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Newcomers Running for Cheshire Selectmen

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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CHESHIRE, Mass. — Three candidates are running for two open three-year seats on the Board of Selectmen seats in the annual town election this May.
 
Raymond Killeen, Shawn McGrath and Michael "Mickey" Biagini Jr. will all run for the two open selectmen seats. No incumbents are running.
 
One seat is open, vacated by Robert Ciskowski who resigned from the board earlier this year. He was completing his second consecutive term though he had served some years previously.
 
Incumbent Ronald DeAngelis did not return nomination papers for the second seat. DeAngelis won one of the two seats added in 2019 to expand the board to five. That term was for two years.
 
All other positions will be filled by incumbents running unopposed except for newcomers Stephen LaFogg, who is running for water commissioner, and Aaron Singer, who is running for a four-year Planning Board seat, unopposed.
 
Incumbent Everett "Gus" Martin will run for the Board of Assessors unopposed and Brian Trudeau will run for the Board of Health unopposed.
 
Rebecca Herzog is expected to return as tax collector and Christine Emerson as town clerk.
 
Water Commissioner Ricky Gurney will run unopposed, and Hoosac Valley Regional School District Committee member Bethany DeMarco will as well.
 
There is still an open three-year seat on the Cemetery Commission. There are also two open Planning Board seats for five years and one year.
 
The election is on Monday, May 3. Last day to register to vote is Tuesday, April 13, from 9 to 8 at the town clerk's office.
 

Tags: election 2021,   town elections,   


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Pittsfield Considers Heavy Vehicle Excusion on Appleton Ave.

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Heavy commercial vehicles might be banned from driving on Appleton Avenue from East Street to East Housatonic Street in the future. 

On Thursday, the Traffic Commission fielded a petition from Ward 4 Councilor James Conant requesting an exclusion for large commercial trucks on the route, which runs next to Pittsfield High School and through a residential neighborhood. 

City Engineer Tyler Shedd explained that the city would have to conduct a traffic study first. He agreed to have that data collected by summertime, and the petition was referred to his office. The exclusion would also have be OKed by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation. 

"I think it's something where maybe we can discuss it here, because trucks are trying to avoid the corner of South and West Housatonic Street, which had barriers for years, and then we put a bump out there," Shedd said. 

"There's a designated truck route that just doesn't get followed, and there's been attempts at improving signage." 

He said the concern is trucks turning from Appleton Avenue to East Housatonic Street without enough room. This often means cars have to get out of the way or run a red light. 

In 2022, the commission approved a petition to exclude heavy commercial vehicles on Deming and East Housatonic Streets. Ward 5 Councilor Patrick Kavey pointed to previous years' efforts to exclude heavy commercial trucks from the area. 

"I don't disagree with [Conant] at all," he said. 

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