Two Charter Objections Called at Pittsfield City Council Meeting, One for the FY23 Budget

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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Rinaldo del Gallo, who proposed the nip bottle ban diplays one before downing it at Tuesday's City Council meeting.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Tuesday's City Council meeting saw two charter objections, one for the city's $189 million fiscal 2023 budget and another on a petition to ban nip bottles in Pittsfield.

Ward 2 Councilor Charles Kronick halted the council's vote on the $189 million fiscal 2023 budget. This will void all of the recommended amendments that were made to the proposal over four nights of deliberations.  

These include an additional $1,000 to the Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP,) $65,000 for school maintenance, and $50,000 to the building inspector's department, and a recommendation for the Pittsfield Police to earmark up to $250,000 in grant money to have additional clinicians as co-responders.

Kronick proposed the amendment to RSVP.

Councilor at Large Earl Persip III was visually and audibly frustrated with the motion, which the councilor said he made on behalf of his ward. Persip commented something along the lines of "you've got to be joking" after the charter objection and walked out of the room.

"I think it's a cop-out. It doesn't accomplish anything. It doesn't do anything. It delays the process and I don't believe he understands what actually his charter objection did to the budget and the things that we actually accomplished, especially around mental health, this year," Persip said after the meeting.

"He has nixed all that accomplishment that we pulled off this year, and I was very proud of some of the things we did but they don't matter."

Before the charter objection was solidified, President Peter Marchetti made sure that Kronick knew what his action would entail.

"Let me make you aware that if you charter object, we cannot take up this budget until the June 26 meeting, and the 45 days in the charter will pass and the mayor will have her original budget without the increases that we've put forward," He said.

"Is that what you really want to do?"

The original budget amount is $188,706,018. A special meeting could have been called to challenge the charter objection but after it was made, Ward 7 Councilor Anthony Maffuccio supported it.

Kronick has made a number of stances against the budget during deliberations. Notably, he scrutinized Chief Diversity Officer Michael Obasohan's credentials for an annual salary of around $90,000 and made a transphobic comment pertaining to the Office of Diversity Equity and Inclusion.

"People want to know how to talk to everybody else, are you a 'he,' 'she,' or 'her,' my sister, she's a ‘she' and 'her' she put it in her LinkedIn thing and I'm never confused when I talk to her," Kronick said at the May meeting.



"I feel, and maybe it's just an opinion, but I don't think it's just an opinion, I think that this is sort of a commonsense sort of thing, you know what you are because we were told that when you were born. It is a religious principle of mine, I think that what we're talking about here is spending money on things that you can research on the side."

After unsuccessfully motioning to send a petition from local attorney Rinaldo Del Gallo III to ban nip bottles in the city to the Green Commission, Persip called for a charter objection.

This was met with exasperated laughter but it wasn't the only time that council chambers were giggling that night. While presenting his petition, Del Gallo displayed a nip bottle as a prop and took a swig from it at the podium.

Last week, the Ordinances and Rules subcommittee rejected the petition after hearing from several liquor store owners about how it would financially cripple the businesses. The owners also spoke at the city council meeting and said they are committed to addressing the issue of people littering the tiny liquor bottles.

Persip argued that the only solution to nip bottle litter is for the state to put a five-cent bottle deposit on them. Del Gallo presented a motion to refer the petition to the Green Committee, which meets on an ad hoc basis, to weigh in on the situation.

He supports the ban to get the state's attention and wanted the petition to at least to be referred off so that the conversation doesn't end.

"I ask you all that's what was being done before this petition came up? Zilch, nothing." Persip said.

"If this goes away, nothing happens."

The motion to refer the ban to the committee failed 3-8 with just Persip, Maffuccio, and Ward 6 Councilor Dina Guiel Lampiasi voting in favor.

Maffuccio was 50/50 on the ban at the subcommittee meeting but is now in favor of it. He called the nip bottle litter a hindrance throughout the whole city.

"This is blight," he said, "I understand lottery tickets are a problem, I understand cups are a problem, you know what? Cigarette packs are a problem. This is a problem. Everything's a problem but we have to start somewhere."


Tags: fiscal 2023,   pittsfield_budget,   

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Berkshire Schools Recognized at Safe Rules to Schools Event

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Silvio O. Conte Community School was recognized by MassDOT's Safe Routes to School program.

The Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT), through its Massachusetts Safe Routes to School (SRTS) Program, held its annual awards ceremony to recognize the program's partner schools, community champions, stakeholders, and crossing guards who have made contributions within their communities by strengthening, promoting, and improving safety for students walking, biking and rolling to school.

Silvio O. Conte Community School was one of the 273 school partners, community champions, and crossing guards recognized. The school was named an Exemplary Program of Western Mass.

This recognition is awarded to schools that set a "great example" by crafting a new or existing Safe Routes to School Program through innovation, creativity, and engagement.

Berkshire Bike Council were also recognized with a Community Collaboration award. This acknowledgment is awarded to an alliance partner organization that demonstrates the importance of collaborating among schools and community stakeholders and furthered the mission of Safe Routes to School

"We are thankful to all the school communities and the advocates whose input through the Safe Routes to School Program helps us identify the specific strategies, resources and tools needed to better protect our school children," said Transportation Secretary and CEO Monica Tibbits-Nutt. "Their dedication makes a meaningful difference, and these awards are a token of our appreciation not just for the winners whom we congratulate, but for everyone who has contributed to the important mission of keeping all road users safe."
 
This year's Awards Ceremony honored 273 schools across Massachusetts that completed SRTS activities and events qualifying them for partner level awards of Basic, Bronze, Silver, and Gold. Awards for Exemplary Program were presented to four schools (with three Honorable Mentions). The Community Collaboration and Nikki Tishler Memorial awards were also presented.

Other schools recognized in Berkshire County:
  • Brayton School and Colegrove Park Elementary received basic partner certificates.
  • Clarksburg Elementary School, Greylock 
  • Elementary School received bronze partner
  • Morris Elementary School received silver partner
  • Silvio O. Conte Community School received gold partner
For the fourth year, the Program recognized the important role Crossing Guards have in supporting families' safety as they access schools and neighborhoods across the Commonwealth. Over 500 Crossing Guard nominations were submitted for consideration from 48 statewide communities.

 

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