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The staff at Lee Family Practice celebrate on Wednesday the completed $1.1 million renovation of the health-care center.
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A new welcoming lobby area.
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Four new exam rooms were added to bring the total to 13.

CHP Marks Completion of Lee Family Practice Renovation

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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The practice sacrificed office space to accommodate new patient rooms when costs for the renovation project grew. 
LEE,Mass. — Community Health Programs Inc. celebrated the completion of its long awaited expansion of Lee Family Practice. 
 
The nearly $1.1 million project was funded by CHP and by a federal Health Resources and Services Administration grant. 
 
The health center program was approved for the grant seven years ago but the project was delayed because of the costs, scope negotiations and the pandemic. When the project was first established, it cost more than the grant amount so the scope had to be adjusted, Chief Financial Officer Tom Walbridge said. 
 
Although the size of the project had to be reduced, it was still able to meet the determined needs, including the number of exam rooms and consult spaces, and the number of potential new patients, within the smaller footprint, he said. 
 
The expansion will allow the practice to serve its patients more efficiently and to increase the number of primary-care patients the health center sees by 1,500 over the next two to three years.
 
The number of exam rooms were expanded from nine to 13 and the number of consult rooms from one to four. 
 
Within the next couple of months, the practice will increase the number of doctors to four and the  number of nurse practitioners to six. It also added a space for a community health worker office. 
 
"We've gotten an influx of new patients who want to come here. It's a really great group of individuals who care about the community and our patients so much. I think our patients can tell that we enjoy working together. It's a good place to work if anyone's looking for a job," senior practice manager Miriam Gluck said. 
 
"And we have fun together. We take care of not just the patients but each other and so it's a really special place and I feel that our patients can see that when they come in."
 
With the services the practice offers ranging from psychotherapy to nutrition, it was clear that more space was needed, said Dr. Melanie Levitan, one of the practice's founders. 
 
Although a little skeptical at first about reducing the size of the offices to make room for exam rooms, the end result brought collaboration between the staff, she said. 
 
"Instead of all these private offices, we have more room for patients to be seen, we have more room for collaborative care," Levitan said. "… the way we're working it out is the practitioner is working closely with the nurse or medical assistant who's working with them and it's much more convenient than either sending lots of messages on the medical record or chasing the person down."
 
Multiple speakers said this expansion is needed and will have an important impact on health-care access in the area. 
 
"It has been really difficult to try and find primary care in the Berkshires, in Western Mass," said Casey Pease, constituent service director for state Sen. Paul Mark. "And it's the responsibility of the state and federal government and partners to really figure out how we can expand access, and it is really exciting."
 
The added capacity this renovation provides will allow the center to take on more patients which is really important, CEO Bethany Kieley said.
 
"There are new residents to the Berkshires all the time, there are retiring providers. So, we need to really continue to increase our ability to serve people," she said. 
 
"I love that we have made the investment to honor our patients with a really beautiful up-to-date facility and our staff, as well, to be sure that they have really good workspaces and a really pleasant environment. So it's a win on every level."
 
A huge difference will not be made until the country eliminates private health plans and replaces it with universal health care, like other democracies in the world, but these renovations will definitely aid in improving accessibility to health care, said practice co-founder Dr. Michael Kaplan.
 
"I can't say we're gonna make huge changes, but I think we'll make accessibility a little better. We already have more clinicians," he said. "It's very hard to recruit new clinicians in the current environment but if we get more doctors and nurse practitioners, we should be able to serve the community."
 
Kaplan has been working in the health-care industry for 43 years and intends on retiring next year. He said he hopes his legacy continues to live on in the new building that is "awfully nice for people to work in."
 
The organization broke ground on the project in July 2022 and completed the renovations this past July.  
 
"We had the right group of people to be able to undertake a yearlong project of construction and still support the patients in the community," Gluck said. "We worked through almost the entirety of the year of construction."
 
During the two "small stretches where the building had to be closed," the Lee Family Practice team was distributed across the entire CHP organization, Gluck said. 
 
"We were welcomed by all of the other sites. We had staff as far north as North Adams and as far south as Fairview [Hospital in Great Barrington]," Gluck said. 
 
For patrons who were unable to travel to other locations, one of the organization's Mobile Health Units was parked in the practice's parking lot. 
 
The mobile unit was always staffed with one or two providers so that travel didn't restrict patients ability to get care.
 
"All of our patients still were able to access us and get the care that they needed when the office was closed, which was a total of six weeks over the yearlong project," Gluck said. 

Tags: CHP,   health center,   renovation,   

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Berkshire County Getting $4M Toward Housing Improvements

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Housing Secretary Ed Augustus has been a frequent visitor to the Berkshires and says a new rural designation for the Housing Choice Initiative grew out of conversations with small towns.  

GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Millions of federal Community Development Block Grant funds are coming to Berkshire County for housing and economic development. 

On Thursday, Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll said announced $33.5 million in federal CDBG funds, of which $5.45 million will be coming to the county. 

Great Barrington, in conjunction with Egremont and Stockbridge, has been allocated $1.25 million to rehabilitate approximately 14 housing units. 

"We really recognize the importance of having strong local partners who are doing that hard work every day, educating our kids, keeping our neighborhoods safe, investing in the best of what makes our community special, places we make memories, places that drive the economy," said Driscoll at the Housatonic Community Center.

"These dollars in particular can help do all of that, along with helping cure older housing stock and meet the needs of community members who might find a desire to have a new roof or make a housing unit more accessible, but don't always have the resources to do it. These dollars are really special, and we're really grateful." 

The federal fiscal 2025 CDBG awards, funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and administered by the state Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities, help small cities and towns undertake projects that benefit low and moderate-income residents.

The more than $33 million will be dispersed to 52 communities across the commonwealth. Hinsdale and Florida will share a total of $950,000 to rehabilitate 11 housing units; Lenox and Sandisfield will share a total of $1,050,000 to rehabilitate 12 housing units, and New Marlborough, Mount Washington, and Otis will see a total of $1,250,000 to rehabilitate 15 housing units. North Adams is getting $950,000 for the second phase of senior center improvements and road repairs.

The funds can be used for projects involving housing rehabilitation, sidewalk and road improvements, planning studies, public facility upgrades, and social services such as food pantries, youth programming, and homelessness prevention. 

Town Manager Liz Hartsgrove said this reflects what is possible when federal, state, and local governments work together, and that the public investment shares significance beyond dollars alone. 

"These programs and projects become instruments of stability, equity, and trust. It allows the government to meet real needs, strengthen neighborhoods, and ensure residents can remain safely and securely in their homes. Places where lives are built, memories are formed, and community identity is shaped for generations to come," she said. 

"Investments like CDBG reduce uncertainties for families, provide reassurance for seniors, and create pathways for households to remain rooted in the communities they contribute to every day. When individuals and families are supported in this way, they are better positioned to thrive, and when people thrive, communities grow stronger, more resilient, and more connected." 

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