has morphed somewhat since the 2013 openings of the Francis Plaza and Dower Square. The idea sprung from a policing focus the city used to operate through the complexes. Then, officers ran the programming and used it as a substation for residents to talk about crime or issues in the community. 
 
In 2013, the city used funding from the Charles E Shannon Grant program, a grant specifically eyed to combat youth violence and gang activity, to bring back those substations.
 
The city had previously had an officer budgeted to run the stations. In this new program, police are still available and can use the center to meet with residents and, at Dower, officers have used it to run programs with children, too, but specific hours and programs aren't being scheduled.
 
"We are challenged to have police officers have hours here," Bianchi said.
 
The Housing Authority has taken on the bills and the Community Development Department has taken on overseeing that the social services are still provided, which frees up the Shannon Grant funds for the Pittsfield Community Connection, which created two growing mentoring programs.
 
Adam Hinds, who runs the Pittsfield Community Connection program, attended the open house and said the space could be used by his staff as well as they grow the mentoring programs.

Tags: community development,   community policing,   neighborhood program,   social services,   

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Pittsfield Holds Second Master Plan Workshop

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Participants added notes to the sectors  such as transportation, open space and neighborhoods  being reviewed by the Master Plan Steering Committee. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass.— The city is about halfway through developing its new master plan, and held a second community workshop this past Thursday. 

"Basically, we're talking to people from Pittsfield and trying to figure out, among a broad sector of issues that affect us, what is our goal and vision for the next 10 years, where we want Pittsfield to be in 10 years, and what changes do we want to see?" Director of Community Development Justine Dodds explained to about 20 community members and city staff at Conte Community School. 

"That will be broken down into some goals and objectives and then some measurable action items that we can all take as a community to move that forward."  

The Pittsfield Master Plan is the policy guide for future physical development, covering land use, infrastructure, sustainability, and more. The plan was last updated in 2009, and Pittsfield has engaged the VHB engineering firm and CommunityScale consultants to bring it through 2036. 

There have been two public listening sessions, a Master Plan Advisory Committee guiding the work, and small focus groups for each section. On poster boards, residents were able to see and mark the draft goals and actions under six themes: economic development, housing opportunities, transportation and infrastructure, environment and open space, neighborhoods and community, and governance and collaboration. 

In November 2025, community members participated in a similar exercise at City Hall. 

Transportation and infrastructure had several notes on them. Suggestions included using infrastructure to address the urban heat island effect, a light rail system, and continuing to implement Complete Streets standards for roadway construction projects. 

"I want to ride my bike to my friend's house safely," one respondent wrote. 

Under economic development, people suggested digital business infrastructure for the downtown, food hall opportunities, and nightlife opportunities. 

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