Before breaking into the evening's business Tuesday, the council took a moment to recognize the executive director of the Berkshire Environmental Action Team.
"In regular times, before the world has turned upside down ... I would be with you probably with a full audience to celebrate as we do every year," said state Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier, who nominated Winn. "I am really pleased to present to you Pittsfield's 2020 Unsung Heroine Jane Winn."
The Massachusetts Commission of the Status of Women annually celebrates women throughout the state who may not receive the most attention but who leave their mark and improve their individual communities.
Winn was selected to serve as BEAT's first executive director in 2006 and helped form BEAT in 2002.
Farley-Bouvier said Winn champions the environment and fights for the environmental justice community. She said she has been impressed by how "nimble" Winn is in her ability to adapt to changing environmental concerns.
"Jane is somebody known to all of you for her longstanding work that she has done in this community," she said. "She is someone whose integrity is beyond reproach in line with advocating for wildlife who otherwise lack a voice. Jane has also been particularly sensitive to the environmental justice community. A human population without economic means or political muscle."
Farley-Bouvier said she is impressed by Winn's ability to reach out to the broader community to a younger generation and "inform, educate, and involve."
Before reading a proclamation, Mayor Linda Tyer thanked Winn for bettering Pittsfield.
"I wish we could be together in person so I could stand by you and be by your side as we offer this proclamation," she said. "We are thrilled to be honoring you this evening."
Winn was on the Zoom meeting call and thanked her team for helping her along the way.
"Wow thank you very much ... I am astounded," Winn said. "I hope I can live up to everything wonderful that you have said and I have the most wonderful team of people behind me and they do so much to make me look good."
Before closing, Farley-Bouvier said people like Winn are becoming more and more important as environmental concerns move into the forefront.
"I am just honored to share the same community with Jane," she said. "I can tell you that in 2020 it is important to have somebody that we can count on to take care of our environment and always keep us honest."
The City Council then went into regular business and accepted a few grants:
• $1,150.40 FY20 Child Passenger Safety Equipment Grant from the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security/Office of Grants and Research for the Police Department.
• $50,000 Diverting Juveniles and Emerging Adults from Criminal Justice Involvement Grant from the Office of the Commissioner of Probation for the Police Department.
• $12,000 grant from the Department of Conservation and Recreation. These funds will be used to cover expenses related to the hiring of boat ramp monitors at city lakes during the summer of 2020.
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Pittsfield School Committee Appoints Latifah Phillips as Permanent Superintendent
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The School Committee enthusiastically voted to hire Latifah Phillips as the permanent superintendent on Wednesday.
Appointed as the interim last spring, Phillips is said to have brought meaningful initiatives centered on student outcomes to the Pittsfield Public Schools in a short period of time. Her hire is pending a successful contract negotiation.
"We've had a lot of really difficult decisions since January, and I think this one is easy," committee member Heather McNeice said.
There was applause from attendees after the vote.
Three options were listed on the agenda: Hire Phillips, conduct a search and allow Phillips to apply, or conduct a search not allowing Phillips to apply based on the interim search. Committee member Sarah Muil made the motion to hire Phillips, explaining that from her first conversations with the educational leader, she has felt like Phillips was at home.
"She has always been unwavering, and everything that she's done, she's always kept a calm and steady way of talking through every situation with families, with staff members, with us," Muil said.
"I feel as though I'm growing up with her in some way through this experience, because she is showing us what a leader truly can be when you allow them to be in the role that they should be in."
Phillips, who joined the meeting virtually, said this is one of the most significant moments in her life and career, and that serving PPS during this interim year has reinforced her belief in restraint, resilience, and potential with students, staff, families, and the community.
She said she looks forward to advancing the district’s shared vision and ensuring that every decision is centered on the success and well-being of students.
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