Motorcyclist Cited in Sunday Accident in Williamstown

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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An employee of Ron's Auto Repair removes the damaged motorcycle from the scene.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — A Vermont motorcyclist was cited for following too closely after a colision with a car at the corner of Simonds Road and Sand Springs Road on Sunday, according to Williamstown Police.
 
Richard Sargent of Sunderland, Vt., was traveling south on Simonds Road (Route 7) on a 2004 Kawasaki motorcycle when he rear-ended a 2014 Nissan driven by Nikita Noyes-Martel of Pownal, an accident report reads.
 
Sargent was taken from the scene by Northern Berkshire EMS after receiving a serious leg injury, according to the report. Noyes-Martel walked away from the accident.
 
Noyes-Martel also was driving on Simonds Road and was stopped waiting to make a left turn onto Sand Springs, police said.
 
"As [Sargent] approached [Noyes-Martel], [Sargent] never slowed or attempted to pass [Noyes-Martel] on the right-and side of the roadway," the report reads. "As [Noyes-Martel] started to make her left-hand turn, [Sargent] realized at the last second that [Noyes-Martel] was turning."
 
According to the accident report, Sargent attempted to swerve to the right to avoid a collision but ended up hitting the right rear of the Nissan, laying down his motorcycle, sliding across the road and crashing into the granite curbing.
 
The accident occurred at about 1 p.m. Sunday afternoon.
 
Ron's Auto Repair removed the damaged motorcycle from the scene.
 
The Williamstown Fire Department also responded to the accident.

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New Ashford Fire Department Puts New Truck into Service

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

New Ashford Fire Department Chaplain J.D. Hebert gives an invocation on Saturday morning.
NEW ASHFORD, Mass. — With a blessing from its chaplain and a ceremonial dousing from a fire hose, the New Ashford Volunteer Fire Department on Saturday christened its first new apparatus in two decades.
 
The company purchased a 2003 HME Central States pumper from the town of Pelham earlier this year.
 
On Saturday, the department held a brief ceremony during which Chaplain J.D. Hebert blessed both the new engine and the company's turnout gear.
 
After the apparatus was sprayed with a hose, a handful of New Ashford's bravest helped push it as it was backed into the station on Ingraham Road.
 
Fire Chief Frank Speth said the new engine has a 1,500 gallon pump and carries 1,000 gallons of water. And it replaces a truck that was facing some costly repairs to keep on the road.
 
"We had a 1991 Spartan," Speth said. "When we had the pump tested, it needed about $40,000 worth of repairs. Being it's almost 30 years old, I said to the town, 'We put the $40,000 in, but then how many more years can we get out of it?'
 
"Once you get into the pump situation, you get into, 'This needs to be done, and this needs to be done,' and it could be more than $40,000. So do we want to spend that amount of money to repair that engine or get something that will replace it."
 
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