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The Curtis in downtown Lenox is a former landmark hotel transformed into 54 units of subsidized housing. A proposal to put a tower and antennas on top of the building has been tabled for the moment.

Citizens Group Protests Cell Antennas on Lenox's Curtis Building

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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LENOX, Mass. — A demonstration hosted by the Lenox Citizens for Safe Cell Siting Group highlighted its concerns this past weekend with placing a cell antennas on top of the Housing Authority's subsidized housing facility, the Curtis.

Member Courtney Gilardi, a Pittsfield resident who has been demanding action on cell tower in that city, said there are many issues within this proposal that include health risks for residents in the former hotel, equity concerns with placing technology on elderly and handicapped housing, and the allowance of a cell tower on residential property, opening the flood gates for other similar placements.

"Really what it becomes is not just an environmental health issue, it becomes a social justice issue because often these towers are placed in low socio-economic areas, and the Curtis is the only elderly disabled in low-income housing option for people in Lenox,'' she said.

"And these are the people who then have to rally their time, energy resources, and often money in order to hire an attorney to push back, whereas in wealthier neighborhoods, people don't put toxic infrastructure in wealthier neighborhoods, they get to have the benefit of it, but they don't have to have it living right next to them.''

She said 25 to 30 people came out to support the demonstration on Saturday and that group tried to share information with others.

"Some people were like, 'Well, I don't live at the Curtis, so why should I care?''' Gilardi said.

"And it was really interesting that citizens were educating people. 'Well, you know, this opens up the wireless zoning bylaws to placing small cells outside people's houses, or having infrastructure closest close to home.' And then they went, 'Oh, well, I wouldn't want it in my back yard or front yard,' and then they took the info sheet.''

Gilardi is currently residing in Lenox after leaving her Pittsfield home because of the cell tower at 877 South St. She says the tower has caused her family and neighbors to become ill.

She has been advocating for proper cell tower notifications, setbacks, and the removal of the tower in her neighborhood for over a year and is expanding her efforts to Lenox in the wake of this proposal.

Director of Lenox Housing Authority Barbara Heaphy told iBerkshires that the proposal is currently tabled by the town and that there is "really nothing to report right now.''

Evolution Site Services of Pittsfield was awarded the project through the Housing Authority. It is a local service provider company that contracts with Verizon.

In July, the Williamstown Zoning Board of Appeals approved a special permit for Evolution Site Services to build a 153-foot cell tower on land leased from Phelps Farm.

This is the third time that a cell tower has been proposed on the Curtis. In 2002, the Housing Authority voted to reject a proposal with AT&T and another fell through in 2017.



The current proposal at the Curtis has been in discussion since 2020.

Gilardi said she and others found a problem with attorney Anthony Lepore of Cityscape Consultants being hired to represent the town and citizens of Lenox in a potential contract, claiming the company also represents the telecommunication industries. 
 
The firm represents municipalities and local government in dealing with wireless infrastructure.
 
"So it's such a conflict of interest and people have been so upset by this," Gilardi said. "They've been speaking up at the select board meetings, they've been speaking up at the Planning Board meetings.''
      
Heaphy had no comment on this but Lepore confirmed to iBerkshires on Sept. 27 that Cityscape Consultants does not represent wireless carriers but rather provides expertise to local governments in dealing with them. 
 
Lepore said Gilardi and others in Lenox were conflating the consultants' representation of Lenox citizens to that of the wireless industry, calling it "patently false."

Lenox currently has a Wireless Telecommunications Overlay District that limits the facilities to three locations on Junction Routes 7 and 20 and Route 7.

"Lenox has very protective wireless zoning bylaws,'' Gilardi said. "So protective that it limits cell antenna placement to essentially three areas. Now, are those the right three areas? Who knows?''

Gilardi also found an issue in the lack of publication for meetings that have the cell tower proposal on the agenda. She and other residents reportedly felt left in the dark, specifically when a South County television station was not able to film a Planning Board meeting at the housing complex even though it was listed as a public meeting.

If approved, this proposal will likely have to go through the Historical Commission because of the old hotel's significance in the town.

The Curtis was built in 1829 as a hotel and got its name in 1853 when it was purchased by William O. Curtis and became known as the Curtis Hotel.

By the 1970s, the hotel was in rough shape and was purchased by the town of Lenox in 1979 to be converted into subsidized housing units that was completed in 1982.

Clarification: the original version of this article gave the appearance that Courtney Gilardi's opinion of Cityscape Consultants might be factual. Cityscape represents local government in dealing with wireless structures and this should have been made clear. This section has been updated to include a statement to that effect and comment from the town's Cityscape representative.


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Pittsfield Police Chief Retiring in January

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Police Chief Thomas Dawley will retire next month after 24 years with the Pittsfield Police Department, and the mayor will appoint his successor. 

Dawley's last day will be on Jan. 9, and he told iBerkshires that it was "just time." He began his law enforcement career in 1995 at the Berkshire County House of Corrections and was appointed police chief in June 2024

"Reasons for leaving are cumulative. I have been in law enforcement for almost 30 years. There is no particular reason for my retirement, I just feel that it is time," he wrote in an email. 

"I love the profession and love this department. The duties, responsibilities and obligations as a Chief are very demanding. It is a lifestyle, not a job. It is a 24/7–365 days a year responsibility." 

According to The Berkshire Eagle, Dawley told Mayor Peter Marchetti of his intention to retire back in April but had kept the decision quiet. Marchetti is expected to choose his successor in the next couple of weeks. 

Dawley, 52, was "honored and humbled" when he was chosen two years ago to succeed Michael Wynn, he said, and he misses being an officer out in the community, as the role of chief is more administrative by nature. He described the officers and civilian staff at the department as "the best of the best" and is proud of the "second to none" dedication, professionalism, and commitment they bring to work every day. 

"Policing is different than it was 10-20 years ago and the profession is being tested daily," he noted. 

"I want a new challenge and preferably something that does not involve law enforcement, but I am definitely not ruling it out!" 

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