Father Cyr Named as Interim Administrator for Adams Parishes

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ADAMS, Mass. — A veteran North Berkshire priest has been called from retirement to serve the Parish of St. John Paul II as well as St. Mary of Assumption in Cheshire.
 
The Rev. William Cyr will be the interim administrator after the current pastor, the Rev. Barrent Pease, was reassigned after outrage over a Mass intention for Christmas.
 
Midnight Mass at St. Stanislaus Church had included an intention "for the conversion of the Jewish people that they receive Jesus as their messiah." The intent is not line with Vatican's current teaching that condemns anti-Semitism and rejects proselytizing Jews. 
 
As first reported in The Berkshire Eagle, a complaint was made to the bishop and the intention removed, to be replaced by "for the conversion of all non-Christians, that they receive Jesus as their messiah."
 
Bishop William Byrne of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield, in a letter posted Dec. 23, said the "painful but necessary" decision was to remove Pease immediately. 
 
"Father Pease feels badly for any misunderstanding or unintended offense he may have caused," Byrne wrote. "He honestly was trying to respond openly and act faithfully has your administrator."
 
He asked the parish include him in their prayers "as he reflects on and learns from this experience."
 
Local Jewish leaders said they planned to reach out to the diocese.
 
Pease had come to the parish last February, replacing the Rev. Steven Montesanti. He was raised in Montgomery, and was ordained in Springfield in 2017. His first assignment was at St. Thomas the Apostle Parish in West Springfield.
 
Cyr and the Rev. Gary Dailey stepped in over the Christmas services. Cyr has been assisting at the Parish of John Paul II. 
 
Cyr was most recently the pastor at St. Elizabeth of Hungary in North Adams for 13 years until his retirement in 2018. He was the pastor of the Parishes of Sts. Patrick and Raphael for 15 years until being transferred in 2002 to St. Catherine's Parish in Springfield. He served in several area parishes and taught at the former St. Joseph's High School for a few years.
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Adams Eyes $21M Spending Plan for Fiscal 2027

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
ADAMS, Mass. — The town is eyeing a budget slightly over $21 million for fiscal year 2027, an increase of 4.5 percent. 
 
The town anticipates having a finalized warrant and budget for town meeting by the end of May. 
 
During the budgeting process, the town administration developed a "level-funded service budget," assuming every vacant position is filled, that is fiscally responsible. 
 
"There's no big changes to organizational charts or operational capacity," Town Administrator Nicholas Caccamo said in a follow-up. He earlier in the process said the goal was to create stability and consistency in the budget. 
 
One of the top priorities is filling vacancies around Town Hall, training the new personnel to become efficient and contribute to operating needs, he said during the Selectmen's meeting last month. 
 
In the last year the town has had a high turnover because of recent retirements and staff leaving to pursue other opportunities. 
 
There is a tight employee market right now making recruitment difficult, Selectmen Chair John Duval said. 
 
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