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Members of Williamstown's John M. 'Mike' Kennedy American Legion Post 152 provide military honors at Kennedy's gravesite on Thursday.

Williamstown's Kennedy Receives Full Military, Police Honors

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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Members of the Williamstown Police Department stand at attention during Thursday's memorial for John M. 'Mike' Kennedy, former police chief. 
 
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — John M. "Mike" Kennedy was remembered Thursday as a true man of peace.
 
"Mother Theresa, in looking around at the world she lived in, sometimes would find a lack of peace," the Rev. John P. McDonagh told the hundreds of mourners gathered at Eastlawn Cemetery. "She would pose the question, 'If we have no peace, we have forgotten that we belong to one another.'
 
"Mike seemed to understand this, both as a criminal justice professional and as an advocate for veterans."
 
Kennedy, 75, died last month after a lifetime of service to his nation and his community.
 
A Missouri native who grew up in Williamstown, Kennedy served in the Army, attaining the rank of sergeant, before returning to his hometown and working as a police officer from 1970 until his retirement in 2000, a tenure that included 11 years as chief.
 
In more recent years, he was an active member of the American Legion Post 152, whose members voted last month to name the post in his honor, and an advocate for veterans looking to navigate a bureaucracy that sometimes seemed designed to deny them the benefits they deserved.
 
"[Kennedy understood], frankly, that people don't know any peace if they have suffered injustice," McDonagh said. "Mike seemed to embody this by his presence — not so much by what he said, he was not a man of many words, as we know — but, by his presence, that we belong to each other.
 
"People, you and I, can really do some dumb things, especially when we're hurt. Mike had an ability to sit with people, rather than arresting them, taking them to Burger King for some food and conversation. Later, listening to the hurt that veterans suffered, Mike, you made us think of how we do belong to each other."
 
McDonagh chose for his main reading a passage from the Book of Wisdom, which reads, in part, "The souls of the just are in the hand of God, and no torment shall touch them. They seemed, in the view of the foolish, to be dead; and their passing away was thought an affliction
and their going forth from us, utter destruction. But they are in peace."
 
The service on Wednesday morning included honors from both the American Legion and the Williamstown Police Department.
 
The Legion provided a 21-gun salute, the playing of taps and a flag-folding ceremony with presentation to the Kennedy family.
 
The WPD provided the End of Watch Call ceremony in recognition of Kennedy's legacy of service to the community.
 
The service ended with the words of the Williamstown dispatcher, who told the mourners, "Although he is gone, he will never be forgotten. Chief, we have the watch from here, sir."

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Williamstown Charter Review Panel OKs Fix to Address 'Separation of Powers' Concern

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Charter Review Committee on Wednesday voted unanimously to endorse an amended version of the compliance provision it drafted to be added to the Town Charter.
 
The committee accepted language designed to meet concerns raised by the Planning Board about separation of powers under the charter.
 
The committee's original compliance language — Article 32 on the annual town meeting warrant — would have made the Select Board responsible for determining a remedy if any other town board or committee violated the charter.
 
The Planning Board objected to that notion, pointing out that it would give one elected body in town some authority over another.
 
On Wednesday, Charter Review Committee co-Chairs Andrew Hogeland and Jeffrey Johnson, both members of the Select Board, brought their colleagues amended language that, in essence, gives authority to enforce charter compliance by a board to its appointing authority.
 
For example, the Select Board would have authority to determine a remedy if, say, the Community Preservation Committee somehow violated the charter. And the voters, who elect the Planning Board, would have ultimate say if that body violates the charter.
 
In reality, the charter says very little about what town boards and committees — other than the Select Board — can or cannot do, and the powers of bodies like the Planning Board are regulated by state law.
 
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