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A new two-story floor plan is proposed for the police station that includes an abbreviated lower level for mechanicals.

New Plans Put Lanesborough Police Station in Current Location

By Brian RhodesiBerkshires Staff
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The new station would be located at the same location as the current station according to new plans proposed by Jacunski Humes Architects.
LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — The Board of Selectmen showcased a redesign of the proposed new police station last week, hoping to ease concerns regarding its location and size. 
 
The new structure would consist of three levels rather than the one level of the design shown on Nov. 16 and would replace the current police station building at 8 Prospect St. The new building design is 4,800 square feet when accounting for the covered parking area for police vehicles. 
 
While the previous design had the building at Bill Laston Memorial Park, community feedback pushed the board to reconsider the location and scale of the project, necessitating a redesign. 
 
"Basically, this new building is designed for the current location," said Selectman Chairman John W. Goerlach at the Dec. 27 meeting.
 
Goerlach said this design is not final and explained changes based on community and other feedback are likely. He said he plans to work with Brian Humes of Jacunski Humes Architects to get cost estimates on the building and aspects like the proposed training classroom. 
 
"This is still a work in progress with Brian [Humes]," he said. 
 
In other news, the board discussed the possibility of streaming meetings on Facebook Live.
 
While the board currently broadcasts its meetings on Lanesborough Community Access TV, it does not stream the meetings online. 
 
Selectman Michael Murphy said the board streamed the recent police station public hearing on the "Lanesborough, MA: Our Hometown" Facebook group. In addition to those who attended the hearing in person, he said more than 50 people watched live on Facebook, which he considers a great success. 
 
"And the beauty of it was, we were able to do it live," he said. "And that same concept could work for an annual town meeting at the school or something we have downstairs in the community room." 
 
The board was unsure whether or not to incorporate live questions from the Facebook audience into meetings. Goerlach said someone could potentially manage the questions and answer them separately. 
 
"You could get 20 or 30 questions. That would be the hard thing about managing that," said Town Administrator Joshua Lang. "I know I've seen other towns and organizations do that and you almost have to have someone have a computer on the side answering those in order to keep up with it. I think if you wanted to do something like post those questions as an addendum to the minutes, that would be a good way to start out and incrementally see how that would go." 
 
Town Tax Collector Jodi Hollingsworth said those who usually have an exemption should receive a revised tax bill early in January that properly includes exemptions. She said she wanted to get the word out about this in advance to let residents know as soon as possible. 
 
"The initial tax bills they receive will not have those exemptions on it," she said. "They will, in short order, receive a revised bill." 
 
• The board acknowledged the hire of new Administrative Assistant Makayla Zonfrilli. Zonfrilli will be starting at the position on Jan. 3. 
 
Murphy said administrative assistant is the job title that will replace the town secretary position. He explained they based this decision on feedback from Lang. 
 
"Just tweaking, per Josh [Lang], the job title and some of the responsibilities to add some things," Murphy said. "Very excited about Makayla coming on board."

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Pittsfield Council Reviews Public Safety Budget, Keeps SpotShotter

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — On the fourth day of budget deliberations, the City Council preliminarily approved public safety and public service budgets. 

See the first two days of budget review here; and the third day here.

Councilors deliberated the Pittsfield Police Department's $16,439,421 spending plan for more than 90 minutes. Ward 1 Councilor Kenneth Warren unsuccessfully motioned to cut $220,000 for ShotSpotter services. 

He said the acoustic gunshot detection technology is not well used throughout the country, citing other communities that have opted out or are exploring it. 

Pittsfield has two more years on its contract; while councilors voted down the budget reduction several were willing to explore the impact data and see if those funds could be used elsewhere. 

Police Chief Marc Maddalena reported that there has been a significant decrease in shots fired calls, and attributed it to the surveillance technology assisting enforcement. He said it also comes in faster than 911 calls. 

"If people know that just by that noise alone that we're responding within seconds, that's preventing them from utilizing that weapon," he said. 

"So that in of itself is saving lives." 

It has an about 20 percent accuracy rate, and police respond to every activation. 

On Sunday, at least two homes in the area of Memorial Drive and Doyle Drive were struck by gunfire and investigators located 17 shell casings on scene. This was brought up during conversation; it was reported that there were 13 impulses on ShotSpotter during the incident. 

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