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Pittsfield Rail Trail Extension Likely to Be Delayed

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — City officials expect the Ashuwillticook Rail Trail extension project will likely take place in 2021 instead of 2020.
 
The City Council authorized the taking of five temporary construction easements by eminent domain  for the rail trail extension on Crane Avenue Tuesday however Parks and Open Spaces Manager James McGrath said that with COVID-19 running rampant, this project may be delayed.
 
"More realistically this may be a 2021 project given the recent circumstance that we are all facing," McGrath said.
 
Construction was originally slated to begin in the fall of 2020; the state could go out to bid after the easements were obtained.
 
He did add that the easements may be for five years but this is just a boiler plate number used. Really the project would take about a year from start to finish.
 
"It certainly won't take that long once the project gets going to complete it," he said.
 
These parcels include portions of land located at 875, 891, 901, 891, and 898 Crane Ave.
 
In other business on Tuesday, the City Council accepted an order from the mayor to transfer and appropriate $154,000 from Retained Earnings-Sewer to the Department of Public Utilities Sewer Division.
 
This can be broken down into $9,000 for a Water/Sewer Maintenance Person, $25,000 for Scheduled Overtime, $40,000 for Maintenance, and $80,000 for the acquisition of equipment.
 
This action did draw some questions from the council and Ward 4 Councilor Christoper Connell first asked what equipment the city planned to purchase.
 
Public Services Commissioner Ricardo Morales said the $80,000 is needed to fill out the budget and noted the city already expended the funds to purchase video equipment needed to service pipes, sewer lines, leaks, and other utility issues throughout the city.
 
He said it was purchased in September by the former commissioner.
 
This concerned Connell.
 
"My issue here is with how the process was done," he said. "It's backwards."
 
Director of Finance Matthew Kerwood said when the city purchased the equipment it was able to adjust the budget and pay for it within the parameters of the budget. He said it was only after a series of emergency breaks this winter that caused them to run down different line items. 
 
"Every year is a little bit different and we did not anticipate the level of breakage," Kerwood said. "It was above and beyond what was anticipated within the budget."
 
Morales added that the equipment ultimately will save the city money because it will no longer have to contract out the service. 
 
After waving Rule 27 to approve the allocation, the City Council voted. Only Connell and Ward 2 Councilor Kevin Morandi voted in opposition.
 
The City Council accepted a $25,000 grant from the Massachusetts Department of Public Health and another $25,000 grant from the Berkshire United Way both to assist in the city's emergency response actions to the COVID-19 pandemic.
 
• The City Council accepted a donation of seven prize baskets for the Eggstravaganza Egg Scramble as well as cash sponsorship valued at $2,050 for various city events.
 
Connell noted that with the pandemic it is likely the majority of these events will be canceled. 
 
"I want to thank Greylock Federal for doing this but all of these events are probably not going to happen given our current state of affairs," he said. "We don't know how long this is going to be."
 
McGrath said the funds would be rolled into a donations account and can be used in the future.
 
• The City Council accepted a $330,225.33 grant from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security for the FY20 Senator Charles E. Shannon Jr. Community Safety initiative for the Police Department.
 
"Yes this is an increase from last year," Police Chief Michael Wynn said. "There is no city match to fund and all the matches are in kind and all of the matches are provided by 18 degrees."
 
• City Council accepted a grant of $210,000 from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs for the Mill Street Dam project.
 
• The City Council accepted a grant of $60,000 from the Massachusetts Department of Transportation Rail and Transit Division. This will go toward the development of the Berkshire County BikeShare Feasibility Study.
 
•  The City Council accepted a $15,000 grant from Berkshire Gas Company and Eversource Energy.

Tags: Ashuwillticook Rail Trail,   

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State Education Officials Visit Pittsfield on 413 Day

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Secretary of Education Stephen Zrike chats with youngsters in the Boys & Girls Club Children's Center.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — State education officials stopped in Pittsfield and North Adams as a part of Monday's "413 Day" tour to highlight early education and early college opportunities. 

At the Boys and Girls Club of the Berkshires child care center in Pittsfield, Secretary of Education Stephen Zrike heard from community-based preschool educators about workforce needs and the impact of the Commonwealth Preschool Partnership Initiative. Some credited the program for creating an official connection between early education and public school. 


Zrike, only 11 days in his position, said having kids come through the elementary school doors with a powerful preschool or early childhood experience is "significant." Last year, as part of a multi-year initiative, the Pittsfield Public Schools were awarded $250,000 through the CPPI to expand access to preschool for 3-and 4-year-olds across the city.

"We know that early childhood educators are woefully underpaid in many places. We also know that the supports and training so that we can retain some of the quality people is something we've got to continue to work on to enhance the quality, but we're off to, I think, a good start," Zrike said. 

"And I come today to learn from another community and to better understand the infrastructure that you built here in Pittsfield." 

Interim Superintendent Latifah Phillips said what the district really wants is for students to come into kindergarten ready, and readiness goes beyond academic skills.  

"It's very much a social emotional readiness," she said. 

"It's ready to learn, which means knowing how to cut, knowing how to walk in line, knowing how to share, and I think those are the pieces through early education where it's important for us to partner so that when the handoff comes, we are ready. It's important for us to approach this as a continuum. Not just we are pre-K through 12. No, we are a community continuum, all of us focused on the support of our students." 

Mayor Peter Marchetti said part of this, to him, is creating a level playing field for all students to start in, "And if we can create that field at 3 years old, rather than third grade, we're miles ahead of it." 

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