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North Adams Lifts Indoor Masking Advisory; Schools to Decide Thursday

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Board of Health has dropped its masking advisory from December effective Thursday. 
 
This means that face coverings will no longer be required in public buildings, with the exception of the schools. The School Committee will meet at 6 p.m. on Thursday to review its mask mandate. 
 
"People that certainly want to wear a mask or should wear a mask or need to wear a mask should certainly be able to do that," said Chair John Meaney Jr. "It's an option of each individual person."
 
The decision to rescind the masking advisory is in line with current guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the low levels of community spread of COVID-19 within the Berkshires. 
 
The CDC is recommending that those who have compromised immune systems or who have not been vaccinated to continue wearing masks indoors. The state dropped its masking mandate for schools on Feb. 28 and lifted mask mandates for school buses based on CDC guidance but has left it up to local jurisdictions to set policy particular to their situations. 
 
North Adams has had eight cases of novel coronavirus over the past 10 days, reported Health Director Heather DeMarsico. Berkshire Medical Center currently has one patient on pandemic precautions.
 
A number of communities have begun lifting restrictions over the past few weeks as the surge in cases over the holidays has dwindled and more people have been vaccinated and boosted. 
 
Board member Kevin Lamb said the public advisory in December, which had advised all residents to wear face coverings indoors regardless of vaccination status, had been in line with the conditions at the time. 
 
"I think we would kind of be in line with other communities, even in our area and across the nation [in rescinding the advisory]," he said. "So I would be in favor of updating that."
 
The two board members (member October Cellena was absent) discussed putting out a new advisory but decided to vote to rescind the December advisory and issue a statement that reiterated the CDC guidance. 
 
Mayor Jennifer Macksey, who attended the meeting, confirmed that starting Thursday, face coverings would not be required in public buildings. These include City Hall and the library. 
 
The School Committee had voted on March 2 to extend masking in the schools until at least March 14 because of the February school vacation. The vacations and holidays have accounted for spikes in transmission. However, the committee will decide on Thursday night whether to continue masking. Pittsfield and Hoosac Valley schools have already lifted their mask mandates. 

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North Berkshire Secondary Ed Study to Be Rebid

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The task force looking at middle and high school regionalization is going back out to bid for a consultant after both remaining bids came in over budget.
 
The Northern Berkshire Regionalization Study Steering Committee opened the bids on Wednesday night, with Vaysen Studio of Syracuse, N.Y., bidding $213,400 and the joint bid of Academic Discoveries of Boylston and The Management Solution of Auburn at $172,000.
 
Both came in higher than the $125,000 the committee has available.
 
After some discussion, the committee, meeting at McCann Technial School, voted unanimously to retool the request for proposals and send it back out to bid.
 
"To me, it's as simple as that. The price has exceeded the available funding, and now we're going to create something that has smaller scope so that, so that it can fit," said Mount Greylock Regional Schools Superintendent Joseph Bergeron. "And then that means, hopefully, you're just deducting from the work you already got through, rather than trying to do something completely different."
 
The group is charged with overseeing a study of secondary education in North Berkshire and includes Mount Greylock, North Adams Public Schools, Hoosac Valley Regional School District and the five member districts of the North Berkshire School Union. The consultant will look at the educational and financial aspects, as well as such areas as special education, enrollment, transportation and long-term sustainability.
 
The initiative is an outgrowth of declining enrollment and rising costs. For example, Drury High and Hoosac Valley High together graduated 116 seniors last year; in 2008, Drury alone graduated 133.
 
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