First Annual 'Running With The Law Race' Takes Off

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Dozens of runners escorted by a police motorcade sped off from Colegrove Park Elementary School on Saturday morning for 5-kilometer "Running With the Law" road race to benefit PopCares.

PopCares raises funds to aid Northern Berkshire individuals and families affected by cancer.

Before the inaugural race, Mayor Richard Alcombright thanked the group of North Adams Police who organized the event that stemmed from a police-student running program at Colegrove.

"Our police are our first line of defense in our community ... and they deserve our thanks and they deserve our respect. I am so proud of the officers of the North Adams Police Department who, in my opinion, have established a model for how cops should be viewed in their communities," the mayor said. "They are stepping outside of the box of traditional law enforcement ... our guys are going to schools, they are going to neighborhoods, and connecting with kids."


He added that people often oversee the many good things officers of the law do, such as the Running with the Law program.

"We see on the news every single wrong thing a police officer does," Alcombright said. "We never hear of the possibly hundreds of thousands of good things that happen with police officers and first responders every day."

The Rev. David Anderson, pastor of First Baptist Church, blessed the race before the runners took off. He noted that police offices and first responders are true heroes.

"We have come to lift up athletes, musicians, and movie stars as heroes, and I think in some respect when we do that we kind of diminish what a hero really is," he said. "This morning as I look around we have a lot of heroes."


Tags: 5k,   cancer support,   Colegrove Park,   north adams police,   running,   

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North Adams Housing Trust Building Foundation for Future

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The newly established Affordable Housing Trust has spent its first meetings determining its mission, objectives and resources. 
 
What it has to decide is the chicken or the egg — set goals with the purpose of finding funds or getting the funds first and determining the best way to use them. 
 
"I think that funding actually would dictate the projects that we do, rather than come up with we what we want to do, and then find a way to fund it," said Trustee Ross Jacobs last Thursday. "There may be sources we explore that will be successful. Some may not. ...
 
"If we start exploring funding options and get some of these wheels rolling, then we'll have a better idea within six months where some of these are going, and then what we can do."
 
Trustee Nancy Bullett said it may be more of doing both at the same time. 
 
"It's almost simultaneous looking at the projects that are incorporating funding, because your funding is specific to whatever it is that you're doing," she said. "So how do you identify the projects that you want to work on, which then dictates the funding."
 
This will tie into the trust's objectives which could include home rehabilitation, property tax relief, emergency rent or mortgage, or support of projects undertaken by private or public developers like Habitat for Humanity. 
 
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