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Professor Jennifer Collins explains the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Council to the trustees.

BCC Announces Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Council

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A Berkshire Community College professor has initiated a diversity council in response to current events involving inequality and systematic oppression.
 
Jennifer Collins, associate professor of chemistry and chair of the Life Sciences Department, gave a presentation to the Board of Trustees on Tuesday evening to introduce the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Council.
 
The first plans for the council began in the summer, while BCC staff were preparing for a remote learning semester in the fall.
 
"There is a response from the BCC community that we want to be involved, we want to be more proactive, and we want to be more prepared as far as education and training for what is going on," Collins said referring to climate that inspired the council.
 
Associate professor of chemistry stepped in to address this need by organizing the foundations of the group.
 
The council currently is made up of 58 employees, but it will be open to students in the future. With the current remote learning setup, it is hard to reach the student body to get them involved and welcome them to the council.
 
To organize themselves, the members of the council voted on a government structure to assign roles, make decisions, and communicate.
 
This involves a group of three co-facilitators, which will be elected on Oct. 8.
 
"It was not any one person taking it on, because we are all jumping into this voluntarily on top of what we're already doing," Collins said. 
 
To focus on different areas, they have been able to form various subcommittees with designated leaders that report back to Collins.
 
There is a large group focused on education, specifically bringing in opportunities for BCC employees, students, and even the community.  
 
Another group is researching best practices on other campuses and businesses so that the committee has role models of which are making positive change.  
 
One group will be working with the Affirmative Action Committee and human resources with welcoming and onboarding new employees. This need came from new employees moving to the Berkshires and struggling to settle in, find things they need, and make connections in the community.
 
A tech-savvy group is working on creating a page on the BCC website about diversity, equity, and inclusion events happening on campus. Another group focuses on community presence and making connections in the Berkshires so that BCC can get more involved in the community.
 
There is also a budgeting group to determine what funding is needed and a survey group to get information about what is happening on campus and what is needed on campus. This information will help the council better serve the community.
 
The key statement to the council is being actionable. The group doesn't want to just keep having meetings.
 
"We want to do stuff," Collins said. "We don't want to just keep talking. We're about centering the voices of people whose experiences are ignored. Hearing them, not just them being the one small voice and everyone is talking over them."
 
If someone is experiencing injustice, the council wants to hear it, to know what it can do to help, where it can report, and if there is something that can be acted upon.
 
One way the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Council has taken action is by teaming up with Multicultural BRIDGE, a non-profit learning organization out of Lee that aims to promote mutual understanding and acceptance among diverse groups and to serve as a resource to both local institutions and the community at large
 
Members will be working with BRIDGE throughout the fall semester to come up with a survey. BRIDGE will also be bringing training opportunities, education opportunities, and rooms to have discussions with employees at BCC informing them of current events and how to respond and participate.
 
Members of the council have attended and participated in various online trainings. The remote aspect of these trainings have made a wealth of content available to members online, as opposed to having to travel for training.
 
"There's all kinds of training on self-awareness, anti-racism, anti-discrimination, and learning your own confidence and how to grow yourself that is available and that we can all take advantage of," Collins said. "We have had a number of people in the BCC community participate in many of these since the summer and it is ongoing."
 
As far as getting out in the community, members of the council have attended organized meetings put on by NAACP and Black Lives Matter in various public commons.
 
"We're getting active, we're being participatory," Collins said. "We're getting out there, which is really nice to see."
 
The mission statement also addresses the culture on campus, commitment to social justice, and education. These are the key things that the council wants to be actionable about.
 
The council had 40 members when it passed its mission statement and more people got involved once it was published. Collins is thankful for the support the council has gotten, saying, "we are really proud of this, and really proud of where we are going."
 

Tags: BCC,   diversity,   

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Dalton Man Accused of Kidnapping, Shooting Pittsfield Man

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A Dalton man was arrested on Thursday evening after allegedly kidnapping and shooting another man.

Nicholas Lighten, 35, was arraigned in Central Berkshire District Court on Friday on multiple charges including kidnapping with a firearm and armed assault with intent to murder. He was booked in Dalton around 11:45 p.m. the previous night.

There was heavy police presence Thursday night in the area of Lighten's East Housatonic Street home before his arrest.

Shortly before 7 p.m., Dalton dispatch received a call from the Pittsfield Police Department requesting that an officer respond to Berkshire Medical Center. Adrian Mclaughlin of Pittsfield claimed that he was shot in the leg by Lighten after an altercation at the defendants home. Mclaughlin drove himself to the hospital and was treated and released with non-life-threatening injuries. 

"We were told that Lighten told Adrian to go down to his basement, where he told Adrian to get down on his knees and pulled out a chain," the police report reads.

"We were told that throughout the struggle with Lighten, Adrian recalls three gunshots."

Dalton PD was advised that Pittsfield had swabbed Mclaughlin for DNA because he reported biting Lighten. A bite mark was later found on Lighten's shoulder. 

Later that night, the victim reportedly was "certain, very certain" that Lighten was his assailant when shown a photo array at the hospital.

According to Dalton Police, an officer was stationed near Lighten's house in an unmarked vehicle and instructed to call over the radio if he left the residence. The Berkshire County Special Response Team was also contacted.

Lighten was under surveillance at his home from about 7:50 p.m. to about 8:40 p.m. when he left the property in a vehicle with Massachusetts plates. Another officer initiated a high-risk motor vehicle stop with the sergeant and response team just past Mill Street on West Housatonic Street, police said, and traffic was stopped on both sides of the road.

Lighten and a passenger were removed from the vehicle and detained. Police reported finding items including a brass knuckle knife, three shell casings wrapped in a rubber glove, and a pair of rubber gloves on him.

The response team entered Lighten's home at 43 East Housatonic before 9:30 p.m. for a protective sweep and cleared the residence before 9:50 p.m., police said. The residence was secured for crime scene investigators.

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