Williamstown Select Board Seeks Volunteers for Diversity Committee

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board agreed Monday to start accepting applications to fill empty seats on the town's diversity committee.
 
With a resolution in sight for a long conversation between the board and the Diversity, Inclusion and Racial Equity Committee about the latter's purpose, Select Board members said it was time to fill two vacant spots on the DIRE Committee.
 
Randy Fippinger, who fills the Select Board's ex officio spot on the diversity panel, asked his colleagues at Monday's meeting whether it could fulfill a longstanding request from the current DIRE Committee members to fill out their roster.
 
Select Board Chair Hugh Daley said he projects the body could be able to make appointments at either its Nov. 28 or Dec. 13 meetings after reaching an understanding with the current DIRE members on a charge to develop a "Diversity Strategic Plan" for the town.
 
At Monday's meeting, Daley again emphasized that work on said plan should be a priority for the DIRE Committee in the year ahead.
 
Jeff Johnson, who served on the DIRE Committee prior to his election to the Select Board in 2021, countered that the strategic plan cannot be the sole focus for the panel, a point that current DIRE Committee members have made in the past.
 
"For that person who is screaming now that they're being discriminated against, we can't put the DIRE Committee on the shelf," Johnson said. "There's a way to do it all."
 
Daley clarified that he was not hoping to shelve the committee during the planning process.
 
"I really believe we have to have the strategic plan done," Daley said. "I think it will yield the best way to go forward."
 
Fippinger reported that there was support from the current DIRE Committee members for committing to the work of developing the plan that the Select Board seeks. The board, in turn, has authorized the town manager to prepare a request for proposals for a consultant to work with the DIRE Committee on the plan.
 
At the same time it is looking to fill seats on the 2-year-old diversity committee, the Select Board Monday discussed formalizing the process for appointing residents to other boards and committees under its jurisdiction.
 
In an effort to ensure that all residents have an equal opportunity to serve on those bodies, the board is moving toward requiring a minimum of two weeks public notice of vacancies – on the town's website, through social media channels and at the twice-monthly Select Board meetings.
 
In other business on Monday, the Select Board heard a report from interim Police Chief Mike Ziemba on efforts to update and publicize WPD policies, fill vacancies on the local force and complete an accreditation process that would make Williamstown's the second accredited police force in the county after Great Barrington's.
 
The board also continued its discussion of a request from Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation to be assigned the town's right of first refusal on a 10-acre South Williamstown property.
 
WRLF officials said they are continuing to attempt to raise funds to purchase the Phelps property on Oblong Road. And the non-profit committed to preserve some sort of public access to the property, either through a walking trail or pull-off, if and when it owns the property.
 
Likewise, farmer Sarah Lipinski of Sweet Brook Farm, who currently grazes cattle on the acreage in question, told the Select Board that she has no objection to public access.
 
"I personally love the idea of opening up the farm more to the public," Lipinski said. "It's good for people to see their food being produced and know it's being produced in a humane and safe way. We have cows out there up to maybe two months a year.
 
"Something like a bench or table or accessible pull-off area is something we're in favor of. As far as having people walk through the field, it's not super safe when the cows are there, but along the perimeter."
 
The property's current owner was represented at Monday's meeting by attorney Elisabeth Goodman, who told the board the seller's only interest is making sure the deal goes through but that they have no preference on whether it goes to the buyer on the current purchase and sales agreement, the town or a non-profit.
 
"They want to sell the land, and they're happy to cooperate with your assignment of right of first refusal," Goodman said. "If Rural Lands is going to buy, great. Money is fungible."
 
The board has until January to make the assignment to a non-profit or waive its right of first refusal but Daley reiterated to WRLF's representatives that he anticipates the board will make that decision at its Nov. 28 meeting.

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Students Show Effects of Climate Change in Art Show

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Students from 10 area high schools are showing works that reflect on climate change at the Clark Art this week. The exhibit will move to Pittsfield and Sheffield later. 

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Students got to showcase their art at the Clark Art Institute depicting their relationship with the Earth in the time of climate change.

"How Shall We Live," a juried art exhibit, was on display Saturday in the Clark's Hunter Studio at Stone Hill. Students from 10 high schools participated.

Climate educational organization Cooler Communities has hosted this show for the past couple of years at different venues across the Berkshires. This year, it was approached by the Clark to host the show and is co-organizing with Living the Change Berkshires.

This was the first year Cooler Communities, a program of the Harold Grinspoon Charitable Foundation, changed its prompt to make it more personal for the students in hopes to start a conversation in the classrooms on climate change.

"In our work with Cooler Communities, we want to really make conversations about climate change normal, so it doesn't just happen in high school science or in activist circles, but for everyone to feel like they have a role to play, and for everyone to explore what it means for them," said Executive Director Uli Nagel.

"And so that's why the work of classrooms rather than after-school programs, but actually have it in the classroom and then bring it to the community and connect it to solutions. That's why the community is here, and so we always try to actually make it real, but also give kids the opportunity to explore their own emotions and interior experiences through art."

The Clark wanted to expand on its Sensing Nature Program and give students a higher impact experience instead of just the program tour that could help fit the criteria for the students’ portrait of a graduate.

The show had 74 displays as well as an iPad that showed other students’ art that was not showcased in the show, which was around 180 submissions.

Students were asked to respond to one or more elements in the following prompt:

  • What does nature provide?
  • What are the Earth's needs?
  • What matters most?
  • What is resilience?
  • Where do you find guidance and inspiration?

Pittsfield High student Stella Carnevale, 16, made her artwork out of newspaper, Mod Podge, chalk, and watercolors. She drew three sardines showing the effect polluted water had on them and wrote in her artist's note that she wants people to pause and feel empathy while also recognizing their role in protecting the natural world.

"Fish are vital to our world. They balance ecosystems, feed communities, and remind us how deeply connected life on Earth is. When our waters are polluted, fish are often the first to suffer, and their disappearance signals a greater loss that affects us all," she wrote. "Pollution doesn't just damage rivers and oceans; it threatens food sources, cultures, and the health of the planet itself. I make art to bring attention to what is quietly being taken away."

She said it was really cool to see her art hanging in the Clark and never thought it would happen.

Wahconah Regional High student, Alexandra Rougeau, 18, painted a jellyfish in acrylics.

"I started off making a different painting that was very depressing, obviously, because it's climate change, and I got really annoyed because everything was so negative," she said. "And although climate change is a really negative part of the world right now, I want to try to show that there is some hope in it. And that we do have some hope in saving our environment. So the jellyfish is meant to depict fire, global warming, but it's in the ocean and it's rising up, and there is some hope, hopefully at the top, in the surface."

Rougeau said it is an honor to be chosen to have her art here and to see all the other depictions from other students.

Monument Mountain High sophomore Siddy Culbreth painted a landscape in oil pastels and said he was inspired by his grandfather who is a landscaper and wanted to depict "what we should save."

"I was picturing this as a quintessential, it's kind of like epitome of what a nice landscape should be like," he said. "And so in terms of climate change, like how that is kind of shifting, or what our idea of like the world is shifting. And I feel like it's really important to preserve what, like, almost not a perfect world, but, what the world should be like."

Some students from Pittsfield High in Colleen Quinn's ceramics class created a microscopic look of what they thought PCBs looked like and wanted to depict how the polychlorinated biphenyls might have affected them at Allendale Elementary, near disposal site Hill 37. 

Quinn said she is very proud of all her students. 

The show is at the Clark until April 26 and is free and open to the public. It will be moved to Pittsfield City Hall to run from May 1 through June 8, and then to Sheffield's Dewey Hall from June 12 through 21.

It is made possible with support from the Feigenbaum Foundation, Lee Bank, and Greylock Federal Credit Union.
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