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Pittsfield Schools Report Case of COVID-19

Staff ReportsiBerkshires
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A staff member at Conte Community School has tested positive for COVID-19. Children and staff in the exposed classroom will isolate by going to remote; the school will remain open. 
 
According to a release on Sunday from interim Superintendent Joseph Curtis, the Pittsfield Public Schools were informed Friday evening of the positive test for the novel coronavirus. 
 
He said the school system, out of abundance of caution, and in addition to previous communications with specific students and staff identified through contact tracing, is making the entire community aware of the confirmed case. 
 
Late in the evening of Friday, Nov. 6, the Pittsfield Public Schools, in partnership with The City of Pittsfield Department of Health, was notified that a staff member at Conte Community School tested positive for COVID-19.
 
The employee in question was most recently physically in attendance at the school on Friday. The city has seen a spike in cases over the last two weeks that prompted Mayor Linda Tyer to urge caution on Friday for residents to abide by mask wearing, social distancing and sanitizing to prevent the spread of the highly contagious disease. 
 
According to Curtis, the Pittsfield Public Schools has planned for the potential cases of COVID-19 within the school system with the city and its Department of Health. 
 
While this is an evolving situation, Curtis said the school is following protocols and guidance from the state and federal health agencies and the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. 
 
The Department of Health has reached out to each staff and family member who has been identified as potentially being in close contact with the infected individual and has provided information and recommendations.
 
Close contact means being within 6 feet of another person for 15 minutes or more. For example, a classroom that has been together for six hours, even if sitting at 6 feet apart, could be considered to be close contacts because of the amount of time spent in a room together.
 
In line with guidance via collaborating agencies, the Pittsfield Public Schools will not close the entire school. Students and staff in the affected classroom will participate in remote learning through Nov. 20.
 
All areas of the building that the individual accessed in the days preceding their positive test result will be thoroughly cleaned, and disinfected before the start of school on Monday. All buses were thoroughly sanitized on Friday, Nov. 6, as part of regularly established protocols.
 
The schools will continue to monitor community absentee rates, reports of illness, and test positivity daily incidence rate metrics, to determine if school closure or in-person education initiatives require modification at Conte Community School.
 

Tags: COVID-19,   Pittsfield Public Schools,   


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Pittsfield Schools Officials See FY27 Budget for 13 Schools

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Right after the School Committee voted to close Morningside Community School, members saw how it will affect the fiscal year 2027 budget

The $87,200,061 budget for FY27 remains, but funds that would have gone to Morningside are following students to four other schools. 

"As we look at the high-level totals, you notice that the total budget amount is the same. We only have so many dollars to work with. Even though that doesn't change, the composition of spending changes," Assistant Superintendent for Business and Finance Bonnie Howland explained. 

Mayor Peter Marchetti, chair of the School Committee, said this year's budget process was "extremely confusing," because of coming changes within the Pittsfield Public Schools, including the middle school restructuring. 

The proposed FY27 budget for the School Department includes $68,886,061 in state Chapter 70 funding and $18 million from the city.  A 13-school plan, excluding Morningside, saves in instruction, school services, and operations and maintenance, allowing those funds to be reinvested across the district. 

Last week, the House Ways and Means Committee released a budget that brings an additional $858,660 to PPS. This includes a rate of $160 per pupil minimum school aid, and Fair Share Amendment earmarks secured by state Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier and state Sen. Paul Mark. 

Morningside's pupils will be reassigned to Allendale, Capeless, Egremont, and Williams elementary schools.  For fiscal year 2027, the district had allocated about $5.2 million for Morningside.

Officials identified school's lack of classroom walls as the most significant obstacle, creating a difficult and noisy learning environment that is reflected in its accountability score.

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