MassDOT Announces Safe Streets Smart Trips High School Video Contest Winners

Print Story | Email Story
BOSTON — The Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) announced the winners of this year's Annual Safe Streets Smart Trips High School Video Contest.
 
This year, 43 videos were submitted from high schools across the Commonwealth and six videos receiving honors were shown during MassDOT's 2022 Moving Together Conference which was held on Tuesday, Nov. 1. 
 
The contest, which began in 2014, encourages high school students to showcase their understanding of roadway safety across all travel modes to try to decrease pedestrian and bicyclist injuries and fatalities. The contest serves as an initiative of the Massachusetts Strategic Highway Safety Plan to promote safe walking, bicycling, and driving behaviors within the Commonwealth.
 
"The Safe Streets Smart Trips High School Video Contest is an important part of MassDOT's safety education efforts," said Transportation Secretary and CEO Jamey Tesler. "The contest gets young people thinking about ways to teach each other about road safety and this peer-to-peer teaching is highly effective. Students from across the Commonwealth take time to create informational videos that encourage people walking, biking and driving to pay attention to their surroundings, obey traffic laws, act courteously and role model safe behavior since doing that will save lives and prevent injuries."
 
The video contest was open to all Massachusetts high school students and featured freshman/sophomore and junior/senior award categories. Per contest guidelines, this year students were asked to write and produce a 30-60 second video focused on interpreting the various signs and pavement markings that are on roadways and in school zones and explaining their meaning. 
 
The prize award categories and high school recipients are as follows:
 
Grand Prize
 
Freshman/Sophomore category: Savannah Bond, Asher Salmon Hansen, Yuli Ziblat, and Josie Lee from Newton North High School. Video Title: "Signs Are Your Friend"
 
Junior/Senior category: Kayla Dulac and Briana Dulac from Millis High School. Video title: "Can't Stop Motion"
 
Honorable Mention
 
Freshman/Sophomore category: Siena Hesbach, Emaline Knight, and Katherine Reeves-Kroff from Maynard High School. Video Title: "Kids Crossing"
 
Junior/Senior category: Nathaniel Jacquart, Robert Magner, and William Bouvier from Dartmouth High School.
Video Title: "Wacky Driving Made Safer" 
 
Runners-up
 
Freshman/Sophomore category: Ella Gates and Isabella Rebello from Dartmouth High School.
Video Title: "Dartmouth High School News – Road Safety" 
 
Junior/Senior category: Chloe Mills, Casey Brewer, Zach Troderman, Logan Shapiro, and Jake Braverman from Framingham High School. Video Title: "Speeding Kills"
 
Grand prize, runner-up, and honorable mention videos in each category (Freshman/Sophomore and Junior/Senior) were chosen by a MassDOT panel. Video creators received prizes including $600 Amazon gift cards for the grand prize videos and $300 Amazon gift cards for the runner-up videos. Top videos may also be used in future safety campaigns.
 
The videos are scheduled to be posted soon on the mass.gov site.
 
MassDOT's 2022 Moving Together Conference was held in-person and virtually. The purpose of the conference was to share transportation best practices, present topical issues including climate resilient infrastructure, provide updates on projects such as the creation of pedestrian and bicycle paths, showcase new technology and equipment, and convene to address challenges such as the recent increase in roadway fatalities in Massachusetts.

Tags: MassDOT,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Social Service Organizations Highlight Challenges, Successes at Poverty Talk

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Dr. Jennifer Michaels of the Brien Center demonstrates how to use Narcan. Easy access to the drug has cut overdose deaths in the county by nearly half. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Recent actions at the federal level are making it harder for people to climb out of poverty.

Brad Gordon, executive director of Upside413, said he felt like he was doing a disservice by not recognizing national challenges and how they draw a direct line from choices being made by the Trump administration and the challenges the United States is facing. 

"They more generally impact people's ability to work their way out of poverty, and that's really, that's really the overarching dynamic," he said. 

"Poverty is incredibly corrosive, and it impacts all the topics that we'll talk about today." 

His comments came during a conversation on poverty hosted by Berkshire Community Action Council. Eight local service agency leaders detailed how they are supporting people during the current housing and affordability crisis, and the Berkshire state delegation spoke to their own efforts.

The event held on March 27 at the Berkshire Athenaeum included a working lunch and encouraged public feedback. 

"All of this information that we're going to gather today from both you and the panelists is going to drive our next three-year strategic plan," explained Deborah Leonczyk, BCAC's executive director. 

The conversation ranged from health care and housing production to financial literacy and child care.  Participating agencies included Upside 413, The Brien Center, The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts, MassHire Berkshire Career Center, Berkshire Regional Transit Authority, Greylock Federal Credit Union, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, and Child Care of the Berkshires. 

The federal choices Gordon spoke about included allocating $140 billion for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, investing $38 billion to convert warehouses into detention centers, cutting $1 trillion from Medicaid over 10 years, a proposed 50 percent increase in the defense budget, and cutting federal funding for supportive housing programs. 

Gordon pointed to past comments about how the region can't build its way out of the housing crisis because of money. He withdrew that statement, explaining, "You know what? That's bullshit, actually."

"I'm going to be honest with you, that is absolute bullshit. I have just observed over the last year or so how we're spending our money and the amount of money that we're spending on the federal side, and I'm no longer saying in good conscience that we can't build our way out of this," he said. 

Upside 413 provided a "Housing Demand in Western Massachusetts" report that was done in collaboration with the University of Massachusetts at Amherst's Donahue Institute of Economic and Public Policy Research. It states that around 23,400 units are needed to meet current housing demand in Western Mass; 1,900 in Berkshire County in 2025. 

View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories