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Nicola Pisapia and Vincenzo Landolfi exchanged gifts with Mayor Linda Tyer on Friday.

Pittsfield Welcomes Sister City Cava de Tirreni Delegates

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Nicola Pisapia said the program is meaningful to Cava because there are so many Italians now living in Pittsfield, unlike other sister cities twinned with Cava.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — It was 30 years ago when an air conditioning company from Pittsfield went to Cava de Tirreni in Italy for a job.

That trip started longtime friendship between the two cities.

Through the Sister City program, Pittsfield has been partnered with Cava De Tirreni and residents of both cities have traveled between them.
 
The cities launched an exchange program allowing students to study and learn the culture of one another. 
 
On Friday that relationship continued when the city welcomed Nicola Pisapia, the chairman of the Sister City Committee in Cava and chamber of commerce director in Napals, and former Cava Vice Mayor Vincenzo Landolfi. The two will be spending the weekend at a number of locations in the Berkshires getting to know the people and the sites.
 
"It's a long history and I have a lot of memories. Many people from Pittsfield have come to Cava and many people from Cava came here. It is a friendship going on day by day and years by years. It is a very important thing to do. This is history for us," Pisapia said.
 
He said Cava held a similar celebration in June with representative from Pittsfield. 
 
"The program is wonderful. We have enjoyed each moment that we've stayed here in Pittsfield. We do believe it is a very important moment, this one, because we are trying to connect people to talk with each other, we know each other, we know our culture," Pisapia said, adding that though there are three other sister cities of Cava, Pittsfield is one with a lot of Italian heritage making it seem more like family. "I think the city of Pittsfield is wonderful, not only as a place. The place is wonderful. We've seen wonderful places, wonderful lakes, wonderful forests, but especially the people. There are great people here in Pittsfield."
 
Mayor Linda Tyer said Italian heritage is still strong here. Her great-grandmother "was an amazing cook. We are still enjoying the legacy of her recipes and it's a very special thing for my family to have those foods when we come together." Her grandfather made wine. 
 
In Pittsfield, the train would arrive and there would be an exodus of workers going to get the grapes, she said. When her family sold their West Street home, she remembers "one of the most difficult things" was to clean out all of the old bottles of wine and wine making equipment.
 

Mayor Linda Tyer, Nicola Pisapia, and Judge Rudolph Sacco. Sacco was one of the delegates from Pittsfield who went to Cava in June to celebrate the 30th anniversary there.
"Many, many families have that memory and that experience. Still today, that Italian legacy is very important to our city," Tyer said.
 
The mayor said she's been to Italy many times and every times she "falls more and more in love with Italy" and she hopes the delegation from Cava does the same when the come here.
 
The celebration started in City Hall on Friday morning with an exchange of gifts. From there, the two Italians will go to the summit of Mount Greylock, play golf at Donnybrook, and eat at Matt Reillys. On Saturday, they'll attend the farmer's market, the Berkshire Carousel, and have an Italian American Club picnic. At night they will go to Tanglewood in Lenox for the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
 
After Mass on Sunday, they'll take a private tour of the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge and finish with a boat tour of Onota Lake. Pittsfield will wish the two farewell after a breakfast at Joanne's Luncheonette on Monday.

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Pittsfield Housing Project Adds 37 Supportive Units and Collective Hope

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass.— A new chapter in local efforts to combat housing insecurity officially began as community leaders and residents gathered at The First on to celebrate a major expansion of supportive housing in the city.

The ribbon was cut on Thursday Dec. 19, on nearly 40 supportive permanent housing units; nine at The First, located within the Zion Lutheran Church, and 28 on West Housatonic Street.  The Housing Resource Center, funded by Pittsfield's American Rescue Plan Act dollars, hosted a celebration for a project that is named for its rarity: The First. 

"What got us here today is the power of community working in partnership and with a shared purpose," Hearthway CEO Eileen Peltier said. 

In addition to the 28 studio units at 111 West Housatonic Street and nine units in the rear of the church building, the Housing Resource Center will be open seven days a week with two lounges, a classroom, a laundry room, a bathroom, and lockers. 

Erin Forbush, ServiceNet's director of shelter and housing, challenged attendees to transform the space in the basement of Zion Lutheran Church into a community center.  It is planned to operate from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. year-round.

"I get calls from folks that want to help out, and our shelters just aren't the right spaces to be able to do that. The First will be that space that we can all come together and work for the betterment of our community," Forbush said. 

"…I am a true believer that things evolve, and things here will evolve with the people that are utilizing it." 

Earlier that day, Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities Secretary Ed Augustus joined Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll and her team in Housatonic to announce $33.5 million in federal Community Development Block Grant funding, $5.45 million to Berkshire County. 

He said it was ambitious to take on these two projects at once, but it will move the needle.  The EOHLC contributed more than $7.8 million in subsidies and $3.4 million in low-income housing tax credit equity for the West Housatonic Street build, and $1.6 million in ARPA funds for the First Street apartments.

"We're trying to get people out of shelter and off the streets, but we know there are a lot of people who are couch surfing, who are living in their cars, who are one paycheck away from being homeless themselves," Augustus said. 

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