Letter: Police at Williamstown Elementary

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To the Editor:

The Williamstown DIversity, Inclusion and Racial Equity (DIRE) committee is certainly living up to its acronymic nickname and is itself in serious danger of becoming dire. The committee, which ironically lacks diversity in its membership, has engaged in mischaracterization of the entire Williamstown Police Department and has shown a lack of respect for due process. But now it has seemingly taken a stance that would be ludicrous were it not downright dangerous. I am referring to its statements in protest of a police presence on school grounds.

When it came time for us to enroll our, non-Caucasian child at Williamstown Elementary School, I was relieved to see police on duty at the start and close of each school day. In our post-Sandy Hook, post-Parkland, et al, nation, I would think that every level-headed citizen would welcome the sight of an officer as a deterrent to a violence that is greater in its impact than misgivings about an officer's POTENTIAL racism.

As I got to see the officers at work for the past couple of years, I became further impressed at their welcoming kindness to the children and their efforts to dispel the notion that an officer is a person to fear. They have been excellent role models. If our children were ever jeopardized at WES, there is no doubt in my mind that our police would put themselves in harm's way to protect them.



Further, the police are there to maintain safety in what could otherwise be a dangerous situation with the great amount of traffic, drivers who ignore rules, and little persons bobbing between cars.

I am not convinced that there is a pandemic of racism at the WPD, however, I am beginning to think that there are pandemics of hyperbole, illogic and/or blindness, if not stupidity, in other quarters. And such reactionary far-left responses do much to help insidious causes of the far-right.

Ralph Hammann
Williamstown, Mass.

 

 


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Williamstown Board of Health Looks to Regulate Nitrous Oxide Sales

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Board of Health last week agreed to look into drafting a local ordinance that would regulate the sale of nitrous oxide.
 
Resident Danielle Luchi raised the issue, telling the board she recently learned a local retailer was selling large containers of the compound, which has legitimate medical and culinary uses but also is used as a recreational drug.
 
The nitrous oxide (N2O) canisters are widely marketed as "whippets," a reference to the compound's use in creating whipped cream. Also called "laughing gas" for its medical use for pain relief and sedation, N2O is also used recreationally — and illegally — to achieve feelings of euphoria and relaxation, sometimes with tragic consequences.
 
A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association earlier this year found that, "from 2010 to 2023, there was a total of 1,240 deaths attributable to nitrous oxide poisoning among people aged 15 to 74 years in the U.S."
 
"Nitrous oxide is a drug," Luchi told the board at its Tuesday morning meeting. "Kids are getting high from it. They're dying in their cars."
 
To combat the issue, the city of Northampton passed an ordinance that went into effect in June of this year.
 
"Under the new policy … the sale of [nitrous oxide] is prohibited in all retail establishments in Northampton, with the exception of licensed kitchen supply stores and medical supply stores," according to Northampton's website. "The regulation also limits sales to individuals 21 years of age and older and requires businesses to verify age using a valid government-issued photo ID."
 
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